Wisdom 4: 7-15
The just man, though he die early,
shall be at rest. For the age that is honorable comes not with the passing of
time, nor can it be measured in terms of years. Rather, understanding is the
hoary crown of men, and an unsullied life, the attainment of old age. He who
pleased God was loved; he who lived among sinners was transported – Snatched away,
lest wickedness pervert his mind or deceit beguile his soul; For the witchery
of paltry things obscures what is right and the whirl of desire transforms the
innocent mind. Having become perfect in a short while, he reached the fullness
of a long career; for his soul was pleasing to the Lord, therefore he sped him
out of the midst of wickedness. But the people saw and did not understand, nor
did they take this into account.
Luke 9: 23-26
Jesus said to all, “If anyone wishes
to come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow
me. For whoever wishes to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his
life for my sake will save it. What profit is there for one to gain the whole
world yet lose or forfeit himself? Whoever is shamed of me and of my words, the
Son of Man will be ashamed of when he comes in his glory and in the glory of
the Father and of the holy angels.”
Funeral Homily
for
Robert Louis Gullickson
Wisdom 4: 7-15
Luke 9: 23-26
Praised be
Jesus Christ!
I am very proud of my brother, Robert.
We spoke on Skype maybe a week before he died. Of course, we spoke about his
awareness that with all the medical help in the world he was not going to beat
the infection that had taken hold of his body. We spoke of his hope for heaven
and seeing our parents and David, who had preceded him in death. We spoke about
his sufferings and hopes not to have too hard of a time dying. Most of all,
though, for me, he told me about his clear understanding and conviction that satisfaction
from accomplishment or achievement in this life is not to be had.
Bob’s insight was much more than saying that human
accomplishment is not what life is about. As an example of constructive and
almost impressive achievement, I am thinking, just by way of example, of that Japanese
guy with the long white hair and beard, the multi-millionaire on the internet,
you know: the one over 70 with a young athlete’s body and energy, who invented
that samurai pillow which is giving everyone a great night’s sleep? Anyway!
Robert was saying much more to me than that measurable success and material
flourishing is not to be envied or sought after.
You see, the best among us (we will call
them God’s own, His children) do not really have to care about wealth or fame.
Truly good people think and act otherwise than do people of this world; the
great ones in the Kingdom just keep hoping they can be of service to others.
They seek to bring light and joy to the lives of others and to cherish that
kind of mutual love, which is born not just of respect, but rather of a
genuine, reverential fear standing or kneeling there before the dignity of that
other woman, man or child born and living in the image and likeness of God.
We firmly believe in the life of the
world to come.
“For the witchery of paltry things
obscures what is right and the whirl of desire transforms the innocent mind.
Having become perfect in a short while, he reached the fullness of a long
career; for his soul was pleasing to the Lord, therefore he sped him out of the
midst of wickedness.”
Robert told me that he understood that
it was folly to think we are the achievers even in terms of doing good. He
thought that maybe he had been too anxious about wanting to do right by the
good people here at Catholic Care, to contribute somehow to the life of this
house. He confessed to me his firm conviction that it is indeed the Lord Jesus,
Who is in charge and from end to end.
“The just man, though he die early,
shall be at rest. For the age that is honorable comes not with the passing of
time, nor can it be measured in terms of years.”
If you think about life that way, it is
easier to embrace the Catholic teaching about Purgatory. Maybe then, we can
better understand what kind of people we must not be in order to enter into
God, in order to rest with Lazarus on Abraham’s bosom, as Jesus in the Gospel
parable tells us. St. John Climacus (born: 579 AD in Syria and died: 649 AD in
Jabal Mousa, Egypt) in his book, “The Ladder of Divine Ascent”, gives a
wrenching description of a monastic prison, where sinner monks placed
themselves freely in hopes of that purification through penance which could
speed them on their way to heaven. Frankly, I had a very hard time with John
Climacus, just as some people seem to have difficulty with the Church’s
teaching on Purgatory. But our lack of insight, our shortcomings do not make
the truth anything less than what it is.
What is secularization, what is the
crisis of culture in our world, if not the failure or inability to see
ourselves already in God or going into Him? What is that crisis of faith that has
many people skeptical or doubting the Lordship of Jesus? Is it not the
inability to live the truth, maybe for lack of a faithful upbringing, for some
trauma from outside ourselves or because of a crisis brought on by our own sin?
None of us knows any better than did
Robert as he prepared for death just where we stand with God. We need to focus
more decidedly on Him Who is the be-all and the end-all. As Jesus in the Gospel
today exhorts: “If anyone wishes to come after me,
he must deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me. For whoever
wishes to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake
will save it.”
Nine hundred years after St. John
Climacus, Saint Catherine of Genoa, in her Treatise on Purgatory, speaks of her
boundless hope and joy at the prospect of coming to see the Lord face to face
at the end of her unspeakable sufferings in Purgatory. Please, I beg you, pray
for the repose of Robert’s soul. May he rest with Lazarus in the bosom of
Abraham, in expectation of that great day when the Terrible Judge will call him
along with all who have been found worthy: “Come, ye blessed of my Father, into
the Kingdom prepared for you from the beginning of the world!”
“Having become perfect in a short
while, he reached the fullness of a long career; for his soul was pleasing to
the Lord, therefore he sped him out of the midst of wickedness.”
Praised be Jesus Christ!
PROPERANTES ADVENTUM DIEI DEI
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