God Re-Members – A Funeral Sermon

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Death is such a mystery. Sometimes it comes way too soon, too early. It comes as a tragic injustice cutting short a life yet to be fully lived. It often calls into question all we thought we knew and believed. 

Other times death comes too slowly and takes too long. That also is a tragic injustice that seems to only prolong the waiting and suffering. We wonder why but we can’t make sense of it. It’s not that we want our loved one to die but that we trust that sometimes there is healing and freedom in death, a new beginning. We trust that with death life has changed not ended. Death is such a mystery.

One of the hardest things we ever endure is watching a loved one lose connection with herself, others, and us; not recognize faces; not recall names, stories, and experiences. But here’s what I want you to know: your names and faces, your connection to and love of Janet, your experiences and relationship with her, your shared stories, have never been lost to her. They may not have lived at the forefront of her mind or on the tip of her tongue but they have always been held secure in the treasure chest of her heart. And they still are. 

We can lose a lot of things in this life: health, relationships, memories, but we are never lost. There is one who always remembers. God suffers no memory loss. Nothing and no one is ever lost to God – not our names, our faces, or our lives. That’s true for Janet and it’s true for you and me. 

When I say that God remembers I’m not talking about simply recalling the past. Remembering is more than recall. I’m speaking about re-membering. Re hyphen membering. 

God is always taking the pieces and fragments of our lives, the things we’ve lost along the way, the parts of ourselves that have been dis-membered, and putting them back together – making whole, making new, re-membering. 

This re-membering is at the heart of all God does. It’s at the heart of all we do and say here today. It’s at the heart of the scriptures we just heard:

  • “The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases, his mercies never come to an end.” God re-members. 
  • “The Lord is good to those who wait for him.” God re-members. 
  • The Lord is our keeper, neither slumbering nor sleeping, but keeping our life. God re-members. 
  • “See what love the Father has given us, that we should be called children of God.” God re-members. 
  • The one who hears and believes “has passed from death to life.” God re-members. 

We too have the power and grace to re-member. It’s one of the ways God shares God’s life with us. It’s one of the ways we participate in God’s work of re-membering. So I want to take a moment and ask you to re-member Janet. I’m not asking you to simply recall something about her from the past but to re-member her as a present reality. Feel her touch and presence. Hear her voice. See her face. Smell her perfume. Taste the sweetness of her life and love. Re-member Janet.

In what ways did she make space and place for you in her life? What words did she speak that you’ll never forget? What are the things she did that made a difference and changed your life? What do you love most about her? What wisdom or advice did she give you? What are your favorite experiences with her? What’s the best gift she ever gave you? In what ways did she care for you and invest in your life? What is it about Janet for which you will be forever grateful? In what ways did she touch and impact your life? How did she show you that you were loved and important to her? What fills your heart when you re-member Janet? What do you need from her today?

In all the things you just named Janet was re-membering you. We do that for one another. Re-membering prevents the past from having the final word. It keeps the present moment from closing in on itself. It opens the door to the future. I think that’s why Jesus tells us, “Do this in re-membrance of me.”

So let me ask you this – what do you need to do with your re-membering? What are your re-membrances asking of or calling from you? To celebrate Janet? To thank her? To forgive her or ask her forgiveness? To wish her well? To embody and live her best qualities? To tell her that you love her? Tell her what she means to you? To bless her? 

On days like this I think, more than anything else, we want to re-member those we love and we want to be re-membered. It’s the only thing to do. Every act of re-membering, whether God’s or ours, is a passage from death to life. Re-membering is why even on this day, “even at the grave we make our song: “Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia.”

___________________
Image Credit: Photo by Quaritsch Photography on Unsplash
Scriptures For This Sermon:
+ Lamentations 3:22-26, 31-33
+ Psalm 121
+ 1 John 3:1-2
+ John 5:24-27

© Michael K. Marsh and Interrupting the Silence, 2009-2025, all rights reserved.

10 responses to “God Re-Members – A Funeral Sermon”

  1. lundyjanc2016 Avatar
    lundyjanc2016

    Sooo wise and loving, dear Michael! My husband, Michael, has started developing dementia. So far, we’re connecting in love, and he’s staying oriented, for the most part, but needs me to help.

    Love to you and Cyndy. Jan

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Michael K. Marsh Avatar

      Jan, I am so sorry you all are going through that. I hope there is much re-membering.

      Love to you and Mike.
      Mike

      Like

  2. Howard Avatar
    Howard

    Dear Father Mike… thank you for this. All one needs to do is remember the passing of a particular person that left a hole in your/my life, while you read it, and the memories are right there again.

    For some reason, I started thinking of John Donne’s famous sonnet, ‘Death Be Not Proud’. I don’t think you’ll mind if I just quote it here… anyone who would like to read the entire sonnet can find it on the Poetry Foundation website, as below…

    It begins…

    ‘Death, be not proud, though some have called thee
    Mighty and dreadful, for thou art not so;
    For those whom thou think’st thou dost overthrow
    Die not, poor Death, nor yet canst thou kill me.’

    https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44107/holy-sonnets-death-be-not-proud

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Michael K. Marsh Avatar

      Howard, thank you for the line from Donne – so well said. The presence is real. May you always feel it.

      Peace be with you,
      Mike

      Like

  3. Helen Avatar
    Helen

    Hello from Nz
    Thankyou for the message on Re-membering. It is inspiring and I have copied and sent it to friends who are struggling with the death of a loved one. We remembered that person at a service but your words are so healing Thankyou.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Michael K. Marsh Avatar

      Thank you Helen. May there be much re-membering for you and your friends.

      Peace be with you,
      Mike

      Like

  4. Joyce Stewart Avatar
    Joyce Stewart

    This is perhaps the most beautiful funeral sermon I have ever “heard”. Thank you. I am feeling particularly raw today as I read it, having just learned that the daughter of a former co worker, a vibrant 28 year old young women, was killed in an auto accident yesterday. My heart is heavy; I am at a loss for words for my former colleague. I am looking for info about a funeral or memorial and not finding the details I need.

    I am going to just sit with the scriptures you included, the words of comfort and hope. I pray that Katie is in the presence of the Holy One and that her heartbroken parents will find comfort and solace from family and friends, but most of all the God who loves them more than they can think or imagine at this time of deep grief.

    • “The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases, his mercies never come to an end.”      •  “The Lord is good to those who wait for him.”     •  The Lord is our keeper, neither slumbering nor sleeping, but keeping our life.      • “See what love the Father has given us, that we should be called children of God.”      •  The one who hears and believes “has passed from death to life.”  
    

    With Gratitude,

    Joyce Stewart

    >

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Michael K. Marsh Avatar

      Joyce, I am so sorry for the loss of Katie, her parents’ broken hearts, and your rawness. How could you not be at a loss for words? There are no words. Love, re-membering, and the presence of friends and family remain. Somehow someday they will be larger than the loss. But the loss and hurt also remain. Our older son died when he was 27. We still grieve and re-member.

      Peace be with you,
      Mike

      Like

  5. Cheryl Avatar
    Cheryl

    Thank you much Pastor for this sermon. I was so blessed but your encouragement and have taken some of your words/explanations and used them to encouraged a family going through grief.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Michael K. Marsh Avatar

      Cheryl, thank you for telling me that. I’m glad you shared the sermon and I hope it was meaningful to others in their grief.

      Blessings on you and them.
      Mike

      Like

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