Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
A country for old men: Why American communities need the elderly
A country for old men: Why American communities need the elderly
Jan 15, 2026 12:23 PM

For those in their twilight years, work has not reached its culmination, but its exaltation. munity life continues to decline, America needs the leadership of older generations.

Read More…

America is facing a crisis munity. The prevalence of social media is threatening human relationships. Religious detachment is leading to declining civic participation. Politicians and central planners are increasingly expanding their reach in munities.

As the nation desperately searches for solutions to the problem, our leaders may be overlooking our nation’s greatest asset: retirees and the elderly.

America’s older generations have a cultural, moral, and spiritual obligation to be the working and teaching vanguards of their munities. Overlooking their central, crucial role to societal health does a grave disservice to all age ranges, munities and spiritually impoverishing churches.

For those in their twilight years, work has not reached its culmination, but its exaltation. Is truth really lost on the old, as one singer recently put it? It shouldn’t be.

Charles Spurgeon, the 19th-century preacher, spoke to this responsibility in an 1867 sermon:

Some of you are getting grey, and your day cannot be very very much longer. Eventide e, and the shadows are drawn out. Now, you must not make the infirmities of old age an excuse for being altogether out of harness. The Master asks not from you what you cannot render, but such strength as you still have, give to him “while it is day,” feeling that you must work the works of him that sent you.

For the elderly, now is the time to share truth and train the young in their wisdom. And for those who feel they don’t have much to offer in the way of wisdom, there are countless opportunities to love and build relationships with those God has placed in their path.

This is a Biblical requirement of discipleship and the time-honored role of elderly men and women: to be gatekeepers of the traditions and purity of munities. It is a duty, but also a position of great honor and deserving of high respect.

And this is the role that modern American society has rejected.

A recent pre-pandemic study found that nearly a quarter of American adults 65 and older were socially isolated. The same study found that this social isolation was linked to quantifiably larger risks of early mortality. This is not just the foibles of a single generation, though: Harvard political scientist Robert Putnam writes that “each generation that has reached adulthood since the1950s has been less engaged munity affairs than its immediate predecessor.”

Unfortunately, this cultural decline has largely been mirrored in the American church. Wendell Berry once praised munities for the fact that there are “no institutions except family and church. The church is munity.” This extreme is so far removed from most modern American Christians that we prehend it. Instead of representing the munity, church is not even a munity for many modern Americans, instead serving as a kind of spiritual pilgrimage we make for a few hours every week away from our lives.

Within those diminished es age stratification. Far from the crucial, mutually supportive roles tasked to each age and gender in the church, as described in 1 Timothy 5, our modern worship tends to segregate by age in Sunday School, worship, Bible studies, and other extracurricular activities. No longer are we “all together” in life and worship.

This age stratification may not apply in every church munity, but where it does, it is neither biblical nor healthy for the members, whether young or old.

So what is there to be done?

Psalm 92 is both a timeless metaphor and a didactic lesson. The psalmist describes the flourishing of the righteous as palm trees and towering cedars, planted in the holy temple of God. The righteous are not described as pigeons who perch on the steeple for a brief chat once a week; they are deep-rooted timbers. They “bear fruit in old age; they are ever full of sap and green.”

Wes Jackson, a secular Kansan author, once envisioned turning abandoned school buildings into similar forests of intergenerational learning, “a partial answer to the mall, a place that might attract a few retired people, including professor types, who could bring their pensions [and] their libraries.” This is a noble view munity engagement. Just think about how much more meaningful this could be in churches.

Imagine churches whose classrooms were not empty during the week, but filled with older men and women engaged in productive work, study, and song. These rooms would e holy factories of output – hymns, poetry, crafts, essays, reflections, art, music, and most of all, consistent mentorship to younger generations. Instead of being a mere Sunday routine, the church could e a home where the elderly regularly go to create, reflect, and teach in their last moments. A final outburst of joy. A place of meaning, purpose, and worshipful work.

This is just one example of an actionable step for church leadership to take. For churches, and for munities, it is crucial to remember that the elderly should have a place in society that goes beyond meeting their own needs and those of their grandkids, let alone signing up for the radical segregation by age of trendy “continuing care munities.”

We need the elderly; and to fulfill a key part of their life’s work, they need us too.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The digital collide
According to published reports, market mechanisms, and petition, are plishing what many decriers of the “digital divide” have long contended only big government could do. The AP, via , reports, “Middle- and working-class Americans signed up for high-speed Internet access in record numbers in the past year, apparently lured by a price war among panies.” The study, provided by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, found that broadband subscription “increased 40 percent in households making less than $30,000 a...
Acton Lecture Series: economic lessons from the parables
Earlier today, Rev. Robert A. Sirico delivered an address as a part of the 2006 Lord Acton Lecture Series entitled “The Eye of the Needle: Economic Lessons from the Parables.” For those who were unable to attend the lecture personally, we are pleased to be able to provide the audio of today’s event in downloadable form – just click here (10 mb mp3 file). ...
America’s 12th graders dumbing down in science
“Last week, the Department of Education reported that science aptitude among 12th-graders has declined across the last decade.” Anthony Bradley explores some of the root causes for why science education continues to falter in schools across the country. Bradley asserts that the typical American now views education as a means for fortable lifestyle rather than a means to knowledge about the world. The purpose of education, instead of producing knowledge and insight into the workings of nature and society, is...
What makes a good priest?
Pope Benedict XVI arrived in Warsaw this morning, the start of his four-day pilgrimage in intensely Catholic Poland and the home of his predecessor, John Paul II. After his ing remarks at the airport, the pope traveled to the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist where he gave a splendid address on the meaning of the priesthood. The entire text is worth reading but here’s an excerpt: The faithful expect only one thing from priests: that they be specialists in...
Get to know Jim Wallis
Entry #2 in Joe Carter’s Know Your Evangelicals Series is Jim Wallis, editor of Sojourners magazine and founder of Call to Renewal. The one-sentence summary? “While Wallis appears to be a genuine and passionate Christian he would do well to base his political views a bit more on the Bible and a bit less on leftist ideology.” Acton’s Jay Richards reviewed Wallis’ recent book, God’s Politics: Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn’t Get It, in the...
Mr. Kim, tear down this wall
Among the oppressed peoples of the world, none has suffered more than the North Koreans. The utter lack of freedom—religious, political, economic—in the dictatorship has long been known. Erasing any doubt, unprecedented information concerning the nation’s prison system was revealed a couple years ago by the U.S. Committee for Human Rights in North Korea. Those searching for a ray of hope—anything—were heartened by news that North and South Koreas had agreed to construct a rail link, the first such transportation...
Mexican politics and the economy
I have argued on this site that the last thing America needs is European style government-by-demonstration, and that the massive street demostrations over illegal immigration perhaps were a signof the Left’s intention to import exactly that style of guerilla theater politics into America. Now Mexico seems poised to illustrate that point: the free market candidate for president is leading the pack. According to the WSJ, but the two leftist parties are threatening to disrupt society and dispute the election if...
Taking stock of the Bush presidency
Rev. Robert A. Sirico joined host Sean Herriott for an interview on Relevant Radio’s Morning Air this morning. They discussed the current state of the Bush Presidency, the President’s view of moral absolutes, and the relationship between religion and politics in America. You can listen to the interview by clicking here (4.5 mb mp3 file). ...
Danger + opportunity = crisis?
In a recent interview with Giant magazine (June/July 2006, “Citizen Gore,” p. 56-57, text available here) about his new movie “An Inconvenient Truth,” former Vice President Al Gore answered a few questions. When asked what he would say to President Bush about climate change if he could: I’d say that this climate crisis is really a planetary emergency, and that he ought to take it out of politics altogether. The civil rights issue really took hold when Dr. King defined...
Skeptical of the convert
I have to admit I was skeptical myself of Gregg Easterbrook’s self-proclaimed “long record of opposing alarmism” regarding global warming. To be sure, a bit of my own research showed that Mr. Easterbrook has long opposed alarmism, just not of the global warming variety. In this June 2003 Wired magazine article, “We’re All Gonna Die!,” Easterbrook debunks a number of apocalyptic myths, including the dangers of germ warfare, runaway nanobots, supervolcanoes, and shifting magnetic poles. He does include “Sudden climate...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved