1. EachPod

People want a sure thing ... but our faith in that which God tells us is that sure thing!

Author
Dr. Joan Boney, Jesus Ministries
Published
Sat 11 Jul 2020
Episode Link
https://jesusministries.podbean.com/e/people-want-a-sure-thing-but-our-faith-in-that-which-god-tells-us-is-that-sure-thing/

Dr. Joan Boney, Jesus Ministries ...


Pam Padgett, put her car up for sale.  Her friend was interested in buying Pam's car.  The friend borrowed the car and took it to her mechanic to examine the car.  That seemed so strange to me for she knows Pam well and should know Pam would conceal nothing from her concerning the car.  Further she knew Pam took good care of the car through the years and the car was priced at a low price for the quality of the car, $6,500.  A new car of the same model and equipment would cost $55,000.


The people who bought my house in Texas wanted a sure thing so they hired a man to inspect the house.  They seemed to need a guarantee from another human.  The inspector found a few very minor things wrong at the house.  (He was being paid to find things wrong, so of course he had to find things wrong to justify the amount he was being paid by the buyers.) The buyers could have fixed these things themselves but they wanted me to fix them. 


So I just added $7,000 to the price of the house to allow me to fix these things.  I didn't know how much it would cost, so I had to guess at the cost, and I raised the price of the house to cover the cost.


It ended up costing less than $3,000 to fix the items.  The buyers could have saved $4,000 by just fixing these things themselves.


Being wise in your own eyes can cost you money.  But this is the way people of this world live.


Also the people who bought my house wanted a "warranty" which cost $600.  I added this to the cost of the house and these people ended up paying for that warranty themselves.


Recently I had some sound materials added to a car.  They tried to charge me $700 for insurance on the speakers.  I told them I did not want that insurance.  The way I live is this:  If I can afford to replace the item. I don't buy insurance.  If I cannot afford to replace the item, then I will consider insurance, such as on a house or medical supplement.  I had difficulty in getting the store manager to remove the insurance from the cost of the project.  But I insisted and he removed the insurance.


We had exactly the same problem when we purchased the car.  They wanted to add an extended warranty.  We insisted that they remove this.  They really fought us.  But we did get it removed.  The dealer must make a great deal by getting people to buy these "warranties".


Pam's neighbor, Jim, a retired Marine, bought warranty on his house but he could never get them to fix anything.  When it broke, they just said, "The warranty does not cover that."


I manage to have money left over after purchasing something and I keep that money in my savings and pay for the item, if something goes wrong.  I find it is less expensive for me to do it that way.


But I find the people of this world usually want this world to protect them.  And often it ends up costing them more than it would have cost if they had just saved money to replace that item after the lifetime of the item.


Also when something goes wrong, the company issuing the "insurance" sometimes files bankruptcy if there are too many claims and they don't cover the warranty anyway.


It is better to trust in God than to put your trust in humans.


I like to be sure God is showing me to make "that" purchase.  That is my peace.  But this world has no peace in God.  Their peace is in their plans.  It is a very hard way of life.




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