The Gospel Call

Nostalgia part two.


Listen Later

Dear friend in Christ,

This is Part 2 of our reflection on overcoming the deep pull of nostalgia, now turning our attention to the realities of growing older and the quiet, sometimes painful sense that we are no longer at the top of our game.

As the years gather, many of us look back on seasons when we felt strong, sharp, energetic, and indispensable—days of leading, building, creating, or simply moving through life with confidence and vigor. Now the body moves more slowly, stamina fades, opportunities seem fewer, and the world rushes by at a pace we can no longer match. Nostalgia for those peak years can mingle with a deeper ache: “Have my most useful days passed? Am I still needed? Was my best contribution already made?”

The Scriptures meet us right in this tender place with truth and comfort. The Apostle Paul, writing later in life after years of hardship, imprisonment, and physical weariness, gives us these words in Philippians 3:13-14:


Paul does not pretend the past was unimportant. He thanks God for it. But he refuses to let yesterday’s achievements—or yesterday’s strength—become the measure of his worth or the limit of his calling. He chooses to press forward, eyes fixed on the eternal prize, not on what his body or circumstances once allowed.

God speaks the same forward hope in Isaiah 43:18-19:


Aging can feel like a wilderness—dry, uncertain, unfamiliar. Yet God promises He is already at work, carving fresh paths and bringing streams of renewal exactly where we feel most parched. He does not discard us when our pace slows; He often repurposes us for deeper, quieter, more enduring fruit.

The psalmist celebrates this truth beautifully in Psalm 92:14:


Notice the promise: still bear fruit… stay fresh and green. Not the same kind of fruit as in youth, perhaps, but fruit nonetheless—fruit of wisdom, of steady faithfulness, of intercession, of mentoring, of a life that testifies to God’s sustaining grace over decades.

And Paul adds this encouragement in 2 Corinthians 4:16:


Your new song may be sung in a softer voice, but it can carry deeper resonance because of the years behind you.

In Christ, your latter days are not a decline—they are a different kind of flourishing.

Press on. His grace is sufficient, and His best purpose for you is still unfolding.

In His unfailing love,

Amen 🙏

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

The Gospel CallBy Scott Fugate