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Now I
want to take a step back, which is actually a step forward. From the
perspective of all these years later, I will reflect in the next few posts on what I have learned
about grief and loss. I hope you will
also share what you have experienced and learned in your own grief journey.
Two of
the gifts God gives us in grief are shock (we become pretty much numb) to what
is going on around us, and adrenaline, helping us function when we are not
sleeping or eating well. What the church
gives us is a memorial or funeral service, hopefully not more than three to
five days into the future. (To me, the growing practice of setting funerals
weeks or even months into the future is a denial of grieving, and often delays the process of healing and renewal.)
One of
the gifts of the shock is that we hopefully don’t really hear a lot of things
being said to us. People are so well meaning
and don’t know what to say, which means, usually, that it is best to say
nothing. As I have mentioned before, the
most important gift a person can give to a grieving person is their presence
and love. However, saying nothing is
uncomfortable, and so we often blurt something out, which is usually a cliché,
and often might be a theological perspective the grieving person doesn’t agree
with. I cringe when I hear people say
that the one who has died is better off now, or God needed them more, or God has
another angel, or this must all be “God’s will.”
Be
especially careful about what you say on Facebook. Unlike one’s mumbling words in the presence
of the grieving person, it can’t just drift off into nowhere.
This is
not meant to scare folks off. Many
people avoid visiting the bereaved because they don’t know what to say. I find it best to simply talk about the one
who has died: what that person meant to you, how glad you are that you had a
chance to know her, how you will miss him also, and how his absence will be a
real loss to you and the community.
I don’t
know if I remember a single thing said to me in my experiences of grief. What I do remember is presence, love and
tears. As I have mentioned before, what
I remember so clearly after my Father’s death is his best friend, Ansel, coming
to the door, standing there with tears in his eyes, saying nothing, and
extending his hand (Norwegians don’t hug much) to my Mother.
When I
was a pastor in California there was a fascinating, homebound couple I used to
visit, and take Holy Communion. He had
been a producer of movies in Hollywood, and going into their house was like
touring a motion picture museum. He had
great difficulty walking and was not able to make it into worship on Sunday
mornings.
One
day, as I was planning the funeral service for my first wife, Pauline, the
doorbell rang. I opened my door and to
my unbelievable surprise, there stood this couple at my door, with tears in
their eyes. They handed me an envelope
with a check, and all they said was:
“This is to help with the funeral expenses.”
“When Jesus saw her weeping, and the
Jews who came with her also weeping, he was deeply moved in spirit and troubled;
‘Where have you laid him?’ They said to him, ‘Lord, come and see.’ Jesus wept. So the Jews said, ‘See how he loved him!’” [John 11:33-36; RSV]
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