I have a friend who has always been the one that people call
when they needed something – a meal, a ride, a hospital visit – but she is a
widow, in her 80s, and her body is not as sound as it used to be. The day is
coming when she will be the one who needs a meal, a ride, a hospital visit. She
has confided that she misses the sense of purpose she once had.
Does the psalmist fear that God will forsake him just
because he has grown too old to be useful? I suspect his concern involves his
awareness that there is so much to do and so little time. Some senior Christians may need to be reminded that their works
don’t save them, but most have spent their lives in service because they are saved, not as their
hope of obtaining salvation. It is their spiritual act of worship – and so now
they are faced with learning a new way to worship.
What words of comfort can we offer to aging saints whose
days of productive service are dwindling away? We might remind them that they,
as older people, have “a peculiar privilege: the chance to see God’s
faithfulness over a lifetime.”* Their lifetime of faithfulness can
be a testimony to God’s faithfulness, a legacy to pass on to the next
generation. A senior saint should also recall how blessed she was by being a
blessing to others and how she has become a vehicle of blessing by allowing
others to serve her. This is truly the circle of life!
A final reminder for every stage of life: God loves us
because we are his, not for what we do and not for how we feel. Busyness – even
in Kingdom work – distracts us from developing our relationship with the Lord.
Feelings - of guilt, inadequacy, purposelessness, self-pity, unworthiness -
hinder our spiritual growth. As we age
and weaken physically, we should rejoice that, spiritually, we are now in the
growing season.
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