No. God promises to be your provider and to meet your needs, but Scripture never guarantees wealth as a reward for enough faith. That teaching turns faith into a currency and God into a vending machine. His care is real; a formula for riches is not.
The Grace Answer
The promise sounds appealing: believe hard enough, give enough, declare it boldly enough, and God is obligated to make you wealthy. It is deeply popular and deeply mistaken, because it turns faith into a currency you spend to make God pay out. That is not faith. It is a transaction.
Here is what Scripture actually promises. God is a Father who knows your needs and delights to meet them. My God shall supply all your need according to His riches in glory by Christ Jesus. That is provision, and it is a real and generous promise. But notice the word: your need, not your every want, and not a guaranteed fortune.
What the prosperity formula gets wrong
Scripture never ties wealth to a level of faith. Some of the most faithful people in the Bible were poor, and some were persecuted, and Jesus Himself had nowhere to lay His head. In fact Paul warns that those who desire to be rich fall into temptation and a snare, and that the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil. A gospel that measures God’s favor by your bank balance has drifted a long way from the cross.
The prosperity formula also quietly blames the one who suffers. If enough faith guarantees wealth and health, then poverty and sickness must mean you failed to believe hard enough. That is a cruel weight the gospel never lays on anyone, and it is the opposite of the comfort Jesus offers the poor and the hurting. Real faith is trust in a good Father, not leverage to pry things out of Him. It rests in His character whether the account is full or empty. Paul learned to be content in plenty and in want, because his security was never in circumstances.
So does God care about your finances? Deeply. Will He provide? He promises to. Does He owe you riches in exchange for enough belief? No, and it is a mercy He does not, because that would make your money the measure of His love. His love was measured once and for all at a cross, and it does not rise or fall with your net worth.