Music has always been important to me.
Sometimes, the words of a song capture well what I am thinking and
feeling. In recent days, I have had
come to mind a song of my youth by singer/songwriter Joni Mitchell. The song is titled “Big Yellow Taxi” and it
includes these words:
Don't it always seem to go
That you don't know what you've got till it's
gone
A few days ago, the news reported that there is now a grand total of
400,000 people in the United States who have died of illness related to this
pandemic. To put that into perspective,
it is reported that there are approximately 464,000 people who live in Raleigh, the
capitol city of North Carolina. Can you
imagine most of the people of Raleigh dying in less than a years time? Yet, that is what has happened across this
nation. Those people are more than a
number and a statistic. They are more
than another patient in the hospital or another death for a funeral home. They are people who touched lives and had an
impact on the world where they lived. . I think of some of the people that I have
known who have died of illness related to this deadly virus:
·
The man who was a father and husband
·
The person who was a leader of not only his local church,
but who was known as a man of faith in leadership across the state and nation
·
The fella who
spent his retirement days working at disaster recovery sites providing food for
the volunteers
·
The guy who started and ran a successful family business
·
The man who was
a counselor-educator who taught people about grief in over 15 countries around
the world
·
The fella who
was a teacher, coach, and driving education instructor for over 50 years
“Don't it always seem to go That you don't
know what you've got till it's gone”, Joni Mitchell wrote and sang many years ago. One
of the things I have seen done by families when someone has died is to leave an
empty chair at the dinner table on a holiday or other special occasion as a
reminder that there is an emptiness and void at their table and in their
lives. In these days, many families are
not only knowing an empty place in their world because a loved one has died
from the coronavirus, but our world is
also a little emptier. Thanks be
to God for the lives of each and every one.
May God swiftly show mercy on us that this pandemic will be in our
rear-view mirror. Have a joy-filled
week.- Pastor Randy Wall
PRAYER: O
God, we give you thanks for all those who we know and do not know that
have died from COVID-19. We thank you
for the many lives that were touched by each and every person. We pray for their families and friends who
have experienced loss that they might know your peace. Thank you, God, that you see us through all
the challenges of life; through Christ our Lord. Amen.