I’m not sure what to offer during a time when the normal turn-taking of who is grieving at any given time has been supplanted by grief as a universal experience. Who among us isn’t feeling loss right now? So much has been taken from so many: our parents, our income, our freedom of movement, our long-planned-for celebrations, our friends, our family members, our work, our health, our hopes.
My sweet friend Rachel died one year ago. Here I offer the sermon I preached at her funeral while in the deepest, freshest part of my own grief - while I myself was so stricken by her loss that I was struggling to even breathe normally. If you haven’t read her books, do yourself a favor. She was an exceptional writer, thinker, and human.
Above is the video of Rachel’s beautiful funeral. The song by her sister Amanda, the gorgeous prayers by Jeff Chu, the reading of the Gospel by Sara Bessey….all of it is worth sinking in to. But if you want to just watch the sermon below (which I highly suggest listening to if possible, and not just reading, since preaching is a spoken form) then it starts at minute 50.
Sermon at Rachel Held Evans’ Funeral
While it was still dark, Mary Magdalene came to the tomb and saw that the stone had been removed. As she wept, she looked in and saw two angels in white, sitting where the body of Jesus had been lying. They said to her, “Woman, why are you weeping?” She said to them, “They have taken away my Lord, and I do not know where they have laid him.” (John 20)
“Woman, why are you weeping?”
I must confess that I used to hear this as a slightly passive aggressive question – as if the angles were implying that Mary was overreacting…or that this question was the equivalent of sending her some vapid don’t worry be happy meme. I’ve gotten a couple of those from well meaning Christians recently. As if Christian faith is mostly a mechanism to bypass negative emotions in favor of delusional positivity. Almost like they were rebuking me for my tears - as if with enough faith I’d not need to grieve. This is, as they say, hogwash.
I have faith.
And right now, I have faith that our grief is actually holy to God.
I have faith that Jesus stood at the tomb of his friend and cried tears as salty as our own. And yes, I do have faith that, in any spiritual and eternal way, death has no sting to it whatsoever.
But it stings now.
And I feel that sting in my eyes.
So as I read this text from John again, I started to see the question, woman, why are you weeping not as an accusation . . . but as an invitation.
So for those gathered who have also been crying quite a lot, I invite us to the same question: why? Why are you yourself weeping? It’s a holy question.
So maybe, for just this moment, we choose to not bypass the real truth of our sadness and ask one another, what’s the thing under the thing.
I myself am crying – because I feel robbed – I am crying because death is a thief we cannot put on trial and punish.
I am crying because I assumed we would all have a future in which Rachel raised her babies and kept writing books and grew old with Dan.
I am crying because Rachel’s death makes me realize that not one of us is promised one more day and that just terrifies me.
I am crying because this grief has opened the door and let in so much other grief and I don't know how to un-invite it’s friends to this party.
And selfishly I am crying because there was a part of me that only Rachel seemed to see and I don't want that part of me to go unseen in this world. I’m pretty sure Rachel, like everyone else living in this century, had some form of caller ID. But you’d never know it. I’d call, she’s say hello, I’d say hey Rach, it’s Nadia and she say Naaaaadia. I’m crying because No one says my name like that.
I’ve heard it said that grief is the price we pay for having loved and so, yeah – I think this love-soaked grief of ours is holy to God.
Because while there are those who would reduce the Christian Faith to moralism and delusional positivity – we know that the God we worship is not a shiny-toothed motivational speaker churning out cheerful memes in times of suffering. Because the God we worship is a crucified and risen God. Which is to say, we worship a God that is not unfamiliar with darkness:
A God who comes close to those who mourn.
A God who comes close to those who stand outside of tombs.
A God who is not far off, but who is as close as the choppy breath that falters in your weeping.
Luke’s Gospel tells us that Jesus had freed Mary Magdalen from demons and evil spirits. Which is why– while it was still dark, when Mary Magdalen stood weeping outside his tomb, looked in, saw angels and was asked, Woman, why are you weeping, I wonder if maybe she was crying because to Jesus she wasn’t “that crazy lady” like she was to everyone else. To him, she was just Mary and when Jesus said her name, “Mary” . . . it felt like a complete sentence. And now she wondered who would ever see her as whole, who would ever call her by her real name.
I think she was crying because having felt divine love in the presence of Jesus she knew couldn't go back to living without it. So she cried saying:
They’ve taken him away and I do not know where he is–
they’ve taken love away and I do not know where it is –
they’ve taken kindness away and I do not know where it is–
they've taken my own wholeness away and I do not know where it is.
And so while it was still dark she went to his tomb thinking maybe the tomb was the end of the story.
As you may know, Rachel loved Mary Magdalen, as many of us do. Mary Mag - the Apostle to the Apostles. The first witness to the resurrection. The one whom Jesus told to go and tell the boys.
I started to wonder this week, why was Mary Magdalen chosen for this role? See, I don’t think it was because she had followed the instructions for how to make herself worthy to witness the resurrection. And Idon't think it was because she fit the high priest’s description of an ideal preacher, and I don’t think it was because she had pure doctrine - but most importantly, I don’t think it was despite who she was– I think it was BECAUSE of who she was. I think Mary was chosen because she was a woman from whom demons had fled. I think Mary was chosen because she knew what it was like for God to move - not when the lilies are already out in church and the lights are on - but for God to move while it is still dark. Because unlike when the men looked in and saw only laundry, when Mary Magdalen looked in the tomb, SHE saw angels.
Mary Magdalen saw angels because she was not unfamiliar with the darkness - she had the kind of night vision that only comes from seeing what God does while it’s still dark.
I do not know why this is God’s economy.
That it is while we are still in despair. That it is, while we are still grieving, while we are still sinners, while we are sure that nothing good will ever come…that it is when we are faced with the nothingness of death – that we are closest to resurrection.
That is while it is still dark that God does God’s most wondrous work.
I do not know why it is that, only when there is nothing else we can possibly do – only when we have exhausted every possible good deed, every perfect confession of perfect faith, every pious notion, every woke tweet, that only then do we finally spread our trophies at his feet and turn at the sound of our name as if it is a complete sentence and respond saying Rabboni! My teacher and my God.
Many of you know that the last thing Rachel tweeted was about having to miss Game of Thrones. So as I watched the final episode I know I couldn’t be alone in thinking of her when Tyrion said: "There's nothing in the world more powerful than a good story. Nothing can stop it. No enemy can defeat it."
This is not the end of the story (as Rachel said)….a story Rachel was willing to risk being wrong about.
A story about God walking around like he definitely didn't understand our rules.
A story about God thinking it’s ok to have dinner with and sex workers and Sadducees . . . and ideally at the same time.
A story about God going around forgiving the sins of basically everyone without even going through a proper verification process.
And then touching both lepers and Roman soldiers as if they were also holy.
A story about how we humans thought this much indiscriminate mercy didn't sound right to us. And this much mixing of people who shouldn't mix didn't sound right to us and this much grace didn't sound right to us and so we had to try and destroy the story Jesus was telling about who we were and who God is and so we hung him on a tree just outside of town. And how there he took all of it – all our broken junk, all our sin and shame and need to blame others and all our precious verification processes and our self-righteous garbage and he took it all into his broken body and from the wooden throne, the King of Kings proclaimed his judgement: forgive them father, they know not what they are doing. Forgive them, they don't yet know their real story.
And how three days later. . .while it was still dark death was already being defeated. And Mary stood weeping.
And this story still isn’t over- and we know it is not the end because we are still being caught up into it. Mary Magdalen’s life – Rachel’s life, your lives – we are all fodder for God’s really, really, long memoir of how God loves humans. The love that saturates our grief - the love we have for Rachel, that she had for us...doesn't just stop. Because tombs are real, but they are not the most real thing. Which means that Death might be the enemy but it cannot defeat the story of the Gospel. In other words, the resistance is winning my friends. Nothing can stop it. And as Rachel says, There are still prophets in our midst.
And while it may still be dark, the light is breaking through. And the darkness can not, will not, shall not overcome it.
Amen.
As a pastor, I never thought preaching a sermon should happen at a memorial service.
All I can say is clearly you didn't get that memo. Thank God.
What a gift to all of us in the world who have come to love Rachel's writing or her personhood or those of you who got to love her in person...what a gift this message was, and is, and will be over and over.
I've been known as a pastor folks may not agree with always, but "he does beautiful memorials, especially if it's for your family's loved one". But clearly, i Haven't learned all the ways to do this well. My tears rolled freely through this marvelous gift of love. My deepest thanks.
I loved what you said in Pastrix as related to grief - how God does not just suffer for us but with us. How God does not initiate suffering, but transforms it. I am sure God will take this world suffering immense grief and will transform it - especially in the presence of open hands and loving hearts.