But we do not want you to be uninformed, brothers and sisters, about those who have died, so that you may not grieve as others do who have no hope.
I Thessalonians 4: 13 NRSVue
In today's Globe and Mail there is an honest, powerful opinion piece by Danielle Crittenden, the author of the recently published Dispatches From Grief: A Mother’s Journey Through the Unthinkable. It begins:
If you suffer a tragedy, there will be no shortage of people offering hope. “You’ll get through this.” “It’s hard now but it will get better.” “You’re strong – and one day you’ll realize this will make you stronger.”
It’s a kind impulse. It’s a generous impulse. But it’s also the most unwelcome impulse.
Two years ago I suddenly lost my eldest daughter, Miranda. She was 32. The cause was complications from a brain tumour she’d had removed five years earlier, along with the pituitary gland it had destroyed. Her doctors had assured Miranda and us that she would live a full, healthy life. That didn’t happen. One February morning, the call came. Miranda was gone, and so was my life as I knew it.
Her loss is literally unimaginable. In paragraph after paragraph Crittenden dismantles some of the response to her loss by usually well-meaning folk who had no intention of being "Job's comforters" but said and did things with the desire to console when there was no consolation. She also describes the grief as a pathway to newfound peace and joy industrial complex (my term) that hasn't been helpful either.
There was a time where rituals and encouragements around grief were largely the domain of religion. Sometimes they have been been awful to the point of cruelty with a happy-clappy "Jesus is Risen" approach that actually deepens profound grief.
As a pastor I tried to travel a careful road on which we acknowledged the grim reality of death and mourning while affirming our resurrection hope in Christ. I won't claim to have always been adept at this but I attempted to be as genuine as possible. I found that any groups I offered on grief were well attended but no one came because they were seeking platitudes. There were some participants who had experienced shocking losses and others who watched elderly loved ones leave this life for the next. Grief was real and often lingering in all these circumstances. I came to appreciate that grief affected every person differently and I had no right to impose timelines or make assumptions.
There were funeral and memorial services in which I included the passage above in a framework that is described so thoughtfully by New Testament Scholar N.T, Wright in a brilliant post on X. I appreciate that Wright acknowledges the apostle Paul's personal grief and a recognition that misusing this passage that his grief is "a standing rebuke to the shallowness that forbids Christians to grieve on the ground that all shall be well."
