Books

The Gift of Years

These Christian reflections look at biblical, historical, and modern perspectives on aging.

Growing Old in Christ
Growing Old in Christ
Growing Oldin Christ Stanley Hauerwas,Carole BaileyStone-king,Keith G. Meador,David Cloutier, Eds. Eerdmans, 310 pp., $24

As Woody Allen, quoted in one essay in this book, says, “Aging looks quite good when you consider the alternative.”

In a culture obsessed with youth, how do Christians approach getting older? Does the purpose of life become clearer in old age? How are virtues nurtured? What does it mean to die well? What does it mean to live a full life?

“The answers to these questions are not charted out like a neat linear map to the end of our earthly lives; rather, they require a tolerance for ambiguity and incongruity,” writes editor and contributor Carole Stoneking. “The answers spiritualize the mundane, ‘hallow this life,’ and bring us home.”

In these Christian reflections on aging, the contributors (professors, deans, and graduate students) look at biblical, historical, and modern perspectives on aging. They also examine Christian community, worship, and other practices that confront modern views on aging and help provide meaning.

The work is academic but largely accessible, offering luminous insights on what it means to grow old in Christ.

Cindy Crosby is a regular contributor to Publishers Weekly

Related Elsewhere:

Growing Old in Christ is available from Amazon.com and other book retailers.

More information, including a list of contributors, is available from the publisher.

Other CT articles on aging include:

A Gerontologist Gets Older | David Petty, author of Aging Gracefully, has long taught about the process of aging. Now, he is personally learning that one of the most important aspects is the spiritual side. (July 29, 2003)

Dying in Peace | In Birmingham, an innovative program combines hospice care, traditional medicine, and faith to comfort the terminally ill. (Oct. 22, 2001)

Thanksgiving at Fair Acres | A meal with my mother and other nursing-home residents opened a small crack in their stony detachment, and gave a brief glimpse of the kingdom of heaven. (Nov. 17, 2000)

Also in this issue

Techno Sapiens: Improving on God's design?

Cover Story

The Techno Sapiens Are Coming

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A Heaven-made Activist

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A Theoblogical Revolution

Editorial

Back to the Garden

A Christianity Today Editorial

Crushing House Churches

Jeff M. Sellers

Inside <em>CT</em>: The IV Connection

Missing Jewish Ways

Reviewed by Cindy Crosby

News Wrap

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Editorial

One Nation Under God—Sort of

A Christianity Today Editorial

Top 10 News Stories, 2003

Simply Good Writing

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The Church in Absentia

The Colonizers

The Gift of Anger

Reviewed by Christopher A. Hall

The Heresy Itch

Sarah Hinlicky Wilson

The Name Game

Following the Star

Compiled by Richard A. Kauffman

The Good News of Da Vinci

By Darrell Bock

Review

The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King

Jeffrey Overstreet

Hope Amid the Ruins

Define 'Better'

An interview with bioethicist C. Ben Mitchell

Canadian Anglicans Face Off

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Corporate Thought Police

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Ex-Muslims Harrassed in Egypt

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Godly Chutzpah

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"Top 10 News Stories, 2003"

Massachusetts court backs gay marriage

RNS, with CT reporting

The twelfth of never

Tony Carnes

Joseph's Sword

Kathy Berklund-Page

Rough-edged Retelling

Reviewed by Cindy Crosby

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