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Favorfloats is Stopping Loan Payback Fights Between Christian Friends and Christian Families
Contact: Dr. Phil Jay, 651-263-1128

MINNEAPOLIS, Dec. 22, 2014 /Christian Newswire/ -- "And he will answer, 'I tell you the truth, when you refused to help the least of these my brothers and sisters, you were refusing to help me'" (Matthew 25:45). Since many people this Christmas will go into debt or max out their credit cards, come January when they need to make ends meet, they will turn to friends and loved ones to borrow money. However, according to Dr. Philip Jay, Chairman of Favorfloat Corporation, "Unfortunately, many Christians who try their best to put Christ's principle of helping others into practice are paid back with ingratitude."

In response, Dr. Jay's Favorfloat (www.favorfloat.com) is a free, worldwide service making it possible for friends, family, lovers, coworkers, and others—perhaps only acquaintances—to feel secure and at peace in exercising their compassion to lend money to help out the people they care about in life.

According to Dr. Jay, "We have all heard horror stories illustrating why we should not loan money to friends, relatives, and people we are in relationships with, because they won't pay you back, thereby causing friction that ends the relationship. However, these stories only support the rational point of view. We are humans. If we care about our friends, lovers, brothers, sisters, and our coworkers, then the fact that a relationship exists between you and a friend or between you and a relative or between you and a loved one creates an obligation to help each other in the best way possible. A relationship, whether with a friend, lover, or family member, must have some kind of vulnerability to becoming lost. In the absence of such vulnerability, the friendship or relationship . . . is only an empty shell."

Dr. Jay further asked, "Who among you have loaned money to a friend, boyfriend, girlfriend, brother, sister, mother, dad, or coworker and he or she did not pay you back? Let's turn it around; how many of you have sought financial help from a friend, family member, coworker, or a loved one and he or she hesitated or did not help you because they feared that it would destroy the relationship if you didn't pay back?"

Favorfloat now provides a way out. As Dr. Jay explains on the website, "Our dearest one is not the person who mercifully gives you tissues to wipe away your tears, but one who attempts to stop your hardship from rising to the point of tears." Visit Favorfloat at www.favorfloat.com save the link among your favorites should a time come when a friend or a loved one seeks to borrow money from you, and forward it to all of your email contacts. Be a Dearest One to somebody today.