In April this year we heard the exciting news that an interest-free loan had
been advanced. Like most other people we had been looking forward to this for
ten years.
We first joined Liberty Trust after a friend presented the details during a
church service.
Bruce and I started our married life living in a mobile home for four years
while we saved for our first home - a 9metre x 6metre converted barn. We lived
here for 5 years and had two children. Then, 8 months pregnant with our 3rd
daughter we bought our first real house, and it was 3 years later that we were
introduced to Liberty Trust. We are now in our 22nd year of our marriage and
live in Auckland with our 6 children (5 girls and one boy). We have used our
loan to buy an apartment near the University. It is currently tenanted, and we
are envisaging using it for accommodation for our children should they decide
to go to University.
I’d like to relate to you now, the story of how we bought our first “real”
house. It was 1995, and we lived in the South Island, several miles north of
Christchurch. With a third baby on the way we were growing out of our little
home so we decided to look around for a section in order to build a kitset
house. We heard about a local woman who had a section she needed to sell and
made her an offer of $7,000. The first miracle occurred when she accepted this
offer. The purchase of this section used up all our savings and we decided to
consider building several months in the future, once we’d saved a little
more. However, a few weeks later on a shopping trip in Christchurch, I called
in to have a look through a relocatable house, just on a whim really. Stepping
across the threshold I instantly fell in love with this house, and when I
arrived home I wore my poor husband’s ear off, extolling its virtues. Finally
he consented to look at the house, was relatively satisfied with its
suitability and accepted the vendor’s offer of $45k including shifting fees.
Without any legal advice we signed the papers. We hired a contractor to measure
the foundations (each house is unique and foundations must be made perfectly to
fit each one) and to start laying them. It was while he was pouring the
concrete for the very last foundation footing that a stranger arrived.
Now this man had just purchased land in order to plant a vineyard and was
preparing to hire workers from the area. Coincidentally, he had also just
bought a relocatable house. The same house.
During a subsequent discussion it transpired that several months previously
he had bought this house, and signed the purchase agreement, from the elderly
owners for $35,000. Their son, not being satisfied with his parent’s deal,
had gone behind their back and resold the house to us for $45,000. Now he was
attempting to negate the previous contract. Obviously the local landowner had
the only legal contract, but we had foundations in place which would only fit
one house. This was the quandary we found ourselves in. Fortunately the
landowner was also a Christian and did not want to cause an upset in the local
community. He therefore proposed that we cancel our agreement and he proceed
with his agreement to purchase the house. Once this was legally done, he would
on-sell the house to us for our agreed price of $45K. We were obviously
relieved with this outcome and trotted off to the bank to apply for the loan.
Amazingly, in our naiveté we had never considered the bank’s lending
criteria. In our circumstances (i.e. no collateral, and no credit history) they
would only loan against a relocated house once it was on site and connected to
services. Our previous agreement, which we’d signed with no legal advice,
required us to pay the full fee upfront before the house would be uplifted from
its current site. There would have been no way we could have done this, and in
hindsight we could have been sued for breach of contract. But our amazing God,
who knows the end from the beginning, had arranged for another Christian man,
who lived less than 5 miles away, to buy the house for us in advance. The house
itself was 40 miles away, which in itself is a miracle. It could have been sold
to an unknown trader 50 miles in the other direction.
So, the landowner bought the house for $35K, and delivered it to us,
whereupon we connected it to the services, and applied for our mortgage, to buy
the house we already had. God blessed the landowner with a nest-egg towards his
own house, and he blessed us with being able to purchase a house through a
process that only God could have arranged. Doesn’t this make you shake your
head in wonder? What a mighty God we serve!
Bruce & Joanna Hingston