Our Mission:To Recruit volunteers from the church who will adopt a nursing homes or senior care facility in their community.To Train volunteers to…
Christian ministries serving older adults across the full arc of aging — through retirement communities and assisted living, in-home care and memory care, hospice and chaplaincy, caregiver support and friendship visiting — honoring the image of God in those whose seasons of life carry both wisdom and growing need.
Christian nonprofits in this focus area that have been verified against The Most Trusted Standard.
Our Mission:To Recruit volunteers from the church who will adopt a nursing homes or senior care facility in their community.To Train volunteers to…
A retirement community offering independent living, residential care, and skilled nursing services to area seniors. Palm Village Retirement Community…
Rest Haven Homes exists today to provide a loving home environment to Christian seniors, through anurturing and caring atmosphere where people can…
Christian City was established more than five decades ago when the first home for abused and abandoned children opened on Valentine’s Day, 1965…
Town & Country (T&C) is a ministry of the Christian & Missionary Alliance. T & C provides services to seniors in a Christian environment with four…
The mission of the Advent Christian Village is to express Christ's love by providing compassionate care and quality comprehensive services for senior…
Reach One-Touch One Ministries is a nondenominational Christian ministry dedicated to meeting the spiritual, social, physical and psychological needs…
The Armenian Relief and Development Association (ARDA) is a non-denominational Christian humanitarian organization based in Pasadena, California…
Based in Dallas, Texas, Buckner International is a diverse global ministry to orphans, at-risk children, families, and older adults. Our mission is…
In the name of Jesus Christ, Christian Community Action ministers to those in need by providing food, rental assistance and utility assistance. In…
As Christians, Christian Friends of Israel-America has received from God a love for Israel and the Jewish people. They want to bless them in the name…
Cornerstone is a Christian nonprofit ministry, dedicated to sharing the love of Christ in practical ways, while empowering the local church and other…
31 nonprofits
Senior care takes many forms — from independent living communities to memory care units, from in-home aides to hospice chaplains, from caregiver respite to friendship visiting. The best work meets older adults across the full arc of aging with dignity, presence, and Christian hope.
Christian-affiliated retirement communities offering independent living, assisted living, and skilled nursing care — often across a single campus where residents can age in place as needs change, maintaining community and continuity through every season of later life.
Home health aides, companion care, transportation, meal delivery, and the practical support that allows older adults to remain in their own homes for as long as possible — honoring the strong preference most seniors have for aging in familiar surroundings.
Specialized care for those with cognitive decline — facilities, programs, and trained caregivers honoring the personhood of those whose minds are increasingly clouded by disease. Person-centered approaches that affirm dignity even when memory and recognition fade.
Faith-based hospice and palliative care for those in the final season of life — addressing pain and physical comfort alongside the spiritual, emotional, and family realities of dying. Christian hospice treats death as a passage to be entered with hope, not denied or hastened.
Care for the family members — overwhelmingly adult children and aging spouses — who provide most senior care in America. Respite care, support groups, education, financial assistance, and the recognition that family caregivers carry significant invisible weight, often at real personal cost.
Chaplains serving in retirement communities, nursing homes, and hospitals — and church-based programs sending consistent visitors to isolated seniors. The patient ministry of presence that addresses the loneliness epidemic affecting so many older adults.
Christian tradition has always held a particular vision of aging. Where modern culture often treats growing old as decline to be hidden or fought, Scripture treats it as a stage of life to be honored. "Gray hair is a crown of splendor," Proverbs declares. The command to honor father and mother does not expire when parents reach a particular age. The elder in biblical communities was treated as a source of wisdom, not a burden to be managed. And the dignity of the dying — the conviction that a person at the end of life retains the full image of God they bore at the beginning — has shaped Christian care for two millennia.
America is aging rapidly. About 16% of the population is now 65 or older, projected to reach 21% by 2030 as the last baby boomers cross that threshold. Roughly 6.9 million Americans currently live with Alzheimer's disease — a number projected to nearly double by 2050. Behind every number is a person — a grandmother slowly losing the names of her grandchildren, a widower who hasn't had a real conversation in weeks, a husband caring for the wife he no longer recognizes him, a daughter who has rearranged her whole life around aging parents and wonders quietly when her own life will resume.
Christian senior care exists across the full arc of aging. Some ministries operate retirement communities offering decades of stable life. Others provide in-home care that lets seniors stay where they are. Some specialize in memory care for dementia and Alzheimer's. Some run hospice programs that walk with families through the final season. Some focus specifically on the family caregivers — the adult children and aging spouses who provide roughly 80% of long-term care in America, often invisibly, often at significant personal cost.
What unites the best work is a refusal to treat aging as primarily medical decline. Older adults are full human beings with stories, gifts, and ongoing capacity for relationship and growth. People with dementia remain image-bearers of God even when memory fades. Those at the end of life deserve presence and dignity, not abandonment or avoidance. The church's calling in this category is not merely to provide services to an aging population. It is to demonstrate, through the patient labor of senior care, what it looks like to honor the whole person across the whole arc of human life — from the first breath to the last.
Beyond our standard verification framework, here are factors specific to Christian senior care ministries that thoughtful donors often weigh.
Senior care quality varies enormously, from world-class facilities to those with serious neglect concerns. Christian affiliation does not automatically equal quality. Excellent ministries staff to recommended ratios, employ credentialed nurses and aides, maintain rigorous quality monitoring, and welcome external accreditation. Look for ministries with documented quality outcomes and transparent regulatory records.
Memory care has been heavily critiqued in recent decades for over-medication, restraint use, and approaches that don't honor the personhood of those with cognitive decline. Excellent ministries practice person-centered dementia care — building care plans around the individual rather than the diagnosis, training staff in attachment-based approaches, and refusing to treat residents as their disease. Look for ministries with specialized dementia care training and outcomes data.
Christian retirement communities can be expensive — entrance fees and monthly costs often place them out of reach for working-class seniors. Excellent ministries address access through subsidized care, benevolent funds, sliding-scale fees, or specific programs for low-income elders. Look for ministries that publish how they serve seniors across the income spectrum, not just those who can pay market rates.
Roughly 80% of senior care happens in homes by family members. Excellent ministries explicitly engage family caregivers — through respite care, support groups, education, and the recognition that family caregiving is itself ministry that needs support. Look for ministries that treat caregivers as primary recipients of care, not just as background figures.
Physician-assisted suicide is increasingly available in many states, and end-of-life decisions involve genuine ethical complexity. Excellent ministries are transparent about their position on these questions — what kinds of care they will and will not provide, how they approach pain management, advance directives, and the spiritual dimensions of dying. Look for ministries with clear ethical frameworks rather than vague spirituality.
The loneliness epidemic affects older adults disproportionately — with health impacts some research suggests are comparable to smoking. Excellent ministries explicitly engage social isolation through friendship visiting programs, intergenerational connection, community-building, and the consistent relationships that meet a deep human need. Look for ministries whose work goes beyond physical care to address the whole person.
Explore verified Christian senior care ministries above — or browse Christian ministries by other causes, locations, and award levels.