1 Corinthians 13.8-13
One of the challenges of
preaching at this service is that I know that everyone here has a different
experience of bereavement. That’s why, when I try to choose readings and poems
for this service, I know I am likely to get it wrong for as many people as I
get it right.
Many people love the *poem I
read just now, (below) for example, with its calm and untroubled assurance that the person
who seems to us to have gone is perfectly, safely present on another shore.
These are great words, reminding us that our perspective is only one
perspective. They encourage us to lift our eyes, to trust that those we love
are held in the hands of God.
But the assurance it brings
might not work for you at all at this moment. You might more easily identify
with another poem I came across recently by the Victorian poet James Russell Lowell.
Three of his four children died in infancy, and then he lost his beloved wife.
After the death of one of his daughters, he put his anger into words in a poem
called “After the Burial”. It’s too long to read in full, but here are a few
verses from it. Someone has evidently tried to console him by reminding him
that his daughter is now immortal in heaven.
All Souls' candles |
Immortal? I feel it and
know it,
Who doubts it of such as she?
But that is the pang’s
very secret,—
Immortal away from me.
There’s a narrow ridge in
the graveyard
Would scarce stay a child in his race,
But to me and my thought
it is wider
Than the star-sown vague of Space.
Console if you will, I can
bear it;
’T is a well-meant alms of breath;
But not all the preaching
since Adam
Has made Death other than Death.
Everyone here is in a
different place, experiencing grief differently. Some may have lost a loved one
just weeks ago, some months ago, some decades ago. Maybe you think you ought to
be over it, but it’s not like that.
And grief is different
depending on who it is that has died. The loss of a parent in old age is
different from the loss of a child, or a spouse or a friend – no less of a
loss, but a different one. The individual relationship we had with them affects
our grieving too. The death of someone
we loved and trusted in an uncomplicated way brings one sort of pain, the death
of someone we were at odds with, where there were unresolved, and now
unresolvable, difficulties brings quite another.
What we believe about death
affects our grieving too. We may have a deeply rooted belief that those we love
are safe in God’s hands, that we will see them again one day, or we may believe
death is the end, or not know what we think at all.
We will probably feel very
different at different moments too. I don’t entirely buy into the idea of
grieving as a process which moves predictably through denial, anger,
bargaining, depression and on into acceptance. My observation of the many
hundreds of people I’ve seen grieving, as well as my own experiences, tell me
that it’s perfectly normal to hurtle backwards and forwards through those
feelings – and many more – from day to day. It’s a bit like the English weather
– you can have all four seasons in one day. Often with grief, just when you
think you’re getting over it, something rises up to push you right back to
square one.
There are no rights and
wrongs, no rules about grief. It is what it is. We are where we are. It isn’t
uncharted territory; many people have been where we are when we grieve, but
there’s no neat, way-marked path through this land.
So if grieving feels like a
mess, or takes a long time, that’s not a sign that we are doing it wrong. It may
just be a complicated journey for us. We all like to know where we are and what
is what, but as our Bible reading reminded us, that’s not always possible. “Now
we see in a mirror, dimly,” says St Paul. Our vision of God, of life, of
ourselves is blurred and indistinct. Or
to go back to Bishop Brent’s image, what we long to see may be over the
horizon, tantalisingly out of view.
So how can we deal with the
confusion of grief?
The **song the choir are
going to sing in a minute might help (below). It is a song from the Christian community
based on the island of Iona, and it’s set to a tune which it is said to have
been played as the ancient kings of Scotland were rowed from the mainland to
their traditional burial ground on Iona. It’s called the Last Journey, and it’s
obviously influenced by that image of the boat slipping gently across the
water.
The journey through death,
and through grief, is in one sense, as John Bell says, a “journey we make on
our own”. It is individual, different from anyone else’s. But in another
sense, the song says, we are not alone at all. Our way is woven by God. We are
accompanied by Jesus, who has been through the darkness of death. The Spirit
surrounds us as we travel. And in the last verse we are reminded that “Angels
walk in our dreams”.
Angels in the Bible are
sometimes supernatural winged creatures – and many people during bereavement do
have strange experiences which comfort them. But the word “angel” simply means messenger,
and often in the Bible angels come alongside people in human form. They don’t realise
they’ve met one till afterwards. The angels who help us when we’re grieving, who
bring us the message that we are loved, might be the friends who turn up with a
meal they’ve made for us, or listen to us while we cry. They might be members
of this Christian community here at Seal too. This is a place where you are
welcome to grieve for as long as you need, in whatever way you need. We are
here for the long haul.
“Now I know only in part,” says St Paul, “but then I will know fully, even as
I have been fully known”. Grief is a mystery to us, unpredictable and
strange – we may feel that we don’t really know what is going on at all. But
the good news which Christian faith proclaims is that God knows us perfectly,
and knows those we love who have died too. And knowing us, he loves us, just as
we are, with a love that never ends.
Amen
* THE SHIP, by Bishop Charles Henry Brent
What is dying?
I am standing on the
seashore.
A ship sails to the morning
breeze and starts for the ocean.
She is an object and I stand
watching her
Till at last she fades from
the horizon,
And someone at my side
says,
“She is gone!”
Gone where?
Gone from my sight, that is
all;
She is just as large in the
masts, hull and spars as she was when I saw her,
And just as able to bear
her load of living freight to its destination.
The diminished size and
total loss of sight is in me, not in her;
And just at the moment when
someone at my side says, "She is gone",
There are others who are
watching her coming,
And other voices take up a
glad shout,
"There she comes"
– and that is dying.
**THE LAST JOURNEY
From the falter of breath,
through the silence of
death,
to the wonder that’s
breaking beyond;
God has woven a way,
unapparent by day,
for all those of whom
heaven is fond.
From frustration and pain,
through hope hard to
sustain,
to the wholeness here
promised,
there known;
Christ has gone where we
fear
and has vowed to be near
on the journey we make on
our own.
From the dimming of light,
through the darkness of
night,
to the glory of goodness
above;
God the Spirit is sent
to ensure heaven’s intent
is embraced and completed
in love.
From today till we die,
through all questioning
why,
to the place from which
time and tide flow;
angels walk in our dreams,
and magnificent themes
of heaven’s promise are
echoed below.
@ John Bell, the Iona Community
No comments:
Post a Comment