I had the honor of participating in the funeral of a friend of mine on Wednesday. He was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer about ten months ago. He early Monday morning. He was only 42 years old. He leaves behind his wife Brooks, two young children, parents, siblings, and friends. It's hard for us to make sense of such things. How do we honor our questions and our faith at the same time. That's what I tried to wrestle with in my remarks. I'm posting them on my blog for two reasons: first, if you didn't know Phillip, you need to; and second, perhaps my remarks will help you as wrestle with your questions and your faith.
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The Bible says …
God
is our refuge and our strength, a very present help in trouble, therefore we
will not fear, though the earth give way and the mountains slip into the heart
of the sea. Be still and know that I am
God. The Lord almighty is with us; the
God of Jacob is our stronghold.
And do we ever need refuge, strength, and help today!
Well, I guess I’ll just say what many of us are feeling:
this is really hard. A God-fearing,
God-loving man gets a horrible cancer.
We pray and pray and pray for God to intervene, to relieve suffering, to
get well enough for immune-therapy, to heal.
And here we are at Phillip’s funeral today. It just doesn’t make much sense to us, does
it?
I remember a few visits with Phillip and Brooks when they
were having a hard time getting pregnant and staying pregnant till term. I remember a failed adoption effort. How frustrating it was for them. I remember the incredible joy when God
answered prayers, the pregnancy took, and God gave them Noah … and then the
extra blessing two years later with Hannah.
I remember the happiness, the joy, the opportunity they thought they
might never have to raise children. Noah
is 6, Hannah is 4, and here we are at Phillip’s funeral. This is hard.
But here we are … in a church that nurtured Phillip and
Brooks … refusing to let our doubts outweigh our faith, refusing to let our
feelings dictate our theology, stubbornly holding on to the truth that God is
rock steady even when we’re not. We are
exercising the same faith as those in Israel who, in spite of their many
hardships, would sing this psalm in worship, even if through gritted teeth, “Give thanks to the Lord for he is good; his
steadfast love endures forever.”
Early in my pastoral career, I really looked up to a man
named Melvin Hill. He had been a pastor
for about thirty years, and then took the job as the Director of Missions for
the association in which I served. There
was more than one time when I called or visited Dr. Hill to get a little
advice, a little coaching, on one church situation or another. Like Jesus, Melvin was the kind of man who
just went about doing good. I couldn’t
believe it when he was diagnosed with cancer.
“God, why?” I asked. “All he does
is serve you. All he does is help
pastors and churches. Why him, God? And if he must have cancer, why not heal him? He’ll give you the glory. He’ll give you the praise.” It was not the first time and it wouldn’t be
the last when I would wonder if God is as good as the Bible claims He is.
After a couple of rounds of treatment that weren’t going so
well, Melvin wrote an article in our associational newsletter. It helped me.
This is what he wrote:
We must all accept life one day at a
time, trusting God and using every day to serve Him. That is what I intend to do, hoping for many
more years to serve Him, but trusting Him to plan my life. We are all in His hands, and they are good
hands.
Those would be the last lines Melvin ever wrote. He died shortly thereafter. He fell asleep in his hospital bed and woke
up in glory. And you know what? I wouldn’t be surprised if his last words on
this earth and his first words in heaven were these: “Give thanks to the Lord, for he is good. His steadfast love endures forever.”
I wouldn’t be surprised if those were Phillip’s first words
in heaven too.
But we still have our questions. We struggle with this. We are not the first persons to do so. There’s a glorious yet haunting story in
John’s gospel about Jesus’ friend Lazarus.
Lazarus was sick. He was sick
unto death. His sisters, Mary and
Martha, sent Jesus word, asking Dr. Jesus to make a house call, lay His hands
on Lazarus, and make him well. “Lord,” the message said, “the one you love is ill.” Jesus got that word. And Jesus did nothing. Check that: the Bible says He did this: “So, when Jesus heard that Lazarus was ill,
he stayed two days longer in the place where he was.” If Lazarus ended up dying, Jesus couldn’t
plead ignorance. Jesus got the word and
stayed where he was for two whole days.
It appears He was deliberately waiting for Lazarus to die.
And sure enough, Lazarus died. “All right, men,” Jesus said to His disciples,
“Lazarus has fallen asleep, and it’s
time for me to go wake him up.” The
disciples breathed a sigh of relief and said, “Well, that’s good news. If he’s fallen asleep, he’s on the road to
recovery.” Jesus just shook His head and
said, “Not sleep as in sleep but sleep as in dead. Lazarus is dead. It looks bad now, but trust me. When I get through, you’re going to be amazed
and you’re going believe in me more than you ever have.”
When they arrived on the outskirts of Lazarus’ place in
Bethany, the mourners were all there.
Lazarus wasn’t laid out in a room; he was already in the tomb. He was four-days dead. Martha met Jesus first and she wasn’t all
that glad to see Him: “Lord, if you’d
have been here, my brother would not have died.”
Might have a stung a little.
Jesus replied, “Your brother will rise again, Martha.”
“Yeah, I know,” said Martha, “he’ll rise again in the
resurrection on the last day.”
And Jesus said, “I am the resurrection and the life. The one who believes in me, even though he’s
dead, yet shall he live. The one that
lives and believes in me will never die.
Do you believe this, Martha?”
“Yeah, yeah yeah. I
believe you’re the Christ the Son of God, who is coming into the world.”
So Martha went and fetched Mary. Mary sang the same sad song, “Lord, if you’d have been here, my brother
would not have died.”
And when the crowd of mourners saw Jesus, even they piled
on: “Couldn’t this one who opened blind
eyes have kept this man from dying?”
And in case you don’t know the rest of the story, Mary and
Martha didn’t have to wait till the resurrection on the last day for Lazarus to
be raised from the dead. Jesus raised
Lazarus that day. It was big deal.
And here’s the deal for us: Phillip has died, and he is
going to rise again too. But we’re going
to have to wait for the last day. We’re
not going to get him back today.
So maybe some of us feel about Jesus like Mary and Martha
and the crowd felt about Him. “Lord, if you’d have been here, Phillip
would not have died.”
Could I suggest to you, that the Lord has been with Phillip
all along?
Didn’t you see Jesus with Phillip in the many acts of
kindness Phillip did for so many of us?
He certainly made me look good with my wife when he arranged flowers for
her?
Didn’t you see Jesus with Phillip through his creative
genius? The guy had magic hands. He was one of those good old Delta boys who
could build anything, fix anything, and create something where nothing was
there before.
I saw Jesus with Phillip and Brooks when we talked about
them joining our church. I went home and
said to Dayna, “Now that’s a pleasant couple who aren’t considering our church
as consumers but as serious followers of Jesus.”
I saw Jesus with Phillip on a mission trip in Senegal where he
loved on the locals and served them gladly.
Didn’t you see Jesus in the way Phillip went about his work:
110% all the time? Did he ever do any
work for you when he didn’t give you more than expected? He did the flowers for our son’s wedding, and
he decided to make a couple of benches to go with the flowers. I saw Jesus in that dedication to his work.
I saw Jesus in the way he handled his flower business. I don’t know about Jonesboro but we’ve got
some snooty people in Hot Springs, and Phillip was occasionally on the
receiving end of that snootiness when he did some flower work for them. I know it bugged him, but he returned
kindness for meanness every time. Don’t
you see Jesus with Phillip in that?
And I’m sure Jesus was with Phillip when he did all kinds of
behind-the-scenes things for people that we don’t even know about it. I know Jesus was there because Jesus said, “Inasmuch as you’ve done it unto the least
of these, you’ve done it unto me.”
Didn’t you see Jesus with Phillip in the way he loved the
church—a little teaching, a little singing, a little drama, a little
missioning, a little deaconing.
Didn’t you see Jesus with Phillip in the way he loved his
family: devoted, protective, provider, all in?
His wife and children never had to ask themselves the question, “Does he
really love us?”
Didn’t you see Jesus with Phillip in the way he faced his
illness: courage, faith, hope? When I
asked him how things were with his soul a couple of months ago, he said, “That’s
the best part. In spite of the struggle,
my faith is strong.” He and his family
have suffered like Christians.
Didn’t you see Jesus with Phillip in the way many of you
offered love and support to him and the family during these days: neighbors,
work, family, friends? You were Jesus’
hands and feet for them.
We’ve got to get past this knee-jerk theology of God’s
presence. Some guy is in a horrible car
wreck. Car is totaled. The guy walks away with a couple of
scratches. Our knee-jerk theology is
quick to say, “Wow! The Lord was surely
with him.” But you notice how you never hear anybody say
that when the guy dies in the wreck?
Just because Phillip died doesn’t mean the Lord wasn’t
there. Jesus is no stranger to death. Jesus does not cower before death. Jesus died on the cross for our sins. Jesus rose from the dead on the third day. Jesus is a living Savior who shepherds His
children through the valley of the shadow of death and gets us all the way home
to the Father’s house where we will live forever.
As a child, Phillip put his trust in Jesus. He turned from his sins, believed in Jesus,
and Jesus saved him. When Jesus saves,
He saves forever. So Jesus was there for
Phillip all along. He was with him as he
was growing up in Vanndale. He always
had a lot of Vanndale stories proving that you can take the boy out of Vanndale
but you can’t take the Vanndale out of the boy.
Jesus was with Phillip in his schooling and his football and his just
being a boy. Jesus was with Phillip when
he went off to college. Jesus was with
Phillip when he met Brooks. Jesus was
with Phillip when he got his first job out of college and traveled all over the
world. Jesus was with Phillip when he
moved to Hot Springs and then back to Jonesboro again. Jesus was with Phillip when the doctor said,
“You’ve got pancreatic cancer.” And
Jesus was with him every day since. And Jesus
was there early Monday when Phillip finished his race, broke the tape, and fell
into the arms of Jesus in heaven. The
Lord has been with Phillip all life long and with him closer than ever even
now.
Phillip
is with Jesus today. Of course, we’d
rather have him with us. But since he
can’t be with us, how grateful we are that he is with Jesus! How grateful we are that death didn’t get the
last word; life gets the last word.
Phillip is strong and well and he is at peace. And death won’t even get to keep his body
forever, for the Lord will raise his body from the dead on the last day. And we who trust Jesus will see him again
when we join him in heaven or when Jesus comes again. Like Peter Marshall used to say to those
grieving a believing loved one: “Since he
is with Jesus and Jesus is with you, you will never be too very far apart.”
And
we can say that because the Jesus who raised Lazarus from the dead defeated
that last enemy death once and for all through His own death and resurrection. That’s our hope in life, in death, and in
grief.
Jesus
defeated death. That’s why Thomas Brooks
could preach in a funeral sermon from 1651:
Death is another Moses: it delivers believers out of bondage,
and from making bricks in Egypt. It is a
day or year of jubilee to a gracious spirit—the year wherein he goes out free
from all those cruel taskmasters which it had long groaned under … Death is a rest from sin, a rest from sorrow,
a rest from afflictions and temptations,
See that Christ be your Lord and Master … and then your dying-day
shall be to you as the day of harvest to the farmer, as the day of deliverance
to the prisoner, as the day of coronation to the king. Your dying-day shall be a day of triumph and
exaltation, a day of freedom and consolation, a day of rest and satisfaction!
Jesus
defeated death. That’s why John Piper
could write: “For believers, death is not
the condemning wrath of God toward them, it is the last gasp of a defeated
enemy who opens a door to paradise.”
I’ll
admit that it’s a lot harder to take and appreciate at the funeral of a 42-year-old
in the prime of life than someone twice that age. But this is true for every believer whether he
is 12 or 22 or 42 or 62 or 92. It’s the
gospel truth. And it’s our only hope.
Some
of us have voiced the kind of hurt that Martha, Mary, and the crowd voiced to
Jesus, “Lord if you’d have been here,
Phillip would not have died.”
Well,
Jesus was here and Jesus is here, and Jesus will be with us
forever. So when your grief is hardest
may God stir up this hope in the deepest parts of your lives in the name of Him
who is our refuge, our strength, our very present help in trouble, and Him who conquered
death and walks with us through our grief to a brighter day. He is Jesus Christ the Lord, the resurrection
and the life. Amen.
Thank you so much for these words. I didn't know Philip but I know his brother and sister in law in west memphis. I have recently lost a friend also to pancreatic cancer. I am watching his wife grieve. Tim was our music minister and loved the Lord. Your words have been encouraging and I'm going to share them with my friend. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Connie. I'm grateful the words help. Sorry about your friend and music minister. These things are hard to figure.
DeleteJohn, again you have not only encouraged many people who were at Phillip's funeral, but you have also lifted me up as well...
ReplyDeleteMay the Lord Jesus continue to use you as you minister to others until He calls us home to be with Him forever, never to shed a tear or perform another funeral again. Philippians 1:3 my friend... ♡ ♡
Thank you, Charles. You are always an encouragement, my friend.
DeleteJohn, I am Brooks' aunt and have heard them speak of "John the Baptist". I was not able to be at Phillip's service so I really appreciate being able to read your gracious words here. Thank you for being there for Phillip, Brooks, Noah and Hannah. Terry Ulvog
ReplyDeleteThank you, Terry. My sympathies to you. I wasn't there for them like I wish I could have been. God bless you.
DeleteThank you John. Comforting, strengthening words to help us deal with tough questions and remind us of God's faithfulness. Like so many, I am blessed to have known Phillip. Continued prayers for Brooks, Noah, and Hannah.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Wallace. Continued prayers needed
DeleteThank you so much for letting us see this sermon. I have been blessed by reading it.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Ann. Grateful it was a blessing.
DeleteThanks for sharing, John. I've had a few funerals that have been for folks younger than we expect: one was a friend, 29, that died from liver cancer 3 days after he started feeling bad. That one was tough, because best I can figure, he wasn't a believer. Personally the biggest loss was a 16 year old youth at our previous church, killed in a car wreck as she and her sisters were on their way to church for youth choir practice. That one was really hard emotionally, but her faith was solid as a rock.
ReplyDeleteBe grateful for every breath God gives us.
Have a good one,
Mike
Thanks, Mike. Those "premature" deaths that come suddenly are more shocking to take than the long protracted death where loved ones have some time to assimilate the sadness of what is happening. But suddenly or protracted death is still "the last enemy." Praising God that Jesus defeated it.
ReplyDelete