Sunday, May 6, 2018

The Encouraging Word



Too often we dwell on what we used to be or what we used to be able to do. As one comment has been made that reflects on us older adults, we maintain visions of what we used to be in our bodies of today. When we acknowledge the truth of what we are and the loss we have experienced, frustration and depression can be the result.

Such a frame of mind need not be, however. To look in the mirror is to see that change and the loss it brings are natural processes of life. Each individual experiences these changes and losses in their own unique way and at a different pace.

For some the process can offer extended opportunities for experiencing the best parts of life. For others the changes come too quickly and reflect a deteriorating life condition. We have all known some for whom “old age” came at fifty while others seem capable of a lifestyle at seventy enjoyed by those still in their forties. We are saddened by the early onset of this loss of health and energy, but we are forced to accept it as a part of life.

So what can we do, as ones who may enjoy a more varied set of activities in our lives, for those whose limitations have come too soon either in their eyes or the eyes of the world? When you cannot change their physical condition, you can help them change their attitude.

Psychologists have noted the one thing over which persons have total and sole control is their attitude, the way they choose to face a condition or a situation. Frustration and depression of the non medical sort are attitudes revealing the perspective of a person facing their context. If we can change the perspective, then we may perhaps change the attitude.

Pro 12:25 Worry is a heavy burden, but a kind word always brings cheer. (CEV)

What does an encouraging word represent? Consider what you are conveying when you offer a person who is frustrated by their current situation. You are telling them they have been noticed. You “see” them. They are not invisible to the world. They are uniquely remembered among all the people around them.

You care about them. To speak an encouraging word is tell them you feel compassion for them and not just from a distance. You are willing to enter into their lives with an expression of concern. This is more than the idea their name crossed your mind in a passing moment. Their situation elicited a response from you that was to be shared with them. Thus the action is more than just the word; it is an expression of your lives coming together.

The encouraging word may be spoken. It may also be written. A letter to my mother is read multiple times before it is laid aside to be replaced with the newest written communication. In the same fashion young preschoolers are known to have carried a postcard addressed to them for days after receiving it in the mail.

The encouraging word conveys the idea a person is remembered and that someone cares. The encouraging word says things can be seen in a different light and change for the better is possible. Written or spoken, the encouraging word offers hope, renews emotional and spiritual strength, and lets the individual know they are not facing the next moment alone.

The Apostle Paul wrote in his Second Letter to the Corinthians we who have been in need before should share our hope with those needing encouragement now.

2Co 1:3-4 Praise God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! The Father is a merciful God, who always gives us comfort. He comforts us when we are in trouble, so that we can share that same comfort with others in trouble. (CEV)

The encouraging word is like a smile, always available and always free.

Wednesday, April 4, 2018

A Ministry to the Lonely



When was the last time you had more than a passing conversation with a human being face-to-face? How about an extended conversation over a digital device that involved more than a series of four word sentences? We can read all the books and stories and news bites we want, but they cannot replace personal and extended human interaction.

These two stories caught my attention recently and stirred my concern even more for the elderly vulnerable in our world.

From Great Britain:
 “The majority of people over 75 live alone and about 200,000 older people in the UK have not had a conversation with a friend or relative in more than a month, according to government data.

“Most doctors in Britain see between one and five patients a day who have come mainly because they are lonely, according to the Campaign to End Loneliness, a network tackling the health threat isolation poses to the elderly.”

Britain appoints minister for loneliness amid growing isolation,

Reuters, Lee Mannion, January 17, 2018


From CNBC a story about “ElliQ”:
 “A company named Intuition Robotics showed off a new robot at CES that's specifically designed for the elderly.

“It's a smart voice assistant with a personality that can help remind senior citizens of upcoming calendar appointments, show pictures from the family, receive and send messages and more. It's also supposed to serve as a companion that people can have social interactions with.”
(CNBC, Todd Haselton | @robotodd, Published 2:08 PM ET Tue, 9 Jan 2018)

It is one thing to be alone. It is altogether different to be lonely. There are many occasions in which we need to be alone. These might be times of concentrated introspection or when critical decisions need to be made. They may be times of personal, profoundly emotional prayer, and no one should be there but the Father and the one praying.

We were never meant to be lonely. From the beginning we were created to be social beings. God saw the need and created the two sexes to meet that need.

Gen 2:18 “Then the LORD God said, ‘It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him a helper fit for him.’”

That need for relationship was never lost regardless of our sinful state. The heartfelt cry of the Psalmist reflects this innate need of the human soul.

Psa_25:16 “Turn to me and be gracious to me, for I am lonely and afflicted.”

Since the time Cain asked God if he was responsible as his brother’s keeper (Genesis 4), we must be about the business of seeking the best for those around us. In the case of the elderly, it means we are responsible for meeting this critical need of socialization for them when they cannot do it for themselves. It involves one-on-one contact. It means including them as individuals of worth in our social circles. It means never allowing them to think they are forgotten.

As congregations of families of faith, we are to be clear about the place of our elderly members in our social circles. Far more than just providing them a chair at the table, we must encourage them to participate at the highest level they can. Through these relationships they come to see their value beyond an ability to produce material results. In this family context they realize their value as contributors to the social network in the eyes of God as well as those of the spiritual family.

Loneliness is a confirmed killer. First it kills the emotions, then the spirit, and finally the body. There is a known and effective cure. It is called friendship.

Thursday, January 18, 2018

The Power of Touch




When Jesus extended his hand and touched the leper, he illustrated a need every human being has and, if were honest, would admit craved – the need to be touched. The Gospel writer Matthew records one illustration of this.

Mat 8:1-3 “When he came down from the mountain, great crowds followed him. And behold, a leper came to him and knelt before him, saying, ‘Lord, if you will, you can make me clean.’ And Jesus stretched out his hand and touched him, saying, ‘I will; be clean.’ And immediately his leprosy was cleansed.

Multiple studies have been done in numerous contexts proving the health of newborn children, both in the beginning and as they grow, is greatly impacted by the physical contact they receive. They need to be touched, held, and feel the nurture of another human being. Touch is essential for healthy development of mind, body, and emotions.

What is so critical for the tiny infant is just as critical for the aging adult. And in the same way, the need is for that contact to be supportive, compassionate, and conveying safe love. Perhaps as active and healthy individuals beyond childhood and before our declining years, we can try to ignore the need for physical contact as a source of reassurance. In our later years, however, that need for touch translates into the need for respect and the knowledge someone believes we still have value.

The infant must be held in a way that will not hurt it, will provide reassurance it will not fall, and convey a sense of security. For the aging adult the touch must also convey that which is positive and never that which brings pain or a sense of rejection. Touch must convey what the caring heart seeks to reveal.

Jesus touched others, and he also let others touch him. The Gospel of Mark records one such incident that became very public.

Mar 5:25-34 “And there was a woman who had had a discharge of blood for twelve years, and who had suffered much under many physicians, and had spent all that she had, and was no better but rather grew worse. She had heard the reports about Jesus and came up behind him in the crowd and touched his garment. For she said, ‘If I touch even his garments, I will be made well.’ And immediately the flow of blood dried up, and she felt in her body that she was healed of her disease. And Jesus, perceiving in himself that power had gone out from him, immediately turned about in the crowd and said, ‘Who touched my garments?’ And his disciples said to him, ‘You see the crowd pressing around you, and yet you say, “Who touched me?”’ And he looked around to see who had done it. But the woman, knowing what had happened to her, came in fear and trembling and fell down before him and told him the whole truth. And he said to her, ‘Daughter, your faith has made you well; go in peace, and be healed of your disease.’”

When we are willing to touch and to be touched by those whom society may see as inconvenient or has chosen to ignore, we express the spirit of Jesus Christ as he dealt with people each day. No one was an outcast to Jesus. No one was beneath his attention. Each person needed what he had to offer, the unconditional love of God.

If we are to have the influence upon this world we are called to have as followers of Christ, then we must make ourselves available to others even as Christ did. Social media will never be sufficient. Love allows itself to be touched and even used while it reaches out to people like aging adults and says, “You are valuable to me. I will touch you with my life, and we will both be better off.”

Friday, January 5, 2018

The Measure of Compassion




One of my favorite organizational mottoes belongs to the Shriners who say something like, “No man stands taller than when he stoops to help a crippled child.” Helping those who cannot help themselves is a sign of compassion, of greatness, and of following in the spirit of Jesus Christ. Throughout his teachings, Jesus emphasized the need to assist the individual who had become a victim of the evil of this world, whether natural or manmade. He added his words to the message of the revelation of God before him. Help the widow, the orphan, and the sojourner in your midst.

The following words of Jesus have become the motivation for what is now a worldwide effort to show compassion through random acts of kindness. Operation Inasmuch can find in aging adults those who contribute to the support of others as well as be recipients of that same support.

Mat 25:40 “And the King will answer them, 'Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brothers, you did it to me.'” (ESV)

These words fulfill the intent of the Old Testament thought found in the Law, the Prophets and the Writings as illustrated by this verse from the Psalms.

Psa 146:9 “The LORD watches over the sojourners; he upholds the widow and the fatherless, but the way of the wicked he brings to ruin.” (ESV)

We need to look at our society, identify who these helpless are, and invest ourselves in showing them the love and compassion of the God who is also watching over them. Some have their focus on the unborn and children in general. Others choose to focus their energies on women and men who are trapped in slavery in a multitude of settings. The crisis of immigration draws the passion of others. Then there are those of us who see the aging adult as another of these who have become members of an outcast group that has in many ways become abandoned by society.

Many of these aging adults are still active in their communities, the “Go-Go” group, and we welcome their participation as long as they recognize their positions of power must be relinquished to a younger generation. Those aging adults that cannot keep up with the crowd are too often slowly pushed to the side, catered to as may be convenient, and eventually cared for out of necessity if at all. I have referred to these as adults who fit into the “Will-Go”, “Slow-Go”, and Can’t-Go” categories. The “Won’t-Go” category is mostly ignored by the church as being too obstinate to deserve attention.

Yet the Church and its individual members are called by God to see all these people as valuable members of his creation. He sees their needs and grieves when they are abandoned by the society they helped create. Aging adults are a part of our family. They are a part of the Family of God. We have a responsibility to care for them and to respect them. If we do not, one day they will stand up and be our judges.

We need to add the Church and Christians in general to the test suggested by the late US Senator Hubert H. Humphrey. Will we pass the test?

"...the moral test of government is how that government treats those who are in the dawn of life, the children; those who are in the twilight of life, the elderly; those who are in the shadows of life; the sick, the needy and the handicapped."
~Last Speech of Hubert H. Humphrey

Monday, December 4, 2017

Senior Adults Are People




We may see them as individuals who are always on the go. They volunteer with non-profit organizations. They use a life time of accumulated skills to help others. They begin second careers. They continue to learn in a variety of ways. They pursue hobbies long postponed and develop new interests in areas of life never before explored. They travel with and without their extended families. The Go-Go individuals among our senior adults can be hard to slow down.

Those who have less initiative are just as willing to participate but need the encouragement of family and friends to be a part of the life around them. They need others to plan and include them in the activities that will keep them a part of the social circles they have valued all their lives. The Will-Go individuals are ready to go and be a part of the plans designed by others. They only need to know others want them.

Extra concern must be shown for those who need more than just an opportunity to be a part of friendship circles. They need consideration for how they feel each day. They need the consideration of how they will be able to get around either with extra support or with others providing transportation. These Slow-Go individuals are special members of our groups and must never be forgotten.

All too often the Can’t-Go individuals are out-of-sight/out-of-mind among their acquaintances. Their caregivers often suffer the same fate. Yet these people are valuable to the Kingdom of God and to society. The efforts others must make to include them will be more than worth the time and energy as everyone gains an enhanced sense of value and ability to contribute. Such efforts must be intentional. They must be planned, and the needs of the restricted individual must be a priority consideration. The result will be a blessing for all.

That fifth category can be frustrating, but it cannot be overlooked. Won’t-Go individuals may say they have no interest in being involved, but rare is the individual who has no desire to relate to others on some terms or in some type of situation. The task is to find the outlet in which these individuals will become involved and then lead them to see such involvement can be a positive addition to their own lives and to the lives of others. These need to know they are loved and of value to the Kingdom of God as much as any other human being.

In some form or fashion all our senior adults fall into one of these five groups. Each group has special qualities, abilities, and needs. As physical abilities deteriorate and the opportunities to interact outside of the residence become more limited, these opportunities become more of a priority in the social relationships of the individual. Social contacts decrease and more time is spent seeking to maximize physical strength.

Whether the focus is maximizing social interaction or in maintaining a sense of good health, spiritual development must be a priority. Every opportunity to strengthen the spiritual life must be optimized in whatever ways the individual can respond. The differences may be great, but when the senior adult ensemble takes its music to the nursing home, those who can sing share their abilities. Those who can only sit and listen lift the musicians up in prayer. All are given the chance to contribute to the work of the Kingdom of God and everyone receives a blessing.