We’ve been told a lie. Not just once, but repeatedly, in ways both overt and subtle, economic and spiritual. The lie is that poverty is natural. That it is inevitable. That it is even, somehow, deserved. This lie infects our religion, drives public policy and seeps into our everyday lives in ways subtle and not so subtle.
But there is a deeper truth, one we can see through the Liberation Lens: that poverty is not a condition of Spirit but a construct of society. That Divine Source is limitless, and that lack is not real, only the absence of recognition and distribution.
In this series, I want to revisit the foundational teachings of New Thought prosperity, not to dismiss them, but to evolve them. For too long, prosperity teachings have been either diluted into feel-good affirmations akin to a “magic potion” or distorted into spiritualized capitalism. But when rightly understood, these teachings are radical: they call us to recognize abundance as a spiritual reality and poverty as a human-made illusion, perpetuated by systems that benefit from inequality.
We will explore what Charles Fillmore meant by “divine substance,” what Ernest Holmes taught about supply and circulation, and why Catherine Ponder believed that prosperity begins in consciousness. But we won’t stop there, as that’s just the typical territory those in New Thought are already familiar with.
Through the Liberation Lens we seek to break free into new understandings that center justice and equity in our spiritual practice. Where personal transformation is not walled off from collective transformation or social responsibility.
Therefore in this series, we will also examine what sociologist Matthew Desmond exposes in Poverty, by America: that poverty persists not because of individual failings, but because of policy, structure, and the choices of the privileged.
And we will reflect on voices like Ezra Klein’s in Abundance, who argue that we live in a world of vast potential—but are held back by our failure to imagine and organize toward a shared flourishing.
This is not just about energy and money, as always it is about liberation. It is about reclaiming the truth that Spirit is not scarce. That God is not withholding. That we do not have to earn our worth, only remember it.
Over the coming months, I’ll be exploring:
Part 2: The Spiritual Origin of Abundance – tracing New Thought’s metaphysical teachings on prosperity
Part 3: How Systems Manufacture Scarcity – exploring modern research on the causes and persistence of poverty
Part 4: The Ethics of Circulation – redefining giving, receiving, and the flow of wealth
Part 5: Collective Prosperity – toward a justice-centered, spiritual economics
If poverty is a lie, then the truth must set us free.
All transformation and shifts begin in consciousness. Having the right mindset about something, anything that we desire is key to bringing it about. That’s why the 40 Day program is so powerful - because it’s an intentional practice to get our minds in the right framework for accepting a greater good.
You have within you the power and capacity to generate and participate in the abundant nature of the universe - in fact, you already are participating. The question is: are you participating at a level that is generative and life giving?
If not, let’s get there together. Stay tuned for this exciting series!
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