Faith & Finance with Rob West
Retirement is often described as the finish line—the long-awaited season when work finally ends, and leisure begins. But what if that picture is incomplete? For believers, retirement does not mean purpose expires. It may simply mean that purpose takes on a new expression. We were created by God not merely to earn a paycheck, but to serve, contribute, create, encourage, and reflect His character in the world. That calling does not end when a career does. Mitch Anthony, bestselling author of The New Retirementality: Planning Your Life and Living Your Dreams…at Any Age You Want, has spent decades helping people rethink retirement. He joins the show today to share a simple but deeply important message: retirement should not be the end of meaningful work. It should be a new season of purposeful living.

Retirement is often described as the finish line—the long-awaited season when work finally ends, and leisure begins. But what if that picture is incomplete?
For believers, retirement does not mean purpose expires. It may simply mean that purpose takes on a new expression. We were created by God not merely to earn a paycheck, but to serve, contribute, create, encourage, and reflect His character in the world. That calling does not end when a career does.
Mitch Anthony, bestselling author of The New Retirementality: Planning Your Life and Living Your Dreams…at Any Age You Want, has spent decades helping people rethink retirement. He joins the show today to share a simple but deeply important message: retirement should not be the end of meaningful work. It should be a new season of purposeful living.
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Work, at its best, is not merely labor. It is an opportunity to bring value to others and meaning to our own lives. That may happen through a career, but also through volunteering, mentoring, serving in the church, caring for family, teaching, consulting, creating, or encouraging others.
Our culture often treats retirement as though people reach a certain age and are no longer needed. But that idea does not reflect biblical wisdom.
Human beings are not products with expiration dates. We are image-bearers of God, created with gifts, experience, wisdom, and calling. While the pace or form of our work may change with age, our purpose does not disappear.
That does not mean everyone should work a traditional job until the end of life. Rest matters. Enjoyment matters. Slowing down may be wise and necessary. But the question is not simply, “When can I stop working?” A better question is, “How can I continue bringing value to others in this season of life?”
Many people imagine retirement as a permanent vacation. After decades of work, they look forward to golf, travel, hobbies, and relaxation. Those can all be good gifts from God. But leisure alone cannot carry the weight of a meaningful life.
Mitch points out that there are diminishing returns to leisure. When recreation becomes the whole purpose of life, it often loses its joy. What once felt refreshing can begin to feel repetitive.
The goal is not to choose between vacation and vocation. The goal is a healthy rhythm of both. Rest gives energy to our calling, and meaningful contribution makes rest more enjoyable.
Most retirement planning focuses on money: savings, income, investments, Social Security, taxes, and health care costs. Those are important. But they are not the whole story.
Retirement also brings significant non-financial challenges. People may struggle with identity, routine, mental engagement, relationships, and a sense of usefulness. For someone who has spent decades in a profession, stepping away can raise painful questions: Who am I now? What do I do with my time? Where am I needed?
Mitch also notes that intellectual challenge matters. When people stop engaging their minds, solving problems, learning, and contributing, they may begin to feel themselves slowing down. Staying mentally and relationally engaged is an important part of a healthy retirement.
There is no retirement clause in that verse.
God created His people for good works—not as a way to earn salvation, but as the fruit of His grace in our lives. Those good works may look different in each season, but they remain part of our calling.
Retirement may change your schedule, income, title, or responsibilities. But it does not change the truth that you belong to Christ and have been gifted to serve others.
For those entering retirement or already in it, the key is to ask better questions.
Those questions can open the door to mentoring younger professionals, serving in ministry, helping nonprofits, teaching a class, encouraging families, offering practical wisdom, or simply being more present to people who need care.
Purpose in retirement does not have to be grand or public. Faithfulness often looks ordinary. But ordinary service, offered to God, can be deeply meaningful.
Retirement is not the end of usefulness. It is not a retreat from calling. And it is not merely a reward for decades of labor.
For the follower of Christ, retirement can be a season of renewed purpose—a time to live with wisdom, generosity, rest, and meaningful contribution.
The goal is not simply to have enough money to stop working. The goal is to steward the life God has given you for His glory and the good of others.
Your career may end. Your title may change. Your pace may slow. But your purpose in Christ remains.
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