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Letting Go of Ian (eBook)

A faith journey through grief

(Autor)

eBook Download: EPUB
2014
192 Seiten
Lion Hudson (Verlag)
978-0-85721-539-0 (ISBN)

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Letting Go of Ian -  Jo Cundy
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Jo Cundy, a solicitor, journeyed with her beloved husband, a senior bishop, through his death from cancer, travelling on through bereavement and beyond – including an earthquake in New Zealand. As Jo tells her story, she articulates deep truths about God who is Lord of the unexpected. This is an adventure of life and love, of private grief and public pilgrimage.
Jo Cundy, a solicitor, journeyed with her beloved husband, a senior bishop, through his death from cancer, travelling on through bereavement and beyond, including an earthquake in New Zealand. As Jo tells her story, she articulates deep truths about God who is Lord of the unexpected. This is an adventure of life and love, of private grief and public pilgrimage.

I’m a Questioning Pilgrim

“Bishop in cancer scare” – a newspaper hoarding in Peterborough’s Cathedral Square highlights one of the realities of public life, that if you are a diocesan bishop you cannot have a private illness. Clergy life, by its very nature, is public to some extent, and episcopal life is even more exposed, so that there is a fine balance to be found in seeking to be “private in the public arena”. Indeed this is a problem faced by so many people who, to a greater or lesser extent, have a public aspect to their life, be they teachers, doctors, lawyers, politicians, media celebrities, or the like. It was something I had lived with all my married life.

Ian had been Bishop of Peterborough for eleven years, and we had become embedded in the diocese and the three counties that it encompassed. Now we were facing serious illness and an uncertain future, with implications that might be not just physical, but also emotional, mental, and spiritual – implications that might have an impact on family, work, and home; and thus the two parts of our world, the two levels on which we lived, were about to collide. We were embarking on a journey where our private experience would inevitably have to be shared in the public arena, a journey through terminal illness, bereavement, and beyond.

This is a journey faced by so many at some time in their lives, and is a familiar story, but through it run various persistent and important questions, because when God intervenes dramatically in our lives we often find ourselves being challenged to answer some of the most basic questions in life, both for ourselves and for people around us. These are the “Oh God!” questions; the “why?”, “what?”, “how?”, “when?” questions.

So I want to begin the story of this journey, this “pilgrimage” story, by suggesting that it may be worthwhile to pause and outline some of those specific and inevitable questions which underlie it as the story unfolds. (Or, dear reader, you may prefer to skip through this “preface” and return to it later!)

Why does God allow those moments when life changes totally? Oh God, why? For me, in the course of a four-year span, God would intervene dramatically three times with memorably life-changing moments: first, the medical diagnosis that we all dread; then the bereavement that pulls the rug from under your feet; and then an unexpected near-death experience. They would be “determining moments” with a before and after, and each prompting the agonised question, “Oh God, why?” Each of us has these “determining moments” in our lives when something happens, or we make a decision, take a specific action, or in some way the course of our life is changed radically. They are milestones on our life’s journey, milestones, perhaps, in our faith journey. Sometimes and rarely, as for me, they come in a rush, all at once, and leave us rather breathlessly trying to catch up with the new landscape and the new horizons around us.

Does having a high public profile make a difference? Ian, like most bishops, was involved in a wide range of commitments, both locally and nationally, so that General Synod, Church Commissioners, Council for Christian Unity, St John’s College in the University of Durham, the House of Lords, and other bodies, all featured in his diary along with diocesan groups and committees, local civic events, and the daily pastoral work of caring for his clergy and people. Every area of this life would be affected. But how?

Does being in a faith-based job make a difference? Clergy are by definition people of faith, and they are called to serve and to live out that Christian faith in their daily life and work. Now Ian and I were facing one of the biggest challenges to that faith – the mystery of life and death. How would, could, and should, Ian bring this into his vocation and public ministry? What would be the expectations of other people and how would we relate to them? What about doubt and darkness of the soul?

What do we mean by “healing”? The other big challenge to faith that Ian and I faced was to understand what God’s healing might mean in practice. We believe in a God who has power to heal and to save, a God who can work miracles. So should we look and pray for the simple solution of a miracle that would take all traces of the tumour away? Or would healing encompass body, mind, and spirit in a more holistic way? How would God answer our prayers? Would we have to learn to pray and trust God day by day, symptom by symptom? How would the church around us share in this process of seeking wholeness from God?

What about the impact on the family? It was not only Ian and I who had to face this challenge, but also our children, and the wider network of family members. The impact on each person and their reaction would be different so that there would be both a sense of “togetherness” and yet also of “individuality”. And as the journey continued, the individual perceptions and experience of it would begin to vary and diverge – so how do you care for the differing needs of spouse, child, sibling, and others?

How can you be private in the public arena? Demonstrating emotion was not something that came easily to Ian and me, both being identified as “introverts” when we did the inevitable Myers–Briggs personality analysis; our natural mode was restraint. But there are always moments in life when we have to expose our vulnerability, let down our defences, and share our deepest emotions with others. We would need God’s grace to know when it was right to do this publicly, when to be not just “the bishop and his wife”, but fellow Christians on the journey of life.

What is my life all about now? This is the “what next?” question – the need to make sense of a changed landscape on life’s journey and find a new path. When Elijah is in the wilderness escaping from the wrath of Jezebel, God asks him, not once but twice, “What are you doing here, Elijah?” (1 Kings 19:9, 13, NRSV) and as one looks at that story, God’s question raises other questions: “Where have you come from?”; “Where are you going?”; “What are you learning along the way?” In the same way, both Ian and I needed at different stages to discern God’s purposes for us.

So many questions, and so many unknowns to be explored. As so often in life, answers would really only appear through experience as our story unfolded. Ian and I were pilgrims, journeying in faith. And over a short period of about four years so much happened, and the pace of life did not slacken. There was laughter and grief, joy and sorrow, moments of the totally unexpected and even bizarre, and God-given touches of glory. Keeping up with God and with the twists and turns of the journey was sometimes challenging and R. S. Thomas’s words from his poem “Pilgrimages” came to mind: “He is such a fast God, always before us, and leaving as we arrive.”1

Journeys are a wonderful metaphor for life as we look at its ups and down, its twists and turns, its joys and disappointments. If we are wise we take time to enjoy the landscape around us, to notice the details, to listen, and to learn. If we are lucky we may share the journey with congenial and interesting companions, or meet people along the way, and there may also be times when travelling alone may be a preference or a necessity. If we are sensible we know we will require sufficient stamina for the journey and appropriate resources, but often these may be limited and we may have to know that enough is enough. Journeys vary in length and the goal may be clear or obscured, the route well-trodden or new territory. And there is also a sense in which each person’s appreciation of a journey is individual and personal – there are things that only they have seen, heard, felt, and experienced on the way, and rather like a witness in a court of law, their perception of details may vary from that of fellow travellers.

Ian and I embarked on our journey together, onto an unfamiliar path, aware of the final end, but without guidance or route map to show the way; a journey to be shared with family, friends, and colleagues; with the diocese, the church and the wider world; with strangers as well as intimates. This journey would be a balancing act: a private pilgrimage shared with many travelling companions, and yet a public pilgrimage which hid a private grief. John O’Donohue, in his book of blessings entitled Benedictus, writes that “a journey can become a sacred thing”,2 and when a journey takes on the attributes of a pilgrimage we find deeper, spiritual significance, especially as we look towards a destination that may or may not have been chosen, and may or may not be welcome.

When you travel, you find yourself

Alone in a different way,

More attentive now

To the self you bring along,

Your more subtle eye watching

You abroad; and how what meets you

Touches that part of the heart

That lies low at home…

When you travel,

A new silence

Goes with you,

And if you listen,

You...

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