God’s Answer to Survival Living
Reading Time 5 mins 48 secs –
Most people were never designed to simply survive.
Yet that is exactly how many live.
Paycheck to paycheck.
Bill to bill.
Problem to problem.
When life becomes a constant struggle to make ends meet, dreams often begin to disappear. Vision fades. Purpose becomes difficult to see. Instead of building something meaningful, people spend their energy trying to escape pressure, avoid emergencies, and make it through another week.
But that was never God's design.
Money Is Not the Problem
Many Christians have been taught to view money with suspicion.
Some assume that having money is wrong. Others believe that prosperity and spirituality cannot coexist. Yet Scripture does not say money is evil. Paul told Timothy that “the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil” (1 Timothy 6:10, NIV). The problem was never money itself. The problem was allowing money to become an idol.
Money itself is simply a tool.
Like any tool, it can be used for good or for harm. A hammer can build a house or break a window. The issue is not the tool. The issue is the heart of the person using it.
God never intended His people to fear money. He intended them to understand it, steward it, and use it for Kingdom purposes.
The Curse Was More Than Sin
When Adam and Eve walked with God in the Garden, they lacked nothing.
There was no fear.
No shortage.
No survival mentality.
Everything they needed was already provided.
But after the Fall, humanity entered what Scripture describes as a cursed system of painful toil, sweat, thorns, and thistles. God told Adam that the ground was cursed and that food would now come through painful labor and the sweat of his brow.
From that moment forward, people found themselves fighting simply to survive.
Many people are still living under that mindset today.
They work jobs they dislike because they feel trapped.
They surrender dreams because they feel they have no options.
They lose sight of who they are because survival consumes all their attention.
But Jesus came to bring something different.
Good News for the Poor
When Jesus announced His ministry, He stood in the synagogue, opened the scroll of Isaiah, and declared that the Spirit of the Lord had anointed Him to proclaim good news to the poor.
Jesus knew that poverty was about more than money. It affects how people see themselves. Dreams are exchanged for desperation. Purpose is replaced by pressure. Jesus came to restore more than provision. He came to restore identity.
Think about that.
What is good news to someone who is poor?
The good news is not that poverty is a blessing.
The good news is freedom.
Freedom from bondage.
Freedom from limitation.
Freedom from a system that keeps people trapped.
Isaiah’s prophecy continues by describing broken hearts being healed, captives being set free, and those who mourn receiving beauty instead of ashes. It paints a picture of restoration.
Jesus came to restore what was lost. He came to reconnect people to the Kingdom of God and the resources, wisdom, and provision that flow from it.
You Were Created to Create
One of the greatest lies people believe is that they are destined to spend their lives confined by limitations.
But you were made in the image of God.
God creates.
And He created you with the ability to create as well.
You were not designed to live without vision. You were not designed to live without purpose. You were not designed to spend your life trapped in survival mode.
God reminded Israel in Deuteronomy 8 not to forget where their increase came from. As they entered a land of abundance, built fine houses, and watched their silver and gold multiply, He warned them not to believe their own strength had produced it. Instead, He said, “Remember the Lord your God, for it is he who gives you the ability to produce wealth” (Deuteronomy 8:18, NIV).
Notice what it does not say.
It does not say God gives everyone wealth without responsibility.
It says He gives the ability.
The wisdom.
The ideas.
The opportunities.
The strategies.
The insight.
Often, one God-given idea can change the course of an entire life.
The Blessing Works Through You
Many people spend their lives looking for something to bless.
The Kingdom works differently.
God blesses people.
When Joseph was placed in charge of Potiphar's household, everything under his care prospered because the blessing was operating through Joseph.
The blessing was not on the building.
The blessing was on the person.
The same principle appears in Deuteronomy 28, where God promises to bless everything His people put their hands to. The blessing wasn't on the barns. The blessing was on the people filling the barns.
Wherever you place your hand in obedience to God, His favor, wisdom, and provision can flow through you into that assignment.
You carry Kingdom authority.
You carry Kingdom citizenship.
You carry Kingdom potential.
You Can Start Today
Perhaps you feel trapped in survival mode.
Maybe debt has stolen your peace.
Maybe disappointment has caused you to lower your expectations.
Maybe you’ve stopped dreaming because life has become about getting through the next month.
God has not forgotten you.
His Kingdom still operates.
His promises still work.
His wisdom is still available.
His favor still opens doors.
Paul wrote that God is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask, think, or imagine according to His power at work within us.
And the same God who gives seed to the sower still gives His people the power to produce wealth, create value, serve others, and fulfill their purpose.
You do not have to spend your life surviving.
In Christ, there is a better way.
A Simple Prayer
Father,
Thank You for sending Jesus to redeem me from every part of the curse and to bring me into Your Kingdom. Help me renew my thinking where I have accepted survival as my destiny. Show me the opportunities, wisdom, and purpose You have prepared for my life. Teach me to steward resources faithfully, trust Your promises completely, and use every blessing to advance Your Kingdom. Thank You for giving me the power to produce wealth and the grace to fulfill my assignment. In Jesus’s name, I pray. Amen.



