Opportunity: The Unrecognized Path from Poverty

Poverty and OpportunityThe unrecognized path out of poverty isn’t education or money; it’s opportunity.

I have spent a significant amount of time in developing nations. In many of these places, illiteracy is common—not because people lack intelligence or motivation, but because their environment rarely requires reading or writing. Access to written materials, digital tools, and formal systems is limited. Life centers on survival, often through physical labor, with the priority simple: find enough for today. Tomorrow will have to wait its turn.

World events and political debates rarely intersect with daily life. The stock market, industrial growth, and global conflict are distant abstractions. When survival is the priority, long-term planning becomes a luxury.

If we define poverty as the lack of stable income, reliable healthcare, infrastructure, and access to capital, a significant share of the world would be considered poor. Even under more moderate income thresholds of $3.65 to $6.85 per day, nearly half of the global population remains economically fragile. These are not people on the brink of starvation but people living one disruption away from crisis.

The Less Obvious

What is less obvious is that this fragility is not limited to developing nations.

In the United States, where the median individual income is roughly $40,000 to $45,000 per year, an estimated 50–60% of people would struggle to absorb a major financial shock without outside help. The difference is not whether vulnerability exists—it is how visible it is. In developing nations, it is expected. In developed nations, it is often hidden behind higher income levels.

So what does survival—and ultimately progress—depend on?

It is not money alone. Many high-income individuals live under constant financial strain.
It is not education alone. Many well-educated individuals fail to translate knowledge into meaningful progress.

The people who consistently move forward, regardless of their environment, tend to share two characteristics. First, they have access to opportunity. Second—and more importantly—they act on it.

Opportunity Is Not Equal

Ephesians 5:15-16, “Be very careful, then, how you live—not as unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunity.”

Opportunity is not evenly distributed, but more importantly, it is not equally visible.

In developing environments, opportunities are often constrained by external factors. Limited infrastructure, lack of access to capital, and underdeveloped markets restrict what is possible. A person may have the ability and the willingness, but no clear path to apply either.

In developed environments, the challenge is different. Opportunity is abundant, but it is often diluted. With many possible paths comes uncertainty, distraction, and hesitation. When everything is possible, nothing feels urgent. The perceived cost of failure becomes a barrier, even when the actual risk is relatively small.

This creates an unexpected contrast. In one environment, people cannot act because opportunities are scarce. In the other, people often do not act because opportunities are overwhelming.

Opportunity Has Two Components

2 Corinthians 9:6, “The point is this: whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows bountifully will also reap bountifully.”

Opportunity is not a single condition. It is the intersection of two elements:

Access – the presence of a viable path, and action – the decision to take that path

“The secret of getting ahead is getting started.”  Mark Twain

Most efforts to reduce poverty focus on access: education, funding, infrastructure, and systems. These are essential. Without them, opportunity cannot exist meaningfully.

But access alone does not create change. An opportunity that is not acted upon is indistinguishable from one that never existed.

Why Opportunity Is Missed

Colossians 4:5, “Be wise in the way you act toward outsiders; make the most of every opportunity.”

In developing regions, opportunities are often missed because they are structurally blocked. There may be no capital to start a business, no market to reach, or no infrastructure to support growth.

In developed regions, opportunities are missed for very different reasons: fear of losing what already exists, comfort with the status quo, overanalysis and indecision, lack of urgency, and, most importantly, the absence of accountability.

These are not external barriers. They are internal constraints.

This leads to a paradox: Those with the least opportunity often act decisively when given a chance, while those with the most opportunity hesitate.

The Real Constraint

The limiting factor is not intelligence. It is not even education. It is the ability to recognize opportunity in its earliest form—and to act before it becomes obvious.

Most opportunities do not arrive fully developed. They do not present themselves as a clear, low-risk path, they often appear incomplete, uncertain, and inconvenient. They may require effort before reward, risk before clarity, and movement without guarantees.

Those who progress are not necessarily those with the best opportunities, but those who act on imperfect ones.

A More Accurate Definition of Poverty

Poverty is not simply the absence of resources. It is the absence of an accessible, actionable opportunity. In many cases, it is the absence of the mindset required to act when that opportunity appears.

Proverbs 14:23, “All hard work brings a profit, but mere talk leads only to poverty.”

This applies globally, locally, and individually.

The Path Forward

If this is true, the path out of poverty, whether in a rural village or a developed city, requires more than money or education.

It is the creation of environments where opportunity is visible and reachable, and where people are equipped—and expected—to act.

Romans 11:29, “The gifts and calling of God are irrevocable.”

This is where real change occurs. Not when opportunity is merely theoretical, but when it becomes practical, tangible, and acted upon.

Closing Thought

Opportunity is the bridge between potential and progress.

Without opportunity, potential remains dormant. Without action, opportunity is wasted.

Where both exist, progress becomes inevitable.

Revelation 3:8, “Behold, I have set before you an open door, which no one can shut.”

Surviving Life in a Broken World

Anxiety SpurgeonSurviving life in a broken world can be all-consuming. It seems to me that we used to have to deal with political and economic chaos in larger, more pronounced clumps. Governments would change, and recessions would come and go over extended periods. There was always a ramp-up to change. The world has changed.

1 Peter 5:7, “Casting all your anxieties on him, because he cares for you.”

Now it seems as though things change almost at a moment’s notice. Along with managing our emotional baggage, we must cope with the ever-changing landscape of world change. What used to take months or years to adjust now takes weeks or days. Planning for our future has become a game of whack-a-mole. We now deal not only with all the dystopias created by navigating our personal lives, but we are also bombarded with constant world change.

“Sometimes God lets you be in a situation that only He can fix so that you can see that He is the One who fixes it. Rest. He’s got it.” – Tony Evans, Facebook, June 7, 2012

Understanding God’s View

Most of us struggle to understand God’s view of our life without also trying to integrate God’s worldview. I know I do. It has become so ever-present that I have accepted I may never know the “why,” but I can at least discover the “what’s next.” God never told Job why, so I guess He won’t tell me either. But He will guide me in the direction of what to do because of it.

Romans 13:1, “Let everyone be subject to the governing authorities, for there is no authority except that which God has established. God has established the authorities that exist.”

I now sometimes find myself overwhelmed with the dysfunctionality of world events. I layer those events on top of my life events, and it seems everything is out of control. And, by the way, it is outside of my control. God is executing His plan for His kingdom. God looks at people, not governments or country boundaries. Most of us view the world in terms of people groups, where some will win and some will lose. God looks at us as individuals, each with the ability to win through acceptance of Him as King.

God’s Control

I know that I often look at current events and project their occurrence onto the people making the decisions, but that is a false narrative. God is in control. He put all of this in motion before the foundation of the universe.

John 17:5, “Now, Father, glorify Me together with Yourself, with the glory which I had with You before the world was.”

None of this is a surprise to God. All of it is part of His plan for humanity. We can step back from the chaos and gain a unique perspective on eternity that allows us to suspend judgment until we see God’s plan. The world may be out of our control, but it is never outside of God’s control. This has always been true of our personal lives. What has happened to us or is still happening has intent. That intent is to expand God’s Kingdom. Our reaction should not be asking why the past was the past, but what do you want me to do about the future?

Revelation 22:13, “I am the Alpha and the Omega, the first and the last, the beginning and the end.”

We should take the same perspective on world events. What do You want me to do? I’m not going to pretend that there will be no adverse impact on Christianity, but that impact is likely to be temporary. We ultimately know the end, it is outlined in Revelations. The question is how and when we get there.

Surviving

First, as best you can, let go of the contemporary hype surrounding everything that’s happening in the world. God is doing great things that are outside of our understanding. Pray that God’s will will be done. Pray for protection for you and those God has put in front of you. Continue to follow your faith, not as it pertains to current events, but as it pertains to God’s Kingdom.

Remember, in the end, He wins.

Colossians 1:17, “He is before all things, and in Him all things hold together.”