Our
ninety-six year old father-in-law has been in the hospital and now
is in a convalescent hospital. In fact, he is in the same convalescent
hospital as our eightythree year old mother, which has made visiting
them that much easier. Our children have also frequently visited
them, often bringing our grandchildren to see their great-grandparents.
There is such a contrast between a one year old and those in the
eighties and nineties. For one, life is just beginning, and for
the other it is nearly over.
Most of us fall somewhere between these two extremes and we can
certainly learn lessons from our observance of the very young and
the very old. A youngster is born into this world having nothing
and knowing nothing. It is completely helpless and must depend upon
others for its survival. The very old are in a somewhat similar
situation. Many of them have nothing and some of them know very
little, nor are they able to use effectively what they do know.
In this same home there is a retired medical doctor who now just
sits in a chair all day long as if in a stupor. All that medical
knowledge stored up in that brain is now of no useful purpose.
We
look at the young child and we are amazed at all this child must
absorb in the next twenty or so years. Learning to walk and talk,
to read and write, learning math and physics, acquiring skill in
playing a musical instrument, developing championship form in sports,
all this is accomplished in some 20 years. Then we visit a home
where the great and near great are settled in rows of wheelchairs,
dozing with their chins on their chests, just waiting to be wheeled
back to their rooms for the night. All their knowledge, all their
skills, and all their experiences are of no useful purpose in their
present state.
Money,
the love of which Paul says is the root of all evil, is of little
use to those in these homes. Some in these homes have a great deal
of money, but they get no better care than the one next to them
who is on welfare. Of course, the very, very rich can have private
nursing care around the clock, but was this the reason for their
driving ambition to accumulate a fortune? To have a nurse sit by
their wheelchair while they doze?
Surely our life must have more purpose than just to accumulate a
lot of money to spend on nursing care. Mrs. Wrigley spent her last
years on the top floor of her mansion surrounded by doctors and
nurses, and never even knew they were there as she was in a coma.
We cannot help growing old and the only alternative is to die, but
we need to re-evaluate our priorities to make sure that the things
that take up our time now will have a value when Christ comes. All
the rest, no matter how much fun it may be or how rich it may make
us, will be like the chaff of the summer threshing floor in the
day of Christ’s coming.
Let
us make sure that our young ones are taught the true values of life
and to seek first the kingdom of God. All the things the Gentiles
seek for will be supplied by God if we will put Him first in our
lives; that’s a promise from Jesus Christ. As we observe the rich
and famous of this world surrounded by their trophies and memorabilia,
dozing in their wheelchairs, we realize that the things of this
life at their very best are still only vanity and vexation of spirit.
How thankful we are to be in possession of the true riches and to
have hope beyond this time of trouble. With Paul we say, ”For our
light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far
more exceeding and eternal weight of glory.”
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