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Puritan Richard Steele

A special privilege and comfort of old age

Proverbs 16:31; Psalm 92:12-14
Puritan Richard Steele June, 10 2026 Audio
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a special privilege and comfort of old age. By Richard Steele. Proverbs chapter 16, verse 31. The silver-haired head is a crown of glory if it is found in the way of righteousness. The older a man grows, the wiser he should grow. And the wiser he grows, the less likely he is to choose evil. The more divine strokes and judgments he has seen upon evildoers, the more he should be afraid of tampering with it.

A special privilege and comfort of old age is that it is richer in experience than any other age. The aged believer can tell experimentally of the wisdom and justice of God's providence, of the truth of his promises and threatenings, of the devices of Satan, of the deceitfulness of riches, of the wisdom of integrity, of the vanity of all carnal delights, of the wickedness of his own heart. Old age is rich in the experience of these things, whereby they are able to govern themselves and to advise others.

Their judgments are more refined. Their passions are more sedate. Their graces are more strong, their actions are more consistent, and their spiritual stature is taller. Trace some godly aged men from morning to night, and you shall find them so discreet in their charity, so grave in their counsels, so savory in their discourse, so constant in their piety, so considerate in their resolutions, so faithful in their reproofs, so poised in their temper, so charitable in their censures, and so uniform and useful in their lives, that their practice may be a perpetual sermon and an example to teach others their duty to God and man.

By long experience, aged believers are taught to avoid many dangers which others fall into. Their manifold experience of the deceitfulness of the flesh, of the world, and of the devil has enabled them to counter and somewhat conquer them, and their experience renders them able to give the most prudent counsels and to forewarn others of those consequences which they easily foresee if they have treasured up wisdom according to their years. The silver-haired head is a crown of glory if it is found in the way of righteousness.
Puritan Richard Steele
About Puritan Richard Steele
Richard Steele (Steel) (1629-1692), nonconformist divine, son of Robert Steele, farmer, was born at Barthomley, Cheshire, on 10 May 1629. He was educated at Northwich grammar school, admitted sizar at St. John’s College, Cambridge, on 1 April 1642, and incorporated M.A. at Oxford on 5 July 1656. (A Puritan's Mind)
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