Greetings Steve, et al,
When you pay insurance premiums, you are hedging yourself against disasters that may never come, and you thus lose what you have invested if there is no disaster.
There was no gamble in his actions, as there is in paying insurance premiums.
I fail to see how this is losing anything or gambling in any form. I see it as helping others to pay for their care which they may otherwise be unable to afford. I have no problem with the insurance company making a small profit, percent wise. Insurance is a system of shared burden.
Interestingly, an employee of a local hospital told me something like 40% of all bills go unpaid with the cost being transferred to the bills of other patients. Healthy people who do not use the hospital nor have insurance contribute nothing to the cost.
It is fine to say you would forego treatment even if it cost your life if you are unable to pay, but what if you are unconscious and someone else has taken you to the hospital? Or if you were out of your mind, delirious, with horrible suffering such as I have never before seen in our grandaughter's case, you would be unable to refuse treatment and any sane person would see that you got help. And if you could refuse help, would you do so for your child or grandchild?
This whole controversy reminds me of the local group who refuse all medical help and believe we must depend only on the prayers and anointing of the elders. They have two children dead of treatable causes.
I think the words of the old gospel song "He Set Me Free" have it right: "Daily I'm working, I'm praying too and glory to God I'm going through". We work, we pray, God gets all the credit. All healing is from God. Before our grandaughter's emergency surgery the chief surgeon made it plain she was in great peril. Our pastor prayed with us and the team of surgeons. After surgery the chief surgeon came back and thanked us for praying, for calling on God.
Life is a gift from God and I believe we are accountable for the care of the gift, especially those He has placed in our care.
I also think that your application of Galatians 6:5 is missing Paul's point. Though the words are identical in the KJV, the words for "burden" in verses 2 and 5 are not the same in the Greek. They may be synonyms, carrying the same meaning, but they may be referring to different types of "burdens."
That is the point I was trying to make. Two different Greek words translated "burden" in English. One Greek word referring to a load too heavy for a man to bear and the other to an ordinary burden.
This is why I joined Samaritan Ministries. This, aside from the last sentence, is exactly what it's about. The only difference is that it is individual Christians that help each other instead of unbelievers or through a company.
Samaritan Ministries sounds like a great idea but, although I may be misunderstanding your view, what's the difference in depending on unbelievers to grow our food or make our clothes, which may be made by mistreated people?