THUMBS UP FOR LONGEVITY?
(In my 92nd year)
LONGEVITY is not an
achievement for which anyone should pride himself. It is a cherished
GIFT given and a FAVOR granted by our generous God who determines
the measure of our years. It is a season of indeterminate length and
a privileged time.
The anticipated number of our years varies with centuries past and with cultures, geographic locations, heredity, and many other factors. The biblical Methuselah lived 969 years. In the dentist's waiting room recently I picked up a magazine with an article about a woman in Italy who is now the oldest in the known world at 110. No one today is pushing one thousand, although longevity to a greater or lesser degree is still alive and well these days.
Longevity is defined as
great duration of life span but not a specific number of years on
the calendar. In real time, age it is irrelevant to longevity,
although brevity of life is its opposite. Whatever one's age in
earth-time, it is the last stage of our lives individually,
notwithstanding its duration. At some point, even longevity
terminates. It's not really the last
stage of life,
however. Eternal life for the soul comes after either longevity or
brevity on Planet Earth. A person may be experiencing longevity in
one's fifties, or sixties, or seventies, or eighties.
In my human family tree
I am heir mostly to brevity
of life. My paternal grandfather in Europe died at 41, my father at
59, my maternal grandfather at 39, my maternal grandmother at 58.
When I went through lung cancer surgery at age 65, my surgeon told
me afterward that there was nothing I could do or he could do to
assure me that I would survive even to an optimistic five year mark.
He said that it was entirely in the hands of God and His plan for my particular
life.
I'm in my 92nd year. I think that I qualify to have reached longevity by the loving generosity and plan of God--and I'm thankful!
I'm in my 92nd year. I think that I qualify to have reached longevity by the loving generosity and plan of God--and I'm thankful!
Realistically, I've already become what
I have been becoming throughout my lifetime—unless I blow it. I now
have a frame around my life picture that is pretty well permanent.
But I dare not say “I've been there and done it all” although my
life has been full to overflowing with God's goodness and mercy and
opportunities. The Lord is always coming up with more
blessings and surprises even at this late season of my life. That
keeps life exciting and I press forward.
Looking ahead, there is
really a next stage beyond longevity, but I won't experience
it on earth. Like the count down we used to shout at play when we
were children: “One for the money, two for the show, three to get
ready, and four to go!” longevity is a “time to get ready.”
I'm preparing to live forever—but not here. “And four to GO!”
There will be a “Birthday Party” at the end of longevity that
will launch me into a new welcoming environment of love and peace
and joy in Heaven. How do I know this for sure? My lifetime faith in
God and the promises of His Son Jesus will carry me through that
door to immortal reality where faith will become sight at last and
where I will know as I am known. That will not be a season that will
pass, but an Eternal Dimension without end.
Meanwhile “back at the
ranch,” as they say, longevity carries with it a responsibility to
continue to be a fruitful and faithful steward of my length of days.
I'm obviously not left here to be good for nothing. However,
stewardship is no longer tied to doing
some specific work as in previous seasons of my life, but to being.
At this stretched-out season of my life
called longevity, what I am or who I am is not
determined by what I'm able to do.
If
I'm not able to do anything,
or if I find it difficult to do anything, or even if it's
unnecessary to do anything, that doesn't mean that I am nothing. I
can please God and He smiles on me regardless of my ability or
capability or inability to be productive. After all, He created us to
commune with Him and to enjoy Him and allow Him to enjoy us—not
primarily to serve Him. We serve Him because we love Him. He created
angels not human beings to be His servant-messengers.
Longevity is a time for
reflection and gratitude. Not a time to waste on worry or regret but
to "smile at the future," as was written about the woman in Proverbs
31:25. And in the same verse, “She opens her mouth in wisdom.”
(If she can't speak with wisdom, it implies that she should “zip
her lips.”) Trusting in the providence of God as we age should bring with it
happiness, restfulness, and contentment. Let's count His blessings and
say “Thank You!” to God for the opportunity to have experienced
life on earth. Yes, we should confess that we have come up
short. Nevertheless, we leave those regrets beneath the cross of
Jesus with gratitude for His mercy and forgiveness.
Of course there is
struggle during longevity with growing weakness and disorder of our
“earth suit” bodies and multiplying health issues. Therefore, we must lean
all the harder on the strong arm of our Mighty Heavenly Father who
knows our frame, recognizes our human frailty, and gently embraces
us in His love. It is also a time for detachment, to loosen the
bonds that have held us to things of this earth.
There is both joy and sadness in longevity. Certainly joy that God has “crowned us with loving-kindness and tender mercies”; joy that we have lived to see new generations birthed on the earth scene; sadness to let go of friends and loved ones and peers when they walk off the stage of life before we do. Then joy again when we are reunited in our Eternal Life after life!
“With
long life I will satisfy
him and let him behold My salvation,” God promises in Psalm 91. To
be “satisfied”
and content is His provision for us in our season of longevity. “[The
Lord] satisfies
your years with good things, so that your youth is renewed like the
eagle” (Psalm 103:5).
LONGEVITY
IS A PRECIOUS GIFT TO BE TREASURED
BUT STILL
INVESTED
WHILE WE HAVE TIME TO DO SO!
To
Chinese people, eating long noodles is a symbol of longevity
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