How Financially Prepared are You?

“ Do not boast about tomorrow, for you do not know what a day may bring forth.” ~ Proverbs 27:1
There are seasons in my life when I have dreams on a regular basis. Sometimes I know they are insignificant and other times I know I need to make note. Over a year ago I did have a dream that has remained with me until this day.
In part of the dream I was with a group of people beginning to load a raft. A storm was raging around us with heavy rains and high winds. I knew we were headed downstream and needed to be prepared for what was ahead. I found some large plastic containers, similar to large suitcases, and we began to fill them with medical supplies, food and other items critical to our survival and that of others. We tied them tightly around the edge of the raft and to one another for extra security. As we undertook these tasks, the wind had increased in strength and the waves had begun splashing over the edge of the raft. I then woke up shortly thereafter.
The dream released a sense of urgency within me that we need to be prepared for what lies ahead. Sometime later I found myself wondering about the meaning of the dream as the pandemic hit and whether this was in part the outworking of the dream. My further musings made me ponder how prepared were we actually headed into the pandemic and how are we doing financially over a year later.
The verse above reminds us never to presume on tomorrow as we never know what tomorrow might bring. If someone had told me two years ago we would be in a pandemic, I would have never believed it. Yet, here we find ourselves fourteen months into a global crisis, and we are not sure when it will end.
So, how prepared were you? Many of us heard over the years about the need to get out of debt but had never really actually taken note of it and changed our habits and lifestyle.
Thankfully, my wife and I had the opportunity to learn a few years ago how important it really is to be prepared for the unexpected. Even now, we continue to learn and apply important principles in our financial discipleship journey. Living within our means, sorting out what truly are our needs from wants, decluttering our home of extra ‘stuff’, getting and staying out of debt, and ensuring we have extra funds set aside for emergencies that could be short-term, one-time events or situations lasting much longer.
I am not here to say things are going to get worse, but I do want to challenge each of you to give serious consideration to the things you have heard for some time, but have never applied to your habits and lifestyle in the area of your finances. Time is short and planning is long.
Carpe diem!









