Sunday, November 24, 2019

Newspaper Obituaries


When I read the newspaper, I read straight through, national news, local news, sports, obituaries.  Oh, wait—obituaries.  Yep!  I read some of them, but even if I do not read the obituary I always look at the ages of those who have died.  This has a morbid fascination for me.  How many of them were my age?  How many younger?  How many older?  This past Sunday there were only four my age or younger.  One of those four died in a car accident, one died in a fire.  Out of those thirty-one obituaries twenty-seven of them represented people older than I, many of them in their nineties.
            The next thing I look for is if they just say “passed away” or if they say “went to be with Jesus” or “went to their heavenly home” or something similar.  I know that these expressions do not cover all Christ followers or even that all of those mentioned are Christ followers, but it does suggest that a relationship with the Lord was important.
            Three years ago in the Cincinnati paper I found an obituary that caught me.  It was the obituary of a twenty-week old baby.  His obituary read in part,  “ Owen had varied interests and many hobbies.  He was an avid explorer, and his greatest adventure was searching for the Gruffalo, a fictitious yet very dangerous British fairy tale character.  Among his other interests were going to pumpkin patches, farms, record stores and even bars, where he was never carded.  He loved music and would spend hours dancing with his parents to the lullaby versions of Creedence Clearwater Revival songs and, depending on his mood, the Beatles.  He generally liked music of any sort if it had a good beat.  His other favorite hobby was melting hearts.  He did that only with his smile.  He enjoyed long walks in the woods.  He was always fascinated with the trees and clouds above.  The higher he looked, the happier he was. . . .Everyone who met him wanted to spend more time with him.”  I suspect his life would have been more of the same, if he had lived.  His parents sound like cool people.  They made his short life an adventure.
            About the same time I found an obituary for a man who died at age ninety.
I won’t go into his family, training, jobs, not even the long list of places he served.  But these were the best lines:  “From his teenage years onward, G. C. bent his mind most acutely on studying the Word of God.  His study of the Word led him to have a lifelong abiding faith in the promises of Jesus Christ.  He had a humble heart and was a godly and gentle man of integrity.  G. C. shared the gospel openly and joyously with everyone who came into his life.”  I like that better than, “He/she was of the Baptist faith.”
            I’ve thought about what I would want my obituary to say.  I’m not sure it needs to have a litany of places I’ve lived or jobs that I’ve had or any of those facts about me. I would like my obituary to say that I loved God, my family, people, but most of all I would want to be to be described as that baby, “the higher he looked, the happier he was.”  I want to be happiest when I am looking up and I want my life to reflect that.  I can look around me and be discouraged or overwhelmed, or I can look heavenward and know that this world is not my home.  I am just passing through.  I am looking up.

                                                                        ~~Faith Himes Lamb

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