Thursday, March 30, 2006

A Requiem for the Living


To grieve well: How do people do this? People will answer differently.

I have seen some down on the floor, howling as though travailing in child birth; others are quiet and still. Grief is unique to each person. The question is important for me to think about as every client is grieving something - loss of child, a marriage, seasonal passages, i.e. adolesence to adulthood, place, time, a role, people, history . . . Two weeks ago I attended the funeral of a dear friend of mine, 35 years old. He was a son, brother, friend, tireless evangelist for Jesus. It’s agonizing to think his voice will not be heard, or presence enjoyed again until Heaven.

One way I have learned to grieve is through music. Sometimes I will listen to Mozart’s Requiem. Requiems are usually presented in traditional latin liturgy as the mass for the dead. They are filled with images of the horrors of the Last Judgement. The tones are somber and summon sorrow and grief. At times though, my grief will not resolve and I get stuck in deep sadness.

Last Friday night, The St. Louis Symphony Orchestra performed Brahms German Requiem. I was there. This was a new requiem for me. Instead of latin liturgical phrases, Brahms’ text is compiled from the Old and New Testament. He seeks to comfort the living who must deal with and accept death. A Requiem for the living!!! In Matt. 22.32 Jesus says, ‘I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob’? He is not the God of the dead but of the living.” Brahms requiem is in stark contrast to the overwhelming sorrow of Mozart’s unfinished requiem. At times, I felt swept away by words, music and the conductor's artful direction of the requiem. Like breathing. Life-giving.

To grieve well is not dwelling on pollyannish platitudes, but embracing human frailty and suffering along with glorious victory through Jesus. Hope, promise, and comfort for the living in the stark face of grief.

At least two people sitting around me were sleeping - one of them snoring. I smiled, but felt sad, too. All too often, the response to grief is resistance. Who wants to feel the agony and anquish of loss? Grief is hard, exhausting work and, at times, appears to be without end. I choose sleep sometimes, and count that a gift of God. But I am also exhorted to wake up (Eph. 5.14) - to stay connected to the process of weeping and mourning for a season.

I feel hopeful. Lent will be ending soon, and the Resurrection of Jesus will be here. This is the best way I know to help clients grasp their losses.

To grieve well? Deep sadness-deep gladness; it’s both/and.

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