Work, Image, and Lifelong Flourishing:

Why Leaving Work Too Soon Can Harm Body and Soul

Work matters theologically and practically. Tim Keller puts it well: “The book of Genesis leaves us with a striking truth—work was part of paradise… The fact that God put work in paradise is startling to us because we so often think of work as a necessary evil or even punishment.” Work, for Keller, is not simply something to endure — it is woven into the good order of creation. He goes on to say, “Work is as much a basic human need as food, beauty, rest, friendship, prayer, and sexuality; it is not simply medicine but food for our soul.” And while work must not become an idol, Keller warns that “Work is not all there is to life. … If the point of work is to serve and exalt ourselves, then our work inevitably becomes less about the work and more about us.” Finally, Keller gives a vivid image that ties God’s activity to ours: “But in Genesis we see God as a gardener, and in the New Testament we see him as a carpenter. No task is too small a vessel to hold the immense dignity of work given by God.”

Those theological convictions — that God is a worker and humans, made in God’s image, share in meaningful labor — give work intrinsic dignity. That dignity has real-world consequences: when people abruptly stop working in their 50s or early 60s, a growing body of research shows there can be measurable harms to health and longevity unless purposeful alternatives are in place.

What the research says about early retirement and health risks

Mortality / survival: Several large longitudinal studies and reviews have found an association between early retirement and increased mortality risk in some populations. Early retirement has been linked in some cohorts to higher all-cause mortality compared with people who remain employed longer — though results vary by study and the reason for retirement (voluntary vs. forced) matters. PMC+1

Cognitive decline: Multiple longitudinal analyses report faster declines in some cognitive domains after retirement (e.g., verbal memory), and studies suggest postponing retirement or maintaining cognitively demanding activities reduces the rate of decline. The Whitehall II cohort and other studies found retirement can accelerate decline in certain cognitive abilities compared with continued work. PMC+1

Mental health — depression & suicidality: The transition to retirement produces mixed mental-health outcomes. Where retirement is involuntary (job loss, poor health), depression and suicide risk often rise. Where retirement is voluntary and well-planned, depressive symptoms may fall for some. The heterogeneity of results is important — retirement is not uniformly good or bad for mental health. PMC+1

Cardiovascular and metabolic risk: Systematic reviews and cohort studies show retirement’s effects on cardiovascular disease (CVD) and risk factors are heterogeneous: some research finds reduced CVD risk after retirement on average, while other work shows increased behavioral risk factors (physical inactivity, weight gain) in subgroups. Timing (early vs. on-time), reasons for leaving work, sex, and socioeconomic status all influence outcomes. PMC+1

Social isolation & loneliness (serious health consequences): Loss of the workplace’s social structure can increase isolation and loneliness — factors linked to higher risks of stroke, heart disease, and mortality in older adults. Addressing social connection is central to protecting health after leaving work. The Guardian

Important nuance: causation vs correlation

Researchers repeatedly warn that the association between early retirement and worse health can reflect reverse causation: people in worse health often leave the workforce earlier. Conversely, leaving work for positive reasons (choice, adequate finances, purposeful plans) often has neutral or beneficial effects. But even voluntary retirees can experience declines when the loss of daily structure, purpose, cognitive challenge, or social connection is not replaced. See the discussion and differing results across cohorts. PMC+1

Why this matters theologically

If work is part of the created order and a sphere in which humans image God (Keller’s “gardener/carpenter” picture), then work is a primary way people find rhythm, purpose, community, and contribution. Abruptly removing that structure in midlife can remove a major source of “food for the soul” (Keller’s phrase), producing both spiritual and physical consequences. The research above shows those losses can show up as cognitive declines, increased depressive symptoms, and — in some samples — increased mortality risk.

Practical Implications and Recommendations

  1. Plan for phased or purposeful retirement — encourage phased retirement, consulting, or part-time engagement instead of an immediate stop. Studies indicate that delaying retirement or staying cognitively engaged can slow cognitive decline. ScienceDirect+1
  2. Replace structure with meaningful roles — purposeful volunteering, mentoring, caregiving, or part-time paid roles preserves identity and social ties. Recent work finds volunteering in early retirement reduces depression risk. ScienceDirect
  3. Prioritize social connection — maintain workplace friendships and cultivate community groups; chronic loneliness is linked to increased stroke risk and other serious outcomes. The Guardian
  4. Keep cognitive and physical routines — encourage lifelong learning, hobbies that challenge the mind, and consistent exercise to offset risks of cognitive and cardiovascular decline. PMC+1
  5. Differentiate voluntary vs. involuntary retirement in planning — if early retirement is forced by job loss or health, prioritize mental-health supports and programs to restore purpose and connection (therapy, vocational retraining, social programs). Research shows involuntary retirement has a stronger link to depression. PMC+1

A Transition

If you’re thinking about stepping away from your paid work in your 50s or early 60s, consider a careful plan that replaces daily purpose, social connection, and cognitive challenge. Faith communities and financial plans that treat retirement as a transition (not a full stop) preserve both the soul’s flourishing and the body’s health. As Tim Keller reminds us, work is “food for our soul” — and the scientific literature shows that when we lose the structure and meaning of work without a thoughtful, purpose-filled replacement, our health can pay a real price.

An Essential Idea

This quarantine has me missing my local hockey rink, all this downtime and no where to skate. Ice rinks in the south typically operate on thin profit margins.

Once described to me by a rink owner, it’s usually the third owner who can keep the doors open. The first two buy all the required equipment and sell for pennies on the dollar at, or near, bankruptcy due to debt and operating costs.

Ice rinks are a tough business, often without bailouts or lenient lending policies. (Essential services, you bet. Have you ever seen a hockey player go 100 days without skating? It’s not a pretty sight.)

Lo and behold, I receive a follow-up email to buy a synthetic rink for the backyard (Yes, I’m on that distribution list).

The first synthetic rinks were expensive and crude, like skating on a waxy jungle gym. The new versions are much more affordable, and so glassy smooth, graceful figure skaters train on them.

That’s the beauty of innovation, someone is actively working to bring a product to the market so my kids and I can have a few moments of sanity in the backyard. Despite the best efforts by central bankers, there’s risk for that innovator – I may wait for another advancement in technology before trading my money for their product – and yet the longer this quarantine drags on, the more likely that transaction will occur.

But don’t tell me tell that a rink owner, or synthetic ice creator isn’t essential, the quality time with my kids and the mouths that innovator is feeding at their home say otherwise.

Review – Boundaries Face to Face

Boundaries Face to Face: How to Have That Difficult Conversation You've Been AvoidingBoundaries Face to Face: How to Have That Difficult Conversation You’ve Been Avoiding by Henry Cloud
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

All conversations start and end with a focus on the future.

Any moment of any conversation not seeking the other person’s best interest is a waste of breath at best, and can quickly become destructive.

Best practice is to have no ‘wants’ out of another person; the practical next best option is to state wants clearly. Stating wants reminds yourself and the listener these are wants, the listener is under no obligation to meet these expectations.

Be specific in feedback. Give examples of the exact wrong, separating the person from the action.

Setup accountability going into difficult conversations. Let a trusted friend know your headed into a conversation that prove difficult. Follow-up with the accountability partner immediately afterwards.

Put Them in the Circle

It’s rather easy to love the people who are near and dear, but that’s not the calling set before us.

But I say to you, Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be sons of your Father who is in heaven. For he makes his sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust.

Matthew 5: 44 & 45

anger

Many people in my life are easy to love. They fit neatly into circles – Family, Nice Friends, Fun Co-workers, Disease-Free Neighbors, Engaging Celebrities.

There’s plenty of space for these wonderful people on little prayer cards. They get full pages in my bullet journal.

But what about the people who don’t quite fit so neatly into my life? There’s a maximum amount of stress I can tolerate; my patience meter only goes so high.

Some people are on Santa’s Naughty List, there’s no other place for them. These folks are mean, rotten and probably even smell like elderberries. If given the opportunity, I would fart in their general direction.

That’s the problem – if given the chance to be gracious, I would (and often have) been ruthless, or at least, sought revenge. While family creates an orderly grouping, a helpful strategy is to draw a circle around all the jerks I associate with, and love on that group just as much as the others. Get to know them, be patient and kind to them.

I have more in common with some of the best jerks I know, even more in common than I have with the kind and tenderhearted people in my life. If my name were added to a list, there’s not doubt which list it would be included – and I have received infinity more patience and goodness than I deserve.