HomeDailyFriday: Further Thought – “Debt – A Daily Decision”    

Comments

Friday: Further Thought – “Debt – A Daily Decision” — 6 Comments

  1. I got baptized into SDA in 2011 through watching Hope tv. Since 2011 to date, I have been studying every adult Sabbath school Bible study guide and at some times a teacher in my units. This week lesson, ‘Debt A Daily Decision’ appears to be more interesting to me. Probably because this is the only lesson that is different from every other lesson I have learned. Every other lessons teaches the Bible and how to obey it but this week lesson talks about me and how I can manage my finances to the glory of God. They say, ‘all work no play makes Jack a dull boy’. At this point I want to conclude that when we are writing our lessons, we should at times write to counsel the readers.

  2. Being out of debt and within our financial means is good for our health. We do need to watch over our gains. “Easy comes easy goes!”
    It is important to give to our family a good example on this matter. Managing money is a talent that we are all invited by God to do well! And this can reflect in our state of mind and consequently in our bodies. God wants us all to be balanced in everything!

  3. Remember that in our life today the one and only great debt, and it is a debt that we has human being can not repay, is what Jesus did for sinners at Calvary. This is the motivation and reason we are to love our brothers and sisters in the same way we are to love God. And it has nothing to do with the last paragraph of Wednesday lesson.

  4. I enjoyed this lesson because of the practicality of it. We live in the world and have to be reminded that we should not follow the financial habits of the world. It is simple: If you don’t have cash for whatever you want to buy, you can’t afford it. Save the money. Don’t put the expense on a credit card. Buying a house is an exception. Some would say buying a car is also an exception, but my husband and I have purchased three cars by saving the money and writing a check. We have not had a car loan since 2004. We have also paid off two houses. One house we lived in for 19 years and the other we have lived in for 3 and a half. Get a mortgage loan with a 15 year term instead of 30 years. We got a loan with only a 10 year term on our second house and paid it off in 3 and a half years. How did we do it? God’s blessings and delayed gratification. As Dave Ramsey says, ” Act your wage!” Blessings

Leave a Reply

Please read our Comment Guide Lines and note that we have a full-name policy. Please do not submit AI-generated comments!

Notify me of follow-up comments via e-mail. (You may subscribe without commenting.)

Please make sure you have provided a full name in the "Name" field and a working email address we can use to contact you, if necessary. (Your email address will not be published.)

HTML tags allowed in your comment: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>

At a camp meeting 40 years later, I happened to see Dr. I. demonstrating some kind of health product, if I remember correctly. (In my mind, I see only the image of him, much older, but still looking much like he did when I was a student, with a friend by my side.) I lingered a little but did not introduce myself. I briefly wondered whether he recognized me. I’m fairly sure that I was as recognizable to him as he was to me.

Had he changed? Or did he still feel superior in his “humility”? Should I talk to him? I didn’t know how to approach him, and was busy with friends. I still don’t know whether I should have said something. (Maybe I’m just a coward.)

If God wants him to see my story, his and my identity are clear enough in this post, that God can direct him to it.