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Symposium celebrates, emphasizes importance of older adults


From "NewsDesk" <NewsDesk@UMCOM.ORG>
Date Wed, 9 Apr 2003 14:43:35 -0500

April 9, 2003  News media contact: Kathy Gilbert7(615)742-54707Nashville,
Tenn.	10-71BP{207}

NOTE: Photographs are available with this story.

By Kathy Gilbert*

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UMNS) - In the United States, 35 million adults - 12.5
percent of the population - are 65 or older, and that number will more than
double in the next three decades. 

In the United Methodist Church, nearly half - 48.4 percent - of the
membership is already over 65, according to the U.S. Congregational Life
Survey in 2001. 

"The United Methodist Church is graying faster than the country," said
Shirley Painter, chairperson of the Older Adult Committee on Aging.

Now is the time to establish active, committed older adult committees or
councils in each annual (regional) conference, Painter added.

The first Symposium on Older Adult Ministries, held March 27-29, brought
together people from 46 of the 64 annual conferences in the United Methodist
Church with a major emphasis on energizing and inspiring those working in
older adult ministries to go back to their conferences and get more church
members involved.

Keynote speakers, panel discussions, workshops and worship services were held
at the Scarritt-Bennett Center in Nashville.

Jane Marie Thibault, gerontologist at the University of Louisville Hospitals
and author of A Deepening Love Affair, opened the symposium by talking about
the future of aging.

"The future belongs to the aging until 2050," she said. "(The age) 120 is the
estimated biological lifespan (without genetic manipulation) for human
beings. You need to plan for living 120 years." 

Bishop Violet Fisher of the New York West Area ended the symposium with a
powerful, inspirational service, "Who's Hand Is On Your Shoulder?"
Participants were anointed with oil and sent forth to work for older adult
ministries.

The event was co-sponsored by the United Methodist Committee on Older Adult
Ministries and the Board of Discipleship's Center on Aging and Older Adult
Ministries. Money from the 2000 General Conference Comprehensive Plan for
Older Adult Ministries was used to fund the symposium, said the Rev. Richard
Gentzler Jr., center director. Each annual conference was invited to send a
representative to the symposium.

Herb Bowman, a participant from the Rocky Mountain Annual Conference, said
Thibault's address emphasized the positives of growing older.

"She said old age is sometimes thought of in pretty negative terms, but it
shouldn't be. We don't think about getting old as quality time," said Bowman,
director of senior adult ministries at Littleton (Colo.) United Methodist
Church.

Gentzler held a workshop on the role of annual conferences in older adult
ministries. The Committee on Older Adult Ministries will be sending
legislation to the 2004 General Conference, the denomination's top
legislative body, calling for a council on older adult ministries to be
established in each conference. The assembly will meet in Pittsburgh, April
27-May 7.

Robbie Youngblood, director of older adult ministries at First United
Methodist Church in Austin, Texas, said she gained valuable information from
Gentzler's workshop.

"We don't have a council in our conference," she said. "I am 82 years old,
and I want to do all I can to help older adults feel they are an important
part of the church family."

Bill Bunker, a representative from the Illinois Great Rivers Conference, said
he left the symposium enthusiastic about "reactivating older adult ministry
in my conference."

"We have to get across to our people (older adults) that they are a valuable
asset to the community and to the church and to themselves," said Elizabeth
Thille, from the Kansas East Conference. "They just have to keep on living
the Christian life. Even if they are physically not able, there are still
many things they can do to serve the Lord." Thille is director of older adult
ministries at the United Methodist Church of Resurrection in Leawood, Kan.

Too often, older adult ministry is "pushed to the back burner" or gets cut
from church budgets, Thille said. Being able to network with other conference
leaders was an opportunity to learn what was available and to hear what other
churches were doing, she said. She also heard of many resources she had not
been aware of before.

Bowman agreed that networking was a highlight of the symposium for him.

Painter was pleased with the participation from the annual conferences. "I
wish we could have had 100 percent participation, but I think two-thirds is
still good," she said.

"We need a wake-up call for the whole church, and that is what we were trying
to do with this symposium," she said. "We hope and pray that annual
conferences that do not have a very active older adult committee or council
will establish one and offer adequate support for this important ministry.
Older adult ministry is so vital to the life and to the continued existence
of the church."

# # #

*Gilbert is a United Methodist News Service news writer.

*************************************
United Methodist News Service
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