Oh, this is a sad sight!
(Ashton Oxenden, "A Happy Old Age" 1870)
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One would think that the longer a person lived, the more willing he would be to leave his present earthly abode. But this is not always the case.
Sometimes, alas! we see very aged people clinging to this world even more tightly than the young. We see them close to the grave's mouth—and yet loving the riches, the pleasures, the trifles of this world with all their affections! Oh, this is a sad sight! It is sad to see a poor dying creature entering upon a solemn eternity—with a heart glued to the world which he is leaving, and full of its concerns!
When this is the case with a Christian, God often in mercy sends us some affliction. He withers our gourds which have grown up around us, that He may lead us to seek a truer and a safer shelter. He sees that we are too fond of these clay cottages of ours; so He makes the walls to crumble, that we may be content to leave them at His call.
Look at your growing infirmities, dear reader—as so many mercies. Let them serve to remind you that you will not be here always, and that this world "is not your rest, because it is polluted!" Let your growing infirmities make you long for that happier land, where there shall be no more old age; where sorrow and sighing shall be unknown; and where "the inhabitant shall never say, I am sick."
Oh, it is well for us that all is not health, and strength, and sunshine here—else we would be even fonder than we are, of our present earthly home.
"But our citizenship is in Heaven. And we eagerly await a Savior from there, the Lord Jesus Christ, who, by the power that enables Him to bring everything under His control, will transform our lowly bodies so that they will be like His glorious body!" Philippians 3:20-21