“The grass withers, the flower fades; but the word of our God will stand for ever.”
Isaiah 40:8 (RSV)
There is a man who I’ve become acquainted with over my time of visiting the Nursing home. He has serious mental health problems and has undergone multiple (ECT) electric shock treatments. Each time I see him he seems to know me but never remembers my name, nor does he know what year it is, or the facility he is in. I will call him Joe, for privacy reasons.
While visiting with my usual small group of residents, Joe came into the Day room, and rolled his wheelchair near to our table. One resident looked at him and cried out, “See, that’s how he gets!” I looked at Joe and he looked extremely anxious, and his facial expression appeared to be tormented. He didn’t seem able to speak, and I didn’t know what to do for him.
I asked Joe if I could pray for him, and he nodded yes. I laid a hand on his shoulder and prayed for him to have peace and to know Jesus is here with him. I told him to keep praying and God will help him. After I sat back down at the table, I heard Joe’s voice faintly begin to recite the Lord’s Prayer. I turned to look at him as he said the words, “Our Father who art in Heaven, hallowed be thy name.” His voice was faint so I joined him in saying the rest of the prayer and then the friends at the table joined in as well. Joe prayed the entire prayer all the way to the end with us.
It was a moment of grace to see how Joe, who couldn’t speak for a moment, and with his very limited memory, start saying the Lord’s prayer on his own, and prayed it to the end with the others.
The Lord’s Prayer is God’s word, first taught by Jesus, in Matthew’s gospel. Isaiah said that God’s word will endure forever, long after the grass withers and the flower fades.
As I looked around the Nursing home that day, it is filled with people whose minds are fading like flowers, and whose bodies are withering like grass, yet the words of Jesus will remain in the human soul forever.
Somehow, the words of that prayer remained in some part of Joe’s soul and brain, enabling him to start reciting it, despite a disabling memory loss. I think it’s amazing that people like Joe can still remember certain prayers and scriptures. Chaplains have found that patients with Alzheimer’s dementia may not know their own name, but they remember how to recite a prayer.
The body and mind may fade but the soul retains all the eternal things, which have nourished it. As Joe prayed, the expression of panic and anxiety left his face, and he became more relaxed.
There’s a scripture for every need and here’s one for all aging seniors to know God is with them:
“Even to your old age and gray hairs, I am he, I am he who will sustain you. I have made you and I will carry you; I will sustain you and I will rescue you.”
(Isaiah 46:4)
God gave us souls that receive blessings even when the mind and body begin to fade like the flowers and grass. Our soul can retain the everlasting nourishment of faith, God’s word and His Presence, which sustains us and carries us through.
Lord, you made us and promised to sustain us, so we place our body, mind, soul and spirit into your hands to be carried in your love. Amen










