There’s something painful but true about our time: evil seems to pay faster than good.
We live in a generation where corruption is smart, fraud is fashionable, and morality is mocked. Ungodly living, internet fraud, political corruption, prostitution, greed, and deceit have now become paths that seem to lead people straight into wealth and fame.
Those who try these ways often see instant results — and because it works, they convince others to join. Before long, it becomes a trend. And now, it’s almost as if there are no consequences anymore.
When Religion Lost Its Focus
Many of us were raised in deeply religious homes, taught to fear God and to love our neighbors as ourselves. That early training became our first knowledge, our conscience. But along the way, something shifted.
A lot of modern religious leaders now preach a diluted grace, giving false hope instead of solid truth. They teach people to wait for miracles, but not to work with faith. They ask for offerings, but rarely teach strategy. They encourage giving, but not investing.
Some even fake miracles and use emotional manipulation to grow their crowd and wealth. They go on to build schools, estates, and empires, while the same congregation remains stuck in poverty, still waiting for “divine intervention.”
The Harsh Reality
Let’s be honest.
If someone goes to a traditionalist and performs a few rituals, they may suddenly become rich without even shedding blood.
If another person loots public funds, their generations may never know poverty.
And on the streets, we see young women making millions in a single night, while others who work hard every day can barely afford rent.
When you look around, it starts to seem like those who live rightly will never make it, at least not while they’re young enough to enjoy it.
Tell yourself the truth: what joy is there in finally traveling the world at 70 when your body can no longer keep up?
The Root Problem
The line between good and evil is fading. We are losing the fight between morals and immorality, truth and lies, hard work and shortcuts.
But here’s the deeper truth: the problem isn’t that good doesn’t work, it’s that we stopped practicing it the right way.
Doing good without strategy is like planting seeds and never watering them.
Faith without wisdom is like believing for harvest but never farming the land.
Faith and Strategy — The Missing Combination
A friend of mine, Joel Joseph Emediong, once said something that has never left me:
“Evil may pay faster, but faith will pay longer. Every good and perfect gift comes from God. The truth is, faith won’t give you wealth, but it will give you the wisdom and creativity to make it. When faith meets strategy, it turns your time into an investment.”
That’s the balance. That’s the way forward.
We can’t keep blaming the world or envying those who take shortcuts. We must become a new generation of believers — faithful, wise, and strategic.
People who pray, yes — but also plan.
People who believe — but also build.
Final Thought
Evil may seem faster, but it burns out quickly.
Goodness may be slower, but it builds something lasting, something peaceful, something eternal.
Don’t let the rush of the world push you into darkness.
Keep doing right. Keep building. Keep believing.
Because when faith meets strategy, your success will not only come — it will stay.
Firstly I must say this was inspiring.
ReplyDeleteKey take: Faith + strategy = sustainable wealth
This is the missing piece we need!
ReplyDeleteA balance on Faith and Strategy
Beautiful!