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ENCOURAGEMENT
AND CONSOLATION
In a recent worship service, five members of our congregation shared their
own experiences of Gods healing. Each attributed their healing to
Gods answering their prayers and the prayers of others. These testimonies
were filled with praise and thanksgiving.
As I listened to these accounts of Gods healing grace, I thought
how much easier our faith would be if our prayers for healing were always
answered. But they are not, and we are often baffled. I pondered my own
personal prayers for thirty years asking for relief from tinnitus. And
I was reminded of Paul, who prayed three times that God would remove the
painful thorn from his flesh. When it was not Gods will that Paul
be healed, God did promise His grace would be sufficient for Paul. In
the absence of healing, I accept that promise of grace.
But I am often frustrated, and I am thankful for help from family and
friends as I cope with my own thorn. Flying Closer to the Flame: A
Passion for the Holy Spirit, a book by Dr. Charles Swindoll, one of
my favorite inspirational authors, has helped me in accepting Gods
will when healing isnt granted.
My heart goes out to others coping with their own struggles and heartaches.
I see those with excruciating pain and those who are homebound, bedridden,
and/or confined to wheelchairs. I see parents who live with the daily
care of children with serious physical or mental limitations and adults
dealing with the care of aging parents. I see those with a healthy mind
trapped in an unwell body and those with a healthy body hindered by reduced
mental capacity. I see grief for the death of a loved one. I am aware
of losses unrelated to physical problems and death. These include broken
relationships within families or homes, other social problems, and economic
problems. These situations remind us of the expression "Living trouble
is worse than death." To carry these burdens from day to day brings
a weariness only those who experience them can understand.
The Burden of a Secret, by Dr. James Allen, pastor and former president
of the Southern Baptist Convention, tells the heart-wrenching story of
his familys struggle with AIDS. In 1985 Dr. Allens daughter-in-law
learned that through HIV tainted blood given at the birth of her first
child Matt three years previously, she, Matt, and a second child were
carriers of the virus. The Allen family determined that due to the lack
of knowledge of AIDS at that time, they would confide in as few people
as possible. Thus the family lived with the burden of this secret for
seven years before it became known. The daughter-in-law and both of her
sons died.
Dr. Allens book shares, almost too intimately for my comfort, how
his twelve-year-old grandson Matt faced his own death and helped family,
friends, schoolmates, and others in his life to accept that he was going
to be with his mother and little brother Bryan. He wanted to say "Good-bye"
to special people like "Great Gran" and he went about doing
this. Matt s body fought the dreaded disease for twelve years. Since
reading this book sharing the hurts the Allen family suffered, I have
often reminded myself that we do not know what another person may be coping
with privately. To suffer in silence demands extreme strength.
My dear friend Anne has had multiple sclerosis for many years. She was
a vivacious leader and a person of varied talents until the disease took
charge of her life. Recently Anne shared with me her feeling that God
has called her to be a listener. Acquaintances and members of her church
come to Annenot to comfort but to be comforted. Knowing how to listen
helpfully requires self-discipline and training. Those who would bring
comfort do not necessarily need many words and often offer no words, simply
listening with their hearts and allowing the grieving one to be comfortable
letting out their grief.
I have read extensively on grief and given much time and thought to the
comforting of sufferers. Someone asked if my reading makes me sad or
contributes to depression. It does neither. I recognize my limitations,
yet I feel God can use lay persons to encourage and console.
I wish we knew more of Barnabas, who was known as the Son of Encouragement
or Consolation. I have recently found references to Barnabas indicating
he was much more involved in the ministry than I had known.
William Barclay wrote about encouragers: "One of the highest of
human duties is the duty of encouragement .... It is easy to laugh at
mens ideals; it is easy to pour cold water on their enthusiasm;
it is easy to discourage others. The world is full of discouragers. We
have a Christian duty to encourage one another. Many a time a word of
praise or thanks or appreciation or cheer has kept a man on his feet.
Blessed is the man who speaks such a word."
Grief at the death of one we love may be one of lifes most devastating
blows. Friends usually respond openly and freely at this time. Those who
are suffering may even feel overwhelmed by the attention. Someone has
said there seems to be no end to casseroles which serve twelve and other
food offerings. The gestures of caring enable those bearing the shock
of loss to get through the time immediately following the death. The
attentiveness of caring supporters from the time of death and through
the funeral does little to prepare the anguished for that time when duties
and lifestyles take these friends away. The loneliness comes before the
wound has begun to heal. Grief is a process and recovery may leave scars.
"Healing is a matter of time" (Hippocrates).
I long to bring comfort to those who I know are suffering the pain of
grief at the death of a loved one this week, this month, last year, or
five years ago. It can take so long for healing to come. Too, we are all
different and react just as variably. Grief may be one of our most intimately
personal emotions.
"When words fail, tears flow," says Dr. Charles Swindoll in
his book For Those Who Hurt. The full text of Dr. Swindolls
"Some Thoughts on Tears" from this book are included in this
newsletter. In another of his books, Flying Closer to the Flame: A
Passion for the Holy Spirit, Dr. Swindoll writes extensively about
allowing ourselves to feel and express our emotions. Some people long
to open their hearts to another. At times tears may be part of this relief,
but few of us are comfortable in the presence of anothers tears.
Too often listeners think "getting their mind off it" is the
way to help someone who is grieving. That one is blessed who has even
one person who can allow the grieving one to talk and to cry about their
pain and loss.
Those who would be comforters would do well to recall that Jobs
friends sat seven days in complete silence because they were so overwhelmed
when they saw how severely he was suffering. At times when circumstances
seem to rob us of words, we can often rely on simply being present.
Sadly, many of us are not comfortable praying with otherswe rely
upon the clergy to do this. But we can ask God to place His arms around
others and bring abiding peace to their hearts. "Only that which
lies outside the will of God lies outside the reach of prayer" (Dr.
R. G. Lee). To pray for another is to offer supreme help.
As I have brought together and shared these thoughts about encouragement
and consolation, I have renewed my determination to be more aware of
and seek more diligently for the best ways to help. I challenge you to
do the same.
SINCERELY,
Patsy
LISTENING
SYSTEM NOW AVAILABLE
A Telex Sound Mate Personal Listening System has been installed at the Funeral
Home to assist the hearing impaired during services in the Chapel. Personal
receivers with earphones provide clear reception and are comfortable to
use and easy to adjust. Just ask any Funeral Home staff member to provide
this listening aid.
SOME
THOUGHTS ON TEARS
When words fail, tears flow.
Tears have a language all their own, a tongue that needs no interpreter.
In some mysterious way, our complex innercommunication system knows when
to admit its verbal limitations. ..and the tears come.
Eyes that flashed and sparkled only moments before are flooded from a
secret reservoir. We try in vain to restrain the flow, but even strong
men falter.
Tears are not self-conscious. They can spring upon us when we are speaking
in public, or standing beside others who look to us for strength. Most
often they appear when our soul is overwhelmed with feelings that words
cannot describe.
Our tears may flow during the singing of a great, majestic hymn, or when
we are alone, lost in some vivid memory or wrestling in prayer.
Did you know that God takes special notice of those tears of yours? Psalm
56:8 tells us that He puts them in His bottle and enters them into the
record He keeps on our lives.
David said, "The Lord has heard the voice of my weeping."
A teardrop on earth summons the King of Heaven. Rather than being ashamed
or disappointed, the Lord takes note of our inner friction when hard times
are oiled by tears. He turns these situations into moments of tenderness;
He never forgets those crises in our lives where tears were shed.
One of the great drawbacks of our cold, sophisticated society is its reluctance
to showing tears. For some strange reason, men feel that tears are a sign
of weakness and many an adult feels its immature. How silly! How
unfortunate! The consequence is that we place a watchdog named "restraint"
before our hearts. This animal is trained to bark, snap and scare away
any unexpected guest who seeks entrance.
The ultimate result is a well-guarded, highly respectable, uninvolved
heart surrounded by heavy bars of confinement. Such a structure resembles
a prison more than a home where the tender Spirit of Christ resides.
Jeremiah lived in no such dwelling. His transparent tent was so tender
and sensitive he could not preach a sermon without the interruption of
tears. "The weeping prophet" became his nickname and even though
he didnt always have the words to describe his feelings, he was
never at a loss to communicate his convictions. You could always count
on Jeremiah to bury his head in his hands and sob aloud.
Strange that this man was selected by God to be His personal spokesman
at the most critical time in Israels history. Seems like an unlikely
choiceunless you value tears as God does. I wonder how many tear
bottles in heaven are marked with his name.
I wonder how many of them bear your initials. Youll never have many
until you impound restraint and let a little tenderness run loose. You
might lose a little of your polished respectability, but youll have
a lot more freedom. And a lot less pride.
Charles R. Swindoll, "Some Thoughts
on Tears," For Those Who Hurt, pages 34-37. Multnomah Press,
Portland, Oregon, 1977.
HELPING
BEREAVED PARENTS
DOS - DONTS
Do let your genuine concern and caring show.
Do be available.. to listen, to run errands, to help with the other children,
or whatever else seems needed at the time.
Do say you are sony about what happened to their child and about their pain.
Do allow them to express as much grief as they are feeling at the moment
and are willing to share.
Do encourage them to be patient with themselves, not to expect too much
of themselves and not to impose any "shoulds" on themselves.
Do allow them to talk about the child they have lost as much and as often
as they want to.
Do talk about the special endearing qualities of the child theyve
lost.
Do give special attention to the childs brothers and sisters at the
funeral and in the months to come (they too are hurt and confused and in
need of attention which their parents may not be able to give at this time).
Do reassure them that they did everything that they could, that the medical
care their child received was the best or whatever else you know to be true
and positive about the care given to their child.
Dont let your own sense of helplessness keep you from reaching out
to a bereaved parent.
Dont avoid them because you are uncomfortable (being avoided by friends
adds pain to an already intolerably painful experience).
Dont say you know how they feel (unless youve lost a child yourself,
you probably dont know how they feel).
Dont say "you ought to be feeling better by now" or anything
else that implies a judgment about their feelings.
Dont tell them what they should feel or do.
Dont change the subject when they mention their dead child.
Dont avoid mentioning the childs name out of fear of reminding
them of their pain (they havent forgotten it!).
Dont try to find something positive (e.g., a moral lesson, closer
family ties, etc.) about the childs death.
Dont point out that at least they have their other children (children
are not interchangeable; they cannot replace each other).
Dont say that they can always have another child (even if they wanted
and could, another child would not replace the child theyve lost).
Dont make any comments which in any way suggest that the care given
their child at home, in the emergency room hospital, or wherever was inadequate
(parents are plagued by feelings of doubt and guilt without any help from
their family and friends).
Parent Bereavement Outreach
MESSAGE CASKET
May your angel wings be strong to watch over us.
You beat us to heaven but only for a short time.
Green for the green grass you will always play on, blue for the blue
skies you now look down on us from, and red for all the love you gave us
and left behind.
I know you have gone to meet Jesus; we will miss you and we will meet
you one day.
These were a few of the messages of love and loss written by family and
friends on the casket of a young teenager who was struck by a vehicle while
crossing a highway to board a Lafayette County school bus.
While message caskets have been used for many years in funeral service,
this was the first time Bob and Beth Rosson suggested a message casket to
a family. During the arrangements conference, the family was presented with
information about the casket, including pictures, description, and an explanation
of how the casket would allow visitors to actually write their thoughts
on the casket itself. After careful consideration and a tour of the other
caskets available in the selection room, the parents chose to use the message
casket.
Batesville Casket Company furnished an unstained Barkley oak casket and
the Funeral Home supplied permanent markers in several colors. Near the
casket a small sign was placed that said: "Message casket. Please write
your message of love and loss." The local school was notified. and
teachers explained to the children that they would be able to write on the
casket during visitation. Many children came prepared with their thoughts
and verses.
The response was overwhelming. Friends and family spent time touching and
reading the messages. Adults as well as children told Bob and Beth that
the message casket was a very special way or them to begin accepting and
dealing with their grief over this childs tragic death.
While message caskets are certainly not always appropriate, family, friends,
and Funeral Home staff felt this was a warm, loving, personal good-bye to
Zach.
COUNT
THAT DAY LOST
If you sit down at set of sun And count the acts that you have done.
And, counting, find
One self-denying deed, one word That eased the heart of him who heard,
One glance most kind
That fell like sunshine where it went Then you may count that day
well spent.
But if, through all the livelong day, Youve cheered no heart, by
yea or nay If, through it all
Youve nothing done that you can trace That brought the sunshine
to one face No act most small
That helped some soul and nothing cost Then count that day as worst
than lost.
George Eliot
IN
MEMORIAM
We dedicate this issue of Seasons to those who
died and whose families we served from July 30, 1998, through November
5, 1998.
Mr. Evan Rogers Rees, Jr. 7/30/98
Mrs. Ila Faye White Inmon 7/31/98
Mr. Thomas Earl "Tommy" Patterson 8/1/98
Mr. James Aubrey Conner, Sr. 8/1/98
Mr. Marvin Jacob "Jack" Haynes, Jr. 8/1/98
Mr. Sam E. Smith, Jr. 8/5/98
Mrs. Clara Mae Walker Gooch 8/6/98
Mrs. Irene White Adams 8/9/98
Dr. John Elon Phay 8/10/98
Mrs. Mary Geneva Still Stone 8/13/98
Mrs. Clara Mae Hale Caldwell 8/13/98
Mrs. Helen Marie MeCain Mooney 8/14/98
Mrs. Sadye Murphrey Cooper 8/14/98
Mrs. Kathleen DeLashmit 8/14/98
Mrs. Genevieve Leah Reynolds Small 8/20/98
Mr. Tracie Edward Briscoe 8/20/98
Mrs. Agnes Barnett Dabney 8/21/98
Mr. Robert Milton West 8/26/98
Mr. Nathan Alridge Foster 9/2/98
Mr. Lonzo Tarver 9/3/98
Mr. Walter Glen Klepzig 9/7/98
Mrs. Olivia Margaret Steams 9/10/98
Mrs. Rozelle Davis Barbee 9/13/98
Mr. Francis S. Scott 9/14/98
Mr. Jessie Ellis "Bud" Howell, Jr. 9/21/98
Dr. Charles M. "Bo" Murry, Jr. 9/21/98
Christopher Alban Bernet 9/21/98
Zachary Spencer "Zack" Walls 9/22/98
Mr. Lenox K. King 9/30/98
Mr. James Robert Redding 10/2/98
Mr. Dillard Ellis King, Jr. 10/4/98
Mr. William Alva Nolen 10/5/98
Mr. Donald Garland "Don" ODell 10/7/98
Miss Gladys Lorene Fitch 10/11/98
Mrs. Rebecca Davis Paschall 10/12/98
Mrs. Winnie Gates Crockett 10/12/98
Mr. Willie L. Sessions 10/17/98
Mr. Clarence Edmond Cannon 10/21/98
Mr. Charles Donald Sandlin 10/22/98
Mr. Travis Hale Fooshee 10/23/98
Mr. Roger Sherman Myers 10/25/98
Mrs. Jimmie K. Kitchens Hickey 10/31/98
The Rev. Robert John Dodwell 11/1/98
Mr. William H. "Buck" Gossett 11/5/98
Miss Velma Lee Walker 11/5/98
MESSAGES
Because of the somber nature of our business, we shy away from seasonal
greetings including" merry" and "happy". We know that
the holiday season can be difficult for those who have not recovered from
the grief of the loss of a loved one. We do, however, wish for all the
best possible holiday season. May the important things in lifefaith,
hope, and lovebring comfort and peace to all.
As in the past, we have grief helps specifically prepared to help the
grieving through the holiday season. These helps will be sent to those
families we have served since Christmas 1997. We will gladly share copies
of this material with anyone else who requests them for themselves or
for others they think might find them helpful.
Also, as in the past, we have beautiful inspirational calendars available
for the asking at the Funeral Home. Dashboard calendars are available
too.
We are proud to be a part of the Oxford-Lafayette County-University of
Mississippi community. We thank you for letting us serve you. The Funeral
Home staff is committed to compassionate, professional assistance to all
those we serve.
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