Sunday, 2 May 2010

Live Long,
Finish Strong
The Divine Secret to Living Healthy,
Happy, and Healed
Gloria Copeland
New York Boston Nashville
,
Copyright © 2010 by Gloria Copeland
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Copeland, Gloria.
Live long, fi nish strong : the divine secret to living healthy, happy, and
healed / Gloria Copeland. —1st ed.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-0-446-55928-7
1. Christian life. 2. Aging—Religious aspects—Christianity. 3. Older
Christians—Religious life. I. Title.
BV4501.3.C6697 2010
248.8'5—dc22
2009024806
C h a p t e r 1
,
How Old Is Old?
H ow would you respond if a divine messenger showed up at
your house today and promised you a long and blessed life?
What would you say if a prophet, a minister, or an angel of God
looked you squarely in the eye and said:
Your days will be long on the earth. Your days will be strong on the
earth. If the Lord tarries His coming, you will live in length of days and
strength of days.
Some years ago, that’s exactly what happened to my husband,
Kenneth. A dear friend of ours, an established minister who was
visiting our home, spoke those words to him by the Spirit of God.
Because we’ve learned some things about how to receive God’s
promises by faith, we knew just how to respond.
We said, “We receive it! We believe it!” We rejoiced!
That’s a message anyone would like to receive. It’s a powerful and
encouraging message.
Best of all, you don’t have to wait for a prophet or for some special
2 Li v e L ong , F i n i s h S t r ong
message to come to you because this message is already confi rmed in
the Bible. It’s God’s promise to you. In recent years, I’ve spent many
hours studying what the Word of God has to say about longevity
and have seen for myself that the promise of a long, strong life isn’t
reserved for just a few special people. It’s not meant for a select number
of people who are divinely ordained to live to a ripe old age.
The promise of a long and blessed life belongs to every obedient
child of God.
If you are a believer, it belongs to you.
God doesn’t have to send an angel or a prophet to deliver that
promise to you. All you have to do is open your Bible to fi nd a multitude
of verses that tell you God wants you to live a long, long time.
As you read them, they will say to you much the same thing the
Lord said to Kenneth:
It’s My will for your days to be long upon the earth. It’s My desire for
your days to be strong upon the earth. If Jesus tarries His coming,
My plan is for you to live in length of days and strength of days.
How you respond to that message will make all the difference. If
you shake your head in disbelief and only wish it were true, it won’t
have much effect. If you respond in faith and say, “I receive it! I
believe it!” it can revolutionize your life.
But, as most of us have discovered at some time in our lives, that
kind of faith response isn’t always automatic. It must be cultivated
and developed on purpose.
How do we do that? By studying and meditating on what God has
to say about this issue. For as Romans 10:17 tells us, “Faith cometh
by hearing, and hearing by the word of God.”
The pages you are about to read are full of that Word. They are
packed with scriptural promises that will help you build your faith
for longevity. They are sprinkled with inspiring examples, both
from the Bible and from the lives of ordinary people who lived long
How O l d I s O l d ? 3
after the Bible was written, that will encourage you to reexamine
your answer to the question: How old is old?
Even more important, you’ll discover some vital scriptural secrets
that can help you extend your years decades beyond what you may have
thought possible. You’ll learn how, by living God’s way, you can live
such a strong, satisfying life that you won’t want to leave this earth until
you are old—really, really old. And not just old according to the world’s
way of thinking, but old according to God’s way of thinking. Bible old!
How Old Is “Bible Old”?
Bible old is much older than most of us think it is. It’s older than
medical science says it is. And it’s far older than the way it used to be
portrayed in the movies a generation ago.
That realization hit me a few years ago while I was watching
an old John Wayne western that included a scene where a whitehaired,
bun-wearing old lady was celebrating her birthday. To me,
the woman looked at least eighty years old. Imagine my shock when
they announced she was sixty!
Whoa! I thought with great gratitude. We’ve come a long way since
that movie was made. Sixty looks a lot better these days .
According to recent statistics, sixty doesn’t just look better these
days, it is better. In 1960, the year I graduated from high school, the
average life expectancy in this nation was only 69.7 years. 1 These
days, the average life expectancy has increased to 77.8 years. 2 So,
even from a natural perspective, old today is at least seven years
older than it was forty years ago.
If we answer the question How old is old? with those statistics, we
might conclude that seventy-eight qualifi es as old in our generation.
Many Christians believe even the Bible backs up that idea.
But are they right?
The devil would certainly like for us to think so. He’s worked
overtime to convince believers that when they celebrate their seventieth
or eightieth birthday, they should start preparing to check out
4 Li v e L ong , F i n i s h S t r ong
of earth and into heaven. But he has had to twist the Scriptures to
sell us that deceptive bill of goods, because nowhere in the Bible do
we fi nd the average life span of God’s obedient people to be a mere
seven or eight decades.
In fact, from a biblical perspective, eighty isn’t old at all. A number
of famous saints, including Abraham and Moses, were just starting
to fulfi ll the call of God on their lives at that age. In God’s eyes,
an octogenarian is just a “spring chicken.”
If you doubt it, study the fi rst few chapters of Genesis. There
we see that God designed Adam’s and Eve’s natural bodies to live
not just seventy or eighty years, but forever ! Even after they sinned
and death entered the picture, their life spans were astonishing—as
were their children’s, and their grandchildren’s, and their greatgrandchildren’s.
Consider this:
3 According to Genesis 5, Adam lived 930 years.
3 His son Seth lived 912 years.
3 His grandson Enos lived 905 years.
3 His great-grandson Cainan lived 910 years.
3 His great-great-grandson Mahalalel lived 895 years. (He died a little
younger than the others. Maybe he had some bad habits!)
3 Mahalalel’s son Jared lived 962 years.
3 Jared’s son Enoch never died at all. He walked so closely with God
that he was caught up to heaven at the tender age of 365.
3 Enoch’s son Methuselah won the old age award by living 969 years.
3 Excluding Enoch, those people had an average earth life span of
more than 926 years.
How O l d I s O l d ? 5
They lived almost a millennium. Think of it! For us today, that’s
like living from 1009 to 2009. In 1009, the Vikings were still roaming
around, raiding villages. The world was in the throes of the
Middle Ages. Can you imagine living from then until now?
That puts the concept of biblical longevity in a whole new light!
Living Long in Dangerous Times
“But Gloria, that was before the Great Flood,” someone might say.
“Conditions on the earth were much better back then. It was easier
to live a long time.”
Not really. According to the Bible, the years before the Flood
were the most violent years this earth has ever seen. Genesis 6
says during that era, as men began to multiply on the face of the
earth,
God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and
that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil
continually. And it repented the L ord that he had made man on the
earth, and it grieved him at his heart. And the L ord said, I will destroy
man whom I have created from the face of the earth; both man, and
beast, and the creeping thing, and the fowls of the air; for it repenteth
me that I have made them. . . . The earth also was corrupt before
God, and the earth was fi lled with violence. And God looked upon
the earth, and, behold, it was corrupt; for all fl esh had corrupted his
way upon the earth. And God said unto Noah, The end of all fl esh is
come before me; for the earth is fi lled with violence through them;
and, behold, I will destroy them with the earth. Make thee an ark.
(verses 5–7, 11–14)
We think we live in dangerous times today, but the years just
before the Flood beat anything we’ve ever seen. People were so
wicked, they didn’t have any good thoughts. They were plotting evil
all the time. Even so, God, in His great mercy and patience, put up
6 Li v e L ong , F i n i s h S t r ong
with them as long as He could. Jewish sages tell us that one reason
Methuselah lived so long was because his name meant “When
he dies, judgment will come.” 3 That’s exactly what happened. The
Flood came the year Methuselah died.
What a wonderful testimony to God’s mercy! It endures a long,
long time.
God is so merciful, He refused to send the Flood until the last
possible moment. He waited until there was only one God-fearing
family left on the earth that He could depend on. He postponed
judgment until just one man, Noah, stood between the annihilation
of the human race and future generations.
I’m telling you, Noah lived in a dangerous era!
That ought to encourage us today because we’re living again in
a time where violence is rampant in the world. Wickedness is again
increasing. As a result, a certain amount of judgment is going to
come. Many people who are committed to sin and refuse to repent
and honor God will die early. They’ll fall prey to disease or catastrophe.
Romans 6:23 says the wages of sin is death, and for those who
work hard at sinning, payday comes too early. But we, as believers,
are like Noah. We’ve found grace in the eyes of the Lord (Genesis
6:8), and we have been forgiven and cleansed of sin by our faith in
the blood of Jesus. We have an ark—a covenant with God—through
His Word, that will protect us from suffering the effects of sin that
are coming on the world.
Of course, for us to enjoy that protection and the long life that
comes with it, we must build our ark by faith in God’s promises and
stay there by obeying His Word. We’re not going to live long just
because we’re born again, although that certainly helps. The new
nature we received when we were saved will empower us to know
and do what’s right. But to receive the full benefi ts of our salvation,
we must walk with the Lord and obey His commandments.
If we ignore the instructions in the Bible, our consciences, and
the promptings of our spirits and give ourselves over to the evils of
the world—born again or not—we’ll get caught up in those evils
How O l d I s O l d ? 7
after a while. If we put our eyes and ears in places they don’t belong,
we’ll be pulled off into sin. If we feed on television programs and
movies full of adultery and fornication, we could end up wandering
away from the ark of God’s protection and living like sinners, even
though in our hearts we don’t want to.
No one thinks that will happen to them. Most Christians, when
they’re fi rst tempted to compromise their standards, say to themselves,
Hey, I know I shouldn’t watch this stuff. I shouldn’t go to those
places or associate with those people, but I’m a Christian. It’s not going to
affect me .
We’ll look at that in more depth later, but I’ll warn you right now,
that’s what every Christian thought who ever fell prey to adultery or
some other sin that wrecked his life. He didn’t think he could ever
do such a thing. But because he looked at, listened to, and thought
about things he knew were evil, he eventually did them. He let that
ugly stuff stir up the lusts of his fl esh, and then he shocked himself
and everyone else by acting on it.
Don’t let that happen to you. If you haven’t already, make a quality
decision today to sell out to God and get your spiritual house
clean. Get rid of sin, straighten up your life, and set your mind on
the Lord. Feed on the Word of God until that’s the biggest thing in
your life. Put God fi rst and love Him with all your heart, soul, and
might.
If you’ll do that, He will keep you in perfect peace no matter
what’s happening in the world. Isaiah 26:3 says, “Thou wilt keep him
in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on thee: because he trusteth
in thee.” He’ll keep you in the center of His plan for your life if you
will listen and obey. And in dangerous times like these, that’s the
safest place on earth to be.
Ask Noah. He can confi rm it. When the Flood came, there was
only one safe place on the planet, and God made sure Noah and his
family were in it. As a result, they were protected from the violence
around them and the judgment of sin. In a day when everyone else was
dying, they not only survived, they went on to live a long, long time.
8 Li v e L ong , F i n i s h S t r ong
Post-Flood Longevity Heroes
Even before the rain began to fall, Noah had already attained what
we could consider an impossibly old age. He was six hundred years
old the “day all the fountains of the great deep were broken up, and
the windows of heaven were opened” (Genesis 7:11 nkjv ).
Six hundred years is a long time to live. Considering the conditions
Noah faced during those years, and the strenuous labor involved in
building the ark, it would have been no surprise had Noah died a few
years after the Flood. But he didn’t. The Bible tells us that “Noah lived
after the fl ood three hundred and fi fty years. And all the days of Noah
were nine hundred and fi fty years: and he died” (Genesis 9:28–29).
Some of Noah’s descendants weren’t quite as hardy as he was,
however. His son Shem, for example, lived only six hundred years.
His grandson Arphaxad passed on at the early age of 438, and his
great-grandson Salah died at 433 (Genesis 11:10–15). As you can see,
people’s faith for longevity was beginning to slip by then, and creation
scientists believe conditions on the earth after the Flood were
not what they had been before the Flood.
Even so, God’s people continued to enjoy such extended lives
that patriarchs born centuries apart lived at the same time. According
to Jewish historians, Noah’s father (Lamech), for instance,
knew Adam. And Noah, who was born 1,056 years after the time of
Creation, knew Abraham, who was born 1,948 years after Creation.
In fact, Abraham was fi fty-eight years old when Noah died. 4
Talk about good examples of longevity! These people lived so
many years that the oral tradition about what happened at Creation
was passed down from Adam through only seven people until the
time it was written down by Moses, who received it on Mount Sinai
directly from God.
Job, too, who is believed to have lived during the same era Abraham
did, enjoyed a life span that would shock us today. Although
Job’s friends are famous for criticizing and speaking wrong things
about him, one thing they said of him came true: “Thou shalt come
How O l d I s O l d ? 9
to thy grave in a full age, like as a shock of corn cometh in in his
season” ( Job 5:26).
Job’s longevity is especially impressive because, as everyone
knows, he had to survive some dangerous times. The devil came
after him with a vengeance. He put Job through a terrible time of
troubles that lasted somewhere between nine months and a year.
During that time, Job’s wife told him to curse God and die. In
so doing, she sided with the devil. That’s just what the devil wanted.
Satan told God that if Job suffered loss, Job would curse God to His
face. (Wives, we don’t want to follow Mrs. Job’s example. When our
husbands are having a hard time, we don’t want to join up with the
devil and discourage them further. We want to join with God and
encourage them.)
Thank heaven, Job didn’t heed his wife’s advice! When trouble
came, he stayed with the program. He refused to dishonor God, and
he refused to give up and die.
As a result, he not only made it through, but “the L ord turned the
captivity of Job, when he prayed for his friends: also the L ord gave Job
twice as much as he had before. . . . After this lived Job an hundred and
forty years, and saw his sons, and his sons’ sons, even four generations.
So Job died, being old and full of days” (Job 42:10, 16–17).
The Bible doesn’t tell us how old Job was before his trouble
started, but historians estimate he was at least sixty years old. That
means Job lived to be about two hundred . . . and the last 140 years
turned out to be even more enjoyable for him than the early part of
his life. He ended up richer than ever (which is remarkable since he
started out as the richest man in the East). He had a whole houseful
of beautiful children and lived to see his great-great-grandchildren.
Not bad for a man most people refer to as “poor old Job.”
Back to the Garden of God’s Goodness
What does all that have to do with us?
We’re descendants of these people!
10 Li v e L ong , F i n i s h S t r ong
Every one of us can trace our ancestry back to Noah. We’re of
the same species. We come from this same family of people who
lived two hundred, four hundred, fi ve hundred, six hundred, and
even nine hundred–plus years.
So when the devil tries to convince us that seventy or eighty
is old, we ought to laugh in his face. “No, Methuselah was old,”
we should say. “Noah was old. I won’t be old for a long, long time!”
“But what if God’s will for those people is different from His will
for us?” you might ask. “Can we really be sure God wants all of us
to live long lives?”
Yes, we can, because, as I’ve already mentioned, God has spelled
out His will in His written Word. He has revealed to us, through the
Bible, that from the very beginning His desire for humankind was
not just long life, but eternal life.
God never wanted any of His children to die. His plan was for
them to live in His goodness and blessing forever. He wanted things
to be well with them. He wanted them to enjoy a life without stress
or strain in an environment full of everything good. His plan was
and still is the Blessing Plan .
The account of Creation in Genesis 1 tells us exactly what that
good environment included. It says:
3 God created light and saw that it was good.
3 He divided the land from the waters and saw that it was
good.
3 He made the earth bring forth plant life and animal life and marine
life and saw that it was good.
3 He created humankind, blessed them, gave them dominion, and
when He was fi nished, God stepped back, looked one more time
at everything He had made, “and, behold, it was very good.”
(Genesis 1:31)
How O l d I s O l d ? 11
3 He put Adam and Eve in a garden of that goodness and gave them
one command. He said, “Of the tree of the knowledge of good and
evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof
thou shalt surely die.” (Genesis 2:17)
Some claim death is natural. They say it’s just a part of God’s
good creation and we should embrace it. But the Bible presents a different
picture. It tells us that death was not a part of God’s original
design. It was not included in His perfect will. In fact, He specifi -
cally commanded Adam and Eve not to open the door to it.
But Adam and Eve disobeyed. They bowed the knee to Satan
by succumbing to his temptation. Through their sin, they introduced
death—the foul offspring of the devil—into God’s beautiful
world.
Had the story ended there, there would be no reason for this book.
We would all be helpless victims just waiting for death to overtake
us. But thank God, the story doesn’t end there. Before Satan could
slither out of the Garden of Eden after the Fall, God warned him
that death’s days were numbered. He foretold the coming of Jesus
and said to the devil:
Because thou hast done this, thou art cursed above all cattle, and
above every beast of the fi eld; upon thy belly shalt thou go, and dust
shalt thou eat all the days of thy life: And I will put enmity between
thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall
bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel. (Genesis 3:14–15)
As we all know, Jesus came to earth and fulfi lled that promise
two thousand years ago. Through His life, death, and resurrection,
He defeated Satan and paid the price for the sin of all humankind.
He was made “sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the
righteousness of God in him” (2 Corinthians 5:21).
Through Jesus, God has set every believer back into the garden
of His goodness. He has made available to us exceedingly great and
12 Li v e L ong , F i n i s h S t r ong
precious promises that are divinely designed to help us escape the
corruption that is in the world through sin (2 Peter 1:4). Many of
those promises offer us long, strong, and blessed lives. They teach
us how we can live to a ripe old age.
Again and again, God makes His will and His ways clear to us
through Scriptures like these:
3 You must serve only the L ord your God. If you do, I will
bless you with food and water, and I will keep you healthy.
There will be no miscarriages or infertility among your
people, and I will give you long, full lives. (Exodus 23:25–26 nlt ,
italics added)
3 Know therefore this day, and consider it in thine heart, that the
L ord he is God in heaven above, and upon the earth beneath:
there is none else. Thou shalt keep therefore his statutes, and his
commandments, which I command thee this day, that it may go well
with thee, and with thy children after thee, and that thou mayest
prolong thy days upon the earth, which the L ord thy God giveth
thee, for ever. (Deuteronomy 4:39–40, italics added)
3 Fear the L ord thy God, to keep all his statutes and his
commandments, which I command thee, thou, and thy son, and
thy son’s son, all the days of thy life; and that thy days may be
prolonged. (Deuteronomy 6:2)
3 He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most High shall abide
under the shadow of the Almighty. . . . With long life will I satisfy him,
and show him my salvation. (Psalm 91:1, 16, italics added)
3 [Wisdom] is more precious than rubies: and all the things thou
canst desire are not to be compared unto her. Length of days is in
her right hand; and in her left hand riches and honour. (Proverbs
3:15–16, italics added)
How O l d I s O l d ? 13
3 Hear, O my son, and receive my sayings; and the years of thy life shall
be many. I have taught thee in the way of wisdom; I have led thee in
right paths. (Proverbs 4:10–11, italics added)
3 The fear of the L ord prolongeth days: but the years of the wicked
shall be shortened. (Proverbs 10:27, italics added)
3 Even to your old age I am he; and even to hoar hairs will I carry
you: I have made, and I will bear; even I will carry, and will deliver
you. (Isaiah 46:4)
3 Honour thy father and mother; which is the fi rst commandment
with promise; that it may be well with thee, and thou mayest live
long on the earth. (Ephesians 6:2–3, italics added)
Since the New Testament guarantees all the promises of God in
Jesus are “Yes, and in Him Amen” (2 Corinthians 1:20 nkjv ), when
we read those verses, we should agree with them. We should say,
“Yes, Lord! I’ll obey those instructions. I receive those promises. I
believe I’ll have a long, strong enjoyable life.”
Years of a Life Worth Living
Notice I didn’t say we should just believe for a long life. I said we
should expect good years, years we can enjoy, because that’s what the
Bible offers us. It says if we keep God’s commandments in our hearts
and obey them, we’ll have “length of days and years of a life [worth
living] and tranquility [inward and outward and continuing through
old age till death]” (Proverbs 3:2 amp ).
Some Christians haven’t experienced that kind of inward and
outward tranquillity, so they don’t want to live a long time. They’re
not happy. Things aren’t going well for them. Their lives are riddled
with misery, and heaven looks like the only escape.
14 Li v e L ong , F i n i s h S t r ong
But those folks are missing out on God’s plan. His plan includes
many years of a life worth living . He has a divine design for us that
will give us not just quantity of life but quality of life while we are on
the earth. He wants our lives to be satisfying (Psalm 91:16).
It doesn’t matter how spiritual you are, it’s hard to be satisfi ed
when you don’t have the money you need to take care of your children.
It’s hard to be satisfi ed when your body is sick, your family is
in a mess, and the bill collector is knocking at the door.
Life is just more enjoyable when your needs are met and you have
a nice home; when you don’t have to crowd six children into a twobedroom
house. It’s more fun when you’re strong and healthy, when
your relatives are all saved and loving one another, when you have
peace on the inside as well as on the outside.
Psalm 91 says that’s the kind of life God desires for us. It also
tells us that to have that kind of life, we must dwell in the secret
place of the Most High and abide under the shadow of the Almighty
(verse 1).
Exactly what is involved in dwelling and abiding in God?
To abide in God means we stay attached to Him. We take up
residence in Him and in His Word. We’re not living for God one
day and living for the devil the next. We live for God every day.
When we do sin or stumble out of His will, we repent and get right
back on the path of righteousness.
God can do great things for an abider. He can work wonders
for the person who will stick with Him, as Job did, in good times
and bad. That kind of person opens the door for God to fulfi ll the
promise in Psalm 91:14: “Because he has set his love upon Me, therefore
I will deliver him; I will set him on high, because he knows and
understands My name [has a personal knowledge of My mercy, love,
and kindness—trusts and relies on Me, knowing I will never forsake
him, no never]” ( amp ).
Those verses reveal another key to abiding in the secret place of
the Most High. They tell us that the abider has faith in God and His
Word. He isn’t stressed out in fear and worry about what the future
will bring. He isn’t focusing on what the devil happens to be saying
How O l d I s O l d ? 15
at the moment, or what the economy is doing, or what the doctor’s
report contains. He is trusting God’s promises. He is praying in
faith and calling on the Lord with confi dence.
God leaves no doubt about how He will respond to that kind of
person. He says, “I will answer him; I will be with him in trouble, I
will deliver him and honor him. With long life will I satisfy him and
show him my salvation” (verses 15–16 amp ).
When God tells us He’ll be with us in trouble, that covers a lot
of territory. It covers sickness, disease, accidents, storms, lack, poverty,
children getting off course, husbands becoming diffi cult, wives
becoming diffi cult. Without God’s help and deliverance, those
things can steal the joy from life. They can make us wish for an
early entrance to heaven. But God promises the abider that He will
deliver him from those things and satisfy him with long life.
The word satisfy means “to have enough of, to fi ll up, to have
plenty.” 5 To be satisfi ed is to have your desires fully gratifi ed, to be
made content.
If you’re not satisfi ed in life, keep growing in the Lord until the
things that dissatisfy you get taken care of and you’re fully gratifi
ed. You can’t be satisfi ed if your child isn’t in the kingdom of God.
You can’t be satisfi ed if he is on drugs and headed for hell. It doesn’t
matter how old you are right now, don’t leave this earth with your
children unsaved. Stick around; keep praying and believing God for
them until they’re born again and living for Jesus.
If you’re not satisfi ed in your occupation, you may not have found
the job God has for you yet. So keep seeking God. Keep believing
and obeying His Word until He maneuvers you into the right
position.
“But I’ve been working this job for twenty years!”
That may be so, but if you’re dissatisfi ed, something is wrong.
A self-adjustment needs to be made either on the inside or on the
outside. If you don’t make that adjustment and instead stay in a place
of dissatisfaction, you’ll get weary of life on earth. You’ll develop a
premature longing to go to heaven. You’ll be tempted to give up on
this life and go on to the next too early.
16 Li v e L ong , F i n i s h S t r ong
Don’t do that!
Live until your needs are met, your family’s needs are met, and
you’re satisfi ed. Live until nothing of vital importance to you is lacking
in your life. Live until you’re at peace.
The Hebrew word for peace, shalom , means “nothing missing,
nothing broken.” 6 It means fullness and wholeness in every area of
life. So set your sights on shalom . Be determined to stay here on earth
until you can look around you and say, “Praise the Lord! There is
nothing missing and nothing broken. I am full and whole—spirit,
soul, and body.”
Finish your life in victory as a testimony to other people. Buy up
all the time you can here on earth so you can give maximum glory
to God.
After all, you have an opportunity to serve Him during your
life on earth that you’ll never have again. Here you have a choice
between good and evil. You can decide to either obey God and give
Him honor or yield to the devil and give him honor. In heaven,
you won’t have that choice—there’s only good. In heaven, there’s no
devil to resist.
Remember, we can’t win faith battles for Jesus on the other side of
the grave. The good fi ght of faith takes place here on earth. What’s
more, we have what it takes to win. We have the power to tell the
devil, “No, you’re not getting me. I’ll not leave this life depressed
and dissatisfi ed. I’ll not be unfaithful to God. I’ll not walk in darkness
just because people around me walk in darkness. I’m going to
obey the Lord. I’m going to give God glory in this body for a long,
long time!”
So, let’s do it. Let’s live in victory over the devil, year . . . after
year . . . after year. Let’s get our hearts set on living for God until
we’re old.
Really old.
Bible old.
Then, when we’re fully satisfi ed, we can leave here and go to
heaven.
Or, better yet, maybe we can live until Jesus comes to catch us
How O l d I s O l d ? 17
away. Wouldn’t that be fun? We might be in church . . . or out shopping
. . . or cooking dinner, when all of a sudden, we hear God’s trumpet
and, in an instant, we’re gone! We might just leave the potatoes
boiling on the stove, shoot skyward to meet Jesus in the air, and take
all our loved ones with us.
What a way to go!
Start Eating from the Tree of Life
“Gloria, do you really believe it’s possible to enjoy the kind of longevity
our scriptural ancestors did? Do you truly think you’ll get
‘Bible old’?”
I’m not expecting to give Methuselah any competition, but I
have my sights set a lot higher than I once did. After I read and
studied what the Bible has to say about it, my perspective on aging
has changed in a dramatic way. Eighty years old is looking much
younger to me these days.
At the writing of this book I’m in my sixties and can say I feel
better now than I did at forty. In fact, I feel more full of life with
every passing year. Do you know why? It’s because I partake of the
tree of life every day.
If you’ve read the fi rst few chapters of Genesis, you know about
that tree. God planted it in the middle of the Garden of Eden.
According to Genesis 3:22, if Adam and Eve had eaten of that tree, it
would have been a source of everlasting life for them.
They didn’t do it . . . but we can. Because we have access to the
Word of God, we have the opportunity to eat every day from
the spiritual tree of life described in Proverbs 3:13–18, which
says:
Happy is the man who fi nds wisdom,
And the man who gains understanding;
For her proceeds are better
than the profi ts of silver,
18 Li v e L ong , F i n i s h S t r ong
And her gain than fi ne gold.
She is more precious than rubies,
And all the things you may desire
cannot compare with her.
Length of days is in her right hand,
In her left hand riches and honor.
Her ways are ways of pleasantness,
And all her paths are peace.
She is a tree of life to those who take hold of her ,
And happy are all who retain her. ( nkjv , italics added)
Though the literal, physical Garden of Eden is long gone, you
and I can partake of the tree of life today by attending to the wisdom
of God. We can open our Bibles and learn how He thinks and how
He does things.
God’s written Word is full of His wisdom. As we partake of
it—heed, believe, and obey it—that wisdom becomes a wellspring of
life to us. It renews our youth like the eagle’s (Psalm 103:5). It makes
our lives a joy.
If we, as believers, aren’t enjoying life, we aren’t doing it right.
Jesus said, “I came that they may have and enjoy life, and have it in
abundance (to the full, till it overfl ows)” (John 10:10 amp ).
Through the years, I’ve discovered the more I fi nd out about
the Word and the wisdom of God, the more I partake of that tree
of life, and the more joyful my life becomes. It gets better every
year!
In 1967, when Ken and I fi rst started putting the Word fi rst, our
lives weren’t nearly as much fun as they are now. We had the joy of
the Lord in our hearts, but our circumstances were not enjoyable.
We were broke, in debt, making about one hundred dollars a month,
and had no natural way to change the situation.
All we knew to do was follow God’s pattern in the Garden of
Eden and center upon the tree of life. So we did. We fed on the
Word every day. We kept that Word in our eyes and ears almost
How O l d I s O l d ? 19
all the time because we knew it was the key to success, prosperity,
health, and every other good thing God has to offer.
We didn’t just read the Word. We determined to believe and
obey it.
Now, forty-three years later, I can tell you that life is far more
enjoyable than it used to be. God’s goodness surrounds us on every
side. We still feed on the Word daily. We have tranquillity within
and around us. The longer we live, the more blessed we are. We’ve
proven for ourselves that God’s Words “are life to those who fi nd
them” (Proverbs 4:22 nkjv ).
It’s a No-Brainer
Of course, Ken and I could have chosen to live another way. No one
forced us to put God’s Word fi rst. We could have ignored it. We
could have left our Bibles lying unopened on the coffee table and
spent all our time watching television, instead of partaking of the
tree of life.
God always gives people that choice. He says to everyone what
He said to the people of Israel through the words of Moses in Deuteronomy
30:
See, I have set before you today life and good, death and evil, in that I
command you today to love the L ord your God, to walk in His ways,
and to keep His commandments, His statutes, and His judgments, that
you may live and multiply; and the L ord your God will bless you in the
land which you go to possess. But if your heart turns away so that you
do not hear, and are drawn away, and worship other gods and serve
them, I announce to you today that you shall surely perish; you shall not
prolong your days in the land. . . . I call heaven and earth as witnesses
today against you, that I have set before you life and death, blessing and
cursing; therefore choose life, that both you and your descendants may
live; that you may love the L ord your God, that you may obey His voice,
20 Li v e L ong , F i n i s h S t r ong
and that you may cling to Him, for He is your life and the length of your
days. (verses 15–20 nkjv)
Moses got straight to the point. To paraphrase, he said, “If you
choose to follow God and His ways, you’ll live long and be blessed.
If you don’t, your lives will be short and miserable.”
You’d think that choice would be a no-brainer. Given the option
of life and blessing or death and disaster, who in his right mind would
choose the latter?
Amazing as it may seem, countless people do.
That’s not God’s will for them, however. He doesn’t want anyone
to choose death. He wants us all to choose life. He said it again
and again, “Oh, that they had such a heart in them that they would
fear Me and always keep all My commandments, that it might be
well with them and with their children forever!” (Deuteronomy 5:29
nkjv ). Still, because God created us with free wills, the decision is
ours. We can do what we want.
If we’re not happy with our lives, we can go for more of the Word
of God. If we have sickness in our bodies or can’t pay our bills, we
can open the Bible and renew our minds with God’s wisdom. We
can start thinking more the way He thinks so we can act as He acts
and enjoy a greater level of satisfaction and blessing.
If we want to live long, strong lives, we can start partaking of the
tree of life . . . or choose not to.
God has already done His part. He has made His wisdom available
to all of us. He has written down in black and white the Word
that will set us free and prolong our days on the earth.
God’s Word will correct and teach us. It will strengthen us.
But if we don’t give it any attention or partake of a continual, fresh
supply by getting it into our hearts and expressing it through our
actions, we’ll miss out on the wonderful, long lives God has planned
for us.
Don’t make that mistake. Choose to center your life around the
Word of God so you can enjoy many years of a life worth living and
How O l d I s O l d ? 21
grow old—real old! Bible old!—before you depart this earth and go
on to heaven.
Choose life!
Start by Choosing Jesus
“But I’m not absolutely sure that I’ll be going to heaven when I die,”
you might say. “I haven’t always been a perfect person. I’ve done
some things that were wrong. How can I be sure that heaven is my
eternal destination?”
It’s simple. All you have to do is put your trust in Jesus. Receive
Him as your Savior and the Lord of your life.
Choosing Jesus is the fi rst step in choosing God’s wisdom because
it’s impossible for any of us to obey God’s Word without Him. We
might desire to obey it, but we can’t. Romans 7:18–20 describes the
dilemma this way: “To will is present with me; but how to perform
that which is good I fi nd not. For the good that I would I do not: but
the evil which I would not, that I do. Now if I do that I would not, it
is no more I that do it, but sin that dwelleth in me.”
Before we’re born again, our fallen nature keeps us enslaved to
sin. When we receive Jesus’ saving grace, however, we are spiritually
re-created. We receive a new nature—the very nature of God Himself.
Suddenly, we have the inward power to live a life entirely different
from the life we lived before. We have the ability to understand
and obey the Word of God.
If you’ve never been born again, don’t wait another moment. Pray
this prayer from your heart by faith right now:
Lord Jesus, I believe that You are the Son of God who became a man
and came to earth to save humankind. I believe You lived a perfect life
and died to pay the penalty for my sins. I believe You were crucifi ed,
rose again, and are now seated at God’s right hand as King of kings
and Lord of lords.
22 Li v e L ong , F i n i s h S t r ong
I receive You today as the Savior and the Lord of my life. I receive
the cleansing power of Your shed blood that frees me from the
bondage of sin and the renewing power of the Holy Spirit that makes
me a new creation in Christ.
Heavenly Father, thank You for giving me new life. Thank You that
I’m born again. Fill me now to overfl owing with Your Holy Spirit. From
this day forward, begin revealing to me Your perfect will. Teach me
through Your Word how to walk and talk with You. Show me how I can
give You glory and live a long, strong life in Your service. In Jesus’ name
I pray. Amen.
P o i n t s t o R e m e m b e r
3 The promise of a long and blessed life belongs to every child of
God. The Bible assures us of it.
3 Many of God’s Old Testament people lived from two hundred
to nine hundred–plus years, and we are their descendants.
3 God’s will for us is to enjoy length of days and years of life
worth living. If we’re not enjoying life, we’re not doing it right.
3 Adam and Eve would have lived forever if they had eaten of
the tree of life. As believers we can eat of that tree every day by
spending time in the Word of God.
3 When we choose Jesus as our Lord and Savior and abide in His
Word, we are choosing life.
S c r i p t u r e
I have set before you life and death, blessing and cursing; therefore
choose life, that both you and your descendants may live. (Deuteronomy
30:19 nkjv )
How O l d I s O l d ? 23
C o n f e s s i o n
I receive today God’s promise of a long and blessed life. I make a
choice to put God’s Word fi rst in my life, to spend time in it, obey
it, and receive the years of a life worth living and the satisfaction it
promises me. I will live in victory over the devil and give God glory
on the earth for a long, long time. I choose life!

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