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Welcome to SUKKEL-VOORT, a heartfelt space where I share my journey through grief and the complexities of life. This blog is a blend of raw emotion, introspection, and faith, offering glimpses into how I navigate loss and find meaning in everyday moments. Whether you're grieving, searching for hope, or simply seeking connection, I hope my words resonate with you and provide comfort or inspiration along the way. Let’s walk this path together.
Friday, 5 February 2021
Saturday, 25 April 2020
Church!
Recently, I was reminded of a question I heard when I got
appointed to my first Congregation (maybe I should say first group of
congregations 🙈 that
is a story for another day). The question was, "Would the community notice
if your Congregation closed in the Community". It raises the question as to
your congregation’s effectiveness and or relevance in the community that it is
situated in. Should we be concerned with being effective or relevant in the
community?
I hear people say all the time, "Stop going to Church,
Be Church". Sounds nice, but what does it mean and how does that mentality
or state of being influence the Communities in which we serve. Should it effect
or influence the community?
One of my favourite quotes is by Henri Nouwen, "The
great illusion of leadership is to think that man can be led out of the desert
by someone who has never been there."
Sounds like a nice thing to say or
maybe even a good excuse not to be led by others (that doesn't have the same,
difficult, experiences as you but it rings very true as to the witness and effectiveness
of the Church. We (the Church) should not hesitate to be vulnerable.
Church is more than the buildings and programs that we run.
Church is the people of God living Christ! We are a bunch of imperfect people
that discovered a perfect Saviour and that shares Christ with those we
encounter. This means that we make a mark in community, whether we want to or
not... by virtue of just loving Christ we impact community. By sharing in
people's joys and vulnerabilities we impact communities. The issue that the
Church should continually be wrestling with is about how much we know and let
Christ be known.
This is ever so true now... The Covid 19 pandemic managed force
us to re-think who we are as the Church… business as usual has been halted and
Church as usual, I think, has forever been altered… Church as usual get not
continue even when this pandemic ends. A re-definition of our perception
and or imagining of Church is now happening, whether we like it or want it
or not. Now is not the time anymore for us to lament and moan
about what we should have done... whatever we are doing now is how we are
shaping our new normal of being Church. I urge us however to never loose
contact with each other. The Church in my opinion ceases to be Church if we lose
contact. Finding ways to share our lives with each other is crucial. We are
Church... Now... in this time... for this time...
I remember a time when HIV/AIDS first hit us… The Church
said… WE ARE HIV POSITIVE – THE CHURCH HAS AIDS. We said this based on our theology
that says that if one suffers, we all suffer. So, what is different now?
Whatever the pandemic, whatever the condition we are all in
it and if we are going to survive it… we must do it together. We must never
loose each other
To be a Christian Church Community in any time means to belong
to Christ and each other… To know Christ, live Christ and to make His love
known to all.
Friday, 24 April 2020
The prison of grief
Google
says that A prison is, "a building in which people are legally held as a
punishment for a crime they have committed or while awaiting trial."
Sometimes
I think of grieving in term of this. Thou grieving doesn't have physical walls
or bars keeping you captive it certainly claims legal right to punish you and
restrain your movement and capacity. Sometimes I think that it is safer not to
love... for the punishment of love seems to be life in the prison of grief. We
grieve because we love...
So, shall
we rather not love, just to avoid the pain and "punishment" of grief?
I beg not... The reward of love outweighs the darkness of grief any day. Love
always has more light in it, than what grieving can bring. The key, I think, is
to remember love...
And now faith, hope, and love abide, these three; and the greatest of these is love.1 Corinthians 13:13 NRSV
I always
have a choice between living the depression of my grief or the joy of the love
I shared with my baby boy. what if that is how we get released from prison...
by filling our lives with love... the love of memories shared, and new moments
created... The challenge is not to try and replace the pain of grief but to
enjoy the moments of love. Love shared is forever! No sorrow, no pain, no
depression, nothing should overwhelm the LOVE we share. For a moment wanted to
say the love we shared, in fact I think I did... BUT I think love should always
be in the present tense.
John (in
the Bible) says that God is love. Scripture teaches me that God is the same
(yesterday, today and tomorrow), which means to me that love is always the
same. My son (Judah) is my son even though he died (WHY DO I STILL FIND IT HARD
TO SAY THAT HE DIED????) so our love is our love no matter what or where.
Everyday
there's an instant or two or three and sometimes ten… that I feel imprisoned by
grief, but love always sets me free. Sometimes it is the loving touch of my
wife (Desiree) or the bright and loud laughter of the kids (Jathni-el and
Jeriah). Other times it is the gentle hello of a caring friend that inquires
"are you ok?" Today it was the realization that God is love.
"...Love
has set me free
Love has
set me free
You're my
rest
The
shelter from the storm
Peace
will come for me
You're my
strength
When I am
weak you are strong
Your hope
will be the song I sing
You're
holding me
You're
everything that I need
You are
rescuing
Your
grace is enough for me
It's all
I need
Love has
set me free
Love has
set me free.."
Tuesday, 21 April 2020
Last Night was tough... BUT
One of the hardest things for me to do is to admit that I am in over my head.
My uncle has a saying that goes something like this. "We are Pedro... P E
D R... O and we Pedros fear no trial or foe" (I made it a little child
friendly 😉).
My Mommy taught me that I can do all things through Christ that strengthen me, and my Daddy taught to never be afraid to admit my wrong and to try again (this I struggle with a lot a little).
I mean... It is a tough thing to do... Admit that you don't have it all together. I like to say I won or at the very least that I survived... I came out on top.
For the last year and a half I tried to fool myself into thinking that I have this grief thing figured out😬. I mean as a Pastor I preach at funerals, I counsel families in grief... I go for counseling myself (sometimes). So yes, I have a handle on things. Or do I? Shouldn't I? You see I have gotten good at talking about grief and accepting that it is a life process that we have to deal with and live with... BUT I have been avoiding my true journey with grief.
It is easy to talk about grieving without actually grieving💔. I have somehow managed to put my grief on hold... to my own detriment I have avoided grieving whilst talking and even helping others to grieve. This is where I need to confess. I somehow thought of myself as a super hero in grieving... WHAT A JOKE... This type of thinking is counter productive to grieving and not helpful at all.
As I mentioned before... All I have, to help me deal with life and life's mishaps and crisis is my Faith and my Theology. So here is my latest attempt at doing Theology in the context of my grieving...
Let's start with where I am at. The Psalmist say "The Lord is near to the brokenhearted and saves the crushed in spirit." This means to me that God is with me, but also that God will save me. The problem I think that existed in my thinking was my understanding of being "SAVED". I tend to think of being saved in the sense of "all things and the traces of all things bad, sad or destructive being erased". In Sunday's Gospel reading about Thomas... He insisted in wanting to see and feel Jesus' scares. He couldn't imagine a Resurrection without the scares of the Crucifixion. This makes sense to me, even though I would have preferred a "less messy" Theology. A Resurrection without the scares of the Crucifixion is fairy tale... A nice story to tell without the evidence to back it up.
Every year (and in every moment of grief) my family and I re-tell and re-live that horrible
day... but we are left with the evidence of our faith growing stronger in an
ever-present God that's ever faithful, even when we think God not to be.
So I am Wiltim Roger Roberto PEDRO. P, E, D, R ... O. We Pedro's fear no trial or foe, cause we Pedro's have faith that even though we stumble and fall our God is Faithful and True to carry us through. Yes, we get wrong sometimes but God gets it right every time.
Monday, 6 April 2020
I have FAITH
When will the hurting stop? It is 5 years since that tragic Monday morning... And still all I feel is pain. There was a moment in the second or third year that I thought... "I did it... I survived the storm".
Who am I kidding? The storm is still raging. I feel battered and... Alone. Not lonely, just alone. Like I am in a room full of people but no one that gets it. I can feel the all too familiar shadow of grief creeping back into my life.
I tried... I really did. I fought... Embraced... Surrendered... Accepted... Bargained... ETC ETC etc. I honestly have no idea what is coming next or how I'll face it.
Never the less, a good friend said something that remained with me. We were talking about something completely unrelated but he said, "I think you need to humble yourself. Not everything is about you." I was shocked. I mean, I generally as a rule in my life try to put the needs of others above my own. I must have uttered this sentiment because his next question pierced my soul. He asked, "WHY?"
Why indeed... Why should I heal? Why should I not feeling like dying on the anniversary of my son's death. Why do I have to be OK?
I never did get the answers to my Why Questions but it did get me to look at life ever so slightly different. It is in our reasoning and grappling with the purpose of things that we begin to find understanding, even if that understanding is incomplete in the moment.
Daniel Migliore wrote a book, "Faith seeking Understanding". I think this is essentially what we all must attempt in all aspects of our lives. Seek understanding of our faith in the midst of all goings on.
Our faith is what will ultimately help is make sense of life. I choose to place my faith in Jesus Christ. Not some fairy-tale idea of a Messiah that swoops in and saves the day, but a Christ that incarnated (became part of my world) and journeys with me through it all.
I have faith that even though I can't see it all, explain it all or perfectly articulate it... all the time... I know I have friend in Jesus. I have an ever loving God by my side.
Who am I kidding? The storm is still raging. I feel battered and... Alone. Not lonely, just alone. Like I am in a room full of people but no one that gets it. I can feel the all too familiar shadow of grief creeping back into my life.
I tried... I really did. I fought... Embraced... Surrendered... Accepted... Bargained... ETC ETC etc. I honestly have no idea what is coming next or how I'll face it.
Never the less, a good friend said something that remained with me. We were talking about something completely unrelated but he said, "I think you need to humble yourself. Not everything is about you." I was shocked. I mean, I generally as a rule in my life try to put the needs of others above my own. I must have uttered this sentiment because his next question pierced my soul. He asked, "WHY?"
Why indeed... Why should I heal? Why should I not feeling like dying on the anniversary of my son's death. Why do I have to be OK?
I never did get the answers to my Why Questions but it did get me to look at life ever so slightly different. It is in our reasoning and grappling with the purpose of things that we begin to find understanding, even if that understanding is incomplete in the moment.
Daniel Migliore wrote a book, "Faith seeking Understanding". I think this is essentially what we all must attempt in all aspects of our lives. Seek understanding of our faith in the midst of all goings on.
Our faith is what will ultimately help is make sense of life. I choose to place my faith in Jesus Christ. Not some fairy-tale idea of a Messiah that swoops in and saves the day, but a Christ that incarnated (became part of my world) and journeys with me through it all.
I have faith that even though I can't see it all, explain it all or perfectly articulate it... all the time... I know I have friend in Jesus. I have an ever loving God by my side.
Monday, 23 March 2020
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Wiltim Pedro
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