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Today I did something I never expected to at the age of 39. As if it wasn’t bad enough my mother in law could tease me about being on medicare. Today I was able to call her and give her a really big laugh. I signed up for my medicare part D prescription drug coverage. Which program did I choose? The AARP plan, that’s right, the American Association or Retired Persons. At 39 I have AARP medicare Part D, and I chose that simply because it was the best plan for me and my medications, not for any other reason. So allow the teasing to begin.
For those of you who don’t know how medicare part D works, there is something called THE GAP! This is when you reach your maximum allowed coverage pay out and you pay for all of your medications. This is also known as “the donut hole”. So I am now in phase 1, or approaching the gap, and not looking forward to it! No one on medicare part D does. If however it really was about donut holes, it might not be so bad, maybe that’s why someone coined the phrase “donut hole”, so it wouldn’t sound so bad. Wouldn’t it be nice if everything bad in life had a name that made it sound better. Now once you reach the gap, you can eventually bridge this gap, by paying enough in the gap to reach the next phase, called catastrophic coverage. At the point part D kicks back in, and you are nearly fully covered.
So after I signed up, I had this term “The Gap” stuck in my head, and I thought to myself “in reality we are all approaching the gap”. This gap has to do with the gap between us and God however, and for some of us the gap has been bridged, and for others it hasn’t. Why is that? The gap has been bridged with the required payment, however, like medicare part D, we must sign up to get the coverage, it isn’t automatic. The coverage is provided by Christ who died on the cross for us, and that death pays the penalty needed to bridge the gap. That gap is caused by our sin, and we must confess that sin and admit our need for the coverage to receive it. Problem is, not every one is willing to admit their sin, they like to call sin different things, give it nicer names or ignore it all together. Unless someone admits the gap exists, confesses their sin, trusts in Christ to bridge the gap through His death on the cross, the gap will remain.
I know the gap exists, but for me the gap has been covered, Christ has covered it for me. Only in Him can it be covered. Unlike with medicare part D, we cannot pay enough to bridge the gap on our own. If Christ has not bridged the gap for you ask yourself if you desire for the gap to be bridged. I encourage you to do so by going to the Lord and recognizing that the gap exists, admitting that your sin has created it, and trusting in Christ’s death to bridge it.
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Neat analogy!
Comment by Lisa Mongold — January 4, 2010 @ 4:54 pm