10-07-2021, 01:16 PM
In case you haven't noticed, the economy is already on the decline. The term "economic collapse" should not conjure the image of something that suddenly halts everywhere at once. It's going to slowly break down in places, and in various sectors of economic activity. I've been praying a lot about what I might do to prepare given the resources at hand.
Yesterday, the Lord told me to go to Sam's and buy two boxes of printer paper. It's not like I had anything else I needed to do, so I went to Sam's just for that alone. The stuff we usually buy had gone up to $30 each for a big box of 5000 sheets. I didn't really want to spend that kind of money. But off to one side was this little section on the shelf with just a few boxes of another brand that was labeled "closeout." It was half-sized boxes of 2500 sheets at less than $9 each. I knew that's what I was looking for, so I grabbed two boxes.
I felt at peace about it when I got home and shoved them into a corner. With my new printer, I've been playing catch-up with stuff I revised and posted, but hadn't printed off my own copy yet. I wanted to wait until the Lord provided a more suitable printer. My wife's would have been taxed by that kind of high page count. The one I got with an donor's help the other day is just dandy for what I'm doing.
I'm trying to have a full set of Bible commentary on the shelf for when computer devices will be useless. I'm also collecting images that help to clarify the background of certain Bible passages. Sometimes it helps a great deal if you can form a mental image of the terrain for those events. For example, a good shot of Ebal and Gerizim standing near Jacob's Well, and where Sychar sits in relation to them, makes the story of the Woman at the Well come alive.There are lots of pictures not yet published in books, along with maps and so forth, that are worth saving. I've done a screen-grab from Google Earth in 3D mode of famous archaeological sites of the Bible a couple of times. All of this makes Bible teaching a lot better.
As always, do what your convictions tell you to do.
Yesterday, the Lord told me to go to Sam's and buy two boxes of printer paper. It's not like I had anything else I needed to do, so I went to Sam's just for that alone. The stuff we usually buy had gone up to $30 each for a big box of 5000 sheets. I didn't really want to spend that kind of money. But off to one side was this little section on the shelf with just a few boxes of another brand that was labeled "closeout." It was half-sized boxes of 2500 sheets at less than $9 each. I knew that's what I was looking for, so I grabbed two boxes.
I felt at peace about it when I got home and shoved them into a corner. With my new printer, I've been playing catch-up with stuff I revised and posted, but hadn't printed off my own copy yet. I wanted to wait until the Lord provided a more suitable printer. My wife's would have been taxed by that kind of high page count. The one I got with an donor's help the other day is just dandy for what I'm doing.
I'm trying to have a full set of Bible commentary on the shelf for when computer devices will be useless. I'm also collecting images that help to clarify the background of certain Bible passages. Sometimes it helps a great deal if you can form a mental image of the terrain for those events. For example, a good shot of Ebal and Gerizim standing near Jacob's Well, and where Sychar sits in relation to them, makes the story of the Woman at the Well come alive.There are lots of pictures not yet published in books, along with maps and so forth, that are worth saving. I've done a screen-grab from Google Earth in 3D mode of famous archaeological sites of the Bible a couple of times. All of this makes Bible teaching a lot better.
As always, do what your convictions tell you to do.