
Aging
Photo by Danie Franco on Unsplash
Recently, I ran across a story of a 45-year-old software developer spending upwards of $2 million a year to reverse the aging process to attain the health of an 18-year-old. A team of over 30 doctors monitors his body and helps shape a rigorous diet, exercise regimen, and other treatments. As you can imagine, the story has elicited curiosity, judgment and even horror, even as there is some evidence that his expensive efforts are working.
For as long as I’ve been a United Methodist, we’ve also had an obsession with age. As someone who has spent decades in, or tangentially connected to, young people’s ministries, I’ve most often experienced it in the form of congregational agonizing over the lack of younger people in the pews. “We need a praise band.” “If only our youth group were bigger/better…” Changes and new programs sometimes help, but the efforts to woo younger members in many congregations often only leave frustration in their wake.
But this is simply one way our age “problem” presents itself. Buildings that are too large for existing membership bring expenses that cut into mission and outreach efforts; eventually, they fall apart around us as we are forced to defer essential maintenance. Some congregations find themselves increasingly out of touch without trusted cultural interpreters – or worse, divided – when confronted with social issues and questions that challenge long-held assumptions.
Aging with grace is an art we seem to have lost in a culture too often obsessed with youth. The same can be said for the church, yet scripture tells us something different where gray hair is a mark of blessing (Proverbs 20:29), and wisdom is something reserved for those who have earned it with years (Job 12:12).
Over the years, I’ve grown to appreciate attempts to understand the state of faith communities using the language and shared experiences of life cycles. While not perfect, using this lens asks us to imagine whether a specific change, learning initiative, or revitalization effort makes sense for the congregation in question. When we consider the vitality of a congregation in tandem with where it is in its lifecycle, different pastoral leaders and the gifts they bring can emerge as better matches.
The difficulty of and lack of willingness to do the essential work of adaptive change for others different from us can be one of the best indicators that we have moved into our congregational twilight years. This is a point when we should ask, “Can we do more by releasing the energy required to keep our ministry fresh and vital to bless our communities in different ways?” After all, few of us can afford 30 doctors to monitor our progress or tolerate a rigid diet and exercise routine.
Even though reaching new generations and new people with the message of God’s transformative love is essential, it doesn’t have to be the work of every faithful group of Christians. Sometimes there is deep wisdom in knowing when it is our time to start to slow down and wrap things up. In doing so, we can remain faithful in creating space and providing resources for other churches in a different stage of congregational life. With acceptance and absent shame, we can also better love those entering their golden years by accepting where they are and listening deeply to the wisdom they have gleaned.
Our realization of entering the last stages of a church’s lifecycle cannot be one-sided. To everything, there is a season, and denial can leave our communities insular, frustrated and sometimes even toxic. For faithful disciples of Jesus, when we stop considering how we can meet, learn and adapt to be in ministry with others, we must start to talk about how we will end our ministry well, even if that end is still years away.
May God give us all the wisdom to recognize where we are in life – both personally and corporately – and the comfort in knowing that we are loved deeply by our creator even when we pivot toward ending well.
Patrick Scriven serves as communications director for the Pacific Northwest Annual Conference. This post is republished with permission from the conference website. To reproduce this content elsewhere, please contact the author.