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When Faith Sounds Different Depending on What You Have

18 December 202513 December 2025

There’s something I’ve noticed over time, and the more I sit with it, the more uncomfortable it becomes. It is much easier for people who have money to talk about God—how good He is to them, how faithful He has been, how everything worked out in the end. Belief comes easily when life has been kind.

If you live in a beautiful home, send your children to good schools, take holidays whenever you need a break, and never really worry about food or rent, faith feels logical. Gratitude flows naturally when your days are already cushioned by comfort. In that kind of life, God sounds generous. Promises feel real. Hope feels reasonable.

But now imagine a different life.

Imagine a man who doesn’t know where tonight’s meal will come from. A woman raising children in a flooded informal settlement. A family that sends their child to a local school not because it’s good, but because at least the child will eat that day. When you stand in front of people living like this and talk about blessings, abundance, and a loving God, the words feel hollow. They don’t match reality. They don’t land.

Telling someone who has nothing that Jesus promises a full life feels cruel when their present is empty. The religion speaks of provision, protection, and overflow, yet their lived experience offers none of it. So what exactly are they meant to believe in?

And here is where the contradiction shows itself.

The rich appear to be the faithful ones, praising God for what they already have. The poor are told to believe harder, give more, serve more, and wait. Faith becomes a ladder they are promised will lead them to the life the rich already live. But that ladder never seems to reach the top.

Instead, it keeps people chasing. Always hoping. Always sacrificing. Always being told that their breakthrough is just one more offering away.

Pastors reinforce this cycle easily. Serve the church and blessings will come. Give generously and you’ll receive a hundredfold. Store your treasures in heaven. And somehow, “treasures in heaven” always translates into money given here, now, to the church. The promise is never questioned because questioning is framed as weak faith.

But something doesn’t add up.

If seeking Jesus truly delivered what the Bible promises, we would see it reflected clearly and consistently in people’s lives. Instead, what we often see is devotion without relief. Loyalty without change. Sacrifice without return. And yet people are blamed for not believing hard enough when nothing improves.

It’s painful to watch.

Not because people are foolish, but because they are desperate. Hope is powerful, especially when life has stripped you of everything else. And when hope is tied to promises that never arrive, it becomes a quiet kind of harm.

I don’t think the rich go to church because they believe more deeply. I think belief comes easier when life already feels safe. Faith flourishes in comfort. It struggles in survival. And that should make us pause before we judge anyone’s spirituality—or use religion as a solution to suffering it does not actually solve.

What saddens me most is not disbelief. It’s how easily people are convinced that their pain is their fault, their poverty is a spiritual failure, and their waiting is noble.

Sometimes, the problem isn’t lack of faith.

Sometimes, the problem is that the promise itself was never meant to be questioned.

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