Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Emotion
Anger
Disgust
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Joy
Sadness
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Anger
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Welcome
Good afternoon.
My name is Clint, I’m a pastor here in town and a friend of Patty and Gerry’s and…..
On behalf of Mary ’s family, I would like to thank you for coming today to remember and celebrate the life that Mary  lived.
She was an amazing woman, a mother and grandmother, a dedicated nurse, and to many of you, a dear friend.
We are here to thank our heavenly Father for sharing Mary  with us for 64 years and to remember Her life and the legacy that she will leave behind.
We are here to share our grief, and to comfort and encourage one another as family and as friends.
And we are here to receive strength, support, and hope from God, who loved and cared for Mary each and every day of Her life.
The apostle Paul wrote in 2 Corinthians 1:3-4, “Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort, who comforts us in our time of need…” Would you join me in prayer as we ask God to bless our time together and provide that comfort that the apostle wrote about 
Prayer (Clint)
Would you bring to us right now that peace that goes beyond all human comprehension… Thank you so very much for sharing Mary with us.
We thank you for the way that she loved, for her service to other people.
Lord we thank you for her Faith in you that so permeated her life.
And Lord we thank you for the Hope she had, the hope of spending eternity with you and the hope that she could leave a positive impact on the world.
Father, would you comfort us in our loss today.
Would you help us to remember the good times and hold on to that same hope that Marry had, the hope that this life isn’t all there is.
Would you be with us now as we celebrate the amazing life Mary  lived.
Amen.
Song
At this time we are going to listen to a song the family has picked out.
After that, Mary’s Brother-in-law Gerry will come on up and share a few words with us.
Eulogy
Gerry Sweetnam
Sharing of Memories
I’d like to invite up Mike and Patty, who will be sharing some memories of Mary with us.
Mike Miller
Patty Miller
Poem
Now Mary’s Husband Patrick will share a poem with us.
Patrick
Special Music and Tribute Pictures
Thank you Patrick And now lets watch a slideshow that will take us through Mary’s life.
Message
Once again, my name is Clint, and on behalf of Mary’s family thank you for being here today as we remember a life well lived.
A life  that had a tremendous impact on many people.
Since Mary passed away, life’s been hard, it’s been different.
When we lose someone who is close to us, part of us changes forever.
It’s a new, different world that you are living in.
And while today is difficult, it’s good for us to be together, to honor Mary’s memory, tor remember Her and Her legacy, to share stories, and to learn from Her and the life Her lived.
I never met Marry.
I never got to hear her tell stories about surgery or working in hospice.
I never got to hear her talk about working with AIDES patients, or what it was like repelling down a cliff to get to an injured person when she worked for Madeline Island.
We never got to go sailing together.
But I did get a chance to sit down a few weeks ago with Patrick, and Patty and Gerry.
I asked them to tell me about Mary and help me get to know her.
We talked for a long time, and they shared the good stuff with me, and the difficult stuff about Mary with me.
Mary was truly incredible in so many ways, and like all of us, she wasn’t perfect.
And both of those sides of her, the amazing stuff, and the hard stuff, impact people.
I’ve been a full time pastor for ten year and a police chaplain for five, I’ve seen first hand, and I’m sure most of you have as well, how death, and loss can impact people differently.
It brings up everything from the past, both the good and the bad.
And we get to choose, we get to choose which way we pivot.
Do we pivot away from each other, or towards each other, towards healing, towards forgiveness and reconciliation, and build a better future together.
As I talked with Patrick and Patty and Gerry, it become pretty clear the Mary moved towards Forgiveness and reconciliation.
And as they talked, not only about her last few days, but her life in general, the thing that I kept coming back to was that Mary kept growing in her ability to live out the Theological Virtues of Faith, Hope and Love.
And today, as we gather together, I think that we can learn from Mary how to embrace these.
Let’s start with Love
Love
Mary’s whole life was bent towards loving people well.
41 years as a nurse in a variety of different roles.
Big or small, she was always there to lend a hand to those in need.
That was Mary’s way of communicating, “I see you, and I love you.”
Think of all the people over all the years that got to feel the Love of God through Mary.
In there most scared, most vulnerable moment, in a hospital, or waiting to leave this life in Hospice, or getting prepped for surgery, and then they got to see Mary.
From Mary we learn how to love people well even in the most chaotic moments of life.
And Mary’s ability to Love, I think, was closely tied into her Faith.
Faith
Mary loved the Lord.
And it was from that place of Faith that she drew strength.
Not only did God deposit amazing gifts in Mary, like her ability to love people and show them compassion, but Mary also learned how to, each and every day, trust God more and more in her life.
To put her weight down on her faith, in the good and the bad.
Hebrew 1:11 says “Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see”
Mary was grounded in her faith, it gave her confidence, and it let her Hope for things that weren’t seen.
Hope
And Mary had tremendous Hope.
She had the Hope that her actions would make a difference in peoples lives.
She Hoped that she could make you smile and turn your day around.
And, she Hoped for a better future.
She knew what was in store for her.
I future with no more sickness, or surgery’s, a future with no pain.
She hoped for a future spent in God’s eternal presence.
Mary  loved deeply, and was loved deeply by so many people.
When we lose someone that we love so deeply, it’s easy to wonder, if God loved Mary so much, why do people die.
It’s important to remember that God never wanted pain and death to exist in the first place.
Gods Original Plan: Genesis
You see, death was never part of God’s original plan.
In the first book of the Bible, Genesis, we see a Good God, who creates a beautiful world, and then he creates his masterpiece, humans, to enjoy creation with him forever.
But humans decided that they didn’t need God, and they turned their back on him.
And in that moment, the world broke.
Relationship between God and humans, and humans and other humans became broken.
But God fixed it.
He came into the world as Jesus and lived the life that no one else could, a life fully surrendered to the will of God.
And that life, led to him dying on the cross.
His death was meant for you and me.
We deserved it by turning away from God, he never did.
He died for us.
And when he did that, he made things right between us and God.
And all we have to do is accept the work that he did.
We are headed towards a future where ever wrong has been made right, and for those who choose to have a relationship with God, we are offered that same opportunity as the first humans, to spend eternity, and that includes the present moment with God.
And that right there, that’s hope.
That’s a hope that will carry us through pain and Loss.
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