The days
of our years are threescore years and ten; and if by reason of
strength they be fourscore years, yet is their strength labor and
sorrow; for it is soon cut off, and we fly away. Psalm
90:10
THESE VERSES from one of the greatest of the Psalms keep
tumbling out of the attic of my memory, because this month I pass
the milestone of my seventieth birthday. As we septuagenarians
know, there is a certain ambivalence as to whether this anniversary
should be regarded as an occasion for congratulations or
commiseration. The Psalmist evidently thought the latter. But he
was writing some three millennia before the advent of modern
medicine, vitamin pills, exercise regimens, and other anti-aging
palliatives. So perhaps a different approach is appropriate for
21st-century longevity.
A few years ago, I was a guest at Margaret Thatcher’s seventieth
birthday party. When Bill Deedes, a former cabinet minister and
newspaper editor, proposed a toast, he quoted the above lines from
the Psalm but without attribution. Apparently thinking that the
sentiments came from Bill rather than from the Bible, Thatcher gave
Deedes a good handbagging in response, along the lines of: “What’s
all this stuff and nonsense about labour and sorrow after three
score years and ten then?”
Later in the evening, I asked if she realized that the “stuff
and nonsense” was in fact a famous quotation. “Who wrote it?” she
demanded. “King David, in the Psalms,” was my answer. The Iron
Lady, on the crest of her birthday wave, could have been back at
Prime Minister’s Questions. “Well, he got a lot of things wrong,”
she retorted. “As kings in the Middle East still do!”
Getting one’s seventies right is an intriguing challenge. We
need to realize that the importance or unimportance of the number
of years we have lived is an attitude of mind. Oliver Wendell
Holmes, who was still handing down great judgments as a Supreme
Court justice at the age of 90, caught the zeitgeist of his
generation well when he said, at the seventieth birthday of Julia
Ward Howe, “To be 70 years young is sometimes far more cheerful and
hopeful than to be 40 years old.”
Cheerfulness and hopefulness are two good starting points for
entry into one’s seventies. They evoke laughter, conviviality,
optimism, and joie de vivre, which are attractive
attributes at any stage in life. But as this is supposed to be a
column about spiritual matters, let’s move into deeper waters and
have a shot at devising some guidelines for septuagenarians with an
interest in life’s spiritual dimension. Here are my top 10
recommendations:
1. Be grateful. At least once a day, find
a moment to thank God for the privilege of life itself. Count your
blessings. Make a point of expressing thanks to others. “Lend me a
heart replete with thankfulness,” said Shakespeare. A grateful
heart is often a happy heart.
2. Keep fit in body and mind. Exercise renews the brain
cells. The 12th-century rabbi Moses Maimonides, who was also a
leading physician, believed that physical fitness was a religious
duty. Intellectual exercise and spiritual fitness are part of the
same calling as we strive to follow St. Paul’s exhortations to
“offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to
God,” and “be transformed by the renewing of your mind.”
3. Get our accounts straight with God. This means
seeking his forgiveness with total honesty and humility, coupled
with forgiving those who have hurt or wronged us. Also, at our age
we should learn to stop judging people. Leave that to God. He is
better at it than we are—and more forgiving, too.
4. Participate in a spiritual community, such as a church or
a prayer group. As we join people who care about Godly ideals,
we will be encouraged and inspired by their examples and
sacrifices.
5. Think about the next life. It is a mystery, but
there are answers to be found if we are willing to open our eyes to
the horizons that lie beyond the grave. The seventies are a
Realistic time to begin contemplating the hour of one’s death. With
preparation, it can be faced without fear and even with joy.
6. Renew old friendships and build new ones. Heed Dr.
Samuel Johnson’s wise advice: “A man, Sir, should keep his
friendship in constant repair.” An extension of one’s circle to
include younger friends, praying friends, and friends who radiate
good energy, both spiritually and physically, is highly
encouraged.
7. Take less interest in the material life and seek more
from the spiritual life. Fulfillment has little to do with
what we get and everything to do with what we give. So stop
worrying about wealth, success, and status. Happiness is to be
found in service—to our neighbors and to the Lord.
8. “Love and then do what you like,” wrote St.
Augustine. He was expressing it in the context of The Shema,
the ancient command in the Book of Deuteronomy to love the Lord our
God with all our heart, all our mind, all our soul, and all our
strength. The New Testament enlarged the divine command into loving
our neighbors (including the less-than-lovable ones!) And one
another. In our seventies, perhaps we get better at this, as we
realize there can be a new element of patriarchal love, and as we
embrace our families, spouses, children, and grandchildren. With
age, we find that we have more love to give.
9. Make time to be peaceful and quiet, for nothing is so
like God as stillness. During most of our threescore years and
ten, we expend our energies Rushing hither and yon, sending ever
increasing numbers of texts and e-mails, and being generally and
often rather pointlessly over-busy. The seventies may be the moment
to take advice from a Simon and Garfunkel song our generation
loved: “Slow down, you move too fast/You got to make the morning
last. ”What better way to do this than to obey another great
spiritual exhortation?“Be still, and know that I am God.” (Psalm
46:10)
10. Pray more. This is the most important guideline of
all. Set aside a regular period of quiet time each day for
listening to and communicating with God, and your life will
gradually be lifted to a new level of contentment. A wise friend
gave me this advice some years ago, and it has proved
transformative. As I enter what I hope will be my less turbulent
seventies, I shall try to deepen my prayer life, for I know this is
the secret of a good life.
None of these signposts for the seventies are easy. I know how
often I will stumble and fall when trying to follow them. But
striving to make the journey along such guidelines can open the
door to the Fruits of the Spirit, magnificently defined by St. Paul
as “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,
gentleness, and self control.” (Galatians 5:22-23) If we can be
filled with these, the septuagenarian years will indeed be
golden.