Funeral homily for
Helen Collins
Whoever comes to me, I shall not turn away. These words of Jesus, written in the gospel
passage we have just read, help us to understand the welcome which awaits all
of us when our earthly pilgrimage is ended.
From the day of our baptism, our God welcomes us, loves us and waits for
us.
The funeral liturgy that we
are celebrating today allows us to gather in the presence of God. God is the master of this household, he is
the one who welcomes us here, just as he welcomed Helen on the day of her
baptism. God is the one who welcomes us
to sit at his table, this Eucharistic table, where we share the meal which he
has given us. God is the one who speaks
to us through the scriptures that we have heard today, comforting us in our
moments of doubt and sorrow, holding us close to his heart and reassuring us
that our dear sister Helen, who we return to him today, will rest forever in
his presence.
Helen was well known in this
city, and in this parish. In her younger
years, she must have been a force to be reckoned with. From what I’ve been told, I believe she
worked in various capacities for the government, she fulfilled the role of
secretary, she was a saleswoman, she was a mother and wife, a grandmother and a
great grandmother. There were even some
hand-written notes on the material I was given, probably written by Helen
herself – instructions which she wanted to make sure we had so that all the details
of her funeral would be tended to. She
did this so that none of us would have to worry about these details. She did this because she loved her family and
those who were closest to her, and she knew that when the time came, she
herself would know the fullness of love, and wanted us to be able to stop, even
for a moment, to celebrate and remember the love that we have had the privilege
to know, and to share with her. Dear
friends, here, in the presence of our God, we experience the fullness of love,
for only in God, the author of life and of love, can we truly know the depth of
perfect love. We experience this love in
various degrees through the gestures of kindness that we experience here on
earth, but only in God’s presence can we truly come to appreciate the depth of
perfect love. Today, we give thanks,
because after her 87 years of life on this earth, Helen is now experiencing the
fullness of this love which she longed to know, in the presence of our God, and
with all those who have gone before her.
From her place in heaven,
Helen now waits for us, just as God waits for us. As we too await the day when we will see
Helen, John, Charles and our God in heaven, we have the assurance that the
promise of our God is not in vain. He
invites us to sit at this table, a preparation for the heavenly banquet spoken
of by the prophet Isaiah in the first reading we heard today. When we think about the banquet that is
described in Isaiah’s retelling, perhaps we can easily bring to mind the many
meals which Helen prepared, and the many many people who were welcomed at her
table. Yet, the heavenly banquet is even
more than any earthly feast, for the food that we will receive at that table is
not something that will fill our stomachs and make us regret having consumed that last
mouthful. Rather, it is a food which
feeds our souls, which lightens our step, which fills us with the certainty that
God, our God loves us, that he waits for us with endless patience – a patience
that can endure even our own choice to turn away from him at times … a
patience that outlasts every human effort, and is still searching for us until
we eventually come Home. Saint Paul
speaks of this divine patience in the second reading we heard today. In his words, we believe that having died with Christ in baptism, we shall return to
life with him on the day of Resurrection.
So dear friends, let us give
thanks to God today for the life of this lady who we commend to His mercy. Let us remember with joy the many years we
have been blessed to share with her, and let us look forward in hope to the day
when we will see her again. In the
meanwhile, let us welcome one another as God has welcomed us into his family,
let us love one another as God has loved each one of his precious children, and
let us wait together in hope for the day when we will see God face to face.
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