Today, we celebrated the funeral of a lady who was truly an example of faith to many. Here is the homily prepared for our gathering.
Funeral homily for
Gertrude Nadon
This community of disciples is
assembled here today to pray our dear sister Gertrude into eternity. After 97 years of life here on this earth,
she is finally at Home, in company with her beloved husband Ross and all those
who have preceded her on the journey to heaven.
This is a celebration of joy and of faith because we believe that the reward
of all our labours, arrival in our heavenly homeland, is granted to Gert
today. Even as we celebrate this
milestone in her life, we are also united in the grief being experienced by her
children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren, because she will no longer
walk among us, talk with us, and share her special love with us on this earth.
Faith was a very important
element in the life of this lady, and so it is fitting that we should bring her
home to this place of prayer. Inspired
by the words of scripture which we have heard this morning, I’d like to reflect
a bit on our God’s invitation, issued to Gert: come, receive the reward
prepared for all the faithful.
Saint Matthew recounts Jesus’
advice given to the disciples about the criteria by which we shall all be
judged on the day we see our God face to face.
This teaching, like so many others which Jesus gave, begins with an
invitation: Come, you whom my Father has
blessed … Gert was well known in
this city, especially to those who frequented the Rosebud and Fiddler’s
Green. In their day, these were the
gathering places, the watering holes where the locals would congregate, for a
Sunday breakfast or brunch, for an evening of entertainment, for a casual snack
or for a family dinner. How many hungry
mouths were fed and watered there? How
many strangers were welcomed, thanks to Gert’s commitment and love? From what I’ve been told, I believe that Gert
was always willing to help someone in need, but she didn’t stand for any
nonsense either. The strength of
character that made all of this possible came in no small part from her faith,
from her commitment and belief in the words of Jesus which command us to feed
the hungry, to give drink to the thirsty, to welcome the stranger, to clothe
those who are naked and to be present to those in need. Now, it’s Gert’s turn to hear these words
spoken to her: Come … take for your heritage
the kingdom prepared for you.
We who are here in this church
today are mere mortals. Today, we gather
in the presence of the immortal, to give thanks for the life of this great
lady. Today we receive the gift of a
special food, distributed from a table around which we are all invited to gather. Today, we watch with the eyes of faith,
trusting that Gert’s soul, like all the souls
of the virtuous are in the hands of God, taken to a place where no torment of any kind shall ever touch her again (Wis 3:1). This is the reward promised to all of
those who are the children of God. This
reward is also promised to each of us. I’m
sure that at times, some of us might feel that we are the least of those who
should be rewarded in this way. Human
beings are often much more aware of our shortcomings, and our weaknesses than
we are of God’s abiding love for us. I
wonder if Gert ever doubted. I wonder if
she ever questioned. I wonder what
prayers she uttered on the days when she might have found it most difficult to
believe that God is always close to us, loving us, waiting for us, wanting to
reward us with the gift of everlasting life, and the full knowledge of a love
that surpasses every trial we may ever have known.
Dear friends, this reward of
life eternal is prepared for all of us.
Even on the days when we must face the greatest of challenges, the Lord
never leaves us alone. He knows our afflictions and our poverty (Rev 2:8),
our sufferings and our persecutions, but he asks us only to be faithful to him,
even to the point of death. Jesus
himself modeled for us the faithfulness he asks us to live, by giving himself
out of love for us, even to the point of suffering death on a cross. Then, as now, physical death did not have the
last word. Instead, physical death is
the gateway to eternal life, the ultimate
crown of victory (Rev 2:10). Let us give thanks
today for the crown that is entrusted to our sister, and let us all be resolved
to imitate her in striving always to come to the Lord, ready to serve him in
faith and trusting in the reward that awaits us.
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