Is abundant health and wealth a mark of divine favour – even a reward from God?
Answer: No. However, poverty is not a blessed condition either.
The problem with a line of teaching which implies that God wants to pour out material blessings in our lives, if only we will let Him, is that it often leaves those who are suffering ill-health or financial hardship feeling as if they are unloved by God and so lacking in faith as to have doubt cast over their very salvation.
It mocks Christians under persecution in many parts of the non-Western world where, truth be known, there is sometimes greater consecration, holiness and fruitfulness for the Kingdom than in the developed world.
It further mocks the sufferings of the early church, the martyrs for the faith, and the apostles. Paul wrote that he and others with him were hungry, poorly clothed, homeless, reviled – the scum of the earth [1 Corinthians 4:7-13].
God can, and does, heal the sick. But healing is not guaranteed through super-faith or positive confession. Timothy had frequent ailments [1 Timothy 5:23].
Are Christians today stronger in faith and more virtuous and deserving than Timothy? [Philippians 2:19-22].
Health and wealth may be a blessing from God and should be gratefully received, but it is not the blessing.
It is a shame to present to the unbelieving world an image of a church and Christians anxious for money, possessions and status. Even those who know little about Jesus admire Him, perhaps not as God and Saviour, but as one given over to the sacrifice of self and to the loss of everything that the world holds dear. It is that spirit which is attractive to the person who has tasted the emptiness of all that this world has to offer.
Nowhere does the New Testament indicate that either wealth or poverty glorifies God. The Christian is exhorted to be content with whatever they have [Hebrews 13:5].
Is God keen to pour out material abundance on His people?
Also see Open Letter to Benny Hinn
