I will turn eighty years old on my next birthday, and I am becoming well acquainted with the realities of aging. That may be why Psalm 72 has grown more meaningful to me. There is a note in the Hebrew Psalter, not carried into many English translations, that reads, “This concludes the prayers of David, son of Jesse.” Whether or not that is the case, the Psalm carries the tone of transition. It is attributed to Solomon, a young man stepping into leadership, yet it echoes the concerns of someone who understands the long road ahead. There is a prayer that stretches across the years: “Do not cast me off in the time of old age; forsake me not when my strength is spent.” Later it adds, “Even to old age and gray hairs, O God, do not forsake me.” It is the honest voice of someone who knows that strength fades, but dependence does not.
Those words feel increasingly familiar. Hearing is not what it once was, memory sometimes takes a moment to cooperate, and walking distances that used to seem routine now require a bit more planning. I say this carefully, because I occasionally walk into a room and forget why I went there, only to stand confidently as though that was the plan all along. John Wesley described similar experiences in his later years, noting the decline of sight, strength, and memory. Yet he added a deeper concern, that physical decline might lead to stubbornness or irritability. That is a perceptive observation. Aging does not only affect the body; it presses on the spirit as well. It can reveal what is beneath the surface. The Psalmist’s prayer acknowledges both the reality of decline and the continued need for God’s presence. Strength may lessen, but the need for guidance and companionship remains steady.
The New Testament brings a quiet assurance to these concerns through Jesus Christ. Paul writes, “Though our outer self is wasting away, our inner self is being renewed day by day” (2 Corinthians 4:16). That renewal does not depend on physical ability. It is rooted in a relationship that does not fade. Jesus said, “I am with you always, to the end of the age” (Matthew 28:20), a promise that spans every stage of life. Charles Wesley’s words capture this hope: “Jesus, my only hope thou art, Strength of my failing flesh and heart.” In Christ, aging is not simply a story of loss. It becomes a journey held together by a presence that does not diminish, guiding, sustaining, and ultimately leading beyond this life into something enduring.
