When
we were visiting our daughter in western Pennsylvania for Thanksgiving, a
friend and neighbor was rushed to the hospital. We visited him in the hospital
on Thanksgiving Day.
A week later he died in the hospital. His wife asked me to
officiate at his funeral. So we found ourselves flying back to Pittsburgh two
weeks before Christmas.
Christmas is always a difficult time for those who have lost
loved ones. That is why we have a Blue Christmas Service at our church. It is
especially difficult when the death and funeral occur near the holidays.
I always remember that my father died the week before
Thanksgiving, even though it happened thirty years ago. The following spring my
grandfather’s funeral was held on Good Friday. Those holidays always bring back
these memories.
When a death happens near the holidays, it forever changes
the way we celebrate the holiday. Not necessarily in a bad way. It enriches the
experience of the holiday. This is especially true of Christian holidays.
There is a painting by William Holman Hunt entitled Shadow of Death. He painted it a hundred
and fifty years ago during a trip to the Holy Land. It shows Jesus in his
twenties, working as a carpenter in Nazareth. He is stretching his arms after a
hard day’s work. He almost seems to be dancing and smiling. You can almost hear
him say, “It is finished.”
The setting sun casts a shadow of Christ’s outstretched arms
onto the wall of the carpenter’s shop. His shadow falls on a wooden tool rack mounted
on the wall and prefigures his crucifixion. His mother Mary is on her knees
before a chest in which she has kept the gifts given to her Son by the Magi.
She glances up to see the shadow of the cross on the wall.
The painting incorporates elements of the birth, life and
death of Christ. It proclaims that death is always with us, even at moments of
emotional fulfillment and joy. That is what the funeral of our friend reminded
us.
He was a Vietnam vet who knew war and death. He was a medic
who was awarded the Purple Heart. He also knew birth and life. He was a surrogate
grandfather to my own grandson Elijah, who lives across the street. He loved
him as his own. He kept a photo of him by his bed in the hospital.
Death does not take a holiday. Even at
Christmastime people we love die. The longer one lives, the more holidays bear
the shadow of death. But we can still dance. That is because the birth and
death of Christ has taken away the sting of death. “Thanks be to God who gives
us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.”
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