The Faithfully Departed: Memories & Prayers

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"Be Not Afraid"

Last year the joys of Easter came crashing down on Tuesday, March 29. Just three days after a glorious Easter Sunday celebration, I suddenly found myself walking the hill to Calvary once more.

I had begun the day praying for our beloved Papa, John Paul II, who three days before had so valiantly rose up to give us all his Easter blessing. The pain of his effort was so poignantly etched upon his face, my heart broke as I pondered the magnitude of his suffering. Deep in prayer for our Holy Father, I wandered out to my little barren “Mary garden.” In the summer months it is bursting with beauty and inspiration. But spring had barely arrived, and so it was still a blank canvas for God to fill up with His created design.

Walking along and pulling the dead stalks of last years flowers, I began praying the ancient rhythm of the “Holy Rosary.” I prayed as I worked, asking God to be merciful to the Holy Father, and to hold him close in these the last days of his life. At least that was my thought at the beginning of the day.

By late morning, our world would be changed in ways I could never have imagined. My husband Gene had gone for his early morning appointment at his doctor’s office, a bi-monthly cancer check-up. From the time he was nineteen, my husband has struggled with cancer, a total of thirty-four tumors.

In October of 2003, he was diagnosed with oral cancer. This kind of cancer had claimed the life of my husband’s mother when he was just a little boy. This latest cancer had required ten hours of surgery and the removal of half of his tongue. But God was gracious: The tumor had actually died prior to surgery; the doctors said Gene would not require chemo or radiation. They would just keep checking his progress for the next few years.

A Shadow Returns

For thirteen months Gene went to these bi-monthly appointments, to check his continued healing progress. From there he would go to his office and get on with the work of making a living. Praying was my job, but this day my prayers were all centered on John Paul II and his needs.

When I reached for the ringing phone on my garden bench, I was not prepared for the sound of my husband’s voice, heavy with sorrow and cracked with emotion he seldom exhibits. A lump grew in my throat as I listened to him struggle to deliver the news he had just received from the doctor: the cancer had returned with a vengeance. Since his last checkup, the malignant enemy had grown stealthy to a very large tumor, and the prognosis was once again not good. The cancer had skipped to the other side of his neck this time.

Holding the phone, I could only gulp back the tears and struggle to regain my composure. For just a moment, I felt myself begin to weep and cry out, “Dear God, not again! Dear God, we have climbed this hill so many times, I don’t think I can climb it one more time.” And in that moment of weakness, the Easter blessing of our suffering pontiff quickly came into my mind: "Be Not Afraid."

For the next few days, those words remained in my heart: “Be not afraid.” It was an echo of courage, which John Paul II gave to us all on that balcony in Rome on Holy Saturday. As John Paul began his final journey to Calvary, we walked beside him in spirit, gaining strength from his witness to hope and the dignity of suffering in this life… this vale of tears.

By Saturday of Easter week, the “Passion of Christ” played itself out once more as our beloved John Paul II had finally finished his race in a moment of great sorrow – and great glory. Hearing the announcement, I fled the house in tears of sorrow to my barren garden refuge. I mourned for the loss of our beloved pope, and I grieved for my family, not knowing what could ever make the world seem right once again.
 
Resurrection Reminder

As I walked among the early shoots of springtime pushing upwards from the barren earth, suddenly, as if in answer to my prayer, a delicate Monarch butterfly landed gracefully at the feet of Our Lady’s statue. How very odd, I thought. I had learned about butterfly migration patterns from my father, and knew that the Monarchs were not scheduled to arrive for at least another couple of weeks. Surely they could not have made the long arduous trip from Mexico this far north already?

Seeing the butterfly, I thought again of my father. As a child, when I was sad or downhearted, he would tell me: “If God can lift the butterfly on delicate wings, and guide them with His winds all the way across country every spring… Surely He can lift us up and care for us in times of trouble, too.” He explained that the butterfly symbolizes resurrection, derived from the stages of butterfly’s life: caterpillar, chrysalis and butterfly - (life, death and resurrection.)

Standing in the garden that day, mourning the loss of John Paul II and the return of my husband’s cancer, the gentle creature of God fluttered near my cheeks, again and again, as if to wipe the tears away. And as I pondered this amazing grace, I heard the sound of a gentle voice whispering softly in my heart*…“Be not afraid.”*

The following week my husband attended the Divine Mercy Sunday with me. This was quite extraordinary for him. You see, my husband was a life-long Baptist; Catholic ideas such as “Divine Mercy” were not something he usually would accept. However, he had admired John Paul II so much, he wanted to show his respect for the loss of my beloved Pope John Paul II. On that day, I prayed mightily for Divine Mercy to flow upon my husband.

On April 22nd, my husband again had surgery, which was not entirely successful: The cancer had spread quickly. Despite months of radiation and many painful treatments, by November, he was quickly losing ground. On the day after Thanksgiving, he entered the hospital; tests revealed that cancer had spread to both lungs. Now, his only hope lay in God’s mercy. Together we prayed the Divine Mercy prayers, and we asked John Paul II’s intercession.

On Tuesday, December 13th, at 3:00 pm, my parish priest and I recited prayers for my husband as he struggled for each breath. I held my beloved and sang the Divine Mercy prayers to him. Father Joe stood behind me and supported me up this last Hill to Calvary, much like the Apostle John must have supported Mary on Calvary. Through it all, I could feel Gods love surrounding us all in that dismal hospital room. At 3:30 PM, God opened Heavens gate as my beloved whispered, “Jesus, I Trust in You.”

As we again enter the Lenten season, I praise God for days of joy and even days of sorrow. By His grace and mercy, I know that time allotted for each of God’s creatures is measured carefully by His loving Hand. He will never abandon us, nor will He allow death to overwhelm us. Just as His hand formed the lowly caterpillar, which must die to form a chrysalis and become a magnificent butterfly; we too must be consumed in death to become a creature of beauty to behold. In the struggles of this life and eventually our death, we are winging our way towards our Eternal home. And we too, will no longer be afraid to fly, with His wind beneath our wings.
 
In Memory of
my dear mother ******* Ruth ******* who passed away 8 years ago today.
Eternal rest grant unto her O, Lord and may perpetual light shine upon her …:gopray2:
 
In memory of my father, Robert ,who passed 03-01-03. May God give him peace and admit him to His holy kingdom.
maggiec
 
I want to make my first post today a special one.

One this day, my birthday, I want to remember my parents, John and Caroline, for participating in giving me and my twin brother Edward life on this day. Obviously, God made it all possible.

I wonder how many people take the time to reflect on how God didn’t have to create us, and He did and we are born. Something to think about when it’s your birthday. :hmmm:
 
In Memory of my Granny:
Alice Elizabeth Hurley Deffendall
June 23, 1899 - October 10, 1975


On April 15th, Easter Vigil, I will bring my family back to the Catholic Church.

One of the most precious times of my life was the summers I spent with my maternal grandmother in Indiana. Most of the time, we spent watching television, going out to eat, going to her Bridge clubs, and other routine errands, etc. The grocery store was across the street from the house Granny was born in and she never failed to tell me that it was where she was born. When we passed the house of her niece and goddaughter she always pointed out Mary’s house to me.

One of my most vivid memories occurred when we were sitting in her back yard one beautiful Indiana morning. She told me all about her mother, brothers and sisters (her father died when she was 10 yo). I never thought I would ever learn the names and personalities of her eleven brothers and sisters. My mother and I were only children, eleven brothers and sisters were inconceivable to me.

Another wonderful memory occurred one rainy afternoon when she and I read my grandfather’s dairy from his senior year in college. This happened to be the year that she and he started dating. He mentioned very little about going to school, but talked a lot about going to see movies. He and my mother did that every weekend when she was a little girl. At the beginning of the dairy, he was dating a girl named Hazel and by the end, he was dating a girl named Alice! 🙂

She would always ask me whose girl I was. I would always say “yours”.

My Granny was the twelfth child of four girls and eight boys of a very devout Irish Catholic family. All of her siblings except a sister and two brothers (who died in their first year) survived to adulthood. The eldest (Lizzy) and youngest (Granny) were girls 25 years apart. The oldest four children were from her father’s first marriage. Granny told me about the day she ran home crying from school because someone told her that Lizzy wasn’t her “real” sister.

In 1922, after four years of dating, my Granny married my Granddaddy, Burl Deffendall, they decided to marry. He was raised Methodist, but unknown to him, his ancestors were Catholic when they came to this country from Germany and many branches of his family are Catholic to this day. For reasons unknown to my mother and me, my Granddaddy did not convert to Catholicism and they married outside the Church. In 1926, my mother was born. She was baptized in the Methodist church when she was three years old, but the family did not attend church. My mother joined the Presbyterian Church and began going to church with a neighbor family.

Fast forward to 1975. My Granny was preparing to play Bridge with her friends when she suffered a massive stroke. The Meals on Wheels people found her before she lost consciousness and called an ambulance. Her niece and goddaughter was a nurse at the hospital and was with her during the last four hours of her life. After a cardiac arrest, Mary called the priest to give Granny last rites. When Granny suffered a respitory arrest, Mary made the decision to let her go home to God. In the last hours of her life, God called her back to the Catholic Church and then, home to Him.

Not a day goes by in the past 31 years that I have not thought about my Granny. She was my hero. A saint in my life. Thus far in my life (50 years), her death has been my greatest loss. I look forward to the day my mother and I will be with her, again.

In her honor and in her example, I am officially joining the Catholic Church on Easter Vigil 2006. Granny’s influence on my mother and I was so profound that we were raised with the values of the Catholic Church. She taught my mother The Rosary and other timeless Catholic prayers and always fed her family fish on Friday.

This story may not seem special, but it is the story of my life. My career and other events in my life have only served to as a vehicle to bring me home to God, our Lord Jesus Christ and my Granny.

I hope to sponsor my mother in her conversion to the Catholic Church a year from now.

Granny, I love you.
 
In memory of my fiance:
Patrick Dennis Murphy II
Feb. 20, 1980 - April 28, 2005
patrick-murphy.memory-of.com

In memory of my grandparents:
Edward J. Barrett and Sarah Frances Shepard Barrett
Gilbert E. Maynard and Ina Mae Campbell Maynard

In memory of Patrick’s (and my adoptive) grandfather:
Raymond W. Murphy

In memory of all my ancestors.
 
This person is NOT a relative of mine, but I wanted to share this with everyone.

I’m online looking at the local obituaries and found this one that I thought was very worthy of posting here.

This woman lived to be 106!
You don’t know what kind of life she lead, but to live to 106 is incrediable! I read one locally a year ago for 105 and 101.
I just hope she’s with Our Lord. I always thought long liffe is a blessing!
 
Incredible is right ! One day I may break that record…my grand daughter is praying for me to live to be 200 !!! God always hears the prayers of the little children…HIS will be done !

Blessings
:yup:
 
My Bishop who confirmed me just died a few year ago. He was the oldest living Bishop in the world at the time. 103. He was an incredible shepherd.

http://www.gidiocese.org/graphics/bishop_paschang.jpg

Most Reverend John L. Paschang

[Reprinted from The West Nebraska Register April 2, 1999, Vol. 69. No. 13.]

Those who didn’t know Bishop John L. Paschang were likely impressed with his longevity and distinction as the world’s oldest bishop.

But those who knew him remember a kind, loving and generous man who had an unending devotion to his vocation, the people he served and, most importantly, his creator.

Bishop Paschang, 103, died Sunday, March 21, 1999, at St. Francis Memorial Hospital in West Point, a town of 3,250 people in northeastern Nebraska.

The fourth bishop of the Grand Island diocese served from 1951 to 1972.

“What a wonderful man, priest and bishop he was,” said Bishop Lawrence McNamara, who had headed the Grand Island diocese since 1978.

“I have vivid memories of his kindness, his compassion, his gentle concern for his priests and people,” he said.
Bishop Paschang had held the honor of being the world’s oldest bishop since June 1995-a fact verified in the Vatican yearbook, the Annuario.

Still his age-which eventually resulted in a significant hearing loss, vision problems and physical difficulties-didn’t keep him from living a full life up until his final days.

Before his hospitalization in late January, Bishop Paschang said Mass each day in his room at St. Joseph’s Retirement Home in West Point. He moved to an apartment there about six years ago.
A niece, Rita Goeden, cared for her uncle by reading him his daily mail, fixing meals and helping him serve Mass.
“His mind was so clear until the very end,” said Archbishop Elden F. Curtiss of the Omaha archdiocese, who often visited Bishop Paschang. “He remembered so many people. He knew so much about the history of the church.”

Bishop Fabian Bruskewitz of the Diocese of Lincoln said Bishop Paschang’s death is a loss for the not only the Grand Island diocese and state but “also for the hierarchy of the world.”
“I had the joy of visiting him several times. I found Bishop Paschang to be a man of insight and intelligence,” Bishop Bruskewitz said. “He was always kind and willing to share his experiences.”

Father Walter Phelan, a retired priest in the Grand Island diocese, saw Bishop Paschang about six weeks ago. Although he was in the hospital and had difficulty speaking, the bishop sent his love to everyone.

"He gave me his blessing and he asked for mine. He was a tremendous man of faith and courage-a true leader, interested in everybody.

“I feel that I’ve lost a read close personal friend,” Father Phelan added. “(But) rejoice that we have a new saint in heaven praying for us.”

Bishop Paschang was known for his even temper, Father Phelan said. A priest know he was in hot water when Bishop Paschang would say, “Oh, my my, Father, dear.”

“If he had any fault, that was it-he was too kind,” Father Phelan said. “You could never say no to him if he asked you to do something.”

Three years ago on Bishop Paschang’s 100th birthday, he was flooded with cards and well-wishes from across the world. He was able to make it to a special diocesan Mass in Grand Island, and hundreds of clergy, family members and friends attended the event.

It was the largest outpouring of letters from U.S. bishops anyone could ever remember, Bishop McNamara said.

“The bishop treasured that. He read and re-read those letters.”
Bishop Paschang was born on Oct. 5, 1895, on a farm near Hemingford in Western Nebraska to Casper and Gertrude Paschang.

He was educated at St. Anthony’s Parochial School in St. Charles and had his classical training at Conception Seminary College in Conception, Mo.

He entered St. John’s Seminary at Collegeville, Minn., and was ordained to the priesthood on June 12, 1921.

Bishop Paschang was first a pastor at St. Rose’s parish in Hooper until 1923 when he enrolled in the Catholic University of America at Washington, D.C.

He earned a doctorate’s degree in canon law and philosophy. Then he became pastor of Omaha’s Holy Cross Church in 1927, and served there until he was named bishop of the Grand Island Diocese in 1951.

In an October 1998 interview with The Register, Bishop Paschang said he was in high school when he heard the call to join the religious life.

As bishop of the diocese, he ordained 55 native men to the priesthood, approved construction of 33 churches, 15 parish houses, 13 schools, 11 parish centers, six convents, several rectories as well as four hospital additions.
 
He began the Damian Leper Relief Society in 1976, and also has a $125,000 scholarship fund in his name that assists seminarians at Conception Seminary College.

Bishop Paschang, who earned a stock broker’s license in his earlier years to save the church money, was also known for his keen knowledge of monetary investments.

“He left the diocese in good shape, both spiritually and financially,” Bishop McNamara said.

“His good stewardship has made it possible to move into the years after his administration with a very easy transition.”
In addition, he left an excellent morale among priests and “a solid and family-centered spirituality throughout Central and Western Nebraska,” the bishop maintained.

Father Bernard Berger of Burwell said he and seven others were ordained by Bishop Paschang in May 1964. Father Berger called him “a good bishop for priests.”

He let them work to the best of their needs," Father Berger said.
Although he did not always agree with some teachings Vatican II brought about, Bishop Paschang remained firmly obedient to the Catholic Church, Father Berger contended. Bishop Paschang attended all four sessions of Vatican II, from 1965 to 1969.
“He wasn’t going to let his own feelings about them stand in the way of them being implemented,” Father Berger said.
Father Tom Down, a retired priests from Denver, said Vatican II was an emotionally difficult challenge for the bishop.

Still, Father Dowd echoed Father Berger’s words.
“I think he was able to say yes to Vatican II because of his fidelity to the church and his solidarity to the bishops,” he said.
Many remember Bishop Paschang’s uncanny wit and sense of humor.

On his 100th birthday, the bishop attributed his longevity to family genetics, God’s blessings, and the fact that he never had to be an assistant pastor.

“Never make them assistants,” he told Bishop McNamara.
“His interest did not grow any less as the years went by. He always kept in touch,” the bishop said. “He was always ready to let me share with him anything and everything that was going on in the diocese.”

“He seemed to be quietly in the presence of God his whole life,” Bishop McNamara said. “There was something about the bishop that made you feel God was in the room.”

“He was a great man, great priest, great bishop,” he said.
 
Today we remember Andrew LaFrance, age 2, who met Our Lord on this day, March 26, 2006
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Scott_Lafrance:
Good morning everyone. Just wanted to drop by and pass on the word that my son Andrew passed away yesterday morning after his 2 year struggle with many debilitating problems. He is finally at peace and in the presence of our Lord. Keep my family in your prayers please. Thanks.

(Please Note: This uploaded content is no longer available.)
Through the souls of the faithfully departer, through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen.
 
Little Andrew is now a saint.

My Gabriel, also 2 years old, drowned on March 7. It will be three weeks tomorrow. I emailed a priest whose theology I trust completely and he responded with some very comforting messages. This is some of what he said. It is also true of Andrew…

"The bottom line is this: little Gabriel, like the angel he is named
for, was meant to remain pure and beautiful with not the slightest
shadow of sin to mar his God created perfection. God’s garden has many different flowers. Some are the lillies of such innocense and purity.

Gabriel is not gone, just removed to a better place awaiting your
coming to join him. He will pray for you to help you on your journey. He has arrived. We have not. We are in peril. He is not. We have many concerns, dangers, and troubles along the way. He does not. He is now eternally arrived.

In a world so infested with moral decay, pitfalls, snares, and
enemies Gabriel is untouched by any of it. He is forever innocent, beautiful, and safe in Jesus, who made it possible through His Cross and Resurrection."

I miss my beautiful, perfect baby boy tremendously and can’t wait to see him again. He was life and joy personified. I love you, Gabriel.

forums.catholic-questions.org/attachment.php?attachmentid=326
 
May God bless you, comfort you and keep you well in your hour of need. Your beautiful son left this world to be with our Father and Holy Mother where he will suffer no more. You are in my prayers now and always. God Bless you Scott, your wife and children and all those who grieve with you. We will grieve the loss of your son, but rejoice in the fact that he is now with our Lord God in Heaven where he will suffer no more.
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Edwin1961:
Today we remember Andrew LaFrance, age 2, who met Our Lord on this day, March 26, 2006

Through the souls of the faithfully departer, through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen.
 
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Dear Sweet Jesus,
Please look after our dear little Baby Andrew that we at CAF have spiritually adopted. I also ask you to bring peace to Andrew’s family and allow Andrew’s death to bring us all closer to your love.
Amen
 
God bless you and your family and may the soul of the innocent Andrew now in heaven with Jesus and Our Blessed Mother pray for you also.

Quaere Verum
Seek the Truth
 
maggieodae

I’ve just finished reading Sadie’s Rose Petals (your posts #16 - 18 in this thread):
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=1047969&postcount=16
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=1047981&postcount=17
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=1047985&postcount=18

Your little Sadie sounded like such a Saint that this Scripture which was read at my mother’s requim really would apply to her:

*But the just (wo)man, though she 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 for men, and an unsullied life, the attainment of old age.

She who pleased God was loved; she who lived among sinners was transported - Snatched away, lest wickedness pervert her mind or deceit beguile her 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, she reached the fullness of a long career; for her soul was pleasing to the LORD, therefore He sped her out of the midst of wickedness. Wisdom 4:7-14 *
vatican.va/archive/ENG0839/_PLL.HTM#57

A K A T H I S T for the R E P O S E of Those Who have FALLEN ASLEEP

KONTAKION 1


O Thou Who by Thy inscrutable Providence didst prepare the world for eternal beatitude and Who appointest times and seasons and the manner of our end: Forgive, O Lord, those who have died in past ages all their sins, receive them into the realms of light and joy, hasten to open Thy Fatherly arms to them, and hear us who celebrate their memory and sing:
O Lord of unutterable Love, remember Thy servants who have fallen asleep.


IKOS 4

Recompense with the compassion of Thy infinite love, O Lord, all who have died in the full flush of their youth, who received on earth the thorny crown of suffering, who never experienced earthly joy. Grant recompense to those who died from overwork, through exploitation or sweated labor. Receive, O Lord, into the bridal halls of Paradise boys and girls, and grant them joy at the marriage supper of Thy Son. Comfort and console the grief of parents over their dead children. Give rest, O Lord, to all who have no one to offer prayer for them to Thee, their Creator, that their sins may vanish in the dazzling light of Thy forgiveness.
O Lord of unutterable Love, remember Thy servants who have fallen asleep.


This is a very long Orthodox Prayer - The rest can be found here:
users.sisqtel.net/williams/akathist-repose.html

Some of the Orthodox brothers sent me this after the death of Theresa Schindler Schiavo, since I was so involved with the campaign to save her life. It is very haqrd to get through this without pouring one’s heart out to God.

May Sadie rest in peace, and may you have the joy of seeing her again.

Peace be with you.

In Christ, Michael
 
Dranzal and Scott:

Please let what I wrote to Maggieodae also express my most condolences for the deaths of Gabriel and Andrew.

At one point, when I was away from the Church, I lived with a group of Protestants in a Christian commune in Oregon. It turns out almost a year to the day before I moved in, the 5-year old son of one of the founders died in a terrible automobile accident along with 2 other members of the commune.

That always seemed to hang like a pall over the “elders” who lost their son, and who never really seemed to understand why their son had died.

May the Lord of Sorrows who bore our pain on the cross help you to bear your pain in this time of grief and questioning. And, May the souls of Gabriel and Andrew, along with all the faithful departed, rest is peace.

Peace be with you.

In Christ, Michael
 
I was just on the net looking up some stuff about that old commune in Oregon - Wikipedia is claiming that the the young buy was 8 when he died, and that he died just before I arrived, and that the Elders whose son died were so grief stricken that they left a few months after I did.

I had remembered that it was heart-breaking, but I really thought that the accident had occured the year before I got there. I just don’t thing the people who picked me up and took me up in the bus would have done so if Seth had just died.

Peace be with you all.

In Christ, Michael
 
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