A few years ago, a friend of mine sold his company. Not a fortune — but enough that he didn't have to work. He told me something crazy: "I always assumed money would make me feel more free. Instead, I just feel more watched — by my neighbors, by my ward, by myself."
That tension sits at the center of how Latter-day Saints think — or don't think — about wealth. We have a theology that simultaneously tells us the earth is abundant and generous, that God wants to provide for His children, and also that riches are among the most spiritually corrosive forces in all of scripture. We tithe cheerfully and talk about provident living, but we mostly avoid the harder conversation: What does the Lord actually expect us to do with money beyond ten percent?
The Uncomfortable Middle
The gospel doesn't give us a tidy formula here, and I think that's on purpose.
On one side, there's the "prosperity gospel" that dominates much of American Christianity — the idea that God rewards faithfulness with financial abundance, and that poverty signals weak faith. Latter-day Saints don't officially subscribe to this, but we aren't immune to it either. We repeat the Book of Mormon's promise — "inasmuch as ye shall keep my commandments ye shall prosper in the land" — and sometimes, unconsciously, we hear it as a divine endorsement of our 401(k).
But the Book of Mormon's definition of "prosper" is far more textured than a bank balance. As BYU professor Camille Fronk Olson has observed, if being "cut off from the presence of the Lord" is the opposite of prospering, then prospering fundamentally means remaining in God's presence — receiving His guidance, His revelation, His Spirit. That's a radically different currency than the one we typically measure.
On the other side, there's a kind of religious asceticism that treats money as inherently wicked — something to flee or apologize for. That's not quite right either. Jacob, in one of the most striking economic passages in all of scripture, doesn't condemn wealth. He condemns the order of operations:
"But before ye seek for riches, seek ye for the kingdom of God. And after ye have obtained a hope in Christ ye shall obtain riches, if ye seek them; and ye will seek them for the intent to do good — to clothe the naked, and to feed the hungry, and to liberate the captive, and administer relief to the sick and the afflicted." (Jacob 2:18–19)
Read that again slowly. Jacob doesn't say, "Don't seek riches." He says, Don't seek them first. And he says that once your heart is anchored in Christ, the very nature of your wanting changes. You'll still want wealth — but you'll want it the way a parent wants a bigger kitchen: not for prestige, but because more people can gather there.
Stewards, Not Owners
The Doctrine and Covenants contains a passage about wealth that I think most of us read too quickly. It deserves to stop us cold:
"For the earth is full, and there is enough and to spare; yea, I prepared all things, and have given unto the children of men to be agents unto themselves. Therefore, if any man shall take of the abundance which I have made, and impart not his portion, according to the law of my gospel, unto the poor and the needy, he shall, with the wicked, lift up his eyes in hell, being in torment." (D&C 104:17–18)
That is not soft language. The Lord is saying two things at once: first, that scarcity is not the problem — there is enough. And second, that hoarding in the face of need isn't just ungenerous. It's damning. The word "hell" appears right there in the verse, and it's not metaphorical.
This is the Restoration's distinctive economic insight, and it's far more radical than most of us have internalized. In God's economy, we don't own anything. We're stewards. Doctrine and Covenants 42:32 describes early Saints receiving back from their consecrated properties "as much as is sufficient for himself and family." The rest — the surplus — belonged to the community. To the poor. To the work of building Zion.
We don't practice that system in its original form today. But the principle behind it never went away. Every time we go to the temple, we covenant to consecrate everything we have — our time, talents, and resources — to the building of God's kingdom. Not ten percent. Everything. We say those words, and then we walk out into a world that tells us accumulation is the whole point of being alive.
The Part We Keep Back
Elder Neal A. Maxwell gave one of the most searching talks on this subject I've ever read. In his April 2002 General Conference address, "Consecrate Thy Performance," he said:
"We tend to think of consecration only as yielding up, when divinely directed, our material possessions. But ultimate consecration is the yielding up of oneself to God."
He then drew a stunning parallel to Ananias and Sapphira, the early Christians who sold their property but "kept back part of the price" (Acts 5:1–11). Elder Maxwell's observation was piercing: "So many of us cling tenaciously to a particular 'part,' even treating our obsessions like possessions. Thus, whatever else we may have already given, the last portion is the hardest to yield."
That's the line that haunts me. Because the "part" we keep back usually isn't money at all. It's the identity that money buys. It's the security we feel when we know we have more than enough. It's the social position that comes with the right house in the right neighborhood. It's the subtle, almost invisible belief that we earned this — that our prosperity is a reflection of our virtue rather than a trust we've been given to manage.
King Benjamin understood this tendency perfectly. His sermon in Mosiah 4 anticipates our rationalizations with uncomfortable precision:
"Perhaps thou shalt say: The man has brought upon himself his misery; therefore I will stay my hand, and will not give unto him of my food, nor impart unto him of my substance that he may not suffer, for his punishments are just — But I say unto you, O man, whosoever doeth this the same hath great cause to repent." (Mosiah 4:17–18)
And then the devastating question: "Are we not all beggars? Do we not all depend upon the same Being, even God, for all the substance which we have?" (Mosiah 4:19)
The answer, of course, is yes. Every paycheck, every investment return, every professional skill — all of it flows from capacities God gave us, through a body He designed, in an economy built on an earth He created. There is no such thing as a self-made man in the theology of the Restoration. There is only a man who has forgotten where his blessings came from.
What Zion Actually Looked Like
The Book of Mormon gives us exactly one picture of a fully consecrated society, and it's worth noticing what Mormon emphasizes about it. After Christ's visit, the people were "all converted unto the Lord" and "they had all things common among them; therefore there were not rich and poor, bond and free, but they were all made free, and partakers of the heavenly gift" (4 Nephi 1:2–3).
Notice: the text doesn't say they were all poor. It says there were no categories. No rich and poor. No bond and free. The distinctions themselves dissolved. This wasn't enforced austerity. It was something more miraculous — a community of people who had so thoroughly reoriented their hearts that accumulation for its own sake simply stopped making sense.
That society lasted nearly two hundred years. And when it finally fell apart, the very first thing Mormon mentions is that "a small part of the people" began to "be lifted up in pride, such as the wearing of costly apparel." The return of economic hierarchy was the leading indicator of spiritual collapse, not a symptom that showed up later.
So What Do We Do on Tuesday?
I don't think the gospel asks most of us to give away everything and live in a commune. But I think it asks something that may be harder: to hold what we have with open hands.
That means paying tithing — but also asking whether tithing has become a ceiling instead of a floor. It means contributing to fast offerings with genuine generosity, not token amounts. It means noticing the person in your ward who just lost a job and doing something about it before the bishop has to organize a committee. It means examining the gap between what you need and what you have, and being honest — really honest — about what that surplus is for.
More than any of that, it means asking a question that consecration demands but comfort resists: Whose money is this, actually?
Jesus told his disciples, "A man's life consisteth not in the abundance of the things which he possesseth" (Luke 12:15). The rich young ruler who came to Him had kept every commandment — and Jesus "beholding him loved him" — but then asked the one thing the young man couldn't give. He "went away grieved: for he had great possessions" (Mark 10:21–22).
That story usually gets taught as a cautionary tale about someone else. But Elder Maxwell's question presses it closer to home: What is the part you are keeping back? It might not be money. It might be time, or ambition, or the career identity you've built your whole life around. Whatever it is, it's the thing you instinctively tighten your grip on when you feel God reaching for it.
Consecration isn't a single dramatic moment of divestiture. It's a daily practice of loosening. Of remembering that everything in your life — the salary, the house, the retirement account, the talent, the hours in your day — arrived as a gift, and gifts are meant to circulate. The question isn't whether you're wealthy or poor. The question is whether your hands are open or closed. And that question is never fully answered. It just keeps getting asked.