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CONFESSIONS OF A (FORMER) PREPPING JUNKIE

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NIAGARA FALLS, Ontario, January 7, 2023 – It never ceases to amaze me that Jesus went into the wilderness for 40 days and 40 nights without any preps at all. Not even water. And yet, even after having starved for nearly 6 weeks, he still managed to outwit the devil.

How’d he do that?

People are starting to furiously prep again, like they did just before the “pandemic” was declared nearly three years ago. I overheard a woman today in the dollar store breathlessly detailing her latest prepping acquisitions to a friend she’d run into. She said she got most of her ideas from survivalist videos she saw on YouTube. Her friend was ooh-ing and ahhh-ing over her overfilled grocery cart and congratulating her on her alleged prepping acumen.

Meanwhile, in grocery stores all across Canada and the US, shelves are being emptied out of basic necessities like rice, pasta, canned vegetables, etc., causing food shortages for everyone else. That they’re causing food shortages doesn’t seem to faze the preppers one whit. They’re only interested in their own perceived needs.

Jesus, as demonstrated by his 40 days and 40 nights in the wilderness, was no prepper. In fact, he stated his position on prepping quite clearly:

“Therefore I tell you, do not be anxious about your life, what you will eat or what you will drink…. Is not life more than food?”

Jesus was notorious for having only enough supplies at any given time to get him through the day. When he needed food and none was available, he relied on God to supply it. Think of how he fed the thousands who’d come to listen to him preach the sermon on the mount. Even his disciples were at a loss to figure out how so many people could be fed in the wilderness, but Jesus just calmly held up the few fishes and loaves they had, said a silent heartfelt prayer, and God took care of the rest.

Because that’s what it’s all about – letting God do his job while we do ours. Jesus was able to go 40 days and nights in the wilderness with no food or water because God set that task to him and then supernaturally enabled him to do it.

When you prep, what you’re saying is that you don’t trust God to supply for your needs. You’re relying on your own strength and ingenuity and turning your back on God.

You’re showing zero faith in God.

Now before you start huffing and puffing, allow me to let you in on a little secret. I know that God doesn’t want us, his born-again children, to prep, because I was once a prepper myself. I still have around 10,000 pristine tea light candles in storage to prove it (lol). But then God started getting on my case a few years ago. He pointed me to various scriptures to show me that my prepping revealed I had a very low level of faith in him to provide for me in some future SHTF scenario. I got the message loud and clear, and from that point onward I stopped prepping altogether. Instead, because I move around so much and occasionally live out in the boonies, I only buy what I think I’ll need until my next shopping trip.

I know what a buzz it is to prep, because I’ve done it. It has addictive properties, in that no matter how much you buy, you still feel you don’t have enough and have to buy more. Many Christians have become prepping junkies who invest a good portion of their income on food and other supplies they may never actually need.

Imagine if they had instead invested all that money, time, and energy in the Kingdom.

If we follow Jesus, we live as Jesus lived. If he didn’t prep and he relied on God to provide for him, then so should we. I’m not talking to unbelievers here or to nominal Christians – I’m talking to born-again believers. The only prepping we should be doing is spiritual prepping, which means working on our relationship with God, treating other people as we want to be treated, and following ever closer behind Jesus. If unbelievers what to prep, let them. Don’t interfere with them. It’s not our business to tell them what to do. If nominal Christians want to prep, maybe remind them that Jesus was no prepper, and leave it at that. They may take the bait, but whether they do or not is between them and God. It’s out of our hands.

But for us born-again believers, we need to understand that prepping food and other items is not what we do. Prepping shows a lack of faith in God to provide for our needs. We are not in Old Testament times, where prepping was actively encouraged, such as in the time of Joseph, where his job was to prep in order to provide for his family. Let other people prep, if they want to, but we born-agains need to remain faithful to our calling to follow closely behind Jesus, who never prepped, not even when he knew he’d be spending 40 days and 40 nights in the wilderness.

Whatever task God sets for us, he will provide for us ONE WAY OR ANOTHER. The “one way or another” part is really important for us to take on, because, like the disciples who wondered where all the food was going to come from to feed the thousands, we won’t always know how our needs will be provided for. That’s where having faith in God comes in handy. You may not be able to see how you’ll be provided for, but trust that God sees very clearly how it will be done.

And it will be done.

I had to learn the hard way that prepping was a no-no for me, throwing out dozens of cans of expired peaches, cranberry sauce, kidney beans, etc., in the process. God doesn’t want us to prep in that way. If he did, Jesus would have been an exemplary prepper. Instead, Jesus prepped in the only way that mattered – spiritually, and for all eternity, storing up his treasures in Heaven, not on Earth.

He taught us and showed us that we should do the same.

Now, if you have a basement or a garage full of preps, don’t throw them out. Use them and share them. And then resolve within yourself not to buy any more than you’ll need until your next anticipated shopping trip.

As born-again believers, we don’t need to be prepping junkies; we need to be faith junkies.


3 Comments

  1. Dave's avatar Scoop says:

    If you are a pepper only interested in your own body and soul then your neglect of others is not exactly a Christian principle which you are embracing.

    Where this author has gone askew is that a pepper is helping the crisis situation by not being another person out there scavenging and fighting for food that others desperately need. They also have the means to take care of their elderly neighbors and friends and keep them out of the fray.

    And since the author was speaking as if peppers weren’t needed if you have faith in God: it is God Himself that prompted our first peppers: Noah or Joseph (with his coat of many colors) who saved humanity itself (Noah) and an entire nation in the case of Joseph.

    If you have the means and can share your bounty then you are doing God’s work. You become an instrument of God, so to speak. God uses people to provide for us . . . don’t sit back and think that yo are going to get a miracle while you are twiddling your thumbs as if you are completely helpless because God uses us to bestow His grace on others. So I am completely against the conclusion that this author thinks is righteous while belittling those who use God’s bounty to help themselves as well as other. And after all how much help will you be as a weakened, starving member of the masses?

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  2. As born-again believers, we’re no longer in the age of Joseph; we’re in the age of Jesus. If we were still in the age of Joseph, we’d be loving our neighbours and hating our enemies, rather than loving both our neighbours and our enemies; if we were still in the age of Joseph, we’d be demanding an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth, rather than giving and not expecting anything in return. But as born-again believers, we’re in the age of Jesus, and Jesus took nothing with him when he preached the sermon on the mount. He relied on God to provide for the thousands of people who’d come to be healed and taught, and God provided. We’re to follow Jesus’ example in everything we do, including in our purchases. Jesus only ever had just enough for the day (in fact, he taught us to pray to God to provide our daily bread, not our weekly or monthly or yearly bread) and he traveled light.

    I don’t know if you’re a born-again believer, but this article is meant for born-again believers, not for people of the world. If you want to follow the world’s example and build barns to store all your goods in, like the guy in the parable who died the day after he finished building the barns, fill your boots. I’m not telling you what to do. My instruction is not for people of the world. But if you want to follow Jesus’ example of how to live your life (and you want to do so because you’re a follower of Jesus or want to become a follower of Jesus), then you wouldn’t prep because Jesus didn’t prep. It’s that simple. Neither did any of his genuine followers — the ones who stayed with him and became his disciples. Jesus lived by faith and taught his followers to do the same. If God sends someone to us for help, God will provide the help we need to give them. Again, it’s that simple. It’s called “living by faith”. If God sends someone to us for help, God provides the help we need to give them.

    The only prepping we need to do is to make sure our lamps are always full of oil. That’s spiritual prepping, not material prepping.

    If you choose to prep materially, that’s your choice, but Jesus didn’t model it and neither will I.

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  3. As an addendum to the above, people should be reminded that when they take more than they need at any given time (that is, when they prep for 3 months or 6 months or for years), they create an artificial dearth (shortage) of whatever products they’re buying too much of. The shortage means that other people who need those products now won’t be able to get them. The shortages caused by prepping also creates an artificial demand that causes prices to go up. So, from this perspective, the preppers get what they think they’ll need for months to come (good for them! they’re looking out for themselves!), but at what cost? Taking food out of other people’s mouths in the present and causing prices to spike. This is what prepping does in real terms in real time in the real world. Just a reminder.

    Because it creates shortages (literally taking food out of other people’s mouths) and price spikes, prepping is essentially very selfish. It is not virtuous and not forward-thinking. It has no place in the life of a born-again believer.

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