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Comments from a Southern California Mainline pastor:
As a pastor, my concern at this point would be
for Vic and his son Vance. When Vic has the heart attack
and is in serious condition, I would be thinking about the possibility
he might die soon. I would be aware that others would not want to
allow themselves to think he might die, and their reticence to contemplate
death might inhibit important sharing and healing from occurring.
Thus I would strive to enable Vic and his son to have time alone
together to naturally say to each other what they needed to say.
I might initiate this by suggesting we have a prayer together. While
the spiritual need for the prayer is authentic, the prayer also
helps them to adapt quickly to the reality that what is occurring
here is more than just a medical emergency-it also is a spiritual
crisis and a relational one.
Following the prayer with Vic and Vance,
I might turn to Vance and suggest that he spend some time with his
father "saying anything you want to say". That is a euphemistic
way of suggesting that this might possibly be a last opportunity
for forgiveness or loving words. It also helps Vance and possibly
Vic to adapt to the potential seriousness of the situation which
they naturally don't want to see. I think it is important for the
pastor to structure an opportunity for healing to occur or for a
close connection to be celebrated prior to death.
At the point when Vic shares his words of
apparent "deathbed confessions" (re: how his business needs a conscience")
I would allow him to speak, unhindered by my need for clarification.
In other words, what is important at that point is not that I clearly
grasp what he is confessing, but instead that he have the opportunity
to unburden his soul to his priest. The fact that he dies without
apparently having shared all of the details is of little concern
to me, because death almost always occurs in the middle of life,
not in a way that feels tidy and complete. The words he shares are
less important than the fact that he is holding my hand in a celebration
of human connection and life. I would be present in a spiritually
concentrated way, and focusing my inner thoughts in the direction
of prayer. All that he chooses to say would be freely accepted,
without my pushing for further comment or questioning the meaning
of his words. I would want him to use his last life energy in the
way he chooses.
After Vic dies, I would continue to stay
near his body and enable anyone who needs to say goodbye to do so.
Often a son or someone else close to the deceased needs to spend
time with the dead body, to pray and to simply see the reality that
the person no longer exists in their body. Additionally, I would
pray for Vic that as he transitions from this life to the next he
experience the embrace of God's loving presence. I would also give
pastoral care to the nurses and doctors, who very often appreciate
someone spending a moment with them following a death.
As I move forward into the challenges of
the way the community is deeply affected by Vic's death, I would
not attempt to access the confidential information he shared with
me on his deathbed in any way. In a sense, I function as if I do
not know what he told me. I as a community member do not know that
information; I only know it as Vic's deathbed priest. If the information
comes forward some other way, then I will handle it in that other
context. But I will not go looking for further details to flesh
out the sketchy information Vic shared with me at his death. It
is literally not a concern to me; it is something which was shared
for one purpose only: for him to unburden his soul. If Vic had wanted
me to know more information, he had plenty of opportunity earlier
to give me details on any subject. My reading of the situation is
that he hadn't shared with me previously because he would have chosen
to share things with me as they became clearly relevant. The fact
that such information may now never come to light is something I
live with as a reality of human existence. Information does vanish
when people die.
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