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God’s supplemental insurance policy, Part 6

Posted by on Sep 23, 2015 in God's supplemental insurance policy | Comments Off on God’s supplemental insurance policy, Part 6

How blessed is he who considers the helpless; the Lord will deliver him in a day of trouble. The Lord will protect him and keep him alive, and he shall be called blessed upon the earth; and do not give him over to the desire of his enemies. The Lord will sustain him upon his sickbed; in his illness, You restore him to health.”  Psalm 41:1-3

This entry is the last in this series. If you haven’t read the other parts, go ahead and scroll down to read them first. There are qualifications to be met in this policy; you need to determine if you want to pay the price before you take advantage of it.

How blessed is he who considers the helpless… The Lord will sustain him upon his sickbed; in his illness, You restore him to health.

Changes stemming from a fundamental transformation in healthcare, governing style, and societal focus are taking hold all around us. Added to this mix is an upswing in the number and virulence of dangerous diseases and pathogens. Because of that, it is essential, now more than ever, that you take to heart the provisions listed in Psalm 41:1-3.

According to the psalmist, you are blessed when you consider the helpless; the benefits that you receive in return will be a lifeline and refuge in times of instability and uncertainty. By blessing those who are less fortunate, you are investing in a policy with great dividends for your life, both now and in the future. And as you listen to the promptings of the Holy Spirit and step out to assist someone else—whether in word, encouragement, listening, finances, service, or giving of your resources—you will build upon God’s stability and safety in your own life and will sow blessing into your later years.

Folks have expressed concern over what will happen to the quality and ease-of-access to healthcare in the years to come. In light of this, a very interesting provision of policy #PS41-1-3 is “The Lord will sustain him upon his sickbed; in his illness, You restore him to health.”  This provision is supplemental to “The Finished Work” policy (TFW) which was made available to you through the atoning death of Jesus Christ.

In the TFW policy, Jesus bore your sicknesses and carried your diseases, and by His stripes you were healed (see Isaiah 53:4-5, Matthew 8:17, and 1 Peter 2:24). He did so freely and without charge to you. He heals all your diseases (Psalm 103:3b). He sent His Word to heal you and delivered you from your destructions (see Psalm 107:20). He desires that in all respects you prosper and be in health, even as your soul prospers (see 3 John 2).

Now is the time to soak up these truths—truths straight from the Word of God. Yes, the times are challenging and will likely become more challenging still, but God has equipped you—by His Word, by the rich heritage of precept and example handed down through the decades and centuries past by men and women of God, and by the Holy Spirit Himself—to stand fast in the face of every contrary decree against the truth.

Into this mix add Psalm 41. The number of helpless folks could very well increase even more in the near future, and the Lord is poised to help them; He longs to help some of them through you. As He leads you to this one or that, granting you wisdom and insight as to how to help, don’t be afraid to part with of some of your hard-earned resources in the process. The expenditures will be worth it, and the dividends will be rich.

Always hang onto your #PS41-1-3 policy, and keep it up to date. It is a privilege and a pleasure to sow into it as the Lord leads—whether in large amounts or small. While others around you may be in dread, you can smile with confidence at your future as one who keeps your policy current. Will you get sick? Policy #PS41-1-3 states that the Lord will sustain you upon your sickbed. Will you become ill? Policy #PS41-1-3 also declares that in your illness, God will restore you to health.

This amazing policy will remain in effect despite what happens around you. As you purpose in your heart to obey the Lord in considering the helpless, you will be blessed.

  • The Lord will deliver you in the day of trouble
  • The Lord will protect you and keep you alive
  • You will be called blessed upon the earth
  • You will not be delivered to the desires of your enemies
  • The Lord will sustain you upon your sickbed
  • In illness, the Lord will restore you to health.

How blessed are you! You will be sustained; you will be restored!

Dorothy

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God’s supplemental insurance policy, Part 5

Posted by on Sep 22, 2015 in God's supplemental insurance policy | Comments Off on God’s supplemental insurance policy, Part 5

How blessed is he who considers the helpless; the Lord will deliver him in a day of trouble. The Lord will protect him and keep him alive, and he shall be called blessed upon the earth; and do not give him over to the desire of his enemies. The Lord will sustain him upon his sickbed; in his illness, You restore him to health.”  Psalm 41:1-3

This entry is the fifth of a series. If you haven’t read the first four parts, go ahead and scroll down to read them first. There are qualifications to be met in this policy; you need to determine if you want to pay the price before you take advantage of it.

Blessed is he who considers the poor…You will not deliver him to the will of his enemies. (NKJV)

Included in “The Finished Work” policy (TFW), made possible by the shed blood of Jesus, you will find this mission statement: “For this purpose the Son of God was manifested, that He might destroy the works of the devil” (1 John 3:8b). You can rest assured that the living God, your Insurer, is very aware of the schemes, plots, and attacks against you; it was because of your Number One enemy, the devil, that He was manifested in the flesh in the first place—to destroy Satan’s mastery over your life. Remember, everything included in the TFW policy is yours free of charge and paid for in full.

However, even though the TFW policy is more than enough, God has also offered you the supplemental policy, #PS41-1-3, as a help to you, assisting you as you navigate the unseen realm of your faith. And one provision of this policy is that He will not give you over to the will of your enemies.

Have you ever experienced the rage of someone who hated you for no reason? Have you ever been targeted by those who seemed intent on destroying your reputation—or your life?  Although someone may, at this very moment, be zeroing in on you to intimidate or ruin you, there is one thing they haven’t counted on—God will not deliver you to the will of your enemies. God will not leave you or forsake you to their devices.

Here’s how you have already paid into this policy, #PS41-1-3: you’ve given to the poor and have blessed the helpless. You have been sensitive to the leading of the Holy Spirit, and you lent a hand to someone in need. Moved with compassion, you gave your shoulder to a rejected or grieving soul to cry upon; you yielded to the Counselor as you gently spoke His Word to the hurting. You are blessed—you have considered the helpless. You are doing your part.

Blessed is he who considers the poor…You will not deliver him to the will of his enemies.

No matter what strategies or tactics your enemy may employ, God has pre-strategized to give you the edge. You can count on it—God will not deliver you to the will of your enemies.

It is written, “A thousand may fall at your side and ten thousand at your right hand, but it shall not approach you. You will only look on with your eyes and see the recompense of the wicked. For you have made the Lord, my refuge, even the Most High, your dwelling place. No evil will befall you, nor will any plague come near your tent.” (Psalm 91:7-10)

Despite the threats you may see or hear, if you have made the Lord your refuge and the Most High your dwelling place, no evil will befall you. He will not deliver you to the desire of your foe.

It is also written, “‘No weapon that is formed against you will prosper; and every tongue that accuses you in judgment you will condemn. This is the heritage of the servants of the Lord, and their vindication is from Me,’ declares the Lord” (Isaiah 54:17).

No matter how powerful the weapon formed against you may be, it will not prosper. When you are accused in judgment, you yourself will condemn every word spoken. This is your heritage, and your vindication is from God. He will not deliver you to the desire of your enemies.

You, like David of old, may be under extreme attack. “O Lord, how my adversaries have increased! Many are rising up against me. Many are saying of my soul, ‘There is no deliverance for him in God’” (Psalm 3:1-2).

Like David, however, you can proclaim with confidence, “But You, O Lord, are a shield about me, my glory, and the One who lifts my head” (Psalm 3:3).

No matter how many rise up against you, no matter how they mock or jeer, the Lord is a shield for you. He is your glory and the lifter of your head. And He will not give you over to the will of your foes.

I challenge you to meditate often upon these truths. Treasure God’s mighty provision of deliverance in your heart. Boast before Him about His faithfulness toward you as you approach His Throne, and make mention of His personal kindness wherever you go.

You are a blessed one; you consider the helpless. God will not deliver you to the will of your enemies. Bank on it.

Dorothy

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God’s supplemental insurance policy, Part 4

Posted by on Sep 21, 2015 in God's supplemental insurance policy | Comments Off on God’s supplemental insurance policy, Part 4

How blessed is he who considers the helpless; the Lord will deliver him in a day of trouble. The Lord will protect him and keep him alive, and he shall be called blessed upon the earth; and do not give him over to the desire of his enemies. The Lord will sustain him upon his sickbed; in his illness, You restore him to health.”  Psalm 41:1-3

This entry is the fourth of a series. If you haven’t read the first three parts, go ahead and scroll down and read them first. There are qualifications to be met in this policy; you need to determine if you want to pay the price before you take advantage of it.

How blessed is he who considers the helpless…he shall be called blessed upon the earth.

An interesting aspect of the #PS41-1-3 insurance policy is that it provides coverage for the reputation of the holder. I know of no other policy like it.

However, having taught eighth grade for over two decades, I became very familiar with an obsession that gripped many of the youth I taught—and indeed much of the culture: FAME. At any cost. A huge majority of my young teens craved to be famous and wanted to grow up to be known by the masses as the “it” singer, dancer, musician, basketball player, football player, actor, actress, model, or stand-up comic. For so many of them, the district’s mandated career education curriculum was valuable only so long as it could support their dream of popularity and renown. And during my career, as social media became more widespread, the intensity of this obsession only increased.

…he shall be called blessed upon the earth.

Fame, wealth, and popularity add up to being “blessed”, right? In the minds of many Americans (and even Christians), the answer to that question is YES. Yet, how many famous individuals do we hear stating their thankfulness for all their blessings—their fame and fortune—and then they appear nude in their next film, video, or photo shoot, or they end up on the wrong side of the law, cussing out some fan, striking a photographer, resisting a police officer…or taking their own life?

I wonder if we really “get it” as a society anymore.

So many precious, talented young ones from Christian homes have been “blessed” with fame and wealth; yet sadly, their lifestyles all too often decry the God they once said they loved. Instead of despising these individuals, however, my heart groans for them to see truth and to turn back to the God of their childhood. Are the adults in their lives, for fear of judging them, enabling the demise of their talented prodigies as they plunge unchallenged into destruction? Ezekiel 33:6 comes to mind: “But if the watchman sees the sword coming and does not blow the trumpet and the people are not warned, and a sword comes and takes a person from them, he is taken away in his iniquity; but his blood I will require from the watchman’s hand.’”

What does “blessed” mean, then? Perhaps, in light of our culture’s current use of that word, it’s helpful to take a look at what it doesn’t mean.

Jesus said this. “Woe to you when all men speak well of you, for their fathers used to treat the false prophets in the same way” (Luke 6:26). Evidently, having others speak well of you isn’t always the same thing as being called blessed in the earth. Sometimes, popularity is not a great thing; sometimes it is an indication of being an accomplished man-pleaser.

Ask a few of the heavyweights in the Bible about popularity. How about Joseph when he was thrown into the pit and imprisoned? How about David when Saul sought to hunt him down and kill him? How about Moses when he fled into the desert from his fellow Israelites in fear of their rage at his attempted intervention? Ask Jeremiah about popularity when his prophecies were called false by the leaders of his time, and he was placed in stocks (see Jeremiah 20) or thrown into a cistern (see Jeremiah 38). Ask the apostle Paul if he was the most popular preacher of his day. Ask the Lord if He prioritized popularity during the three years of His earth ministry.

Indeed, Paul said this about the sum total of what others would call his personal blessings: “…whatever things were gain to me, those things I have counted as loss for the sake of Christ” (Philippians 3:7). As for being called blessed during his own lifetime, other Christians said of Paul, “His letters are weighty and strong, but his personal presence is unimpressive and his speech contemptible” (see 2 Corinthians 10:10).

How blessed is he who considers the helpless…he shall be called blessed upon the earth…

Discern your own life by God’s standards. You may not always feel blessed; others may not always perceive you as blessed; but if you honor God in considering the helpless, you are blessed whether it is apparent or not.

There’s a stark contrast between the one who ministers—often secretly—to a needy soul and the one who is obsessed with how he appears to others. When you consider the helpless, you will be called blessed upon the earth—perhaps not by others, but most definitely by the Lord. “And your Father who sees in secret will Himself reward you openly” (Matthew 6:4b).

In this age of glitz, glam, and greed for prestige, you are free not to walk in lock-step with the false values by which this culture derives its measure of worth and effectiveness. You are free to obey God, however He may lead you—and as you go, consider the helpless. The door to true blessing—the eternal variety—will open before you. And no man will be able to shut it. Ask Joseph, David, or Moses. Ask Jeremiah or Paul. Ask Jesus Himself.

Consider the helpless, and your blessings will be blessings indeed.

Dorothy

How blessed is he who considers the helpless…he shall be called blessed upon the earth…

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God’s supplemental insurance policy, Part 3

Posted by on Sep 17, 2015 in God's supplemental insurance policy | Comments Off on God’s supplemental insurance policy, Part 3

How blessed is he who considers the helpless; the Lord will deliver him in a day of trouble. The Lord will protect him and keep him alive, and he shall be called blessed upon the earth; and do not give him over to the desire of his enemies. The Lord will sustain him upon his sickbed; in his illness, You restore him to health.”  Psalm 41:1-3

This entry is the third of a series. If you haven’t read the first two parts, go ahead and scroll down to read them first. There are qualifications to be met in this policy; you need to determine if you want to pay the price before you take advantage of it. 🙂

By virtue of receiving Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior, you have an all-inclusive policy called “The Finished Work” policy (TFW), paid for you in full by the shed blood of Jesus. This policy, which actually encompasses every other good gift from God, is accessed by faith. You received Jesus by faith, and you live your life by faith. This is the way God designed things to function.

Although the TFW policy is entirely free of charge to you and covers everything, God, in His wisdom, gave us supplemental insurance, #PS41-1-3, so that we humans, acclimated to this material world, could be assisted in navigating the unseen realm of faith by the very concrete illustration of sowing and reaping: You give; you receive. You help; you receive help. And all the while, our sowing allows Christ to be formed in our hearts (see Galatians 4:19), and as we assist others, God supplies their needs through our love and labor. We have the opportunity to “let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 2:5b) by allowing God to lead us in serving others.

The Father knew that we would face challenges throughout our lives—some small, some large, and some downright epic in proportion. Faith is the substance God provides for us to deal with all of our difficulties. The bottom line is to operate by faith in both the sowing and the reaping parts and to understand that because of Jesus’ shed blood, God freely gives of His provision to deliver us from trouble.

The Lord will protect him and keep him alive.

What a privilege to partake of God’s protection! How many disasters in your life have been averted by this particular provision of His policy? I think that one of the delights in Heaven will be to see every one of those “near misses” played back so each of us can marvel at His wondrous acts during our earth walk.

Although trouble abounds on every hand, I neither endorse nor recommend living a paranoid life. The Word of God trumps every bit of trouble you can find, and God’s policy is clear and specific as to how He is able to help you. When I sense in my spirit that trouble is looming, I pray, plead the blood of Jesus, and ask the Lord to cover every blind spot I may have. And then I go my way, trusting that He is watching over His Word to perform it (see Jeremiah 1:12).

A few years ago on a Monday, I heard this quiet warning deep within me: “Don’t mow your lawn on Thursday.” I basically thought, Huh, and went my way.

I had all but forgotten the whispery admonition; and when Wednesday came, I was not in the mood to mow my lawn (never was, never will be!). It was already 3:30 in the afternoon, I had just returned from a long walk, and a lawn crew was working on the next door neighbor’s yard. My other neighbor’s pit bull was out, ready to lunge and bark through the fence, and I decided it just wasn’t the right time to mow.

And then I heard the voice of the Holy Spirit say very sweetly, “The lawn crew will help you if the pit bull gets through the fence.”

I thought, Oh well, let’s get at it, and mowed my front yard. By the time I was finished with the front, the lawn crew was gone and the dog was inside. I didn’t really want to work on my back yard, but a strange thing took place. Quite honestly, I felt sort of like a machine being remotely controlled; my mind went into sleep mode, so to speak, and my body went through the motions of mowing the back yard; my will seemed suspended. When I finished, I was thrilled to have the task behind me but wondered at the strange way I had felt while completing the job.

The next day, Thursday, I had several places to go that afternoon and had plans to leave the house a little before noon. As I sat at my kitchen table around 10:30 that morning, I peered through a large window at my freshly mowed back yard and realized that I would have been mowing at that exact moment had I not finished the task the day before. A couple of my cats sat looking out the screened porch door into the back yard as I drank coffee and read the Bible.

Just then my reading was interrupted by a loud, prolonged CRACK, and I watched in amazement as a large silver maple in my back yard teetered in slow motion and then crashed across the width of the property, taking out a large branch of another tree on the opposite side of the yard. I looked at the cats; they looked at me; we all looked back at the fallen tree; and then I remembered the whispery admonition, “Don’t mow your lawn on Thursday” and my strange experience of being “remotely controlled” as I completed my mowing job on Wednesday, just the day before. And when I realized that I could have been squashed like a bug under that huge tree, with no one to see or hear me, I did what any sane person would do—I leaped up and danced wildly around the house, praising God, with cats scurrying in every direction!

Your insurance policy, #PS41-1-3, is an essential supplement to your TFW policy. Your Father desires to protect you and keep you alive in this crazy world, and has made provision to do so. Cling to Him in faith, trust Him at all times, and He will make sure you are covered.

As you consider the helpless and sow into their need, this supplemental policy, #PS41-1-3, will be activated and put into effect for you immediately. Trust Go

Dorothy

How blessed is he who considers the helpless; the Lord will deliver him in a day of trouble. The Lord will protect him and keep him alive.

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God’ supplemental insurance policy, Part 2

Posted by on Sep 17, 2015 in God's supplemental insurance policy | Comments Off on God’ supplemental insurance policy, Part 2

How blessed is he who considers the helpless; the Lord will deliver him in a day of trouble. The Lord will protect him and keep him alive, and he shall be called blessed upon the earth; and do not give him over to the desire of his enemies. The Lord will sustain him upon his sickbed; in his illness, You restore him to health.”  Psalm 41:1-3

If you didn’t read yesterday’s entry, scroll down to read it—God’s supplemental insurance policy, Part 1, before you read this one.

This policy, found in Psalm 41, unlike “The Finished Work” policy (TFW) which Jesus purchased for you with His death on the cross, has a prerequisite for you to fulfill before it is activated—you are to consider the helpless. You need to determine if you want to pay this price before you can take advantage of the policy.

The first listed benefit of supplemental policy #PS41-1-3 is deliverance in the day of trouble. Look at the news and you will see a vast array of troubles. This policy is good for every one of them—from sniffles to war.

What is the day of trouble that you are facing? No matter how distressing it may seem, it doesn’t come close to taxing the broad expanse of #PS41-1-3.

To give you an idea of the range that this policy covers, I will give you two lists. The first one includes some types of everyday trouble you will probably face sometime in life.

  • Sickness
  • Surgery
  • Injury
  • Death of a loved one
  • Debt
  • Joblessness
  • Loneliness
  • Ridicule
  • Sudden attack
  • Lies and questioned reputation
  • Rebellious, wayward children
  • Broken heart

The next list includes some of the trouble that’s currently filling the news.

  • Wars
  • Economic woes
  • Unemployment
  • Attacks on First amendment rights
  • Massive immorality
  • Government overreach
  • Stirring of racial division
  • Increased violence
  • Invasion of privacy
  • Identity theft
  • Judeo-Christian culture under attack
  • Widespread governmental corruption
  • Exorbitant national debt
  • US borders broken down
  • Rampant lawlessness
  • Christians persecuted and slaughtered overseas
  • Christians openly ridiculed and brought into lawsuits at home
  • Tax dollars used to support groups that counter biblical thought

Either list could go on and on, but this is a mere sampling of some of the troubles you may face. The good news is this: Every type of trouble in which you may find yourself, your Agent has provided adequate deliverance for you no matter what it is. In addition to “The Finished Work” policy (TFW), if you have considered the helpless, you have yet another avenue through which to access deliverance from trouble.

The Lord will deliver him in a day of trouble.

Rest assured that if you’ve helped someone else out in their day of trouble, you can cry out for the Lord’s help the very minute you sense that trouble is near. It’s not that you deserve His help; it’s just that He’s ready to extend it to you in ample supply. Remember, however, even if you haven’t considered the helpless, you can still receive help in trouble through TFW policy, paid for in full by the blood Jesus. The supplemental #PS41-1-3 policy merely gives you an added “point of contact” faith-booster, empowering you to persevere confidently until the trouble is routed.

I challenge you to apply this policy—#PS41-1-3—by faith to your daily life. In case you haven’t noticed, the times are escalating into increasing levels of trouble. Now is the time to ratchet up your faith so that you can live victoriously despite the chaos around you. Now is the time to build your faith for deliverance from trouble. Because of that, now is the time to consider the helpless.

Here’s to all those precious souls you will help. And here is to your deliverance from trouble!

Dorothy

How blessed is he who considers the helpless; the Lord will deliver him in a day of trouble. Psalm 41:1-3

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God’s supplemental insurance policy, Part 1

Posted by on Sep 16, 2015 in God's supplemental insurance policy | Comments Off on God’s supplemental insurance policy, Part 1

How blessed is he who considers the helpless; the Lord will deliver him in a day of trouble. The Lord will protect him and keep him alive, and he shall be called blessed upon the earth; and do not give him over to the desire of his enemies. The Lord will sustain him upon his sickbed; in his illness, You restore him to health.”  Psalm 41:1-3

Several years ago I discovered an insurance policy in the Bible that far surpassed the one I enjoyed as a teacher. I didn’t abandon the policy through my school, but I did take a serious look at the policy outlined in the Word of God. It was an offer I couldn’t refuse.

A quick survey of the benefits listed in this policy—spelled out in Psalm 41:1-3—made the price of securing it well worth the expenditure. I call it Policy #PS41-1-3.

Policy #PS41-1-3 benefits:

  • Deliverance of policy holder in a day of trouble
  • Protection and life sustenance for policy holder
  • Policy holder will be called blessed upon the earth
  • Policy holder will not be handed over to the will of his/her enemies
  • Policy holder will be strengthened while upon sickbed
  • Policy holder will be restored to health when ill

Do you like what you see? I sure did, and I set up an appointment to discuss it with my Agent as quickly as I could. He assured me that this policy was lifelong in coverage, and that the disbursements would occur as often as I had need. This policy also provides for limitless payouts—and is good toward rewards after death.

I signed up immediately with clear instructions from my Agent that this policy was actually supplemental to my primary policy called “The Finished Work” policy (TFW). He told me that I already qualified for the TFW through my status as a believer in Christ. The way I look at it, no matter what happens in this crazy world, I am covered by my Insurance Agent with policies—each of which include lifelong grace periods.

Jesus paid for “The Finished Work” policy on Calvary, and it is active in your life free of charge if you have received Jesus as your Lord.

However, supplemental policy #PS41-1-3 does include fees that you pay as your Agent directs.

In a nutshell, this is the price that you are charged: consider the helpless. My Agent made it very clear to me that this kind of giving was different than the tithe; neither was it an extra offering thrown into the plate on Sunday morning. The payment toward this policy is what the Old Testament called “alms”.

Alms are money, food, or other donations given to the poor or needy. If you sign up for this supplemental policy, your Agent will quickly direct you to individuals who have need, and He will have you target them with cash, food, or other necessities. He may send you on stealth operations; He may enlist you in face-to-face contact. He may give you an ongoing project; He may thrust you into one-time blitz assignments. Sometimes your target is a friend, a relative, or an acquaintance; at other times it is a complete stranger. Capital may involve your favorite coat; it could be lunch money or a ten or a twenty; it might be paying vet bills or rent; it may be money for a car. This Agent is a shrewd Financier, and He knows the best way for you to invest into your policy.

I am sold on this supplement to “The Finished Work” policy. Talk to my Agent; He’ll set you up with an offer you can’t refuse!

Dorothy

How blessed is he who considers the helpless… Psalm 41:1a

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