37 hours is all it took. A little over a day and a half. A common ordinary day and a half for most folks filled with familiar routines. An extraordinary day for one family.
What did you do over the past 37 hours? A more important question would be what did you do that will matter in eternity during that time?
I got a phone call this past week from a lady I did not know. Her story compelled me. She and her family needed a preacher to preach a funeral. Not just any funeral. A funeral for their parents. That is not a typo. I meant to write parents in the plural sense. The funeral would be for both. They did not die in a horrific accident. The real story is more incredulous.
Virgil met Joann when she worked at the picture show selling tickets. She was 14 and he older. Family members said she was a sassy red head, spirited, feisty and loving. Virgil was soft spoken. A man of few words. A man given to pondering and working with his hands. They started dating.
One day they went on a date, an unusual date, for they had something else in mind. They eloped to be married. By this time Joann was only 15. They kept their marriage secret for two weeks before Joann's mother began suspecting something. Finally the truth came out.
They remained deeply in love enjoying 69 1/2 years of marriage. Joann came down with Alzheimers a few years ago. Virgil got sick a few weeks ago and had to be admitted to the hospital. Joann stayed in a care center. When Virgil finally came home his kids wanted to know if he wanted his wife to be brought home too, which of course he did.
When they brought her home Virgil said, "Hi, sweetheart," and began to weep. After 69 years it was evident he was still madly in love with his wife.
Just days later Virgil died peacefully sitting in his favorite chair one morning. He always wanted to go first because he did not think he could carry on without her. 37 hours later Joann also died and joined Virgil in eternity. Just yesterday we celebrated their love and lives in a small old country chapel with both of them together, each on their own casket , next to each other.
What a love story. What a testimony of a loving enduring marriage. May Virgil and Joann inspire all of us to cherish our spouses and make the most of the time we still have with them.
Matthew 19:4-6 (NASB)
4 And He answered and said, "Have you not read that He who created them from the beginning MADE THEM MALE AND FEMALE,
5 and said, 'FOR THIS REASON A MAN SHALL LEAVE HIS FATHER AND MOTHER AND BE JOINED TO HIS WIFE, AND THE TWO SHALL BECOME ONE FLESH'?
6 "So they are no longer two, but one flesh. What therefore God has joined together, let no man separate."
Thank you for this tribute to our parents. You truly made our final farewell a memorable celebration of their lives.
ReplyDeleteA perfect testamony to love and life itself. It certainly strengthens a part of the vows of marriage that says what God has joined together no man shall seperate. I am warmed up on this chilly morning not because of the aromatic coffee I love but because of an enduring love story. Thank you for these words and my heart is full because I know this Love Story will repeat itself in the hereafter.
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