Thursday, August 28, 2008

Death Stinks, But Hope Will Someday Return

It's encouraging to look at all the comments posted at Marsha's blog. It's even better being able to see what HSB is doing to reach out to one of their own. There isn't much you can do to make life easier for a bereaved family, but they're doing all they can.

Death stinks. There are other ways to say it, but I consider this a family blog. Death really is the worst. It means a separation, a heart-rending loss of staggering proportions. It's a leaving, a departure and a goodbye that makes the breath catch in our throats. How can human hearts survive it?

But somehow, the sun manages to come up the next morning. It's Death + Day 1, and if we sleep at all, it's in spite of a heart that rages against the loss. Hope for anything is beyond the horizon and it's a cold grayness that descends over everything. How long this lasts is anyone's guess, but it seems forever until the music returns to the notes, the flavor returns to the food and laughter returns to the heart.

Somehow, the joy of life will return. Things will be different, but it will return.

Chrisitians have a hope that this world doesn't truly grasp. In a way, most of us don't grasp it either. When Jesus referred to his own death, He said,
You will grieve, but your grief will turn to joy. A woman giving birth to a child has pain because her time has come; but when her baby is born she forgets the anguish because of her joy that a child is born into the world. (John 16)

Right now, we feel the pain. We know nothing but the pain of the process. The hope of Christians is that this pain will eventually be forgotten in the joy of our homecoming. This hope is very distant while enduring the pain of death, but nevertheless, it exists. Someday, it will be fulfilled.

What do we say to those profoundly affected by loss? We mourn with those who mourn. We stand by them, shed tears, and live beside them for as long as they need us. I've written more about this before as recently as May. I don't want to turn WW into a grief blog, but this just seems like where we're at lately.

Marsha, we are with you in this storm.

1 comment:

MarshaMarshaMarsha said...

We really appreciate your prayers, Steve.

While I wouldn't use the term easier, I will say that it gets less hard with each passing day. I just really really really miss Christian. He was so into everything and was full of so much JOY!

But I wouldn't trade our time with him for anything. God has not ever spoken to me so clearly as He is right now. And He has never held me so tightly! He has been SO faithful, encouraging and loving to our family... and we truly can look back and see God's hand in our life, SEE how He has loved on us and encouraged us even before we knew we would need it.

I'll be in touch with everyone again soon. Please keep praying, my friend-- it makes a huge difference!