F4S: Conspire to Retire, to Re-pace Yourself and then Refire? Man, why Not?

Wednesday, January 8, 2025

Conspire to Retire, to Re-pace Yourself and then Refire? Man, why Not?

Will I retire soon? Not really sure at all, but will pray about the timing.

Why not fellowship more.. a whole lot at Christian Bible studies, church, prayer and other meetings? I love all that cuz I love Him! Man, there are ways to seek the Lord and grow strong in Him! Are most of your waking hours spent pleasing some bosses in your secular work arena? How edifying has it been, believer? Don't get me wrong, I enjoy working and think more people should. Too many in our culture refuse to.

Retirement from a full-time career can have both positive and negative effects on a man's health, and you know how the impact depends on a number of factors that really need to be re-examined, including the age of full retirement, the type of retirement, and the individual's own circumstances:

Mental health
Retirement can actually improve mental health for some people. For example, one study found that retirement decreased feelings of loneliness and depression (with both are really not good for your health).

Physical health
The effect of retirement on physical health is less clear. Some studies show that retirement has little effect on health, while others show that it's associated with a decline in health.

Timing of Retirement
The timing of retirement can impact health. For example, one study found that early retirement was associated with increased BMI, while another study found that regular retirement was associated with increased CHO/HDL.

Type of Retirement
The type of retirement can impact health. For example, one study found that statutory retirement and early retirement were associated with improved health in men.

Continuing to Work at a Wise Pace
Continuing to work after career retirement may be beneficial for health overall. For example, one study has found that seniors who continue to work in some capassity after age 65 are healthier than full-on-retirees.

Other factors that can impact health would include:

Socialization: Working full or part time provides natural socialization and friendships. Fellowship in a spiritually healthy community can be way better than that for you.

Sense of purpose: Working can help to maintain a balanced constructive sense of purpose, but God has a world-changing purpose for every believer, small group, and local church (to plant seeds of faith in witnessing, and in reaping a harvest for His glory).

Cognitive decline could happen if one becomes idle: Working in most places provides mental stimulation that slows cognitive decline. Memorizing Scripture on purpose and working with others in spreading the gospel will be a huge blessing. The battle here is for the mind! Have you put on the full armor of God including the helmet of Salvation?

What is the helmet of salvation (Ephesians 6:17)?

Can salvation be lost?

What did Peter mean..what does God's word mean when he tells each of us to make our calling and election sure?

What is the full armor of God?

What is the belt of truth (Ephesians 6:14)?

What is the breastplate of righteousness?

What are some Bible verses about assurance?

What is the shield of faith (Ephesians 6:16)?

What is the sword of the Spirit?

What can I do when I am under spiritual attack?

What does it mean to be strong in the Lord in Ephesians 6:10?

What if I don't feel saved?

A good routine will be good for all: Working can provide an others-oriented routine that helps maintain healthy habits (too many have inverted eyeballs a.k.a. a selfish inward focus).

The timing is important. Ask God. Yes, please pray about all this. Retiring at a younger age as many young people aim to do (so that you are still able to physically do things like travel a.k.a. on mission trips or say for pleasurable hiking, recreation and other exploring) or for other types of service -- it's not bad if you can pull it off.  It would take some planning for sure. 

Personally, I don't want to retire completely ..and then expire like so many men do. Lord, help me refire (even today, with a passion for you and your world-changing purpose). Yes, together with your church and not tire (I mean, become weary in well doing)? 

The Apostle Paul in 1 Corinthians 15:58 says, “Therefore, my beloved brethren, be ye steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, forasmuch as ye know that your labor is not in vain in the Lord.” In Galatians 6:9 he admonishes believers with: “And let us not be weary in well doing: for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not.”

Never need to get bored out of your gourd serving Jesus.  

While Sucking Air, You're Never Too Old To Have An Impact For Jesus In This World!

Redeeming the Silver or Golden Years: A Biblical Perspective on Retirement, Saving, and Serving

Life’s latter years typically are not a finish line to merely coast past all work, nor are they a personal playground for self-indulgence and pleasure-seeking. The apostle Paul’s words to Timothy basically warn against a selfish life consumed by pleasure, declaring, “The widow who lives for pleasure is dead while she lives” (1 Timothy 5:6). 

This Bible truth from the Lord reverberates far beyond the widows; it is also a clarion call to men and all believers. Retirement, while a well-earned reprieve from daily labor, must not devolve into a self-serving pursuit of feet always up kind of leisure. A life focused solely on ease and entertainment totally misses the mark of a faithful servant of Christ. You know this. We are called servants for a good reason. 

Wisdom in Preparation.. A Biblical Framework

While Scripture of course does not explicitly mention retirement accounts, retirement planning, or investment portfolios, it resounds with principles of wise stewardship for sure. 

Read all of Proverbs 21 and zero in on verse 20 which extols the virtues of prudence: “The wise store up choice food and olive oil, but fools gulp theirs down.” 

Also zero in on the industrious ant in Proverbs 6:6–8 who models preparation, diligently gathering in summer to provide for wintertime. Similarly, Joseph’s foresight in storing-up grain for Egypt during those seven years of plenty there (Genesis 41) exemplifies wise obedience and God-honoring planning.

Only doing some saving can be wrong, but saving is not antithetical to faith. It can be an expression of godly wisdom when rightly motivated. As Jesus (who is to be our guiding Lord) warns in Matthew 6:19–21, “Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth.. but store up for yourselves treasures in heaven.” 

The question is not whether to save some, but why we save. Saving and planing can indeed be done out of love for others. If our savings reflect trust in God’s provision and a heart prepared to go bless others, guess what.. they align with biblical values. Let Jesus lead you step by step and who cares what other think of you. 

Retirement.. A Season of Serving, Not Drifting Away

There is no vacation away from God and His will. And God’s design for retirement is not an endless vacation but a redirection of one’s time, one's energy, and one's resources (which are really His) to serve Him in His kingdom. I consider your property as.. Your property, but what do we really have that is not on loan to glorify God with? Is it on loan basically? 

The Levites in Numbers 8:24–26 retired from the rigors of temple service at age fifty but continued to work assisting their brothers. This principle underscores that retirement is not about ceasing to work but shifting the focus and personal pace perhaps of one’s labor.

In this new season, believers are called to leverage their freedom to witness, to plant, to win, and to mentor (to disciple from love without the manipulation or control) the younger generation, to care for their families, and to extend generosity to others in Jesus' Name. 

Psalm 92:14 proclaims, “They will still bear fruit in old age, they will stay fresh and green.” Our latter years can be as fruitful as the former when anchored in God’s purposes. I've been praying about the timing of how God wants me to work fewer days each week, fellowship more and refire in more ministry service for Jesus. 

Honoring Family and Navigating Hard Choices

If the Rapture doesn't happen while we are sucking air so to speak, then we will one day die physicallyy and we each need to be ready for that day. How are we to care for our aging parents or relatives? How is their health today? Are they right with the Lord and walking with Him. Keep praying for them.

I live far away from my folks. I want to go visit them again soon. Caring for aging loved ones reflects the heart of God. Paul in Ephesians 6:2–3 commands, “Honor your father and mother,” which is a call to lovingly support our elderly family members. 

However, balancing care with wisdom is so vital. For some, in-home care is indeed feasible and preferred; for others, the needs may require some professional assistance. Decisions about nursing homes or assisted living must be bathed in prayer.. again and again.. and guided by love from the Holy Spirit, honoring both the dignity of those loved ones and the well-being of your own immediate family.

Remember when Jesus rebuked the Pharisees for neglecting their own parents under the lame religious guise of spiritual dedication. This passage underscores that financial and emotional support needed for family and how it's a sacred duty for believers. 

"He was also saying to them, 'You are experts at setting aside and nullifying the commandment of God in order to keep your [man-made] tradition and regulations. For Moses said, ‘Honor your father and your mother [with respect and gratitude]’; and, ‘He who speaks evil of his father or mother must be put to death’; but you [Pharisees and scribes] say, ‘If a man tells his father or mother, “Whatever I have that would help you is Corban, (that is to say, already a gift to God),”’ then you no longer let him do anything for his father or mother [since helping them would violate his vow of Corban]; so you nullify the [authority of the] word of God [acting as if it did not apply] because of your tradition which you have handed down [through the elders]. And you do many things such as that.” Mark 7:9-13 amp

I love how to the point Jesus was with his timing and all. Still, as with all areas of stewardship, wisdom and balance are key. God, we need your wisdom and balance in being good witnesses as we care for multiple people. 

Sacrificial giving must not come at the expense of neglecting those in our immediate care.

A Heart Set on Eternity

The golden years are not a time to get all the gold you can, can all that gold and then go sit on that can of gold until you're really Really REALLY OLD! 

How do you and I spell LOVE? Like this: TIME.  

These years are not a time to withdraw from life but to press in closer to God to do His will. This is a good time to reflect on God’s faithfulness, to invest in others, and to glorify Him through every resource we’ve been entrusted with. Whether saving for future needs or navigating the complexities of aging, our actions must be marked by trust in God and a heart rich toward Him.

Paul’s exhortation to the Corinthians basically encapsulates this truth: “So whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God” (1 Corinthians 10:31). 

Hey, may our latter years in Jesus—and the way we prepare for them—radiate the hope of eternity we have inside, leaving a legacy of faith for our kids and grandkids by His wisdom, and the love we've received from God for the generations to come.

Is there a biblical perspective on partial or full retirement from your career work? Sure there is. Is there a biblical perspective on human mortality, and on our eternal hope in Christ as believers. Yep. 

It shifts the focus from current cultural norms of retirement to a life-long, meaningful ministry service as unto the Lord, emphasizing that our purpose in Him doesn't expire with age or career. Instead, it grows, develops and sort of evolves better as we grow closer to Him and mature in our faith.

The path of the righteous is a topic in several Bible scriptures, including:

God says in Proverbs 4:18: "The path of the righteous is like the morning sun, shining ever brighter till the full light of day". The lives of those who walk with Christ, follow him closely.. should become brighter and brighter in this dark world.

The Psalmist said (23:3): "He leads me in paths of righteousness for His name's sake". It's for His glory!

In Psalm 1:6 the Lord is depicted as the righteous believer's ultimate Protector and Guide. The psalm contrasts the righteous with the wicked, urging believers to closely examine their lives to ensure that they are biblically on God's path of righteousness for them.

God, "Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path." Psalm 119:105 kjv

Want some more truths that relate to the path of the righteous?

Job 11:17
Job 22:28
Isaiah 60:3
Isaiah 62:1–2
Daniel 12:3
Psalm 97:11
Psalm 84:7

Now go check out these Scriptures—Luke 9:23–24, Ecclesiastes 7:2, and 1 Corinthians 2:9—because they provide a robust theological foundation on this topic today. 

They remind us of the eternal perspective believers are called to maintain: dying to self and living 100% for Jesus daily. Yes, living with the hope of heaven inside, and preparing for the joy of eternal life (helping others gain this too) while we still have time. There needs to be a sense of evangelistic urgency!

Retirement can indeed be an opportunity for "refiring" in the Lord. There is a time for you to become freed-up from the constraints of a full-time career. Hey, one might discover new avenues of creative ministry, whether counseling with the word, or mentoring, or in intercessory prayer, or in ushering and parking lot serving at your healthy local church.. or in simply spreading the gospel in ways that fit your personality and this season of life. 

What's the best age to be? The world says it's when you are young like 17 through 20, but it's really the age you are, believer. This age you currently are, can be the best time of your life as Jesus is Lord of all. This mindset reflects the joy of being stewards of God's grace, as described in 1 Peter 4:10, using the gifts He has given us to serve others.

None are fond of the pain of aging and of dying.. getting dead. Death is because of the fall of Adam in the garden -- it wasn't meant to be this way for people. Did God know it would happen? Yes and thus he's had a very good plan for you. The Cross of Christ and that empty tomb was not in vain.  

Is "death" still an uncomfortable and yet unavoidable topic for most people? Yes. Facing mortality with biblical faith in Jesus enables believers to live all-in each day ..purposefully.. aware that our time on earth is very limited, brief even, finite..  but our ministry impact for Christ by faith can still have eternal significance! 

Revelation 21:4's promise of a world free from all pain, sickness, viruses, disease, and death brings comfort and anticipation of the perfect fellowship with God and with others in heaven. We can have fellowship with the Lord and living believers here now, and later on we can enjoy meaningful fellowship again with the saint up in heaven.. and on through the milenium. 

Hey believers, please fully embrace God the Son, all of His Bible, and His will for you during every phase of life here. You will be so glad you did! Sure, as an opportunity to glorify God here, in reflecting His light, love and truth until our very last breath here. 

Listen, you can still have an assurance inside that you are saved. 

I really want to stop questioning my salvation!

I really want to get the doubt out.. regarding my salvation!

What is the readiness of the gospel of peace?

How can I have assurance of my salvation?

Truly, the thought of being warmly welcomed into God's eternal kingdom makes the journey worthwhile, transforming any fears inside about aging or dying ..into a joyful expectation of seeing Jesus, the Father and the Spirit in eternity.

Death and physically dying indeed are not popular topics--never will be while here. They are uncomfortable subjects for most people, particularly when it comes to one’s own passing away--death. Many of us make our way through life never giving a thought to our mortality until a serious illness, the loss of a loved one, or some other jarring occasion confronts us with the inescapable reality that one day we will die. Ecclesiastes 7:2 tells us that “death is the destiny of everyone; the living should take this to heart.” Jesus described this eternal mindset as daily dying for Him: “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross daily, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it” (Luke 9:23–24, NLT). Believers live with the hope of heaven and a readiness to lay down their lives for Jesus. Death for the believer is the beginning of a new, eternal phase of life. When our days on earth come to an end, we will transition to the beginning of a heavenly life. Heaven is our true home where God waits to welcome us into His arms. In His eternal kingdom, all heartache, pain, and death will cease (Revelation 21:4). We will enjoy intimate fellowship with God and our loved ones. No matter how spectacular we imagine heaven will be, the Bible promises it will be even better: “No eye has seen, no ear has heard, and no mind has imagined the things that God has prepared for those who love him” (1 Corinthians 2:9, GW).