Elders at the Gate
By Ray Blunt
()
About this ebook
The young need anchoring in adult connections; their elders need purpose in their last lap-together they can restore the broken links of the design for a full, meaningful life.We sense that something important is broken.
The younger among us are disconnected in an over-connected world-often lonely, slow to mature, and anxious, they seek safety while abandoning the comfort of faith. Their elders have long, healthy years ahead, but toward what end? Retirement as a time to indulge a desire to travel, or to spend their days in leisure can come to seem purposeless. Together neither have re-discovered the wisdom meant for a full life and the mission that has been built into the last phase, both of which arise from God's good design for the generations. This way of life has all but been obscured in the search for individual happiness.
Herein, today's elders at the gate are given the vision, encouragement, and understanding for how they can become the mentors they are designed to be, beginning to help repair the broken links between the generations and committing their lives to bringing maturity and meaning to those who follow.
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Elders at the Gate - Ray Blunt
Introduction
Elders at the Gate
A Call to Repair the Generational Links
Broken hands on broken ploughs
Broken treaties, broken vows
Broken pipes, broken tools
People bending broken rules
Hound dog howling, bullfrog croaking
Everything is broken
Bob Dylan
Certain things stick in your mind; others seem to just fade away. You probably know this by now. Among those we remember, just a few become touchstones for life. That’s what happened when someone first called me, Sir.
It hit me right out of the blue without any warning. That innocuous greeting started something that has not stopped—not yet anyway. That is the day I began to become an elder.
It happened in the most mundane way. I was in a hardware store simply nosing around among the aisles of tools. The young man’s salutation was obviously not because I held a higher rank or had some superior position. It definitely was not because I’m what you would call distinguished looking. Hardly. No, it was apparently just a courteous remark by a younger man to well—OK, an older man—what I’ve now come to call an elder. All I could conclude at the time was that I must have looked as if I deserved it. But later I began to see it as a bit of a turning point in my life and not simply something amusing to share with B.J., my wife. In retrospect, it quietly launched the time when I think I first began to say to myself, I’m getting old!
So, it was not simply an off the cuff remark on my part when our good friend, Anne, upon turning a certain age, received this e-mail consolation from me: Well, Anne, now you can take your place as an elder at the gate!
It turns out we are not the first to be caught up in this question of what our role is once we draw near to being the elders.
At the Gate
In ancient times, the city gate was where people went for judicial decisions, for counsel, and to gather the latest news. Those who were no longer able to go off to the fields, to their shops, or to the market to work, spent much of their time sitting by the gates of the city. They were not there just to play checkers, watch haircuts, or gossip. They assumed their places as other elders had before them, taking up their necessary role reserved for them. This was a key societal position, one expected of them as they became the next keepers and dispensers of judicious wisdom to the coming generations. Without city gates, perhaps we have lost something we didn’t even know we were missing; something essential to a good life even—a place to go for wisdom, a purpose to fulfill for those who are aging, an accessible and established link to the generations that follow. It all connected.
Where do those younger go for wisdom today? Google; Wikipedia; YouTube for starters. That’s about the size of it.
What is the purpose for those who have years of life ahead? Retirement? Golf? Fifty-five and over perpetual care communities? It’s not clear at all.
What about the nature of our culture today? How well do the generations connect, older with younger, without city gates?
As Bob Dylan reminds us, it appears something is broken, and sometimes it does feel like everything.
As an elder I simply want to focus on just one thing that has become very clear to me—The young need anchoring in deep, adult connections; their elders need to rediscover their established purpose in their last lap—together they can restore the broken links of the design for a full, meaningful life as intended by their Creator.
For those who are elders or can imagine themselves as such one day, this challenge to mend is for us to take up the gauntlet. To do so, we need all the wisdom we can get, and for that it is best we begin to go back to the time when wisdom was prized and sought after, the role that awaited in a long-lived life.
Ancient Wisdom
First a word of context. I write this with a Christian worldview. I do so for two reasons. One, I’m a Christian and my questions about meaning in life, especially in my latter years, have never been answered by philosophy or sophistry but rather by what I believe is ancient wisdom. Not that I’ve lived wisely all my life, or even understood what wisdom is, but when I began to think about how to finish well as a Sir,
I found the questions best answered by what has stood the test of time, particularly in our broken
age. Second, with the brokenness that is all around us, I find Judaism and Christianity, alone among the religions and even philosophies, have the most well thought out answers that are key to attend to the mending and life’s meaning.
You don’t have to be a Christian to consider this ancient wisdom for yourself, so as you read this if you are not religious, it’s not intended to be a sneaky apologetic. I hope tried and true wisdom can be respected by people of all beliefs or those with no particular belief. In fact, I will make the case that the Christian church may be among the worst offenders in this brokenness by ignoring how societies like ours can live wisely connected—younger to older—despite what are their good intentions. That may make Christians uncomfortable, but I’d encourage them to hang in there with me, too.
The backdrop then for what lies ahead is to understand the loss of the meaning of wisdom—head and heart—and its necessity for our times in connecting the generations, gate or no gate, and the role for wise elders at a time when the aging population is growing rapidly. How that plays out remains to be seen in the pages ahead.
Now to wisdom. With the very opening lines of Solomon’s great gathering of Near East acumen in the ancient book of Proverbs, we hear the earnest advice of the female protagonist, Wisdom. Her timeless critique speaks immediately to our 21st Century culture about the missing role of the elders and the implications of disconnection with those who are in the early stages of life. As she enters the scene, she begins to walk along the noisy streets of Jerusalem, calling loudly for the people to follow her to the gates where she gives this ominous warning:
Because I have called and you refused to listen, have stretched out my hand and no one has heeded, because you have ignored all my counsel and would have none of my reproof, I also will laugh at your calamity; I will mock when terror strikes you.
At first blush, we might be tempted to read the message as: You young kids, you better pay attention to the older folks or you will make bad choices and all hell will break loose.
But Wisdom goes to the gates because it is the elders who are not there; they are failing to build a relationship with her and it is their hearts, that deepest human place within each of us, not just their heads, that suffer. As a result, they do not play their needed role, the generational links are breaking down, and the young suffer the most. For Israel, disaster actually would follow Solomon’s generation as his own son ignored this admonition.
Wisdom says to each generation down through the years, it is not your responsibility as elders to garner a comfy seat while others pass by and give you honorific greetings, nor is it yours to find a warm place to end your days after selling your snow shovels as you head south.
The intent of Wisdom is not for elders to be exclusively with people who look like us once our time for productive contribution is all but ended. As we grow older, she does not want us to just withdraw into our 55-and-over continuous care entertainment zones, devoid of the noise and messiness of little kids, while we watch amusing digital images as our last act. To be sure, walking the fairways of well-manicured golf courses on occasion is certainly a good form of exercise and camaraderie, but our culture’s image of retirement can also become a deadly trap, even setting the stage for terror to enter at our gates. The implications for our culture are as poorly understood today as they were 3,000 years ago. Perhaps we can recapture these ancient insights.
In a nutshell, the narrative ahead is for those who can envision themselves as one day receiving their fiftieth birthday gifts of an AARP card and a colonoscopy, as well as those who are already there: you will be, or are, a needed though often missing source of wisdom in a broken world where the generational links have been badly strained. This is also for those emerging adults who are already on their frantic way to and fro, seeking direction for the beginning of their life story: those who sit by the gate are the secret sauce. That is ancient wisdom, not modern pride. If you are not quite an elder, but no longer young, consider this an early wake-up call that you will be an elder one day, and know you can learn to take advantage of what those that go before you have to offer without remaking their mistakes.
Adulting
If there is one symptom of this brokenness it is captured in the exaggerated media portrayal of the rising generation. In a combination of disdain and dark humor, emerging adults, Millennials,are usually depicted as narcissists, gamers, and slackers, marked by a self-absorbed fixation with screens and digital amusement as they travel with their loose tribe. This is the view that many who are older imagine is accurate where the young are freeloaders in their parents’ basements, delaying adulting
as long as possible. As in all caricatures there is some truth here, but it masks the actual heightened anxiety, depression, and sense of loneliness in those who are becoming adults that are genuine symptoms of what is lost. We are not seeing some evolutionary quirk or personal failure in delayed adulthood.
To be sure, many of the young are doing just fine. Still, it is fair to say many who are younger would covet a few older people who would sit down and simply hear them out and give them some wise advice rather than criticize. They are the product of those who are elders, and elders have a need to acknowledge we can do far better. So, this is neither a critique of those older or younger but rather a look into the nature of our times and how we can come together to better achieve God’s original design for a good life. I hope to show just how that can play out.
Listen
This story is an encouragement for us all to do what Wisdom asks of us: listen to her as she speaks to our day, a time not only of actual, looming terror at the very gates of our great cities, but a time of great social divide. Whether it is in education, poverty, race, culture, immigration, sex, or living conditions, a caustic, nearly feckless political divide besets our leaders. Anxiety and depression seem almost a pandemic. All this fragmentation and even misery is compounded by deepening moral instability led by a hyper individualism and its handmaiden, ethical relativity.
In the pages ahead, we come to understand the life challenges among those in their teens through their 30s as well as those who realize their younger days lie behind. Both have questions, good questions, that have wise answers encapsulated in the lost purpose and role for elders. It is not just our national leadership in all sectors which seems to grow even more dysfunctional in the new millennium: that is too easy of a target and too simple an excuse we have been making. For those of us now addressed as sir
or ma’am,
the symptoms of cultural and societal decline have grown exponentially just within our lifetimes—and we are implicated. We who came of age in post-World War II America have seen it all happen and it’s been on our watch.
The Road Ahead
The fundamental story here is to explain why there is a need to restore the generational links and thus to recover the strategy God devised long ago for the older generation in shaping the next with the wisdom of life’s experiences and relationships. This he intends for the good of a society that might otherwise remain broken. The meaningful role for elders is one God has envisioned and it is ours to recover.
In Chapter 1, Two Paths, we begin the story by seeing that our culture has a well-worn, well-advertised path for the retirement years best characterized by the bucket list
—finally getting to do all the things that leisure and life savings can provide, often in a more benign climate. However, there is a second path, the one less often followed, and it is the discovery of the power of purpose in bringing in a heart of wisdom and engaging in the unique vocation reserved for the third third
of life we discuss next.
In Chapter 2, Finishing Well, we begin with a vision for this third third, one of living the remaining years with zeal for the task prepared for us and for our response to the role that life and God has prepared for us to do: wise mentors who build deep relationships with the next generation. This is the first link to strengthen.
In Chapter 3, Miserable and Unprepared: What’s Wrong with these Kids? we look at the second link, the generations coming behind, generally referred to as the Millennials and