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Can Million/Billionaires be Christian?

Christianity Thu, May 14, 2026, 12:00 PM

We live in a day of staggering contrasts, a time of dizzying prosperity for some and agonizing, soul-crushing deprivation for so many others. How can we, who claim to follow the Man of Sorrows, He who had nowhere to lay His head, justify the silent, stagnant accumulation of vast, hoarded fortunes while the cry of the hungry and the plea of the destitute rise like smoke unto the very gates of Heaven? Is it possible, is it even spiritually conceivable, that a heart truly touched by the crimson grace of Calvary could remain unmoved and unchanged while sitting upon a mountain of gold?

The Parable of the Desert Well

Consider, if you will, the image of a man who discovers a deep, crystalline well in the heart of a parched and dying desert. He drinks his fill; he bathes his face; he finds life where there was only dust. But then, looking out across the shimmering heat at his brothers and sisters who are fainting from thirst, their throats raw and their eyes hollow, this man begins to build a wall. He does not build a wall to protect the water from being wasted; he builds a wall to keep it for himself. He spends his days hauling stones and mixing mortar, sweating under the sun to ensure that not a single drop of that life-giving flow escapes his grasp. He watches from behind his ramparts as others perish within sight of the fountain. Has that man truly understood the gift of the water? Or has the very abundance of the well become a poison that has petrified his heart and blinded his eyes to the image of God in his neighbor?

The tension is not merely financial; it is fundamentally, profoundly spiritual. We often hear the defense that wealth, if acquired ethically, is a neutral blessing. But I tell you today that for the follower of Christ, there is no such thing as "neutral" abundance when the world is in want. The Gospel does not call us to be ethical hoarders; it calls us to be radical givers.

Our mandate is not to build bigger barns, but to build bigger tables.

If you have been blessed with much, if your barns are bursting and your accounts are overflowing, that surplus was never intended to be a monument to your own security. It was intended to be a reservoir of hope for the hopeless. To hold onto millions, or billions, while the "least of these" suffer is to attempt the impossible: to serve both God and Mammon.

The measure of a Christian life is not the height of one’s accumulated assets, but the depth of one’s consecrated sacrifice. Our responsibility is the holy, high calling of lifting others up: pulling them from the mire of poverty, shielding them from the storms of life, and reflecting the light of Christ into the dark corners of their despair.