Going Down Singing

Carolyn Arends explains why we should all remember that we will die:

The  day before he died, my father wore what his doctors  called the “Star  Wars mask”—a high-tech oxygen system that covered most  of his face.  Pneumonia made his breathing extremely labored, but that  didn’t keep  him from chatting.

“Pardon?” my mom would ask patiently, trying to decipher his muffled sounds. Exasperated, he’d yank off the mask, bringing himself to the brink of respiratory arrest to ask about hockey trades or complain about the hospital food.

After several hours, he gave up on conversation. He started singing.

“What  are you humming?” my mom asked. My dad repeatedly  tried to answer  through the mask before yanking it off again. “With  Christ in the  Vessel, I Can Smile at the Storm,” he gasped. “Wow,”  murmured my mom,  before singing it with him.

My  dad learned “With Christ in the Vessel” at Camp  Imadene in 1949, the  summer he asked Jesus into his 8-year-old heart.  Six decades later,  hours before his death, that silly old camp song was  still embedded in  his soul and mind, and he was singing it at the top of  his  nearly-worn-out lungs.

I  have never liked thinking about my own death. But I’ve  considered it  enough to know I hope I go down singing, or at least  speaking or  thinking, something about Jesus.

I suppose that is why I found myself sobbing on an airplane while reading Margaret Guenther’s The Practice of Prayer.   In one section, Guenther discusses the Eastern Christian discipline of   continuously repeating the Jesus Prayer: “Lord Jesus Christ, Son of  God,  have mercy on me, a sinner.” She reports her own efforts to  incorporate  the practice into her daily life, even sizing up the logs  she chops for  firewood by the number of Jesus Prayers she’ll likely get  through  before they are cut.

I  love the idea of having such truth-giving words  ingrained into my  routine. But here’s Guenther’s line that really got to  me: “I hope that  by imprinting [the Jesus Prayer] on my subconscious,  it will be with  me for the rest of my life, especially at the end, when  other words  will perhaps be lost to me.”

Guenther,  a former professor at General Theological  Seminary in New York, is an  accomplished and educated woman. Yet she is  humble and practical enough  to do what she can to prepare for her own  death—and for the  possibility that even before her death, her mind might  fade into  dementia. In a culture consumed with denying mortality, here  is a woman  who plans for it, in a way that affects the minutiae of her  life now.

Many  early Christian communities encouraged believers to  engage in the  spiritual discipline of considering their own deaths—not  in order to  create morbid fear, but to put this life in the proper  perspective. Memento mori,  medieval monks would say to each  other in the hallways. “Remember your  mortality,” or, more literally,  “Remember you will die.”

Death  unaddressed is the bogeyman in the basement; it  keeps us looking over  our shoulders and holds us back from entering  joyously into the days we  are given. But death dragged out from the  shadows and held up to the  light of the gospel not only loses its sting,  it becomes an essential  reminder to wisely use the life we have.

When  we remember the mortality of those around us, they  become more  valuable to us. Madeleine L’Engle once noted that when  people die, it  is the sins of omission, rather than the sins of  commission, that haunt  us. “If only I had called more,” we lament.  Remembering a loved one’s  death before it happens can spur us into the  sort of action we won’t  regret later.

And  remembering our own mortality helps reorder our  priorities; a race  toward a finish line has a different sense of purpose  and urgency than a  jog around the block. When a believer acknowledges  that he is headed  toward death (tomorrow or in 50 years), he can stop  expending the  tremendous energy it takes to deny his mortality and start  living into  his eternal destiny, here and now. And he can be  intentional about  investing himself in the things he wants to be with  him at the end,  much the way Guenther seeks to make the Jesus Prayer a  permanent part  of her psyche.

I  don’t want to romanticize death. My friend Bernie  calls it “the Great  Gash,” and I must confess that on the six-month  anniversary of my  father’s passing, the hole left by him is still  gaping.

But  though death hurts, it is not the end. Though we  mourn, we do not  mourn as those who have no hope. And so I offer my  dread of death to  the Author of Life, asking him to help me to number my  days rightly. I  don’t know how many I’ve got, but I want to use every  one of them to  get the truth about who Jesus is—and who I am in him—more  deeply  ingrained.

That’s why I’m teaching my kids “With Christ in the Vessel.” We sing it at the top of our lungs.

Explore posts in the same categories: Death, Theological Truths

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