THE GLORY OF AGING A woman nearly 100 years old wrote: This old shell in which I dwell Is growing old, I know full well, But I am not the shell. What if my hair is turning gray, Gray hair is honorable, they say. What if my sight is growing dim, I still can see to follow Him. What should I care if times' old plow Has left deep furrows on my brow. Another house, not made with hands, Awaits me in the Glory Land. What tho my tongue refuse to talk, What; tho I falter in my walk, I still can tread the narrow way, I still can sing, and watch and pray. My hearing may not be as keen As in times past it may have been But I still can hear the Savior say In whispers soft, "This is the Way." This outward man, do what I can, To lengthen out his life's short span, Shall perish and return to dust, As everything in nature must. The inward man, the Scriptures say, Is growing stronger every day. Then how can I be growing old When safe within the Master's fold? Ere long this soul shall fly away And leave this tenement of clay. This robe of flesh I'll drop and rise To seize the "everlasting prize." I'll meet you on the streets of gold And prove that I'm not growing old. "For which cause we faint not; but though our outward man perish, yet the inward man is renewed day by day" (2 Cor 4:16). |