Some people are privileged to live long lives that are blessed with health and happiness; others are taken from us much too soon, and yet it is only once we have realized that they no longer walk among us that we truly begin to appreciate the gift that they were and are.
Funeral homily for
Deanna Boisvert
The members of Dede’s spiritual family have gathered around
you, her beloved mother, her sisters and her friends to support you in this
time of loss. A little more than five
decades ago, Basil and Vivian brought Dede to the Church and asked for her to
be baptized. Water was poured over her
head on that day, and she became a precious child of God. This simple act – of pouring water over her head
– has a much deeper meaning, one that we are witnessing today.
At the moment of our baptism, we believe that God
welcomes us and claims us to be his precious child, and because we are his
children, we are also heirs to the promise of eternal life with him in
heaven. Just as Christ was raised from the dead … so we too will walk in the
newness of life (cf Rom 6:4) when our lives here on earth are ended. This is the hope to which we all aspire. Day by day, week by week, we gather with
others who have also been baptized, others who have also come to believe that
Jesus is the son of God. Here in this
place, and in other locations like this, we listen for his word that guides and
instructs us, and then we go out into the world to share the good news that we
have encountered here, the constant and never-ending love that God has for us,
with everyone we meet.
God’s love is unconditional: there is nothing that we
have done to merit it, and there is nothing that we can do to earn it; love is
pure gift. When we realize this truth in
our lives, we are filled with joy and gratitude and we want to tell others
about it. Having discovered the gift of
God’s love, we in turn want to love others, because love is something that we
can never keep for ourselves; it begs to be shared. It is encountered in the gentle presence of
warm sunlight, in the calm waters of a lake and in the gentle breeze that
brushes across our faces. It is also
discovered in the relationships that we cultivate with others: with friends and
family who we invite into the confines of our confidences, with other sentient
creatures such as pets, sometimes even in the presence of plants that calm us
and assure us of the quiet presence of their Creator.
God our Father created us and has loved each one of us
from the day of our conception. He is
present to us at every step of life’s journey.
We celebrate his presence in a special way through the Sacraments:
moments of grace that are given in order to strengthen us so that we can
continue our journey in faith. Each such
moment of grace prepares us for the moment when our earthly journey comes to an
end. We believe that at that moment, our
souls will return home to heaven, to the place where we are meant to live
forever with God. In fact, God has
promised us that he will put his own
spirit within us, and we shall live (Ez 12:14). In other words, he will breathe new life into
our spirits, and we will live forever with him, even as our earthly bodies, the
vessels that have hosted our precious and eternal souls will be returned to the
earth from which they were created.
This is a truth that defies all human logic, yet it is a
truth that we can trust because Jesus came from heaven in order to remind us
that his Father, our Father loves us unconditionally, with infinite love. As we make our way through life, all of us
encounter certain moments that scare us, especially experiences that place us
face to face with an unknown future.
Yet, Jesus reassured his disciples: Do
not let your hearts be troubled; believe in God and believe in me (Jn
14:1).
Today, we give thanks to God for having allowed us the
great privilege of having known and loved Dede.
We ask him now to take her eternal soul to heaven, so that she can live
there in the fullness of joy with him and with Basil and with all those who
have gone before us … and we ask him to strengthen our faith so that if we
should ever be tempted to doubt his promise, he will always find a way to
remind us that not only do we know where he is, where he waits for us, but we
also know the way to the place where he
has gone before us (Jn 14:4).
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