Archive for year 2012
Death is Coming
“On a long enough timeline, the survival rate for everyone drops to zero.” ~ Fight Club
As human beings, there is one certainty in this life: it will end. Some lives sooner than others, some more quickly and painlessly than others, some with more tragedy or dignity than others. But, regardless of the details, everyone who ever lives will die. FACT.
Yet, what is the single thing people are most afraid of? I’ll give you a hint: it’s not heights, not public speaking, not flying, and not spiders or snakes. Give up? It’s death. Death scares us more than anything. What does it say about people when our number one fear is something as unavoidable and universally experienced as death? How does our fear of death affect our way of life?
Typically, we try to defend ourselves from the things we fear. For instance, a person can avoid heights, public speaking, spiders, and snakes. A person can even try to avoid certain means of dying. I, for example, could not imagine a worse fate than death by drowning – simply because I cannot bear the thought of being consciously aware of dying. Therefore, I do not push beyond my comfort zone when swimming or visiting the beach. In other cases, people have been known to avoid possible deadly situations by refusing to fly, refusing to smoke cigarettes, or in extreme cases, refusing to even step outside ones front door. Still, for as much control as you may try to have over how you die, no matter what you do, you cannot prevent death itself from occurring. Death comes for us all in due time.
Still, advances in medicine and lifestyle choices attempt to hold off death for as long as possible. We cling to life for every last breath (and dollar). So, what are we worried about, that we will go to such lengths to prevent death?
“Death is a worry of the living. The dead only worry about decay and necrophiliacs.” ~ Dogma
I think we are scared, because we are confused. If we believe the gospel and trust God’s word, then we know that Jesus died in order that we might live. And, we proclaim that at the Resurrection, Jesus defeated sin and death. Those truths confuse us. Why? Because we feel like it should say, ‘Jesus died and defeated death so that we wouldn’t have to.’ That would be GREAT news! Wouldn’t it? But, it doesn’t say that. Jesus death and resurrection does nothing to change the FACT that we will still die like every other person who’s ever walked this earth and every person who ever will.
So, what does Jesus change?
Jesus relieves us of the need to fear death. He gives us the hope and confidence to live in the face of impending, unavoidable, unpredictable death. He promises us that death is not the end of life. He promises us that death is not a journey we make alone. In Him, death is no longer that scary. Not being ruled by a fear of death, we are free to truly live. This is what is meant when Jesus and Paul talk about “abundant life.” They are referring to life when it is lived fully free from fear. Death is a reality, but it is not a reality that we must fear. Rather, it is a reality that must inspire us to live.
“Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we’ll die.” ~ Dave Matthews Band
Read through the book of Ecclesiastes sometime. Sure, initially it seems like a real downer. But, what it really is is a reality check. It’s reminding us that we should enjoy this gift we have called life, because death comes to us sooner or later. So, don’t spend your precious time working to stave off death. Spend your time relishing in God’s good Creation, embracing those whom God has brought into your life, and celebrating the good gifts God has given you. Be adventurous; take risks. What’s the worst that could happen?
Oh, yeah…death.
It is those who have not yet lived, who cannot bear the thought of dying. But, joyful are those who die in the midst of truly living.
P.S. While the preceding is written as an address to individuals, let it be understood that what is true for individuals also tends to be true for groups of individuals. Therefore, the suggestions I raise to “people” to resist being rule by a fear of death and instead embrace life, I also raise to churches, which are so often lulled into preservation-mode themselves, rendering their ministry “lifeless.”
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Here is Matt’s bio: I strive to be an innovative pastor in love with Christ, the Church, and the richness of Christian tradition, but committed to challenging the Church to vocalize their faith and tradition in languages understood by a new generation of people. Follow me on twitter (@RevGork) or by subscribing to my blog: http://ramblingrev-mgorkos.blogspot.com/.
Eulogy for Tom
When Jay Cincotta was a young boy, his Uncle Anthony hung himself — but it was never spoken of. Suicide had a stigma in his Italian family and it was years before Jay even learned how his uncle died. Decades later, Jay’s younger brother, Tom, hung himself. In shock and grief, Jay reflected upon how he’d approach this sensitive topic with his own children, his cousins, his brother’s children and the rest of their friends and family in his eulogy for Tom.
This is the eulogy he delivered at his brother’s funeral:
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Thank you all for being here today joining my family in celebrating the life of my little brother.
If it wasn’t for Tom, I wouldn’t be here today. You see even as a young boy, Tom was a passionate entrepreneur. Tom was building a candy empire, and in his effort to protect his inventory, he actually saved my life.
We used to have a spare refrigerator in our garage in New York, and being an imaginative eight year old boy with lots of curiosity and no apparent common sense, I locked myself inside it to see if I could get out.
I couldn’t.
I learned that the light turns off when you close the door. And you can’t get to the latch from the inside. It was pitch black, cramped, airtight and nearly soundproof. As I kicked and screamed, the air got hot and thin. Sweating, panting and crying, I realized I would die and wondered how long it might be before anyone found my body.
Suddenly, there was a burst of white light. I thought maybe it was heaven. I thought an angel had come for me as I fell to the floor gasping for breath and I heard a voice. But it wasn’t the voice of an angel. It was the voice of my brother, Tom, and the voice said, “Jay, were you eating my candy?”
Tom was always clever and inventive, particularly in the pursuit of hoarding and selling of candy. In middle school he once rigged up an oversized jacket with all these inside pockets where he could hide candy and open it wide in front of potential customers, like a guy with a coat full of cheap watches.
Tom was a great athlete. He could have been a pro bowler. I think he even bowled a perfect game of 300 one time. He ran track. He loved lacrosse and played varsity in high school.
When we shared a dorm room at the University of Maryland in College Park, Tom and some of the other jocks would play lacrosse in the long hall using toilet paper rolls instead of balls to bean unsuspecting nerds enroute to their dorm rooms. Like me.
And once, while recovering from a knee injury, he raced me across the quad. Even on crutches he could still outrun me.
As we got older, we both got married, we both had two kids, we both had good jobs, and for awhile it seemed that everything was going his way.
But then it didn’t. Tom became confused. He made mistakes. His life took a darker turn. My love for him never wavered, but our relationship became terribly strained and for years we hardly saw one another.
But recently there was hope. Tom reached out to me, my brother, Doug, and our parents expressing regret and remorse. As a family reunited, we began planning a new beginning. Two weeks ago today, Tom, Doug and I spent a sunny spring day together after years apart.
Tom confessed to me that he realized his mistakes and that he was sorry for them and I truly believe he was sincere. I cried and told him how happy I was to have my brother back. Tom found the Hagarstown Recovery Mission and submitted an application which was accepted. He was about to start a new life, on the road to full recovery and redemption.
When last I saw Tom alive he was living alone in a small house with boxes piled to the ceiling. But good things were starting to happen.
I had hope. I thought Tom had hope.
One day Tom opened a door just in time and saved my life. Last Saturday I opened the door to his house just a bit too late to save his. There was an old rope tied to the doorknob. And when I opened the door I understood why: Tom had hung himself.
I will spend the rest of my life wondering why.
I dialed 911 and the next few hours were a blur as paramedics, then police came and went and people asked me questions and made me fill out forms. Finally, as a dark unmarked van pulled away I found myself alone in Tom’s front yard.
It was only then that I first noticed that his place backed to a public park. It was another bright beautiful spring day with a parking lot full of SUVs and young boys in team colors were playing lacrosse right behind Tom’s house.
They were young and intense and having fun and at a point in their lives where Tom once stood, where all that mattered was the stick in your hands and the ball and the net and the game and all your life lays out before you with all its promise and ripe possibilities.
And there’s always the danger that life can go horribly wrong when you least expect it. And you find yourself in front of an abandoned house. And a lonely cat needing a new home rubs against your ankles. And you’re left wondering why. Why?
I’m talking to you today about me and Tom because it’s the story I’ve lived. But my story isn’t really about me. Or even Tom. It’s about all of us, the people we love, and the urgency of time.
As life whizzes by it’s so easy to miss the preciousness of the fleeting moments of our lives. To forget how important we are to each other and that we have to love one another and love one another well and with all our hearts and not when it’s too late, but long before it’s too late.
Now. When it matters. When love, friendship and heartfelt concern can make a difference.
20/20 Interview
Two weeks ago ABC’s 20/20 came out to Parkesburg and filmed me on site at the funeral home for about an hour and a half.
Somebody at the studio had been reading my blog and thought I’d fit into a segment called “True Confessions.”
As a condition to the interview, I asked the producer to be respectful toward my family’s business as I didn’t want our 160 year old reputation to be sullied in a two minute nationally televised TV show. They accepted my stipulation, so I agreed to the interview.
I only told a couple friends that 20/20 was interviewing me (actually, I don’t think I told anyone … my immediate family did most of the telling … and I told them not to tell too many people because I was afraid I’d look like a moron). It aired last Friday and I think one or two of you caught it and gave me a text/tweet/facebook shout out.
John Berman was the interviewer. He was a pleasant person. Harvard educated. A New England sports fan. Very relaxed and generous in person.
The producer was a tall, pensive, well-spoken man. At one point I say, “People sometimes buy (caskets) out of guilt.” That line was at the producer’s prompt. The association between guilt and an expensive funeral fancied him.
The camera and sound crew were all local guys who were independent contractors. Some were out of West Chester, others out of Philly. And I liked them all … the main cameraman was especially entertaining (did you know that professional cameras start at around $70,000?).
I had my suit dry cleaned, bought a new dress shirt and tie, created and purchased “Wilde Funeral Home” t-shirts for all the crew and had one sleepless night all for two minutes of national televised face time.
Even though they forgot to post my twitter handle on air, it was a good experience and so far (based off the responses I’ve received) the Parkesburg community seems to be proud of the fact that 20/20 came out to Parkesburg.
Here’s a couple behind the scenes shots.
Here’s the video.
Embracing the Mystery
In the epigram for his (in)famously frightening novel, Pet Sematary, Stephen said: “Death is a mystery, and burial is a secret.” Yet in our age of hyper media saturation, this does not seem to be so. King wrote those words long before the Internet connected the darkest corners of the planet, before there was a YouTube showing us:
The hanging of Saddam Hussein.
The beating and humiliation of Mohammar Qaddafi.
Before someone paid $500,000 for a photo of Whitney Houston’s body lying in its casket. Before the Los Angeles County coroner released Ms. Houston’s autopsy report to the pubic.
It seems that death is no longer a mystery, nor is a burial a secret. If I’m honest, I’m part of the problem—because I want to know. Part of this is surely temperament, of taking a sort of perverse fascination in these sordid details, of my flesh wanting no mysteries.
Not even in death.
The other part is the zeitgeist—the spirit of the age—a prevailing scientific mindset that wants to dispense with mysteries altogether. We’ve seen the farthest flung reaches of the universe, so what’s a dead body? We can discuss in great clinical detail how a life is formed, so what’s the big deal of satiating ourselves on the gory details of a life’s end?
(Is it possible that this knowledge damages our interior lives? In some way deadens us to life’s sanctity?)
This curiosity is endemic to our species: we want to know. And this wanting is what got us into so much trouble in that long ago place called the Garden. Because our forebears wanted to know, they lost the most intimate fellowship with God any in our race have ever known.
I know in my heart that allowing some mystery in my life would be a balm for my soul, but it is hard to achieve: because I want to know. Yet even God says “For now we see as through a glass darkly…” The ready availability of even the basest of details means it requires the volitional on my part to turn from the knowing towards the unknown. I have to choose overlook, to willfully ignore some things for the good of my soul.
Yet my flesh wants no mysteries, but my soul longs for them. Even in this age of hyper-transparency, not everything should, nor need, be disclosed. As Adam and Eve learned there is such a thing as too much information.
I fear it is a dichotomy that won’t be resolved until I, too shuffle off this mortal coil.
What do you do to engender a sense of holy, hushed awe in your life? What turns are you making towards the unknowing?
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Chad is a Christ-follower, husband to his awesome wife, Lisa, and dad to two great kids.
He lives with his family in the Arizona desert.
The jury is still out on the effect the sun has had on his brain.
He blogs five days a week at Randomly Chad, and you can always follow him on Twitter @randomlychad.
The Video of Our Adoption Journey
Here’s our adoption journey video. You may recognize some of the clips from prior videos I’ve posted, but the majority of the footage is fresh footage, including the adoption ceremony itself.
I have a favor to ask you.
Even if you don’t know us personally, please advocate for both the adoption community and our personal adoption journey by sharing this video through facebook, twitter or your own website!
Adoption is such a beautiful experience and we’d love for you to be apart of the adoption community and of our own personal adoption experience by sharing this video with your family and friends.
Thank you!
If you’re interested in offsetting our $21,000 adoption expense, here’s a farther description of the fundraiser we’ll be doing through The Both Hands Project.
Caleb and Nicole Wilde have answered God’s call and stepped out in faith to adopt an infant boy from the US. The Wilde Family and a team of volunteers will be working on a widow’s home to help raise funds to cover the high cost of adopting their sweet boy. The Wildes were able to be at the hospital when their precious son, Jeremiah Michael, was born on March 16, 2012.
Jane is a kind and hardworking woman. Since the loss of her husband 14 months ago, it has become more difficult for her to keep up with the necessary improvements to her home. Jane said, “I am now on my own. My two sons live out of state so I rely on extended family and friends, who are busy with their own lives, to help out with the projects around my house that Rudy has planned to do after he retired.”
Each volunteer is raising sponsorship for their day of work. Since most of the supplies for the repairs on Jane’s home are being donated, 100% of the money raised will help cover the high cost of adopting this precious boy, Jeremiah, into his forever family – the Wilde Family. So on June 9, the Wildes and a team of volunteers are going to serve Jane by completing improvement and repair projects at her home.
If you are interested in helping us out financially in the adoption of Jeremiah, here’s the link to the organization that’s handling our fundraiser and finances. The link also provides a secure way to donate.