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 5:07 AM

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
Audio: Rev. Sirico on ‘The Principle of Subsidiarity and the Service to the Poor’
On the new Reclaiming the Culture radio show, host Dolores Meehan recently interviewed Acton President Rev. Robert A. Sirico on the subject of “The Principle of Subsidiarity and the Service to the Poor.” Here’s how Meehan describes the show’s mission: Bay Area Catholics are some of the strongest Catholics in the country. Reclaiming the Culture grew out of the desire to show that the Catholic Church in the Bay Area has the resources to confront the prevailing secular culture. Our...
The Ecumenical Movement and the Nuclear Question
It’s worth noting that the original context of engagement of the ecumenical movement by figures like Paul Ramsey and Ernest Lefever (two voices that figure prominently in my book, Ecumenical Babel) had much to do with foreign policy and the Cold War, and specifically the question of the proliferation of nuclear weapons. Last week marked the anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and today is the anniversary of the Nagasaki detonation. As ENI reports (full story after the break), the...
Publicly Funded Films: A Cautionary Tale
The most basic lesson of all of the various efforts, by both state and federal governments, to provide incentives for films to be made is that with government es government oversight. Once you go down the road of filing for tax credits or government subsidy in various forms, and you depend on them to get your project made, you open yourself up to a host of regulatory, bureaucratic, and censorship issues. It shouldn’t be a surprise, for instance, that states...
Acton on Tap – August 12: American Exceptionalism
Join us on Thursday, August 12, at Derby Station in Grand Rapids as we continue our Acton on Tap series, a casual and fun night out to discuss important and timely ideas with friends. The event is scheduled for 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm and discussion starts at 6:30. American Exceptionalism is a newsworthy topic as some on both the political left and right lament that America’s greatness is slipping away. But what does American Exceptionalism mean and how did...
Abela: Will Teaching Business Ethics Make Business More Ethical?
On the National Catholic Register, Andrew Abela confesses to a “nagging suspicion that teaching business ethics in a university is not delivering on what is expected of it.” The question is both concrete and academic: Abela is the chairman of the Department of Business and Economics at The Catholic University of America and an associate professor of marketing. He was awarded the Acton Institute’s Novak Award in 2009. Here, he explains the problem with “amoral” business attitudes: … we often...
Re: Broken Windows – University Funding Edition
As Kishore Jayabalan noted yesterday, the fallacy of “broken windows” is, unfortunately, ubiquitous in discussions of public finance and macroeconomics. Though we are told that government spending and public works have a stimulating effect on economic activity, rarely are the costs of such projects discussed. Such is the case with several stimulus projects in my own hometown of Atlanta, GA. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reportson a list that Sen. John McCain and Sen. Tim Coburn drew up,criticizing wasteful stimulus projects throughout...
The Economist, Catholicism, and Europe
When es to the sophistication of its coverage of religious affairs, the Economist is better than most other British publications (admittedly not a high standard) which generally insist on trying to read religion through an ideologically-secularist lens. Normally the Economist tries to present religion as a slightly plex matter than “stick-in-the-mud-conservatives”-versus-“open-minded-enlightened-progressivists”, though it usually slips in one of the usual secularist bromides, as if to reassure its audiences that it’s keeping a critical distance. A good example of this is...
Do We Need Pro-Family Tax Policies?
Last month, in “Europe’s Choice: Populate or Perish,” Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg observed: At a deeper level … Europe’s declining birth-rate may also reflect a change in intellectual horizons. A cultural outlook focused upon the present and disinterested in the future is more likely to view children as a burden rather than a gift to be cared for in quite un-self-interested ways. Individuals and societies that have lost a sense of connection to their past and have no particular...
Carbon Regulation: Ecological Utopia or Economic Nightmare?
In this week’s Acton Commentary, I discuss whether the Environmental Protection Agency’s planned regulation of carbon emissions can be justified from a Christian perspective. The EPA has found that carbon emissions endanger “public health and welfare,” and it is on track to begin regulating vehicle and power plant emissions. Environmentalists claim that policies targeting carbon emissions, such as EPA regulation or a cap-and-trade program, will stimulate the economy by creating green jobs. Unfortunately, this is not the case – the...
Family vs. the State in Indian and Chinese Entrepreneurship
This August 3 Wall Street Journal article is based on a Legatum Institute paring Indian and Chinese entrepreneurship and raises important issues about the roles of the state and the family in promoting entrepreneurship. mon elements between Indian and Chinese wealth-creators are their optimistic view of the pared to Americans (“Why I’m Not Hiring”) and Europeans (“Everything’s Fine With Greece, Just Ignore Some Facts”) presumably, and their lack of concern about the impact of the global financial crises on their...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved