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biblical advice for every stage in life

The Empty Nest

The Empty Nest

After raising your children, the empty nest is just the next great adventure. At this point in your life, you can rediscover your purpose.

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The Empty Nest Years

Achieving the long-term goal of raising and then launching a child (or children) is one of those milestones in life that can lead to surprising emotions. One day you might feel relieved to catch your breath after such an intense marathon and then the next day you miss the busyness — especially the ever-present relationships that went with it. Whether you are approaching, just hitting, or deep into the empty nest season, you are likely experiencing a range of feelings that can leave you asking yourself, “What next?” This would be a great time to take steps toward rediscovery in your life.


STEP ONE: Rediscover Your Mission

Psalm 90 gives empty nesters a sober reminder of the passage of time, but also a wise prayer for the Lord to “teach us to number our days aright” and to “establish the work of our hands.” A major segment of your life up to this point has been committed to serving and to guiding your children. That faithful and daily focus on individuals within your home has been preparing you for broader service. In 1 Timothy 3:5, Paul asks the question “If anyone does not know how to manage his own family, how can he take care of God’s church?” Another way to see that passage is those who have managed their families have learned a couple of things about how to care for God’s church: how to love, forgive, guide, lead, and encourage. Such characteristics developed in the last season — as well as the additional time and resources that often come with an empty nest — can equip you for a whole new world of opportunities to fulfill your mission during this exciting season of life.


STEP TWO: Rediscover Your Marriage

Some marriages do not last until the empty nest years either because of death or divorce. If your marriage has survived, you may feel like the tsunami of kids that swept in and out has left you needing to rediscover the person to whom you said “I do” so long ago. Proverbs 5:18-19 says, “May your fountain be blessed, and may you rejoice in the wife of your youth.” After this intense stretch of parenting, how can you find fresh ways to rejoice in the marriage of your youth and to “be ever captivated” by your spouse? You may just need to reintroduce yourself (“Hi, I’m that guy who asked you out a couple of decades ago,” or “I’m that girl you met on the missions trip.”) and start rediscovering some of your earlier passions and dreams.

STEP THREE: Rediscover Your Children

During earlier parenting stages, you had some fairly clear lines of authority and control, especially when it came to your house rules. Those lines blur as your children become independent — even if they boomerang back home for a season. Now is the time when your influence is built upon strong relationship rather than direct control. Your efforts will focus on coaching your children into self-sufficiency and into pursuing marriage and building families of their own. This season requires a lot of trust because “sideline coaching” is all you can offer rather than step-by-step direction. This season also gives you a vantage point to see the time and effort you have invested into your children in a different light especially as they begin to take ownership of the values you have tried to instill (Psalm 78:3-7). Watch them discover God’s plan for their lives.


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By Bob Buford

Your midlife doesn't have to be a crisis. In fact, the second half of your life can be better than the first. Bob Buford's bestseller shows you how. What do you want to do with the rest of your life In Halftime, Buford provides the encouragement and insight to propel your life on a new course to true significance--and the best years of your life.

Buford focuses on this important time of transition to the second half of your life, leading you to...
·Take stock of your successes and accomplishments thus far
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This updated and expanded 20th Anniversary edition also includes new questions for reflection or discussion at the end of each chapter, brand new "halftime" stories of men and women enjoying a second half of significance, specific halftime assignments to guide readers into their second-half mission, and more.

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Your children are gone or leaving soon. It's time to focus once again on your own future and especially on your marriage. What's in store for the second half? David and Claudia Arp provide answers and practical help in this groundbreaking book. Drawing on their national survey of hundreds of "second-half" couples, the Arps reveal eight marital challenges every long-term marriage faces, and they offer strategies and exercises for meeting each of them. The Second Half of Marriage will challenge you to create a vision for the rest of your life together -- and inspire you to make that vision a reality.

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