The Stewardship of Grief

Similar documents
OK. So, now what? Dan Yuen West Valley Presbyterian Church

PRIEST: Firmly anchored in the risen Lord Jesus, our hope does not disappoint us but gives us renewed confidence as we now pray:

Sermon Mark 10:35-45, the greatest October 18, Title: Servant to all

How to pray: How to pray: Prepare: close your eyes, breath, clear your mind. How to pray: How to pray:

WHEN IT S DARK A LIFE NIGHT ADDRESSING CRISIS

Hopeful Grieving 1 Thessalonians 4:13-5:11, Matthew 5:3 First Presbyterian Church November 12, Introduction to the Reading

An image often came to her in the quiet times: Jesus weeping. She writes:

Homily for St. mark S lutheran Church, Middleburgh, NY, November 1, 2015

THE FUNERAL SERVICE FOR A CHILD

Funeral Policy and Planning Guide

Counseling Under the Cross: Martin Luther on Suffering, Sorrow, and Hope in Christ

LAMENT FOR A SON April 5, 2012, Maundy Thursday Mark 14:32-42 Rebekah M. Hutto, The Brick Presbyterian Church in the City of New York

Prayers To Be Prayed For a Dying Catholic

Evangelical Lutheran Worship Marriage

Trial Use Collects, Prayers over the Gifts and after Communion. Propers 10 to 22 June to August 2015 Year B

I am Resurrection and I am Life, says the Lord. Whoever has faith in me shall have life, eve n though he die.

Finding Joy on the Journey of Grief Rev. Dr. Peter B. Barnes First Presbyterian Church, Winston-Salem, NC November 5, 2017 (1 Thess.

God of life and death and life again, speak to us today and guide our lives, individually and collectively. In Jesus name, Amen.

UNIVERSAL PRAYER OPENINGS and CLOSINGS

Funeral & Memorial Services

LIGHT GREATER THAN OUR DARKNESS Text: John 20: 1-18 April 20, 2014 (Easter Sunday) Faith J. Conklin

Peaceful Pain 7 Truths to Help You Heal from Your Divorce. By Miriam Nicole Huffman

Psalm 116. (2015) The Bible not only reveals God s eternal plans purposes and promises. But also shows how you can know God for yourself.

Sermon for All Saints Day

I. TO BELIEVE IN JESUS IS TO BELIEVE THAT HE IS THE

love and faithfulness

Extra. Extra Grace Required RECONCILIOLOGY GRACE REQUIRED. How to Approach Others. Our Recommendation. 6 Steps To A Healthy Apology

brothers could not answer him, so dismayed were they at his presence. 4 Then Joseph said to his brothers, Come closer to me.

Pronouncement about the Sabbath. The Man with a Withered Hand. 3 Again he entered the synagogue, and a man was there who had a withered.

Jesus & The Sinful Woman Text: Luke 7:36-50 Bible Teacher Ben Stuart

Wedding Information/Planning Package Table of Contents

Goal: That the hearers are reassured that Jesus gives them their identity.

Liturgy of Healing for the Prevention of Suicide

Today's Devotional Food for thought Meet the family Prayer suggestions About

Funeral Planning Guide Salem Lutheran Church Hitterdal, MN

Funeral Masses and Readings

Good Friday. First Church in Cambridge Congregational, UCC 11 Garden Street, Cambridge. Church of the Covenant UCC/PC(USA) 67 Newbury Street, Boston

The Lutheran Church of Vestavia Hills ASH WEDNESDAY March 1, Noon. -Enter in Silence-

TOOLKIT for MCC CHURCHES Hosting the PULSE Memorial Service on 12 June 2017

Peace Through Christ

The Litany of Reconciliation by Canon Joseph Poole, 1958

1 To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven:

Should I Pray for Healing?

The prophet Jeremiah is lamenting the fate of his people. He knows that they

UNIVERSAL PRAYER OPENINGS AND CLOSINGS

How can I get through. my grief? Looking Deeper

Service for Ash Wednesday 14 February 2018 Introductory Notes. Background to the drought situation

Ecclesiastes 1:2 niv "Meaningless! Meaningless!" says the Teacher. "Utterly meaningless! Everything is meaningless." Ecclesiastes 12:8 niv

HOLY BAPTISM TWO IN HOLY COMMUNION TWO

Some Resources In Response to the Tsunami Disaster January 2005

INTERCESSION PRAYERS FOR WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1 ALL SAINTS

Thy Will Be Done: A Lenten Sermon Series To Restructure Your Preaching

Fourth Sunday of Easter April 17, 2016 (Good Shepherd Sunday)

Sacred spaces that require no words

SCRIPTURE READINGS REQUIEM MASS

3/10/2013 Loving Others 1

(September 2, 2010). Pg

Traditional Form First Method of Recitation

Questions We Ask God. Week 1 Small Group: Forgiveness

Sunday, May 30, Gathering Song: A Mighty Fortress -Sanctify. Gathering: Pastor David. Greeting Time: Pastor David Move to the inner sections.

Cling To God s Safe Care Message by DD Adams Providence United Methodist Church All Saint s Sunday November 6, 2016

2/28/2016 Loving Others 1

The Resurrection To Life Everlasting John 14:1-3, 1 Corinthians 15:50-58,

Scope and Sequence for Children Fall (K)1-2: Children will hear God s word in James and respond with Christcentered.

FUNERAL LITURGY SECOND READING ROMANS 8:31-35, ROMANS 14:7-9,10b-12. A reading from the letter of Paul to the Romans:

DAILY PRAYER at ST. BARTHOLOMEW S

HOLD FAST April 13, 2017, Maundy Thursday Psalm 116 Rebekah M. Hutto, The Brick Presbyterian Church in the City of New York

Funeral Guidelines. Saint John Paul II Catholic Parish th St, Idaho Fall, ID l l

As gold in the furnace, he proved them, and as sacrificial offerings he took them to himself.

The 10 th Sunday after Pentecost, July 24 th 2016 St. John s Lutheran Church, Summit, New Jersey "Lord Teach us to Pray (Luke 11: 1-13)

30 Day Prayer and Journaling Challenge

All I Want for Christmas Is PEACE Isaiah 9:2-6

The Journey from Grief to Grace Reaching Out to Those Hurting After Abortion Theresa Burke, Ph.D.

Robert Walter Treglown. Funeral Service in Loving Memory of. 9 th July th August 2018

Remembering David L. Bartlett. Rev. Dr. Frederick J. Streets

- Joseph Bayly, The Last Thing We Talk About

Break Through Psalm 23, Acts 9: 36-43, Luke 24:13-35

+ IESUS + 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18

Page 1 of 5. Kol Nidre 5778 Rabbi Daniel J. Fellman Temple Concord Syracuse, New York September 29, Tishri 5778.

Revelation 21:1-6a (The New International Version) First Presbyterian Church. Portions of Isaiah 65

was coming up out of the water, he saw the heavens torn apart and the Spirit descending like a dove on him.

Empowered. Let me tell you If I m the man who has spent the last 38 years of my life

A Service of Evening Prayer

Imagine a first-century Master of Ceremonies announcing to a crowd gathered in front

YOU LL GET THROUGH THIS

Psalm a Day Lenten Devotional

scoffed; but others said, We will hear you again about this.

THE DUNGEON OF DESPAIR

SERMON All Saints Sunday November 1, 2009

HEAVEN A STUDY OF PART 5. Will We Want Anyone Besides Christ? Christ is the Alpha and the Omega, the First and the Last (Revelation 22:13).

John 20: When it was evening on that day, the first day of the week, and the doors of the

Presentation Transcript Grief - Mental Health and the Bible 13 By Bill Jacobs March 30, 2018

Days of Prayer & Meditation

The Raising of Lazarus.

We Have This Hope John 11: 1-45 The Fifth Sunday in Lent April 6, 2014 Jeanne Davies

Collect of the Day Ecclesiastes 3:1-8 Psalm 90:1-6, 12-14

JULY 24, 2016 THE TENTH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST

Comfort for the Mourning

PRAYING DURING THE EASTER SEASON

CHURCH OF OUR LADY IMMACULATE & ST ANDREW, HITCHIN. Fr Christopher Burgess AA

Transcription:

The Stewardship of Grief John Wilkinson Third Presbyterian Church November 12, 2017 I Thessalonians 4:13-18 *** Are you familiar with Elizabeth Kubler-Ross five stages of grief, developed in the late 1960s? Denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance. The Kubler- Ross scholars acknowledge that this approach has often been perceived of as a process a kind of checklist where you move from one stage to the next in a linear fashion until you land at acceptance. They understand now, as do many psychologists, that grief does not work that way, that grief is not a process. I am not a psychologist, but my own experience and the experience of many of you has taught me that that s true, that grief is not a process but is, for want of a clinical term, a journey. Sometimes it s a journey absent a map. Sometimes it s a journey that goes forward and backward and sideways, sometimes all at the same time. Sometimes it s a journey that pauses for a brief while or a long while. A journey that asks the question How do we live missing those we ve lost? The first step in the grief journey is to acknowledge grief itself, its power and presence and reality, a sense of loss and diminishment. We were big fans of the original Will and Grace. In the revamped version, Rosario, Karen s maid and sparring partner," dies. Karen, true to form, spends the length of the funeral at the bar, drinking. Later, alone, she sits by Rosario s casket. People keep asking, What do you need? What do you need? Karen says, mocking everyone s concerned tone. But then she crumbles, just a little: I need for you to not be gone. 1

That is what we need a spouse, a child, a parent, 26 Baptists in Texas. We need them not to be gone. A dear friend of mine died in August, a minister, 59, whose family cared for me greatly when I was just a young ministry intern. I attended her funeral in Indianapolis, where a mentor of mine took on the brave task of preaching. He didn t flinch, not one bit. He raged against the cancer and acknowledged what we were all experiencing. We are a community of broken hearts, he said. A community of broken hearts. And we are. Even now. We grieve, yes. But we do not despair. Our grief does not have the final word. We are not weak in our brokenness, nor are we without faith. Or consolation. Or encouragement. Or hope. Paul understood this. In what is likely the oldest of Paul s letters, he writes to a Thessalonian community asking questions about loved ones who have died. Paul writes that he does not want the church to grieve as others do who have no hope. Paul continues, with very little detail, about what this looks like reconciliation, reunion. The scholar Jane Patterson writes that Paul seeks to make ultimate realities that are beyond ordinary sight so real that (we) can entrust (ourselves) completely to them. Our loved ones have died, yes, but we remain in community with them. Paul s vision, Patterson says, is that heaven and earth are suddenly and beautifully reconciled in an embrace that takes place in a newly opened space between heaven and earth and which will never end. We have hope, Karoline Lewis writes, from which we find comfort, encouragement, and faith in the face of (our) loss. Because Jesus died and rose again, this hope is not wishful or fanciful thinking. It is grounded in the comforting presence of Christ. Lewis writes: Paul is not saying the community should not grieve. On the contrary, grief is the expected emotion when faced with the painful loss of a loved one. At the same time, the grief of the believer is grounded in and defined by 2

hope. This interconnectedness of the profound emotions of grief and hope is a mark of a community who confess Jesus Christ as Lord. We are a collection of broken hearts formed into a community of broken hearts. And we are not without hope, now, or ever. We trust God in the promises of faith, for us and those we love. Because Easter is not a one-time thing, we hold a longterm view about reconciliation. And that same hope allows us to face the immediate reality of grief differently. What does that look like? Anne Lamott writes that: You will lose someone you can t live without, and your heart will be badly broken, and the bad news is that you never completely get over the loss of your beloved. But this is also the good news. They live forever in your broken heart that doesn t seal back up. And you come through. It s like having a broken leg that never heals perfectly that still hurts when the weather gets cold, but you learn to dance with the limp. In his book Promise Me, Dad, former vice president Joe Biden, who lost a wife and infant daughter decades ago and a son in just the past year, describes how he explains to people in mourning that their sadness will last a long time, and that the smallest sensory cue a song, a scent may bring forth, in sudden and painful fashion, a vivid memory of the departed. And yet, he tells them, the time will come when the memory will bring a smile to your lips before it brings a tear to your eyes. (Vanity Fair, December 2017) I hope that that can be the case for you in your journey with grief, that you can dance, even with a limp, that a smile can intercede at times through the tears. And when that cannot be the case, I pray, I hope, that you that we can find hope. Can find consolation and encouragement, in community. Can find hope in the face of our grief as we cling fast to one another and cling fast to the promises of our faith, the promises of resurrection and reconciliation and reunion, that the ones we have lost have been granted eternal rest and that perpetual light shines upon them. Amen. (Followed by Morton Lauridsen s Lux Aeterna, performed by the Third Church Chancel Choir and orchestra) 3

*** Prayers of the People, Lynette K. Sparks God of life, you created the world and called it good. In Jesus Christ you came to redeem us; his resurrection is our promise of eternal life. By the power of your Spirit you claim us, strengthen us, and prepare us to live with you in glory. In sure and certain hope, we pray for your world, that we may live into your coming reign of justice and peace. Wherever the church thrives and wherever it struggles keep us faithful to your gospel. In Sutherland Springs, Texas, Your church bears the unspeakable pain of so many lives lost. Bear them up with your strong hand, Eternal God, and carry them through grief and anger to one day hope again. And end the stalemate, O God, in our government, that leaves weapons of war available for exploitation and massive harm. Grant our leaders wisdom and a resolve to do justice. And this Veteran s Day weekend, grant them the commitment to care for all those who serve and have served our country. Give your special care to those who have returned different than when they left - troubled, angry, wounded, and broken. Creator God, heal the wounds of our planet, and make us better stewards of its wonders and gifts.... Compassionate Christ, calm the fears of those who are dying, and welcome them into your eternal peace....give relief to people who suffer from anxieties and ills. Feed and protect those who endure the days and nights without food or shelter. Comfort those who suffer in silence carrying secret sorrows.... Guide all who seek your face to find you. 4

With thanks that you hear our prayers, spoken and unspoken, with prayers for those who are unable to pray themselves, we entrust all of life to you, gracious God, our Alpha and Omega, our only hope in life and in death. Amen. Adapted from Feasting on the Word Year A, Volume 2 5