Don't Waste Your Retirement

John Piper wrote a great little book, Don’t Waste Your Life, (may be freely downloaded here) in which he recounts a retired couple’s decision to move onto yacht, and spend the rest of their lives beachcombing. Piper’s point was, after wasting their lives, what do they have to bring glory to God, seashells?

Piper writes:

I will tell you what a tragedy is. I will show you how to waste your life. Consider a story from the February 1998 edition of Reader’s Digest, which tells about a couple who “took early retirement from their jobs in the Northeast five years ago when he was 59 and she was 51. Now they live in Punta Gorda, Florida, where they cruise on their 30 foot trawler, play softball and collect shells.” At first, when I read it I thought it might be a joke. A spoof on the American Dream. But it wasn’t. Tragically, this was the dream: Come to the end of your life—your one and only precious, God-given life—and let the last great work of your life, before you give an account to your Creator, be this: playing softball and collecting shells. Picture them before Christ at the great day of judgment: “Look, Lord. See my shells.” That is a tragedy. And people today are spending billions of dollars to persuade you to embrace that tragic dream. Over against that, I put my protest: Don’t buy it. Don’t waste your life.

I believe one of the Christian church’s greatest capitulations to worldly thinking is the concept of retirement. Since social pension programmes were established for all workers, much of life has become a scramble to save enough money to survive retirement. When the age was set for workers to retire (usually males), sixty-five was just a few years short of the time they were expected to die. With better health care and worker safety, workers can reasonably expect to live another 20 years or more after they quit working. That is, twenty years without a paycheque. The quality of life depends upon the quality of savings during the working years. That those who have very demanding jobs physically and mentally (such as manual labourers and coffee shop servers) have the poorest retirement prospects, while many who had relatively easy work (this description left blank!) have the richest pensions, is a matter of injustice.

This, of course, is a great burden to the taxpayer, but that’s not my issue here. Much less is it my wish to see a neo-Marxist plan to solve these problems.

My concern is for those who have bought into the myth that the dominion mandate (i.e., to care for Creation, to do work; Genesis 1:28-31; 2:15) is suspended at an arbitrary age. If retirement means a quitting of labour, it is so as an act of disobedience from the God who made us to work. Christians should know better.

Many Christians are forced into leaving their places of employment by a certain age. But employment is not identical to godly work, and being out of the “workforce” does not place one on a twenty year vacation.

Work brings glory to God, and honours Him. I know of two excellent retirees (younger than me), whose industry offered them early retirement. It was a wise decision for them to take it, and indicates stewardship. Among the many other things they are doing now while “unemployed,” both serve their Lord by serving their community. More directly in service to Christ, one is undertaking hospital construction in Nigeria, the other is building and managing a church camp in Ontario. Here are two men, along with their wives, who live as examples of a retirement not wasted.

A Warning to Intellectuals

Real Christianity is intellectually vigorous. But in the end, one is saved not by their intellectual gifts, but by the grace of God, and oftentimes in spite of them.

The Text: Ephesians 3:2–7 (ESV)

assuming that you have heard of the stewardship of God’s grace that was given to me for you, how the mystery was made known to me by revelation, as I have written briefly. When you read this, you can perceive my insight into the mystery of Christ, which was not made known to the sons of men in other generations as it has now been revealed to his holy apostles and prophets by the Spirit. This mystery is that the Gentiles are fellow heirs, members of the same body, and partakers of the promise in Christ Jesus through the gospel. Of this gospel I was made a minister according to the gift of God’s grace, which was given me by the working of his power.

The Comment

“Likewise I trust that we have seen again something of the nature of Christian truth. It is not ordinary knowledge. It is not something that the unaided human intellect can understand and receive. Without the enlightenment which the Holy Spirit alone can give, gospel truths remain as dark and as hidden to us as they did to ‘the princes of this world’ when the Lord of glory was actually amongst men. ‘But God hath revealed them unto us by His Spirit’. ‘We have received not the spirit of the world, but the Spirit that is of God, that we might know the things that are freely given to us of God’ (1 Cor 2:12). This is not ordinary truth. Whatever the power of our intellect, whatever our brilliance, it will never be enough. We must all become ‘as little children’. We need the inspiration and the anointing and the unction of the Holy Ghost before we can receive and understand divine truth.”

Lloyd-Jones, David Martyn. The Unsearchable Riches of Christ: An Exposition of Ephesians 3. Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1972.

 

 

Comparative Religion?

“Let us never measure our religion by that of others, and think we are doing enough if we have gone beyond our neighbours.” Ryle, J. C. Holiness: Its Nature, Hindrances, Difficulties and Roots. London: William Hunt and Company, 1889.