
Is Insurance Biblical? What Joseph’s Grain Silos Teach Us About Protecting Your Family
Is Insurance Biblical? What Joseph, Moses, and a Cowboy Hat Can Teach Us About Preparing for Life
When people first start thinking about life insurance, long-term care, or legacy planning, a quiet question often comes up: especially among people of faith:
“If I trust God, why would I need insurance?”
It sounds spiritual on the surface. But it misses something deeply biblical.
Because all throughout Scripture, God never condemns preparation. He condemns neglect.
Faith in the Bible is not passive. Faith is active. It listens to God’s warning, then takes wise action.
And if you picture faith wearing a hat, it wouldn’t be a flimsy party hat. It would be a sturdy, well-worn cowboy hat: the kind you put on when you’re going to do real work. The kind that protects you from the sun, the wind, and the storms while you take responsibility for what’s been placed in your care.
Let’s look at why insurance, when used properly, is not unbiblical at all: it’s actually a form of faithful stewardship.
Joseph: The First Financial Planner in the Bible
One of the clearest stories about preparation in the Bible comes from Joseph in Egypt.
Pharaoh had a troubling dream: seven fat cows were eaten by seven skinny cows. Joseph, through God’s wisdom, interpreted it as seven years of abundance followed by seven years of famine.
Now here’s the key question:
If God revealed the future, why didn’t He just skip the famine?
Because God’s plan wasn’t just provision: it was preparation.
Joseph didn’t say, “Don’t worry, God will figure it out.”
He built grain silos.
He stockpiled food.
He created a long-term plan.
That wasn’t a lack of faith. That was faith.
Insurance works the same way. We don’t buy it because we expect disaster. We buy it because we know life is unpredictable: and God gave us wisdom to prepare for that reality.
Your life insurance policy is basically a modern grain silo. It stores financial value today, so your family won’t starve tomorrow.
The Red Sea Was a Miracle: But They Still Had to Pack
When God led the Israelites out of Egypt, He performed one of the greatest miracles in history by parting the Red Sea.
But long before the sea opened, God gave them instructions:
Put blood on the doorposts
Pack your belongings
Be ready to leave
Take supplies
God provided the miracle.
The people provided the obedience and preparation.
Imagine someone saying, “I don’t need to pack. God will figure it out.” That would have been foolish, not faithful.
Insurance is the same thing.
You’re not doubting God.
You’re putting your boots on and grabbing your hat before walking into the wilderness.
The Bible Calls It Prudence
One of the clearest verses on this topic comes from Proverbs:
“The prudent see danger and take refuge, but the simple keep going and suffer for it.”
That verse could be printed on the front of every insurance policy.
A prudent person doesn’t panic.
A prudent person doesn’t ignore reality.
A prudent person puts on their hat, looks ahead, and gets ready.
That’s what insurance is: refuge.
Not emotional refuge, but financial refuge for your family when life hits.
Why Life Insurance Is a Love Letter
Life insurance isn’t really about death.
It’s about love.
When you buy a policy, what you’re really saying is:
“I refuse to leave my family in chaos if something happens to me.”
You’re making sure:
The mortgage doesn’t become a burden
The kids can stay in their home
Your spouse doesn’t have to beg, borrow, or go broke
Your legacy doesn’t get wiped out by medical bills or taxes
That’s biblical.
The Bible tells us a good person leaves an inheritance to their children’s children. You don’t do that by hoping things work out. You do it by planning.
The Steward’s Hat
In the Bible, God repeatedly calls people stewards, not owners.
Everything we have: our money, our homes, our families belongs to Him. We’re just managing it for a season.
That means our job isn’t to gamble with it.
Our job is to protect it.
Picture yourself wearing a Steward’s Hat: a strong, dependable hat that says:
“I’m responsible for what’s under my care.”
That’s what insurance is. It’s the hat you put on when you decide that your family matters more than your ego, and your future matters more than your comfort.
Why Not Having Insurance Can Create Burden
There’s something else the Bible talks about a lot: not being a burden on others.
When someone dies without insurance, their family often has to:
Pass the hat at church
Start GoFundMe pages
Sell property
Rely on government programs
That’s not how God designed families to work.
When you plan ahead, you don’t create dependence: you create stability.
Insurance keeps your family off the government and out of financial crisis. That’s far more biblical than leaving them to struggle.
Faith and Planning Are Not Opposites
Some people think faith means ignoring reality.
The Bible disagrees.
Faith is believing God will carry you: but still wearing your seatbelt.
Faith is praying for rain: but planting the crops.
Faith is trusting God with tomorrow: but still buying the policy today.
You can pray for protection and have insurance.
You can trust God and be prepared.
Those two things were never meant to be enemies.
The Legacy Hat
At Lone Star Legacy Insurance, everything we do is about protecting what matters most: your family, your home, your dignity, and your story.
That’s the Legacy Hat.
It’s not flashy.
It’s not trendy.
It’s dependable.
And when the storm comes: whether it’s sickness, accident, or loss : that hat is still on your head, protecting the people you love.
Final Thought
Joseph planned.
Moses prepared.
Proverbs commands prudence.
God honors faith: but He also honors wisdom.
Insurance isn’t unbiblical.
It’s biblical stewardship with a modern tool.
And honestly?
It’s one of the most loving things you can do for the people who wear your last name.
If you’re not sure which hat you’re wearing right now: or which one you need: that’s exactly the conversation I’m here for.
469-425-3221
Guardians of Your Legacy.
Champions of Your Dignity.
