New Life Class Christmas Luncheon 2016 Gastonia First Wesleyan Church |
A couple of days ago, I received an email from a church
member in his 80s, letting me know that he’s moving. We have known for some
time that it’s best for him to move closer to his family due to his health and
housing situation.
But the news that the move was finally happening hit me
unexpectedly, as if I’d lost a dear friend. I felt it in the pit of my stomach
and the tears in my eyes.
Then I realized that is exactly why I felt that way:
I was losing a dear friend, and a grandfather in the faith.
And our church is losing him, too.
Sometimes senior saints question their usefulness in the
church as they age. That’s unfortunate because they’re an essential part of the
body of Christ. Although we trust in our sovereign and wise God to add and take
away from his local body as he sees fit, church life is different without them.
As pastors, therefore, we need to remind our elderly members that they’re not
only loved by their Good Shepherd and Savior—they’re also loved and needed by
his people.
Here are four reasons every local church needs senior
saints.
1. We need your prayers.
My 80-something friend often leads our congregation in
prayer on Sunday mornings. Visitors and members regularly comment on how his
prayers are a blessing to them. We need older members to pray out loud during
worship services, Bible studies and prayer meetings. We also need their private
prayers.
Sometimes, I’ll see God work in a way that can only be
explained by a work of his Spirit in somebody’s life or in salvation. When this
happens, I think, “God has answered the prayers of one of my sisters in
Christ,” because I know there are several elderly ladies who pray for our
church, our community and my pastoral ministry regularly. Even if you’re
reading this on your tablet from a nursing home—I visited an elderly lady doing
just that the other day—we as the church need your prayers.
2. We need your practical, biblical wisdom.
My grandpa taught an adult Sunday School class until
Parkinson’s robbed him of his voice. I’ll never forget a seminary professor who
taught class using a special microphone because health complications made it
difficult for him to speak.
I’m so thankful that these men continued to pass on
their biblical knowledge and life experience until they literally could not
anymore. Whether through teaching a class or sharing a comment during a Bible
study or encouraging a young mom during fellowship, every church members needs
the wisdom that comes from decades of studying the Word mixed with decades of
life experience.
Senior saints, please continue to speak into the lives of
younger believers with love and truth and grace. The church needs your wisdom
not simply because you’re older, but because you bring the practical, biblical
wisdom that only comes from marinating in the Word and walking with Christ in
both life’s joys and sorrows.
3. We need your encouragement.
My friend recently raised his hand at a business meeting as
I was almost done explaining a new initiative, and simply said that he saw
God’s hand in this and that the congregation should be supportive of where God
was leading me with this initiative. We could have just stopped the explanation
right then and gone straight to the vote. As a senior saint, your words of
encouragement matter.
I’ve seen young, sleep-deprived parents light up when an
older person in the church tells them, “Your kids are a joy.” I’ve seen
discouraged empty-nesters, struggling with change, rediscover hope as they
remember God’s faithfulness in your marriages of over 50 years
As the Psalmist exclaims, “One generation shall commend
your works to another, and shall declare your mighty acts” (Psalm 145:4). Don’t
hesitate to share your stories of provision and grace and forgiveness, and to
remind us of God’s goodness and faithfulness. Senior saint, we need your
encouragement.
4. We need your presence.
We know it takes a lot of work for older folks to get to
church. We know that there will come a day that we need to come to you, rather
than you coming to us. But until that day, we need your presence.
There’s something particularly special about the redeemed
people of God coming together for worship and seeing a spectrum of ages.
There’s something about coming together to worship with people who are
different than us—even generationally—that points to the beauty of the gospel
and the glory of God.
There’s something about knowing fellow saints who can
speak of God never abandoning them through decades that
powerfully reminds us of the faithfulness of God.
We don’t call you “senior saint” because you’re perfect or
because you don’t have struggles like the rest of us. We call you “senior
saint” because your faith in Christ in your senior years points to the fact
that the same God who saves is the same God who sustains. Lift your heads, dear
senior saints.
You’re needed. Please don’t stop serving.
This article originally appeared here.
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