Note: This is the text of the funeral message I shared at the recent funeral of Chloe, age 4, and Camille, age 2 - two sisters who were killed in a train/car accident in northwest Iowa. I offer it here as a word of hope and comfort to all who need it.
BELIEVING WITH HOPE
It seems that for all of us here
today that of all deaths, that of a child appears the most unnatural and
hardest to bear. We expect the old to die. When those who are old die, it is always
difficult, but perhaps it comes as no surprise. But the death of a young child
or a youth is a different matter. Life with its beauty, wonder, and potential
lies ahead for them. Death comes as a cruel thief when it strikes down the
young.
In a way that is different from any
other relationship, a child is bone of her parents’ bone and flesh of their
flesh. When a child dies, part of the parent is buried. When we lose a child,
the effect is widespread. It not only deeply reaches into the fabric and heart
of loving and caring parents, it also involves siblings, grandparents, friends
and family, in incredibly unique ways.
So, I want
to begin today by naming some realities about this day and the circumstances in
which we gather:
- This was an accident and no one is to blame here;
- The hurt is deeper than the deepest hurt;
- The tears seem endless;
- The pain feels unbearable;
- There is a sense of powerlessness that is with each of us;
- We are trying to let go when what we really want to do is hold on;
- We have a sense of physical, emotional, and spiritual exhaustion.
I am not
telling you anything you do not already know and feel. But I also want to tell
us all something else. While the things I just named are very real, please know
today that they are not the final or ultimate reality. There is a dimension yet
unknown to any of us, but very real to Chloe and Camille – a life that brings
the promise of Christ and with it the promise of resurrection.
I will
tell you that there is no answer that can fill an empty mother’s heart or end a
father’s longing or restore a sister to you. We come here today, not for
answers but for comfort. The comfort we seek is the Word of the Lord that
endures forever.
Dan and
Heather and Nate - your compassion and love for Chloe and Camille - those are
not simply choices, they are, I believe, divine qualities. They reveal the
ongoing and active presence of God with you and in you. And none of you or us
here today stand alone in these circumstances. Even in Chloe and Camille’s death,
God is present with us. He is the God of resurrection life, love, and
compassion.
Compassion
and love are what brought Chloe and Camille into this world and they are what
allowed you, in the end, to let them go. That is the miracle in the midst of
today’s circumstances. That, Dan and Heather and Nate, is the miracle that has
and will continue to let you entrust Camille and Chloe to God. And, it is the
same miracle by which you will forever be their mom and dad and brother.
We all want
our children to outlive us. No parent ever thinks the day may come when
they must bury their children. But the world in which we live is not
about fairness or justice. What we expect from God is far above fairness
and justice. It is mercy and grace. Mercy and grace that is strong
enough to bear our broken hearts and make them whole again. Mercy and
grace that is strong enough to hold a hope of the blest reunion to come.
Mercy and grace that is strong enough to fill our emptiness and teach us joy
again.
In this
real world of tragedy, trauma, sin, curse, destruction and death, God’s
compassion and love for us are why, in the Christian faith, death never has the
final word. Death is for sure our enemy - but it is not the final reality. It
is why God says that he makes all things new.
Physical life
has changed for Chloe and Camille, but there IS a life that has not ended for
these two precious girls. It’s the reality of a life found in the grace of God
and the love of Jesus Christ.
As real as
the circumstances are today, the greater reality is the love of God, the power
of Christ’s resurrection, and the healing of our lives. That is the greater
reality into which we entrust Chloe and Camille and ourselves.
When tears
fall, we entrust. When questions and doubts arise, we entrust. When
circumstances overwhelm, we entrust. Over and over we entrust ourselves and
those we love to God and the new life He is creating. And we do not do this
alone. We do it together with and supported by family, friends, the angels,
archangels, and all the company of heaven, of whom Chloe and Camille are now
one.
We come to
God in our sorrow and in our mortality and He answers us with the gift of His
own Son, Jesus. He gives Jesus to us, in our flesh and blood, to bear our
suffering in His own suffering and to die for us the death that ends death’s
reign once and for all.
When a child dies, all of us
struggle with the purpose and will of God and rightfully so. Every person has a
purpose in the divine design.
Marshall Shelley and his wife lost a
child shortly after birth. He wrote about the brief life of their child and
their grief. I want to personalize his words for us today. He said, “Why did
God create a child to live two minutes? He didn’t. He did not create Chloe and
Camille to live two or four years. He did not create me to live forty years (or
whatever number he may choose to extend my days in this world). God created Chloe
and Camille for eternity. He created each of us for eternity, where we may be
surprised to find our true calling, which always seems just out of reach here
on earth.”
The Psalmist
describes children as a treasure from the Lord, gifts from God to the wombs,
hearts, and lives of His people. No life and no child is hidden from the Lord.
No child suffers without the Lord suffering and no child’s cry is left unheard in
the ears of our heavenly Father.
Dan and Heather, it was your intention to raise Chloe and
Camille in the faith. I remember that you brought them both to baptism and we
know that God claimed them as His own. “I have called you by name; you are
mine.” You wanted them to hear the stories of Jesus and listen to your prayers.
Please know now that God reaches into your greatest sorrows with the rescue of eternal
life that death cannot steal. It is this confidence that calls to us now
in our sorrow.
Long ago
the prophet Isaiah promised that the Savior who would come to us “would gather
the lambs in His arms and carry them in His bosom and gently lead the young.”
Those words became flesh and blood when God sent His Son to be that shepherd to
carry the little lambs in His arms. In their baptism, Chloe and Camille became
a lamb of the Lord’s flock and a sinner of His own redeeming.
The gospel
of Mark 10 tells us that people were bringing their children to Jesus, hoping
that He might touch and bless them. The disciples pushed the children
away, thinking they were in the way. Jesus said, “Don’t
push these children away. Don’t ever get between them and me. These children
are at the very center of life in the kingdom. Mark this: Unless you accept
God’s kingdom in the simplicity of a child, you’ll never get in.” Then,
gathering the children up in his arms, he laid his hands of blessing on them.
I know
that we don’t get all our questions answered, but I also know that we must all become
like a little child and come to Jesus… Bring your pain to Jesus… Bring your
broken hearts to Jesus… Find your comfort not in explanations or reasons but in
the hope and promise of a manger that held the Christ child, the cross on which
Jesus suffered to put an end to our suffering, and His death that gives us life
– life everlasting, eternal life – life that is never quenched by
physical death. He gives power to the faint. He fills the hearts of the
empty and gives strength to the exhausted.
He will
renew your strength… He will restore you… The pain of this day is real – but
through the pain we can also find a way to the promise and hope of that which
is to come. It is a day when tears will flow with joy instead of sadness. It is
a day when all our questions of WHY fade away in the presence of the Lord, in
the reunion with those whom we love who depart in the Lord, and in the unending
future of joy He has prepared for us.
The pain we feel today says
something to us not just about death, but also about life. Life, when it is
brief, is a reminder that all of us can be recalled at any time. Life is
transitory. Psalm 39:5 reminds us, “Each person’s life is but a breath.” Since
we have no promise of how long we are given life and breath, surely we must
maximize the opportunities God gives us. Count every day a blessing. Bless
every day by counting.
Time will bring some healing, but it
will not heal all the wounds. Billy Graham wrote, “Time does not
heal. It’s what you do with the time that heals … a long life or a short life
are of equal importance to God.”
Time alone doesn’t overcome sorrow.
So, we turn to the only One who can enable us to deal with our grief. “The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and
saves those who are crushed in spirit” (Ps. 34:18). Faith in Jesus Christ, who
is the resurrection and the life, gives us unexpected strength. We grieve, but
not as those who have no hope.
Chloe and Camille are
in the Lord’s presence by God’s grace. And through Jesus Christ we will get
there, too.Chloe and Camille have brought joy and smiles and energy and
sunshine and a simple faith and believing and trusting, exuberant love – to you
and to us all.Chloe and Camille have taught us so
much about the precious gift of a child. Though grief hammers and tears at
our hearts, the memories we have will always be cherished. AND we realize,
because of Jesus and his victory over death, that there will be a reunion. That
song by Watermark said it well, “We cling to God’s promise that we will hold
them someday in heaven.”
A writer by the name of Kenneth
McFarland told of an item he found on the obituary page of the newspaper in a
small southern town. It read, “Billy, it was just a year
ago today that you left us and the sunshine went out of our lives. But, we
turned on the headlights and we’re going on … and Billy, we shall keep on doing
the best we can until that glorious day when we shall see you again.” It was
signed simply “Love, the family.” No names, just a simple testimony to the kind
of faith that enables a person to go on in the face of sorrow and death.
And today I want to say the same
about Chloe and Camille. Chloe and Camille, you have left us and the sunshine
went out of our lives. But we will turn on the headlights and we will go on –
and Chloe and Camille, we will keep on doing the best we can until that
glorious day when we shall see you again.
Until we come to that day when all
mysteries, purposes, and plans of God are sorted out for us in the day when we
shall see God face-to-face, let us be thankful that the lives of Chloe and
Camille have enriched us and made us the better because of it.
Chloe and Camille belong to God.
Today we release their hands as God has grasped them over there, and He will
never let them go.
Victor Frankl once said: “We cannot judge
a biography by its length, by the number of pages in it; we must judge by the
richness of the contents. Sometimes the “unfinisheds” are among the most
beautiful symphonies.”
I agree with Victor. Chloe’s and Camille’s
brief life touched each of you in their own way as daughter, sister, grandchild, niece,
cousin, friend. Their unfinished life is among the most beautiful symphonies.
That’s because they put music in our lives and it was a beautiful piece of
music. And it plays on and on and on – and it is a symphony that will never
end. And right now I believe it’s playing among the heavenly angels in God’s
heaven, prepared for Chloe and Camille.
And while we say goodbye to Camille and
Chloe today, we also say hello to the love and hope that is the meaning of Chloe’s
and Camille’s life.
Love may change its
form, but it does not die. We seek to
find meaning. We feel pain and sorrow – beyond words.
But there is also love.
Enduring love. Eternal love.
In the rising of the sun and in its going
down we will remember Chloe and
Camille – in love.
In the beginning of the year and when it ends we will remember Chloe and Camille - in love.
In the beginning of the year and when it ends we will remember Chloe and Camille - in love.
So long as we live, they too shall live for
they are now a part of us as we remember
Chloe and Camille – in love.
Today is a closing and an opening— a
saying goodbye and a saying hello again. So while we say farewell to the Chloe and Camille we know, we greet the Chloe and Camille who have become a part of us - the Chloe
and Camille who lives on with us as the love which is in our hearts.
“And now abides, faith, hope and love,
these three: but the greatest of these is love.”
Closing Song Lyrics – Steven Curtis
Chapman
So we can cry with hope
We can say goodbye with hope
Because we know our goodbye
Is not the end
We can say goodbye with hope
Because we know our goodbye
Is not the end
We
can grieve with hope
Because we believe with hope
There's a place by God's grace
There's a place where we'll see your face, again
Because we believe with hope
There's a place by God's grace
There's a place where we'll see your face, again
So, we wait with hope
And we ache with hope
We hold on with hope
We let go with hope.
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