This year has really been a challenging year for me. I
suppose I have felt my humanity more this year than in any year previous. For
one thing, I am spending a lot of time with medical professionals.
Now in and of itself that is not anything unusual. I have
always spent a lot of time with the people of the health care industry.
I served as a Chaplain at the Memorial
Southwest Hospital
in Houston , Texas and in that capacity often found
myself as a counselor to Physicians as they struggled with personal and
professional life decisions. It was during this aspect of my ministry that I
really learned to appreciate the challenges they have balancing their personal
and professional lives not to mention the life and death issues with which they
dealt daily.
I also, through my ministry, had a social interaction with
many Md's. We had worked together on special community projects; we had
worshipped together in church; we had socialized as friends. In all of those I
related to them as colleagues, acquaintances or friends depending on what we
were engaged in at the time. I rarely stood in awe of them as persons because I
knew them in their humanity. I did however, marvel at some of how they related
to the world around them; how they utilized their skills; and in some cases the
depth and breadth of their faith.
However, this year I have not only been seeing them in all
the ways I did in the past but now I have taken on a new relationship with the
health care professionals in my life. Now I am a patient. I have a Family
Practice Doctor whom I see frequently both professionally and socially; I have
a Cardiologist who keeps up with my cardiovascular diseases; I have a Urologist
who monitors my prostate and other lower abdominal organs. In fact, I have an appointment at the end of the
month for a prostate biopsy; I have an Ophthalmologist who keeps my one good
eye as healthy as possible; and, a Pulmonolgist who makes sure I am breathing.
Every one of which tell me at just about
every office visit, "Remember, you're not a kid anymore."
I recognize that all of life is a journey and each stage has
its own particular challenges. However, the "sunset years" have a
unique set of challenges for the person who has always been the leader and the
problem solver. The sunset years present you with challenges outside of your
expertise and beyond your ability to control.
In a lot of ways Joshua's words to Israel as they entered the promised
land apply. He told them that because they "had never passed this way
before" they were to space themselves so they never lost sight of the Ark
of the Covenant lest they loose their way. As we enter the Sunset Years of our lives we really do need
to keep our focus on the Lord because in a unique way we have never passed this
way before.
In the bulk of my life I was active, that is, I initiated
actions to achieve desired results and to a large degree was successful in
those efforts. As I get older I
experience more and more things over which I have little or no control. With greater frequency things that I did not
knowingly initiate interrupt my plans and demand my attention. As each year passes I find myself more and
more reacting than acting.
Oddly enough, as my body has begun to yield its virility to
the ravages of time my mind is discovering a new birth of efficiency and
creativity - as my friend John Blanchard once said to me, "I am having a
new burst of mental prowess." My thinking is clearer than at any other
time in my life. It is less influenced
by popular culture and more by my own walk with the Lord, study of the
Scripture and interaction with people from all walks of life. And most of all
it has been liberated from what is "politically correct" to follow my
reason to what is a Biblical, moral and ethical conclusion.
It reinforces something my father told me early on in life,
"Youth is wasted on the young, when I was young and physically vibrant I
wasn't experienced or smart enough to know what to do with that virility and
now that I have both the experience and understanding to know what to do
with it (my virility) I no longer possess that virility." Little wonder that God said, "The glory
of young men is their strength, And the honor of old men is their gray
hair." (Proverbs 20:29)
I think I understand now more than ever why older Christians
seem to have a preoccupation with
their heavenly home. It is in old age that you really do realize that
"heaven on earth" is fleeting. If you are blessed with longevity you
will inevitably discover that what the world gives through hard work,
creativity, etc it takes away in old age. Or, as someone said, most of us spend
our youth getting wealth and we spend our wealth trying to keep our health in
old age.
In 1983 I read Edith Schaefer's book The Tapestry: The Life
and Times of Francis Schaefer. Since that time I have viewed my short
appearance on this planet as small part of a great Tapestry God is making with
the lives and experiences of His people. My weaving is fast coming to an end
but shall always be a part of the whole, namely the whole Family of God.
Jesus said: "Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth
and rust doth corrupt, and where thieves break through and steal: But lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where
neither moth nor rust doth corrupt, and where thieves do not break through nor
steal: For where your treasure is, there will
your heart be also."
This
is why it is so important that we make good use of the years of our physical
strength and not spend all of our limited time and waning strength trying to gather
wealth and worldly fame. It is vital that we spend some of that time on
building a meaningful personal relationship with Jesus Christ and other people.
It
is nice to have some of the "good things" and comforts this life
affords those who prosper materially. But we must never forget that life does
not consist of the abundance of things we possess in this life. As one wise
Evangelist once said, "You'll never see a hearse pulling a U-Haul trailer
as it makes its way to the cemetery."
Someone
asked at Cornelius Vanderbilt's funeral how much wealth he left behind. The
rejoinder came back, "Everything."
For those who have accumulated great wealth in this life and wondering
what should become of it when you come to the end of life's journey I have a
suggestion. Put it to work where it can continue to bless people until Jesus
comes.
Specifically
I'd ask you to consider Mission Dignity where it will
be used to allow those who served God
faithfully without accumulating wealth of any significance to live out their
Sunset years with a modicum dignity. I
saw a lady the other day who was 107 years old and mentally as sharp as ever
but living in a nursing home surrounded by people suffering from dementia. I
wondered to myself as they celebrated her longevity, "How does she do
it?" She deserves, no, they all
deserve better than that and we have it in our power to give them better than
that. Paul speaking of caring for our families made it clear to young Timothy
that, "Anyone who does not provide for their relatives, and especially for
their own household, has denied the faith and is worse than an
unbeliever." (I Tim 5:8).
Do
I fear death? I don't think that I do. I was at the death's door in 2005 and
found that it was not frightening. Obviously I did not die but during the whole
process from the initiation of my "widow maker" heart attack while on
a cruise ship in Galveston; to my ride in the ambulance; through my time in the
emergency trauma unit; and until I woke up in my hospital room I experienced no
fear.
Do
I fear dying? Maybe! I suppose it depends on the nature of the dying process. Someone
once said there are no good ways to die but I believe some ways are better than
others. I want what all people and especially Christians want and that is to go
to sleep in my own bed and wake up in God's eternal city.
Do I have any fears as I
walk toward death? I do! I fear failing my Lord, myself and/or my
friends. But my greatest fear as I make that inevitable march toward the grave is
the one Jesus spoke of to Simon Peter when he said to Peter, "Very truly I
tell you, when you were younger you dressed yourself and went where you wanted;
when you are old you will stretch out your hands, and someone else will dress
you and lead you where you do not want to go."
Quiet
frankly, I fear that while having my full mental capacity but because of the
frailty of my flesh being relegated to sharing a ten
foot by ten foot room with two other people, i.e., I fear the "Nursing
Home." I've been in and out of them all my life and my mother worked in
one when I was a child. Some have been better than others but I have to be
truthful and tell you that I find little that is redemptive about any of them. They represent our culture's last resort for
our elderly. That's a whole other conversation that I'll save for another time.
I
just know that my sister and I moved heaven and earth to keep my mother and
father out of them and we succeeded to a large measure. I can only hope someone
does the same for us in our last days. I want to go out of this world in my own
bed surrounded by the people who I have loved and who have loved me.
The
conclusion of the matter for me is that growing old is both a blessing and a
curse. Old age is just the last part of something that I have been doing
something that began when my mother conceived me. While I am not particularly
anxious about taking the last few steps of that journey "I'll fear no evil
for Thy rod and Thy staff the comfort me . . . and I shall dwell in the house
of the Lord forever."
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