For years, tons of Christians have been stuck in this endless search. We give money, read scripture, show up every Sunday, then just sit around waiting for some money to drop from the sky. It sounds extreme, but honestly, I lived that dynamic myself.
Back in the eighties , attending a Pentecostal church as a young student, the message was simple: raise those hands, make those offerings, and get ready for the wealth. Everyone repeated it. But I kept asking myself a quiet question, the kind that makes people nervous. How does God actually deliver that return?
For a long time, I walked around staring at the pavement. Seriously, I’d turn over small rocks thinking maybe a hundred-dollar bill was stuck there. Maybe I’d wake up and find cash hiding under my mattress. It was a bizarre kind of magical thinking. Here is the funny thing: I never met one single person who found money that way. Not one.
So how does actual prosperity show up after we support our churches? It happens through local work. Or your job. Whatever you do with your own hands.
People love highlighting Malachi to talk about God opening heaven’s floodgates, of course. Yet everyone somehow misses the next line of scripture, the part where God promises to bless our crops and our daily physical labor.
If someone gives half their salary away but lacks a farm—meaning high-quality actual work or a real project—what exactly is God opening those windows for? Empty space? There has to be a target. Prosperity does voter-style miracles, maybe, but real provision grows through showing up on Monday morning.
Let us be honest, hard labor takes a group. People never harvested crops on their own back in ancient history anyway. They had partners. The classic saying, that workers are few, tracks. When collaboration fails, your hard work spoils.
Here is some truth nobody wants to hear in sermon circles, but we should say it. Think about the folks who had pastors lay hands on them, got covered in special anointing oil, cried over the wooden pews, yet still block accounts over debt. God did not lie to them. Religiosity simply replaced personal output.
Going to church and refusing to build things makes belief empty. Thinking God owes you an unexpected deposit because you gave thirty dollars is a shortcut. Wisdom reminds you to give, sure, but then instructs you to run that business well and find a team.
Believers need freedom from that passive mentality, it even got worse, watching highly educated professionals fall for promises by perceived prophets or men of God that your mobile money wallet or bank accounts could receive miracle moneys drawing fresh funds overnight, which seems crazy. Stop inspecting grass for dry cash. Master a practical craft instead. Learn specialized skills and team up with people you share. True benefits take faith, sure, but expect sweat on clothes. really. Forget searching the ground for quick cash. Learn a real trade instead. Collaborate on projects. True blessings demand faith and our own heavy, sweaty hands work.
I know God keeps promises. Always has. Yet that devotion operates best wherever your own effort of labor graciously begin first.
Thanks for reading dear; May God’s Wisdom lead us and may His Peace remain steady within you. I urge you to like , subscribe and share it to bless others. Shalom Chaverim.
By E.A. Randolph-Koranteng
…A servant of Christ…
Idea Champions Center – Beyond Religiosity: Unleashing the Power of Faith and Works

