You
know the line from Psalm 23: “Yea, though
I walk through the valley of the shadow of death ….” I’ve been spending a lot of time in that
valley these last few weeks. Lots of
death, lots of funerals, lots of grief—I just finished my third funeral in a
week’s span last Friday. And there were
several more in November and December.
The Grim Reaper is doing a brisk business in my little world. And I feel like the little boy in the film The Sixth
Sense who says, “I see dead people.” I
do. I see a lot of them. I spend a lot of time in the valley of the
shadow of death.
It
takes a toll. I’ve been pastor at my
current post for going on eighteen years.
I don’t just bury parishioners; I bury friends; some are like family
even. I enter the anguish of families
and even bring a little of my own. And it
wears on a person after a while. The
grief adds up over time, yet I seldom give myself freedom to embrace it—in part
because there’s a grieving family to care for, a funeral to prepare, Sunday’s
sermon to crank out, a visit to make, a gripe to listen to, a counseling session
to hold, the next death to attend to and the next funeral to prepare for. Sometimes that stuff is waiting for me when I get
back from the cemetery. And it never
ends. The deaths of my own parents were
swept up in that same cycle. I confided
in a retired minister some months ago, “I live with this nagging fear that
someday all the grief I’ve pressed down across the years is going to rise up
and crush me when I least expect it.” I’ve
wondered why it hasn’t done so yet.
Based
on a study I did of a David text in 2 Samuel where he eulogized Saul and
Jonathan when he got word of their death, I discovered that maybe I have been
processing my grief all along through the writing of eulogies for the people I
bury. It gives me time to reflect on the
deceased’s life, to celebrate that life, to offer thanks for that life, and to
grieve the loss of that life from our everyday presence. This helps, I think.
And
something better help because we pastors spend a lot of time in the valley of
the shadow of death. The good news is,
however, that we are not in that valley alone.
Remember what David said about that valley? “I will
fear no evil, for you are with me—your rod and your staff: they comfort me.” We pastors are in good company in the valley
of the shadow. Jesus, our Good Shepherd,
is there. Yes, that’s Him—the one with
the nail scars in His hands. Jesus has
walked this valley of the shadow of death for himself. This isn’t new or strange terrain to
Him. He knows the way through. He knows how to get us to the other side. His very presence with us in that valley
reminds us when we need it most that death doesn’t get the last word and grief
doesn’t get the last word; Jesus gets the last word—and that word is life.
No
wonder Paul could write with such confidence: “Death is swallowed up in victory. O grave, where is your sting? O death, where is your victory? Thanks be to God who gives us the victory
through Jesus Christ our Lord.”
John, you do such a great job on the eulogies for our members. You cand sense you have known these people and cared for them. I hope you can let your grief go and not keep it bottled up. I will pray for this for you. God Bless You for doing his work so good.
ReplyDeleteThanks John, for your words of wisdom. We just have to take and hold on to the nail scared hands a little tighter and not only walk in faith but trust and to obey Him.
ReplyDeleteFred Stroman
Thanks for your honesty! Reminds me to pray for you guys that serve so many. Appreciate you!
ReplyDelete