Episode 58 of the Chalcedon Podcast explores the biblical concept of wealth, contrasting it with modern misconceptions shaped by materialism and state power. The discussion, led by Andrea Schwartz with Mark Rushdoony and Martin Selbrede, highlights that in Scripture, wealth is not merely monetary but encompasses strength, family, responsibility, and covenantal blessing. They stress that wealth itself is not evil, but its use determines whether it becomes a blessing or a curse. Misused wealth can lead to destruction, while biblical stewardship channels resources toward God’s kingdom purposes.
A major theme centers on how the modern state manipulates wealth redistribution, fostering envy and dependence in order to expand its power. Instead of recognizing God as the true source and governor of wealth, society often demonizes the wealthy, exalts leisure over work, and erodes the family as the foundational institution of economic and cultural life. The podcast argues that biblical provisions for work, family strength, and faithful tithing create true wealth, while inflation, taxation, and eminent domain strip people of their God-given inheritance. This rootlessness feeds a culture of debt, consumption, and idol-making, whether through money, technology, or leisure.
The conversation concludes that genuine wealth must be covenantal, grounded in obedience to God and exercised in service to His kingdom. Families, children, and even wives are presented as true assets in Scripture, contrary to humanistic views that reduce them to liabilities. Work is affirmed as a divine calling, not something to escape, and the Sabbath as a safeguard against idolatry of labor. Ultimately, the Chalcedon message insists that only by recovering spiritual capital—recognizing God’s law as the foundation of economics and culture—can society rebuild lasting wealth that resists decay and advances Christ’s reign in every sphere.