Today, we celebrated the second funeral since my arrival. In this case, the person in question was a woman I first met when I was assigned here in this city (within the first year or two after my ordination). Here, for posterity's sake, is the homily I prepared:
Funeral homily for
Nancy McCubbin
My first memories of Nancy
were in the pews at the Pro-Cathedral.
It was there that I first met her, sitting on the left-hand side of the
church (facing the altar), along with Alma and Dean. More often than not, when I passed by the
pew, Nancy had a smile for me, and a kind word about whatever it was that was
going on at the time.
There are some people in life
who seem to radiate a special love which has no bounds. From what I’m told about the special role she
played in the lives of all her nieces and nephews, and about the love she
shared with all the members of her family, I can believe that Nancy had this gift
of sharing love. She shared this love
with those she knew, with those who were closest to her, but she never tired of
sharing this love with even those she only saw once in a while. Her radiating smile, her kind words, her
uncanny ability to know just the right gesture to help when assistance was most
needed all bear witness to the type of love and acceptance which characterised
her. Visible gestures such as these are
often born from the heart of one who knows the trials of suffering. Love expressed in such depth of compassion is only possible if
we ourselves understand the desolation that Jesus must have known when he sat
with his disciples at table and shared with them the special meal that we have
come to know as the Last Supper.
John’s account tells us that
he knew that his time on earth was limited, and yet even while faced with
mounting doubts and fears, he was more concerned for his disciples: Do not let your hearts be troubled. Believe in God, believe also in me. Although the disciples couldn’t quite
understand what he was talking about, Jesus was encouraging them to believe
that he had already taught them everything that they needed, if only they would
just believe in themselves. How many
times in life do we find ourselves paralyzed by fear of the unknown, rather
than embracing the adventure of life with the certain knowledge that we already
know the way, the truth and the
life? We were first introduced to
him on the day of our baptism, and every day spent here on earth is another
opportunity for us to know him, to trust him, and to share the joy of his love
with those we meet.
On the surface, Nancy was
always welcoming, but at another level, her struggles here on earth were
numerous. Those of us who knew her in
this life are aware of at least some of the physical challenges, but few of us
can fully comprehend the fear she must have known when she first discovered
that she’d lose a part of her sight, or how frustrated she must have been at
times when she couldn’t share treats that every child around her seemed to take
for granted. Even fewer of us were
perhaps aware of the depth of faith that she was cultivating because of the
struggles she had to face. How else
could she have faced life when it was such a challenge? Yet she always lived with grace. She always had a smile on her face when she
greeted friends and strangers alike.
Just last week, when she knew
that she needed some more surgery, she entrusted herself to the skill and care
of the doctors, knowing that even if the situation was grave, she was not
afraid. She knew, as we all know that our souls are in the hands of God and
that one day we are all destined to go Home to be with Him. This transition is not something to be
feared; rather it is the reunion for which we prepare ourselves every day of
our lives. We do this by learning how to
trust in the God who we cannot see with our physical eyes, but who we know is
present, right beside us every day. His
love for us is shared with us in ways small and not so small. If we pay attention, we can learn to see it
in the generous invitation to sit at the Sunday table, to join in the conversation
that is just as likely to be peppered with laugher as with just the right
amount of challenge to keep the intellectual side of us thinking.
The woman who we commend this
day to our loving God would perhaps be the first to remind us that we need to
be more and more convinced every day that each of us is beloved by God, that out of this love he sent his only Son into
the world so that we might live through him. If we truly believe this, then let this
gathering of faith not be one of sorrow and tears, but rather a celebration of
thanks for all that has been accomplished through the hands, ears and heart of
this woman of deep faith. Let us
celebrate around the Father’s table with the same faith that gave her a reason
to laugh, for if we love one another, God
lives in us, and his love is perfected in us.
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