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THE MOURNING PROCESS
I think we,
no, I should say I, often forget that grieving is an
extremely individual process. No one can really experience
grief in the way I do, and no one can experience it in the
way you do. When the Lord says in Matthew 5:4, Blessed
are those who mourn, for they will be comforted, it
seems to me he acknowledges that the comfort will be
whatever works for the person and their state of grief.
Why is grief
so particularized?
Our
relationships are complex. Here I will use my mother as
an example. Very often she and I had a troubled
relationship. Frequently, I thought of her as angry. Even
though she said often that she loved me I found it difficult
to believe because she was so critical. Toward the last of
her life, and, in her Alzheimer’s, she became much sweeter,
and I did often feel loved by her. I have had to admit to
myself that I truly loved my mother and wanted her approval,
above anyone else, but I didn’t really like her for many
years. If I’m honest she felt the same about me. What does
this do to the grieving process? Unfortunately, it makes it
a mixed bag. Part of me was very sad and grief stricken that
she died, but part of me, a terribly hard admission for me,
was relieved that I wouldn’t be trying to live up to
expectations I couldn’t possibly attain to. I think the
grief devotional gave me a chance to express the long term
change in relationship for me and my mother and the always
evolving nuances of it.
We grieve
in the context of our current lives. If we are leading
productive, happy lives, if we are loved and can express
love, if we can have the freedom to make life giving
choices, then we are going to be much healthier in our
grieving. For some deaths which I have mourned, my life, my
marriage, my finances, my personal well being have been in
turmoil. Then grief just stirs the boiling pot. I tend to
sink into depression and self-pity, to feel victimized by
life and even God, to go into the “just one more thing for
me to bear” mold. It’s kind of a super grief and even
feelings of being buried alive in the tomb with the person
I’m grieving. I experienced this with my grandmother’s
death. Everything in my life seemed upside down, and I was
having problems in my marriage and finances especially. I
truly loved my grandmother, and she loved me. Her death was
like the last straw in “why is the universe and everyone in
it conspiring to kill me?” vein. I just couldn’t seem to
rise above any of my circumstances for healing or peace. It
took me a good year or year and a half to begin to feel
grounded again, this, because I went to therapy.
Our past is
interwoven with our present. Past ideas about grief
will rule. I was always from a “pull yourself up by your
bootstraps” family. That kind of philosophy leaves little
time to grieve. I was ever helping with the funerals, making
the financial plans around the will and estate of the
deceased family member. The idea of just taking time for
myself to grieve was considered selfish and uncaring of
others. So grieving, in any way, except a very quiet and
non-obtrusive manner, will never come easily to me. I think
now I try to allow myself depression, anger, the intake of
all the mental information about the loss and the outgo, the
weeping and true grieving. But it will never be natural to
me. I think there are still some very open wounds because I
still find myself in avoidance and denial about many facets
of grieving.
Our spiritual lives will have a
deep impact upon us. I am a Christian, and I believe John
3:16 with all my heart. So my grief is never for the eternal
life of my fellow Christian. I believe that is a fait accompli,
and she is with the Lord. My sorrow is for me here, but I
accept and breathe in deeply the consolation, the presence, the
peace, the understanding and the love of the Lord that does not
just tide me over and keep me surviving until better times, but
helps me to prevail and find the joy even in the sorrow. I love
the Bible quotes that seem to hold out so much hope, not for the
present because the loss is always in the present, but for the
future, to be the consolation for the foreverness of our souls.
It is the passage on which our devotional is based. I believe
Isaiah 61 is really about the Lord Jesus and who he will be to
his people, that grief will be transformed and ultimately
eliminated and that he will be there:
...to comfort all who mourn, and
provide for those who grieve in Zion– to bestow on them a crown
of beauty instead of ashes, the oil of gladness instead of
mourning, and a garment of praise instead of a spirit of
despair. They will be called oaks of righteousness, a planting
of the LORD for the display of his splendor. Isaiah 61:2‑3
The promise of the
Lord is even more expansive than this passage from Isaiah
because it provides even for eternity in Revelation.
And I heard a loud voice from the
throne saying, "Now the dwelling of God is with men, and he will
live with them. They will be his people, and God himself will be
with them and be their God. He will wipe every tear from their
eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain,
for the old order of things has passed away." Revelation 21:3‑4
For your encouragement,
Diana Burg
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Diana Burg
http://www.amourningdevotional.com
Mourning Glory – A Devotional for
Grieving is a book for
helping those struggling through a loss and looking for support and
comfort.
Diana is a writer and author with several
books in print. She writes everything – novels, short
stories, plays, screenplays and poetry. Her passion is
writing Christian books. |
Please feel free
to contact us if you would like to submit an article for our
site. |
 ISBN:0-9716511-6-7
Soft cover, 224 pages |
"Your devotional book, Mourning Glory,
is excellently done, and you can be very proud of your accomplishment. I know it
will be an excellent resource for Christians who are suffering through
bereavement."
Andrea Gambill, Editor
Grief
Digest Magazine
"I so enjoyed laughing and crying reading this
deeply honest and inspirational book. The authors share great wisdom of life’s
sorrows and grief, but remind us through touching experiences and thought
provoking scripture how we are truly blessed.
Mourning Glory truly reveals God’s Glory!
Thank you! Thank you!" - Jayne Hause
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