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A Season To Refocus


These refocused years can become years of
freedom, growth and fulfillment.

Man
From the wisdom of Solomon we read: “To everything there is a season” (Ecclesiastes 3:1). The NIV simply says: “There is a time for everything!”

Being born and raised in New England has given me an appreciation for the four seasons of the year. I enjoy the uniqueness of each one. I believe there is a similarity between the seasons of the year and the seasons of our lives. If we are blessed with many years of life and health, we will experience Spring, Summer, Fall and Winter.

RETIREMENT IS A SEASON TO REFOCUS. It’s a time to reevaluate the value of your life and take personal inventory of the precious, God-given gifts you possess. Your retirement or refocusing years can be the beginning of the best, not the beginning of the end. There’s more to this season of life than simply slowing down, taking it easy, letting someone else do it, and waiting for your Social Security check to arrive in the mail or be deposited in your bank account.

Retirement is a critical time for anyone. Although some may look forward to it, many find the transition difficult, disappointing, and even tragic, especially if one simply retires to a rocking chair. It’s interesting to note that according to insurance statistics, inactivity (doing nothing) is a leading cause of death for retired seniors.

There are marvelous opportunities waiting for you as you choose to refocus. Don’t resist aging — it certainly beats the alternative, doesn’t it? These refocused years can become years of freedom, growth and fulfillment. In their book Every Day Is a Saturday, authors Dr. James & Jackie Harvey give us personal insight into their season of refocusing:

woman

“Our retirement has not meant a withdrawal or a move to the sideline. It has meant a ‘refocusing’ of our activity — a marvelous focusing on the things we want to do, like to do, and on what we believe God wants us to do — we are no less active now. The difference is we are doing the things that are more exciting, more fun, and no less meaningful than when we worked.”

One of my concerns for older adults is that there are those who are consumed with retirement. They are driven to retire to PLAY instead of refocusing on their personal gifts and talents and matching them with the ministry opportunities that lie before them. It is a time to reidentify their purpose for being and realize once again that they were created to serve the Lord and His church. It is very clear from the Scriptures that God’s call upon a life is for a lifetime of ministry and service, not just until retirement!

It is exciting and rewarding for me to serve in the national office of Senior Adult Ministries and observe a tremendous stirring among our older adults desiring to be actively involved in their local churches. For the most part, senior adults are an untapped resource, a field of ministry gifts ready for active ministry in the end-time harvest. They are a reservoir of resources providing wisdom, experience, dedication, commitment, availability, and capability. Many are ready to present to their church four very special gifts they possess: their TIME, TALENT, TREASURY and TESTIMONY.

When older adults become involved in volunteer ministries within the local church, it meets a twofold need: (1) the church redeems their unique ministry gifts and, (2) they in turn experience a feeling of being needed — a sense of identity and purpose once again.

Another avenue of ministry and fulfillment in retirement is to work with ministries outside the local church. Many retired couples through the RV Ministries and in other ways have helped at the Benevolences ministries of Hillcrest and Highlands. The men work on the construction or remodeling of the buildings; the women work on wallpapering, sewing curtains, or other necessary tasks. And they all become “Grandpa” and “Grandma” to the children at Hillcrest, or role models for the young women at Highlands. Retired couples have even worked part-time at the homes and become a real blessing as they branched out their ministries in perhaps a new direction.

RETIREMENT IS A SEASON TO REFLECT on how good God has been and to remember His great faithfulness!! Every one of us is a living testimony of His many blessings upon our lives. Thanksgiving is not just a holiday we celebrate once a year in November — it is a way of life. Listen to the reflection of Jeremiah in Lamentations 3:22,23: “It is of the Lord’s mercies that we are not consumed, because his compassions fail not. They are new every morning: great is thy faithfulness!” David, a man after God’s own heart, opened his heart and declared: “I have been young, and now am old; yet have I not seen the righteous
forsaken, nor his seed begging bread” (Psalm 37:25).

RETIREMENT is a SEASON to REFOCUS — it is a SEASON to REFLECT!! Allow the Holy Spirit to sharpen your vision. Keep your eyes upon Jesus. Remember, you have “come to the kingdom for such a time as this” (Esther 4:14). Redeem your time — treasure your time — don’t spend it, invest it!! Dare to dream — develop and nurture your dreams. Someone once said: “You do not become old until regrets take the place of your dreams.”

You will find the SEASON of WINTER a marvelous experience filled with wonder and delight. Travel light, letting go of the things of this world. Watch as they grow strangely dim in the light of His glory and grace. Focus on your treasures to be stored in heaven and one day you will hear Him say to you: “Well done, good and faithful servant — enter into the joy of thy Lord.”

Stephen B. Sparks
National Director
Senior Adult Ministries

 
 
 

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