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Rethinking Retirement...Continued from page 5

John Piper

Author

When we are so satisfied in Christ that we are enabled to willingly die for him, we are freed to love the lost as never before, and Christ is shown to be a great Treasure.

A Charge to Baby Boomers

I am sixty-two years old—just about the oldest baby boomer (January 11, 1946). Behind me come seventy-eight million boomers, ages forty-three to sixty-one. Over ten thousand turn sixty every day. If you read the research, we are a self-centered generation

Likes: working from home, anti-aging supplements, climate control

Dislikes: wrinkles, Millennial sleeping habits, Social Security, insecurity

Hobbies: low-impact sports, uberparenting, wining and dining

Hangouts: farmer’s markets, tailgate parties, backyards

Resources: $2.1 trillion3

What will it mean to finish life to the glory of Christ as a baby boomer in America? It will mean a radical break with the mindset of our unbelieving peers. Especially a break with the typical dream of retirement. Ralph Winter is the founder of the U. S. Center for World Missions and, in his early eighties, is still traveling, speaking, and writing for the cause of Christ in world missions. He wrote an article titled “The Retirement Booby Trap” almost twenty-five years ago when he was about sixty. In it he said,

Most men don’t die of old age, they die of retirement. I read somewhere that half the men retiring in the state of New York die within two years. Save your life and you’ll lose it 

Just like other drugs, other psychological addictions, retirement is a virulent disease, not a blessing. . . .

Where in the Bible do they see [retirement]? Did Moses retire? Did Paul retire? Peter? John? Do military officers retire in the middle of a war?”4

Millions of Christian men and women are finishing their formal careers in their fifties and sixties, and for most of them there will be a good twenty years before their physical and mental powers fail. What will it mean to live those final years for the glory of Christ? How will we live them in such a way as to show that Christ is our highest Treasure?

The Perseverance of Charles Simeon  

When I got prostate cancer and had surgery at age sixty, I recalled the experience of Charles Simeon and prayed that his outcome would be true for me.

Simeon was the pastor of Trinity Church, Cambridge, two hundred years ago. He learned a very painful lesson about God’s attitude toward his “retirement.” In 1807, after twenty-five years of ministry at Trinity Church, his health broke when he was forty-seven. He became very weak and had to take an extended leave from his labor. Handley Moule recounts the fascinating story of what God was doing in Simeon’s life.

“The broken condition lasted with variations for thirteen years, till he was just sixty, and then it passed away quite suddenly and without any evident physical cause. He was on his last visit to Scotland . . . in 1819, and found himself, to his great surprise, just as he crossed the border, “almost as perceptibly renewed in strength as the woman was after she had touched the hem of our Lord’s garment.”

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Most Recent User Comments
mfortier
6/11/2009 6:38 PM
Great article!

I've been thinking along these lines about retirement for some time. I'm 44 years old, and I just wonder how I could possibly think about retirement. I see these T.V. shows that deal with people in their sixties buying vacation homes in foreign countries to live for themselves and think, "what a self-centered existence". Not for me! There are so many people out there who need to know about the love of Christ, who need help in every other way immagineable and know that I'd rather burn out for Christ right till the end of my life. It will be much more engaging, rewarding, exciting, and mentally stimulating to minister to folks, consumed by His love for them and wishing that I could do more, that sitting around bemoaning my old age, which sounds really depressing, boring, and according to your article deadly! Anyway, thanks again for a great read. This seems to me to be exactly what the Lord wishes for us, what the Bible confirms, and the best course for all of His.
mruppert
6/8/2009 12:51 PM
Truly, I have 2nd thoughts about blanket retirement, that is retirement to nothing, esp. not being married & stuff, but I have given thought to semi-retirement to part time stuff &/or volunteering. And my current job has some physical demands on it sometimes.
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