I attended a funeral today. One of my church friends had a lung disease and died at the very young age of 30. Last May she married her partner. Days ago when she died, her family stepped up with a life insurance policy in which they were the beneficiaries. Her wife didn't have the money to bury her, so she gave my friend's family the rights to make the funeral and burial arrangements.
The family posted the obituary in my friend's maiden name and didn't acknowledge the wife at all. It's as though the wife didn't exist. Church friends showed up in support of her wife. We all wore white shirts and sat on the wife's side at the funeral home. Our minister didn't speak, and he was not on the program.
The family took every opportunity to exclude her wife from the service.
However..... the minister who spoke at the service acknowledged the division in the funeral home and said that my friend who was deceased brought everyone together. Even though folks in the room had very different positions, the door is now open for us to interact. It was a very good message. A message that I suspect that the family was not prepared to hear. He went on to acknowledge my friend's wife, and say that we (the folks on the wife's side of the room) knew her as her married name... because she is, in fact, legally married.
I was surprised that the minister took the chance and acknowledged the divided funeral service, and advised us that it is now incumbent upon us to keep the door open... to be open for interaction even though we don't agree with each other. It was really good to hear, and I think it took a lot of courage to address the issue.
After the service, an announcement was made and her family was invited to our church. Some of her family came to our church, and we were happy to have them. Today was a huge eye opener about how families can be during bereavement, and how we still have a long way to go in so many aspects.
Are your affairs in order? If you die tomorrow, would your family exclude your partner from the services? Do you have the money to leave to your partner so that your final arrangements could be made the way that you would want them to be made?
The family posted the obituary in my friend's maiden name and didn't acknowledge the wife at all. It's as though the wife didn't exist. Church friends showed up in support of her wife. We all wore white shirts and sat on the wife's side at the funeral home. Our minister didn't speak, and he was not on the program.
The family took every opportunity to exclude her wife from the service.
However..... the minister who spoke at the service acknowledged the division in the funeral home and said that my friend who was deceased brought everyone together. Even though folks in the room had very different positions, the door is now open for us to interact. It was a very good message. A message that I suspect that the family was not prepared to hear. He went on to acknowledge my friend's wife, and say that we (the folks on the wife's side of the room) knew her as her married name... because she is, in fact, legally married.
I was surprised that the minister took the chance and acknowledged the divided funeral service, and advised us that it is now incumbent upon us to keep the door open... to be open for interaction even though we don't agree with each other. It was really good to hear, and I think it took a lot of courage to address the issue.
After the service, an announcement was made and her family was invited to our church. Some of her family came to our church, and we were happy to have them. Today was a huge eye opener about how families can be during bereavement, and how we still have a long way to go in so many aspects.
Are your affairs in order? If you die tomorrow, would your family exclude your partner from the services? Do you have the money to leave to your partner so that your final arrangements could be made the way that you would want them to be made?
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