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Friday, January 1, 2021

I Kissed Retirement Goodbye!

Wow--here's an article that is just too good to not share with whomever may be reading this blog from time to time.  Please read it, take it to heart, and then do something about it--especially if you are in or heading for those often dreamed about and long-hoped for "retirement years".

This article will help you not to waste your life by wasting this retirement you've been anticipating for the last--who knows how many years.  It might just help break you out of that fragility mindset some folks get themselves caught up in where all you think you're good for is sleeping in, visiting the grandkids, and reading them books about Barney.  Now, there is nothing wrong with that at all, but there is so much more you can do with your retirement, your resources, and your life experience walking with the Lord.  So please for the sake of Christ and those He has given His blood to save--Don't piddle your life away in the last lap.  Finish strong and finish well!  

Here's the article, entitled: Kissing Retirement Goodbye by John Ensor, who is the Executive Director of Urban Initiatives for Heartbeat International and author of The Great Work of the Gospel, which is a great read about what God has accomplished for us through the Gospel.

I kissed retirement goodbye—at least the kind traditionally planned for in America. My mother has finally persuaded me that there are better things to do than "just retire" when I reach her age.  

In August, I wrote about caring for family with end-of-life challenges.  My mother, at 78, started to go blind while on a mission trip to Mongolia.  Her sight was saved through high-dose steroids, which tripped other health concerns which were compounded by the discovery of breast cancer.  The subsequent surgery left her fragile.  She fell and added injury to sickness and disease.  We gathered with her in August to discuss how to care for her as she enters what I call “the frowning years.”  Ecclesiastes simply calls them the "evil days", when: 

"the years draw near of which you will say, “I have no pleasure in them”; before the sun and the light and the moon and the stars are darkened and the clouds return after the rain in the day when the keepers of the house tremble, and the strong men are bent, and the grinders cease because they are few, and those who look through the windows are dimmed, and the doors on the street are shut—when the sound of the grinding is low, and one rises up at the sound of a bird, and all the daughters of song are brought low—they are afraid also of what is high, and terrors are in the way; the almond tree blossoms, the grasshopper drags itself along, and desire fails, because man is going to his eternal home, and the mourners go about the streets." (Ecclesiastes 12:1-5).

The point of this description is to “remember your creator in the days of your youth” (12:1) while you can taste and see the goodness of God while all your senses are in full function, and your strength is still intact.  Savor him while you can—before your teeth fall out (the grinders cease) and your eyes fail (the windows are dimmed) and your bones ache with every move (the grasshopper drags itself along); before the fears of dying assail you and sap your strength and try your faith one last time before they are swallowed up in victory.  

Evidently, at 78, my mother is still in the days of her youth.  Since August, she has prayed and fought for her health but just last week she left for Quetzaltenango, Guatemala.  She joined a team of trainers for a Leadership Development Conference in which 90 teachers from around the country took their school vacation week to learn to study and teach the Bible through an inductive-study method.  Seven more teachers planned on being there.  But my mother writes, “They did not get here because their charter bus was ambushed by robbers and the driver was killed.”  

In spite of such things, she writes of the thrill of watching the participants learn how to discover the Bible's unsearchable riches.  She concludes, “I have been so blessed to be here, that at times I think I will burst!” 

Evidently, she intends to die with her mission boots on as she faces down those “frowning years.” 

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