Monday, January 12, 2009

Tom's Funeral

The funeral for my friend Tom was Saturday. It's taken me a couple days to process it, and the truth is I expect I'll be processing his life and his death for a long time to come. I've seen a lot of crazy, sad things in my 35 years, and it takes a lot to jolt me. This did.

It should be easier for me to process the funeral, but this is one of those unfortunate cases where being a pastor hurts rather than helps. This was my first Presbyterian worship of any kind, and during the funeral I kept noticing things they did differently from what I was used to. The 'normal' people there may or may not have been doing the same thing- we all come with expectations, and so maybe everyone else thought those thoughts. I dunno. But I sure did. "Huh, that's different," or "Wow, I liked that part" or "Hey, I really miss this part." All technical, worship leadership thoughts that I really could have lived without. I was there to celebrate and grieve and worship, not attend a seminar on funerals. But the thoughts came anyway.

Tom's wife asked me to do a prayer in the funeral. It came after his best friend, his two brothers and his dad spoke. They all made it through without breaking down. Me, I sobbed my way through. Ironic, isn't it? The four people who never speak in churches got through theirs just fine, while the guy who does it for a living blubbered. Right up to the moment I started talking I thought I was fine, and that I would be able to do it without crying. Afterwards, I told my wife that and she said "I knew you weren't fine." I wish I had, but even if she had told me I wouldn't have believed her. I don't always listen when I should.

After a funeral, there's really not that much else for anyone but immediate family to do. Life pretty much gets back to normal for us. They're the ones who have to get rid of his clothes, sort through the paperwork, and figure out what to do with his comic book collection. That's messy, awful stuff that I don't wish on anyone. So we're going to help with the house, and we're going to keep the kids every couple weeks so his wife can do this stuff. At this point, all we can do is support them. So that's what we'll do. And gradually, over time, I suppose my Dad will once again be proved right. I asked him once how he got over his Dad dying, and he said you never really get over it. You just get used to the pain.

I do believe that someday I will see Tom again. I look forward to that. I look forward to the day when death will be no more. When weeping and crying and pain will be no more (Revelation 21:3-4). I'm looking forward to that a great deal. And until then, I guess I'll just keep processing. Keep praying for God to help me deal with it all, and for all who loved Tom to do the same.

Peace.

1 Comments:

At 6:39 PM, January 12, 2009, Blogger Beth said...

I agree with your dad. You don't get over it. But I think that with time, you begin to remember the good times more and feel the pain less. Helping Tom's family is good for them and for you.

 

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