Thursday, April 24, 2014

An Abandoned Dying Spouse – Abandoned Jesus in Gethsemane and in Calvary, A Deserting Spouse – Peter Who Failed to Keep His Promise



One thing that bothers me and puzzles me so much in providing counseling and pastoral care to dying persons is that their spouses abandon them in some cases.  

Imagine what it would be liked to be abandoned by your spouse when you are dying.

In the Sacrament of Matrimony, a wife and a husband are bound by these words of the wedding vow:  I promise to be true to you in good times and in bad, in sickness and in health. I will love you and honor you all the days of my life”.  They have sworn their fidelity and unconditional love, represented in these words of the vow, at God’s alter, in God’s presence.

So, how can the sacramentally bound husbands and wives can be broken when one of the souses is dying? 

As a mental health professional and pastoral minister, seeing a dying person abandoned by his or her spouse is extremely painful. But, the pain and grief of an abandoned spouse, while facing the relentlessly fast-approaching death, are far greater. In fact, this is not something I can every fully understand. 

As a counselor and minister, all I could do to help such an abandoned dying spouse is simply to be present for him or her and listen to his or her painful heart speak  - verbally and non-verbally.
Having this special deeply emotional privilege to be with such a person, amidst of his or her unfathomable spiritual and emotional pain of abandonment, what strikes me that an abandoned dying spouse reminds me of Jesus in the garden of agony in Gethsemane and Jesus walking into the Calvary, abandoned by his beloved disciples, especially Peter. 

Among the disciples, Peter was very passionate and vocal about expressing his care and love for Jesus. In fact, it was Peter who said to Jesus, “Even if I have to die with you, I will not deny You” (Matthew 26:35) during the Last Supper. And, the rest of the disciples said the same to Jesus, following Peter. 

But, it was Peter, who was one of the disciples fell asleep, when Jesus was praying in agony, after the Last Supper.  Jesus asked Peter, James, and John, to watch him pray in this dark garden as he prepared himself for his path into the Calvary.  And, it was Peter, who denied Jesus three times, once Jesus was taken to be crucified, contrary to his words of absolute loyalty to Jesus in Matthew 26:35.
………..

As long as an abandoned dying spouse I counsel and minister to is Catholic or some type of Christian or receptive to biblical stories, I gently invite him or her to reflect his or her own unfathomable pain and sorrow of being abandoned by his or her beloved spouse at a moment of dying to Jesus being deserted by his disciples, especially Peter. 

There is rather a long period of silence upon this invitation.  But, this silence is spiritually pregnant.  This silent period is like the Holy Saturday, the day between the Good Friday, the death of Jesus, and the Easter Sunday, the Resurrection of Christ. 

So, after this silence,  I notice tears begin to run from the eyes of the abandoned dying spouse.
Yes, it’s tears of sorrow. But, it is also tears of something else.
……….

When Mary Magdalene and another Mary found that the tomb of Jesus was empty and were told by  about what happened, on the Easter Sunday early morning,  they left the tomb quickly with fear and great joy and ran to report it to other disciples (Matthew 28:8).

Perhaps, tears were running from the eyes of these women, who first discovered the Resurrection, though they did not yet see the body of the risen Christ at that time.  The fact that they ran quickly to tell this news tells that these women were driven. 

Maybe they still had some sorrows, because what they heard:  Jesus was risen and gone from the tomb, was so confusing and did not yet see the very risen Jesus.  But, at that moment, their sorrow was no longer holding them down.  Even though they were fearful, as the scripture tells, they were not held up by the fears.  It is because of joy that they began to feel. 

It was joy of anticipation, because they did not yet see the risen Christ. And, it was sufficient enough to mobilize Mary Magdalene and another Mary.
………

As I see tears from the eyes of an abandoned dying spouse, upon reflecting his or her own painful abandonment experience upon deserted Jesus,  I now suggest to juxtapose his or her tears to the fear and joy that Mary Magdalene and another Mary had upon learning about the Jesus’ resurrection.
Yes, an abandoned dying spouse still feels deep sorrow. But, now, there is another feeling. 

Through this juxtaposition, I ask him or her if there is also joy that is drawing tears from his or her eyes – a kind of joy of knowing that he or she is so intimately close to Jesus through his or her deeply painful and sorrowful experience of being abandoned by his or her most beloved. And, a kind of joy to know that this Jesus, whom he or she feels so close through the pain and sorrow,  rose from the dead.
……

This pastoral and psychological identification of his or her pain with Jesus and his resurrection is not to suggest that his or her deadly prognosis would change.  Such a suggestion would be unethical because it means planting a false hope. 

In fact, Jesus died in deep sorrow and pain. The fact that Peter deserted him really hurt Jesus – even though he knew as he predicted Peter’s denial.  

What is so important here is that Jesus’ resurrection comes after his real death. 

So,  linking an abandoned dying spouse’s experience to Jesus, who died and resurrected – also identifying with Mary Magdalene and another Mary, who were the very first witness to the mysterious resurrection – is to help he or she discern deeper faith-based meaning amidst his or her immeasurable and indescribable pain and sorrow.
…………

Fr. Pedro Arrupe, S.J., the Jesuit Provincial of Japan (1958-1965), the 28th Father General of the Jesuits (1965-1983), said as he was dying from debilitating conditions after a stroke :
More than ever I find myself in the hands of God. This is what I have wanted all my life from my youth. But now there is a difference; the initiative is entirely with God. It is indeed a profound spiritual experience to know and feel myself so totally in God’s hands.

 In “Hearts on Fire: Praying with Jesuits”, edited by Michael Harter, S.J. (2005)

No, Fr. Arrupe was not cast out just because he was losing his abilities to remain on the top of the Jesuits, to perform priestly service, due to the paralyzing effects of his stroke. His Jesuits brothers stayed with him and cared for him and prayed for him, while he was becoming weaker and dying. Nevertheless,  as only a dying person can understand,  Fr. Arrupe must have felt alone – so alone.

But, he did not feel lonely, as these above words of Fr. Arrupe tell. It was not because he was always physically surrounded by his caring Jesuit brothers. It was because he was, indeed, more intimately with God.

Perhaps, Fr. Arrupe was deeply identifying himself with dying Jesus as he was dying, losing his abilities to the unfolding consequences of his stroke. And, he knew that Jesus was not just in pain and sorrow as he walked into the Calvary, because of his deeply intimate and absolutely inseparable oneness with the Father (i.e. John 10:30).

………..

When someone, who swore his or her absolute love into the matrimonial sacramental union with you,  abandoned you,  what else could be a better way to cope with such unfathomable pain and sorrow, such as what an abandoned dying spouse had to bear – than identifying it with what Jesus went through?

………

It is my mission as a pastoral psychologist to guide an abandoned and dying spouse to feel like what Fr. Arrupe felt before he or she dies. 

Yes, it sure bothers and pains me to know that even someone who swore his or her absolute love and loyalty in entering into the matrimonial sacrament can abandon his or her love, as the spouse is dying. But, witnessing an abandoned dying spouse begin to find joy amidst his or her pain and sorrow, upon coming so intimate with God also brings me a sense of purpose to be given an opportunity to be with him or her.

After all, it is the God who said, "I will lead the blind by a way they do not know, in paths they do not know I will guide them. I will make darkness into light before them and rugged places into plains. These are the things I will do, and I will not leave them undone” (Isaiah 42:16).

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