Thursday, September 13, 2012

Funeral Sermon for Ruth Kerbel, 4 September 2012



The Rev. Paul J Cain
Psalm 121
The Lord Will Keep You Forevermore
Funeral Sermon for Ruth Kerbel
Tuesday of Pentecost XIV, 4 September 2012
Immanuel Lutheran Church, Sheridan, WY

In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

“In suff’ring be Thy love my peace, In weakness be Thy love my pow’r; And when the storms of life shall cease, O Jesus, in that final hour, Be Thou my rod and staff and guide, And draw me safely to Thy side!” (LSB 683:4) Amen.
And so our Jesus has answered that prayer, a hymn stanza just sung moments ago, one that Ruth Kerbel read every day. She now waits as we all wait for the resurrection of the dead on the last day. Ruth is still in Christ, yet away from the body and at home with the Lord. She no longer has to walk by faith but by sight, for she sees her dear Lord face to face, all because of His boundless love to her and us.
The best hymns are those that provide a view of life from a heavenly perspective. In other words, hymns like the ones Ruth selected for today’s service excel because they put our focus on Jesus and His work for us in His death and resurrection. Such hymns lift high the cross of Jesus and dismiss us with His blessing. Another such hymn is Ruth’s favorite Psalm, Psalm 121.
1I lift up my eyes to the hills. From where does my help come?
It’s easy to lift our eyes to the hills, foothills, and beautiful Bighorn Mountains here in Wyoming. They are great, vast, high, and mighty, but they are not our source of help. Instead, we look to He who created the mountains, all plants and animals—even dairy cows and teddy bears named Marilyn—He who also created each one of us. Ruth confessed, 2My help comes from the Lord, who made heaven and earth.
The Lord’s own creativity is reflected in Ruth’s creative gifts of writing and art. One of her many writings on LWML letterhead is found in today’s bulletin. It is a prayer she wrote shortly after Bill’s death. The aisles of Immanuel’s nave are lined with banners she had a hand in or worked on all by herself. One of our most useful, entitled “All For Love,” shows the life and ministry of Christ. I have little doubt that is was a labor of Ruth’s love to her Lord and for her congregation and was heavily influenced by her favorite hymn, “Jesus, Thy Boundless Love to Me.”
Our God is a Lord that is active in our lives for our benefit. The Psalmist sings, 3He will not let your foot be moved; he who keeps you will not slumber. 4Behold, he who keeps Israel will neither slumber nor sleep.
Jesus’ obedience leading to His Good Friday death and Easter Sunday resurrection show even the power of the Lord God resting in His three-day tomb. He is therefore our enlivening Vine and the source of our faith, our fruit, and our faithful service. Apart from Him we can do nothing. With Him, we bear much fruit. Jesus is the source of Ruth’s fruit from teaching countless children in Sunday School, her support of Martin Luther Grammar School, her lifelong service on Altar Guild, the sacrificial service of her and Bill transferring to Prince of Peace, Buffalo, and her years in the LWML including two terms as Wyoming District LWML President. Abide in the boundless love of Jesus. No matter what you face in this life, He will never leave you or forsake you.
Like any life in this valley of the shadow, Ruth faced challenges. Hers included a ruptured appendix, mourning a dear husband, and several occurrences of cancer.
One evening before a trip to the hospital, Ruth found great comfort in Psalm 121. Here’s the rest of the story: Pastor Garwood visited her the next morning and shared a devotion he had prepared just for her—on Psalm 121. That is when this Psalm became her favorite. Shortly after I arrived, I had the opportunity to provide her pastoral care in connection with a health concern. I didn’t know this story. She told it to me after I shared a devotion with her on Psalm 121.
5The Lord is your keeper; the Lord is your shade on your right hand. 6The sun shall not strike you by day, nor the moon by night.
The Psalm does not promise that you’ll never see a full moon, blue moon, or be prevented from getting a sunburn. It means that the Lord will sustain you through all things, day and night, your whole life long and even after that. The Lord will keep you forevermore.
7The Lord will keep you from all evil; he will keep your life.
There are things worse than death. Ruth Kerbel was concerned about such things. Perhaps the worst thing is falling away from faith in Christ Jesus. That is why it broke her heart when she didn’t see a dear family friend in the Lord’s house on the Lord’s day for quite some time. She prayed for this person and did what she could to remind them of the gifts of God in Christ at Church.
Because she was here regularly receiving the Lord’s gifts of word and sacrament, she knew that a habit of despising preaching and God’s Word could lead one on a path away from Christ, away from faith, even to the sin against the Holy Spirit and away from salvation itself: eternal separation from God.
We will miss Ruth at Bible Class. Her fellow saints appreciated her faithful and meticulous care for our communion linens and how she organized the new banner room, yet we loved her all the more for living out her most important vocation: a baptized child of God, clothed in Christ’s righteousness, regularly and eagerly receiving the Lord’s gifts.
The funeral pall draped over her casket speaks of baptism, just as Romans 6 confesses our dying and rising in Christ Jesus. The waters of baptism are a river of regeneration, washing us in the blood of the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.
8The Lord will keep your going out and your coming in from this time forth and forevermore.
Our Lord keeps His promises. He also makes this promise to you. Abide in Him and He in you. Jesus did not only show us the way to the Father, but He Himself is the Way, the Truth and the Life, the only way to the Father.
He gives His righteousness as a gift to His Christians. The white robe of His righteousness and starry crown of heavenly glory are shown in every white baptismal gown, the white of one’s Confirmation day, the white robes of the acolytes, elders, and pastors, the white wedding gown of a bride, white Communion linens, boiled to keep them white, and even the white funeral pall of the Church. All speak to the pure, holy, righteous gift of forgiveness, life, and salvation given to all who believe and are baptized into Christ.
8The Lord will keep your going out and your coming in from this time forth and forevermore.
“The valleys we are destined to cross seem to be greater than we can climb, but Lord, we know you are with us each step of the way, to face whatever and wherever you lead us.”
I say such words to give you comfort as you mourn. They were written by one who was mourning the loss of someone dear to her. Ruth wrote that sentence. She wants you to be comforted by her Jesus, for He is your Lord Jesus Christ. The Lord will keep you forevermore, just as he has done for Ruth.
With her let us bless the Lord for all His benefits. “Thank you, Lord for your daily gift of joy and hope” in Jesus. Amen.

In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.