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To: jwpjr

For you and your grandfather and anyone else who struggles to "forgive":

"Only God can mend a soul torn by suicide"
By FR. RON ROLHEISER, omi
Rome



A few days ago, I was asked to visit a family who had, just that day, lost their 19-year-old son to suicide. There isn't much one can offer by way of consolation at a moment like this when everyone is in shock and the pain is so raw.

Few things can so devastate us as the suicide of a loved one, especially of one's own child. There is the horrific shock of losing a loved one so suddenly which, just of itself, can bring us to our knees; but, with suicide, there are other soul-wrenching feelings too, confusion, guilt, second-guessing, religious anxiety. Where did we fail this person? What is this person's state with God?

What needs to be said about all of this: First, suicide is a disease. It takes a person out of life against his or her will, the emotional equivalent of cancer, a stroke or a heart attack.

Second, we, those left behind, need not spend undue energy second-guessing as to how we might have failed that person, what we should have noticed, and what we might still have done to prevent the suicide. Suicide is an illness and, as with any sickness, we can love someone and still not be able to save that person from death. God loved this person too and, like us, could not, this side of eternity, do anything either.

Finally, we shouldn't worry too much about how God meets this person on the other side. God's love, unlike ours, can go through locked doors and touch what will not allow itself to be touched by us.

Is this making light of suicide? Hardly. Anyone who has ever dealt with either the victim of a suicide before his or her death or with those grieving that death afterwards knows it is impossible to make light of it. There is no hell and there is no pain like the one suicide inflicts. Nobody who is healthy wants to die and nobody who is healthy wants to burden his or her loved ones with this kind of pain.

There is no hell and there is no pain like the one suicide inflicts. And that's the point: This is only done when someone isn't healthy. The fact that medication can often prevent suicide should tell us something.

Suicide is an illness, not a sin. The victim of suicide (in all but rare cases) is a trapped person, caught up in a fiery, private chaos that has its roots in emotions and in biochemistry. Suicide is a desperate attempt to end unendurable pain, akin to throwing oneself through a window because one's clothing is on fire.

Many of us have known victims of suicide and we know too that in almost every case that person was not full of ego, pride, haughtiness and the desire to hurt someone. Generally it's the opposite. The victim has cancerous problems precisely because he or she is wounded, raw and too bruised to have the necessary resiliency needed to deal with life. Those of us who have lost loved ones to suicide know that the problem is not one of strength but of weakness, the person is too bruised to be touched.

I remember a comment I overheard at a funeral for a suicide victim. The priest had preached badly, hinting that this suicide was somehow the man's own fault and that suicide was always the ultimate act of despair.

At the reception, a neighbour expressed his displeasure at the priest's homily: "There are a lot of people in this world who should kill themselves," he lamented, "but those kind never do. This man is the last person who should have killed himself because he was one of the most sensitive people I've ever met." Too often it is the meek who seem to lose the battle, at least in this world.

Finally, we shouldn't worry too much about how God meets our loved ones who have fallen victim to suicide. God, as Jesus assures us, has a special affection for those of us who are too bruised and wounded to be touched. Jesus assures us that God's love can go through locked doors and into broken places and free up what's paralyzed and help that which can no longer help itself.

And so our loved ones who have fallen victim to suicide are now inside God's embrace, enjoying a freedom they could never quite enjoy here and being healed through a touch that they could never quite accept from us.

http://www.wcr.ab.ca/columns/rolheiser/2002/rolheiser072202.shtml


20 posted on 02/16/2006 6:32:10 AM PST by silverleaf (Fasten your seat belts- it's going to be a BUMPY ride.)
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To: silverleaf
What is this person's state with God?

My own studies on this have led me to believe that if one never had a true understanding of the Almighty, or didn't consciously reject the opportunity to gain one, that person won't be judged as harshly as someone who did. Lots of folks have died who never had access to a Bible or a preacher. It would be unjust to condemn them simply because a missionary or Holy man was unable to reach them.

As I read the Bible, there is only one unforgivable sin. And it ain't suicide.

38 posted on 02/16/2006 7:28:47 AM PST by Freebird Forever (Extremism in the defense of Liberty is no vice.)
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To: silverleaf
What a great way to view it! Thank you so much for sharing. I have long since forgiven Pops, and now know how much he would have chosen another outcome for his life.
62 posted on 02/16/2006 5:05:34 PM PST by jwpjr
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