Miracles?


If we were to organize a list of the thorniest problems for the bereaved, certainly somewhere near the top would be the question of miracles. Everybody has heard anecdotal stories of certain people who have suffered incredible, life-threatening injuries or illness, but who have somehow recovered against all odds. A woman who has been in a coma for two years suddenly hears her husband's voice and awakens. A teenage victim of an automobile accident who was reportedly given no hope of recovery finally responds to the unwavering faith and persistent attention of a loving mother...and on it goes.

Depending on who's doing the reporting, the stories can range from inspirational to downright incredible! They demand our attention from the front pages of our daily newspapers or on our TV screens and they are recorded in detail in countless books and magazines. But it is because of their rarity that these stories are so prominent. Those of us whose loved ones died occupy by far the more populous arenas.

Make no mistake here. No one is happier for these victims and their families than the bereaved. The grief-stricken whose outcome was not so positive know only too well the pain and suffering that these families have been spared. We really do rejoice with them in their victories. We also, however, have to wonder if they ever take into consideration that the cavalier accounting of their experiences can be like an arrow through our hearts?

When we are exposed to the gospel of someone who by all rights should have died, but didn't, we are often told that it was prayer or faith or enormous self-discipline on the part of a loved one that "pulled them back." It's not that we question their faith or their determination, we're just wondering why it didn't work for us, too. We wonder why it feels like we failed-or worse, as if God just didn't care about us. (Lots of times, I think we're mad at God when our arrows should really be pointed at some of the people who need a little more education, and maybe some manners.)

We loved, too; we cared, prayed, talked, sang, read and stood by with vigilance while the lives of our loved ones slipped away from us. "Did God love us less?" we ask. "Was there even a moment when our attention was elsewhere, and it shouldn't have been?" We torture ourselves with the inquisition of guilt, regret and remorse. Our muscles turn to jelly, and tears fill our eyes as we replay in our minds the scenarios of agony that have slipped beyond our earthly grasp. We stumble around the "what ifs" and "if onlys"-sometimes for the rest of our days.

Though our faith may tell us that we're just as valuable to God as anybody else, we're tangled up in our feelings. Grief hurts so much anyway, and if we add spiritual failure, it becomes nearly unbearable.

Miracles are just that, miracles. They do not happen casually or often; if they did, they wouldn't be miracles. Their purpose is to alert us to God's message, not to call attention to man's skill or power. They were not meant to make us defeated or discouraged because they didn't happen to us or to those we love.

When Jesus called Lazarus forth from the grave, He said, "Lazarus, come forth." It has been suggested that had He not said Lazarus' name, all the deceased would have been raised! There were surely people in the area who either witnessed this incredible event or heard about it later. They had to wonder why not their loved ones, too? We don't know all the reasons or answers to that, but we do know one thing: Lazarus and all the "resurrected" like him still had to die again, sometime.

So, it would seem kinder if the temporarily "lucky" would try to refrain from sounding too pious and judgmental. They may yet have to stand in the shoes of sorrow.

Personally, I believe that our loved ones who died got the big hurdle out of the way. It looks like they got the real miracle!

Good Grief Resources (http://www.goodgriefresources.com) was conceived and founded by Andrea Gambill whose 17-year-old daughter died in 1976. Almost thirty years of experience in leading grief support gropus, writing, editing, and founding a national grief-support magazine has provided valuable insights into the unique needs of the bereaved and their caregivers and wide access to many excellent resources. The primary goal of Good Grief Resources is to connect the bereaved and their caregivers with as many bereavement support resources as possible in one, efficient and easy-to-use website directory.







Related News




Danville service aims to help those who have lost a child - Urbana/Champaign News-Gazette

Danville service aims to help those who have lost a child
Urbana/Champaign News-Gazette, IL -13 hours ago
Padan thinks it's a good thing to have such a ceremony and a place for people who share a common grief to come together. "It's acknowledging a loss that ...

Charlotte's loss is our loss, say colleagues - Independent Online

Charlotte's loss is our loss, say colleagues
Independent Online, South Africa -Oct 9, 2008
"Her loss is our loss. We have given her more than flowers, a person throws flowers away within three or four days, but the moral support we give her will ...

ELECTION Q&A: Floyd County Coroner - Evening News and Tribune

ELECTION Q&A: Floyd County Coroner
Evening News and Tribune, IN -11 hours ago
On average two families a day in our community will be touched by the loss of a loved one. As a funeral director and grief counselor I have had the ...

Chat Leftovers: Food Processor Bread, Grieving Fare - Washington Post

Chat Leftovers: Food Processor Bread, Grieving Fare
Washington Post, United States -Oct 9, 2008
Talk to the widow and ask her what she might be craving (recognizing, of course, that she may have a temporary loss of appetite) or what she’d love to have ...

Vet's Views - Latah Eagle

Vet's Views
Latah Eagle, ID -Oct 9, 2008
If you have recently lost a pet, know that you are not alone in your grief. If you know someone who is grieving over the loss of a pet, please realize that ...

Eiko & Koma's non-narrative of loss and love - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Eiko & Koma's non-narrative of loss and love
Minneapolis Star Tribune, MN -6 hours ago
But as they paint ravens on a floor drop, they offer a nubile kind of hope in this stage poem to the ravages of grief, confusion and loss.

Ask Amy - Grief: Let your dad help you get over the loss of your ... - Winston-Salem Journal

Ask Amy - Grief: Let your dad help you get over the loss of your ...
Winston-Salem Journal, NC -8 minutes ago
My mom died last year at around this time. I am having a hard time sleeping, and I don't want to eat as much as I used to. My dad tells me it's all stress ...

Husband's grief over floods tragedy - The Press Association

Daily Mail

Husband's grief over floods tragedy
The Press Association -22 minutes ago
A British man has spoken of his grief at the loss of his wife and one of his twin daughters who died after being swept away by floods in Spain. ...
Mother and daughter die in floodsThe Press Association
all 68 news articles

Victory tinged with pain of personal loss - MLB.com

MLB.com

Victory tinged with pain of personal loss
MLB.com -1 hour ago
In the context of such a critical baseball game, none of them had endured a loss so significant. The world of sports has produced a few similar examples, ...

X Factor exclusive: Laura White's tears caused by pain of loss - Mirror.co.uk

X Factor exclusive: Laura White's tears caused by pain of loss
Mirror.co.uk, UK -4 hours ago
By Mark Jefferies 11/10/2008 Singer Laura White has revealed the grief behind her X Factor tears – the death of two close relatives. ...