God Refuses to Be a Formula
On covenant blessing, collective faithfulness, and the danger of reading prosperity as a sign
There is a theological framework that circulates widely in Christian thinking about wealth and poverty, and it has enough biblical support to feel convincing on first reading. It goes something like this: God blesses the faithful with prosperity, and when a society turns from God, His blessings are withdrawn. Poverty and suffering are therefore signs of spiritual failure — either personal or collective. Wealth is evidence of God’s favor. Hardship is evidence of His discipline.
It is tidy. It is intuitive. It maps onto deep human instincts about cause and effect, desert and reward. And it has genuine roots in Scripture. Deuteronomy does connect covenant obedience with blessing and covenant rebellion with consequence. Proverbs describes patterns linking diligence with flourishing and laziness with want. The moral structure of reality is a real biblical theme and dismissing it entirely would be its own kind of error.
But there is a critical difference between a pattern and a formula. A pattern describes what tends to happen across time and community. A formula promises a predictable, individual, observable outcome. The Bible consistently affirms the pattern. It just as consistently refuses to let that pattern become a formula — something you can read in real time from someone’s bank account or medical history or neighborhood.

















