"The silver-haired head
is a crown of glory, if it is found in the way of righteousness"
(Proverbs 16:31).
As soon as we are born,
everyone begins to get older. Have you ever plucked out a gray hair? Our
sensual culture worships youth and good looks more than virtue and good
sense. This began with those who came of age in the 1960's, saying,
"Don't trust anyone over 30." Those spoiled baby boomers have had to
revise their mantra, pushing it ever higher as they themselves age.
However, there is more to life than being young, looking good, and
having a good time.
In the Biblical world,
gray hair was a badge of honor, not a sign of being decrepit. "The
splendor of old men is their gray head"
(Proverbs 20:29).
It represented maturity, hard-won experience and wisdom by living long
and learning well from God's university of hard knocks. God's purpose
for our lives is our spiritual and moral development, "so we might share
in His holiness"
(Heb
12:10).
It is not how long we
live, but how well we live before God that counts. "Teach us to number
our days, that we may present to you a heart of wisdom"
(Psa
90:12). As the
years roll by, we never retire from the Lord's service. Caleb was one of
the faithful few to the divine vision to conquer Canaan with God's help
against all odds. He remained active and alert to the end, with youthful
exuberance to take on new challenges
(Joshua 14:6-15).
"Paul, the aged," still wrote encouraging letters during his final Roman
imprisonment
(Philemon 1:9). To
keep his mind sharp and occupied, Paul was still studying toward the
very end of his life
(2
Timothy 4:13).
Victor Hugo said, "Winter is on my head, but spring is in my heart."
Someone has said,
"Experience is what you get after you don't need it." No, if we keep
active in the Lord's work, we can use our experience somewhere in the
future, even if it is teaching someone younger
(cf.
Titus 2:3-5).
Contrast this with some elders who may think serving as an elder is a
lifetime appointment to a board of directors, regardless of their
declining fitness of age and ability to execute the "hands on" work of
shepherding the flock.
David Lipscomb, long-time
editor of the Gospel Advocate and co-founder of David Lipscomb
University, knew the Bible in his day about as well as anyone. In the
very last months of his life at 84, he would sit in his rocking chair
and study his Bible for up to 2 hours daily. In 1916, a year before his
death, he wrote, "We have long ago passed the threescore and ten years
allotted to man on earth.... As we approach the end, the more we study
the word of God, the more anxious we are to meet him, knowing we have
opposed all innovations and changes upon His order at every point along
the line of duty drawn by Him" (Gospel Advocate, 1916, p. 1).
May this be our epitaph,
that we were faithful to the Lord and His Word, as we get older until
the very end of our life on earth. It is better to wear out than rust
out in the Lord's service. Christians should not detest getting older.
As we progress through the Lord's school of discipleship, it brings us
closer to graduating to that heavenly shore where there are delights
with our Lord forever more
(2 Cor
4:16-18). The sick
and physically weak are then forever healthy and strong.
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