Showing posts with label death. Show all posts
Showing posts with label death. Show all posts

Monday, November 21, 2016

Pastoral Response/youth group response to teenage suicide



Last year I had the unfortunate and difficult task of responding and ministering to a teen suicide in our community. Adam was a young man in our youth group that took his own life. For me, it is the first time I have ever lost a close member of our youth group to death; suicide or otherwise.

It still feels surreal.

I still can’t quite believe I won’t see him again, hear his laugh, or have a great conversation with him. I’m not sure it has really sunk in yet.

All death can create feelings of mourning and sadness, but suicide is different. It is so sudden, abrupt. You feel as if a piece has been taken out of you that will never be replaced. This bright, young life with so much promise is over.

Its a punch to the gut, because so many would have told him how much they loved him. So many people would have talked him down, or tried to stop him. The 600+ people who came to the viewing or the 200+ who attended the funeral I officiated would have told him they loved the beautiful, uniquely made child of God that he was.

Ironically, I was reading the book “Tuesdays with Morrie” two days before Adam’s death, and I highlighted this phrase in my Kindle, after Morrie attended a funeral of a friend, Irv:

He came home depressed. “What a waste,” he said. “All those people saying all those wonderful things, and Irv never got to hear any of it.”

Indeed. What a waste.

As I unpack the emotions involved with this sort of tragedy, I hope and pray that my story and advice may help someone else as they walk along those who deal with the ramifications of teen suicide, and hopefully, to avoid it.

There are no easy answers, but there are specific things you can do to lend effective pastoral care:
Give clear guidance & leadership to the family – in moments of trauma, surviving family members operate in a fog or shock. They need you, as the minister, to give clear and affirming leadership. Take as much off their plate as you can.

  • Keep your phone at your side at all hours – be ready to reach out, call, and text youth and parents at any hour. 
  • Run to God in your pain – encourage others to leverage their pain as a way to lay hold of God, and not the opposite. 
  • Keep the focus on Jesus – if officiating the funeral, keep the focus on Jesus as the Good Shepherd, God’s loving sovereignty, and positive memories of the deceased. 
  • Keep the focus on love – people need to be reminded of why they are at a viewing or funeral: its because they love that person. All are gathered because they care, and that is to be celebrated. If you love someone, tell them immediately. 
  • And mean it – Youth ministers and parents fight for teenagers daily and love them with a passionate love. Live each day to the fullest, and if God ever brings a teen to mind to pray for or reach out to, act immediately. Keep fighting for your kids, and “leave it all on the field” so that if suicide does happen, you can know you did all you could. 
  • Mourn with those who mourn – don’t give advice and for goodness sakes don’t say “Everything happens for a reason.” Just be present and weep when you want to weep. 
  • Avoid “If only…” – it is so tempting to torment yourself with thoughts of “if only I had done this, etc”. I chose to affirm the fact that we have loved Adam well as a Christian community, which we have. Focus on the positive memories and how you have worked on someone’s behalf. Ultimately, the choice of someone to take their own life is just that: their own choice. Beating yourself up after the fact will not change what has happened. While incredibly sad that someone has taken their own life, there are also other potential suicides you have also possibly prevented over the years. If there is any positive side to “if only” thoughts, let it be an inspiration to reach out to teenagers that much more. God will do what is absolutely best – You will be asked the question, “Is he/she in heaven? Is he/she in hell?”. The short answer is: you don’t know. The long answer: God is perfect. Honestly, none of us really know at the time of death, especially in terms of a suicide where the profession of faith of the individual is in question. It is dishonest to give a false hope, or conversely, a false judgement. The grave is very silent and death is final on this side of eternity. What we can do, however, is trust in Jesus’ words, remember Jesus as the Good Shepherd, remember that a teenager is still a child, and that God will do what is perfect, just, loving, and eternally secure. We are not God, but we can trust in God’s perfect Word and God’s perfect character.

I will always love and miss Adam. I will think of him for the rest of my life. He has made an indelible mark on my life.

Ministry and loving others is a risk. You never know what is going to occur.

However, I think we can all agree its a risk worth taking.

It is always better to love and lose someone than not to love at all.

Keep up the good fight.

Dealing with teenage suicide



Last year I had the unfortunate and difficult task of responding and ministering to a teen suicide in our community. Adam was a young man in our youth group that took his own life. For me, it is the first time I have ever lost a close member of our youth group to death; suicide or otherwise.

It still feels surreal.

I still can’t quite believe I won’t see him again, hear his laugh, or have a great conversation with him. I’m not sure it has really sunk in yet.

All death can create feelings of mourning and sadness, but suicide is different. It is so sudden, abrupt. You feel as if a piece has been taken out of you that will never be replaced. This bright, young life with so much promise is over.

Its a punch to the gut, because so many would have told him how much they loved him. So many people would have talked him down, or tried to stop him. The 600+ people who came to the viewing or the 200+ who attended the funeral I officiated would have told him they loved the beautiful, uniquely made child of God that he was.

Ironically, I was reading the book “Tuesdays with Morrie” two days before Adam’s death, and I highlighted this phrase in my Kindle, after Morrie attended a funeral of a friend, Irv:

He came home depressed. “What a waste,” he said. “All those people saying all those wonderful things, and Irv never got to hear any of it.”

Indeed. What a waste.

As I unpack the emotions involved with this sort of tragedy, I hope and pray that my story and advice may help someone else as they walk along those who deal with the ramifications of teen suicide, and hopefully, to avoid it.

There are no easy answers, but there are specific things you can do to lend effective pastoral care:
Give clear guidance & leadership to the family – in moments of trauma, surviving family members operate in a fog or shock. They need you, as the minister, to give clear and affirming leadership. Take as much off their plate as you can.


  • Keep your phone at your side at all hours – be ready to reach out, call, and text youth and parents at any hour. 
  • Run to God in your pain – encourage others to leverage their pain as a way to lay hold of God, and not the opposite.
  • Keep the focus on Jesus – if officiating the funeral, keep the focus on Jesus as the Good Shepherd, God’s loving sovereignty, and positive memories of the deceased. 
  • Keep the focus on love – people need to be reminded of why they are at a viewing or funeral: its because they love that person. All are gathered because they care, and that is to be celebrated. If you love someone, tell them immediately.
  • And mean it – Youth ministers and parents fight for teenagers daily and love them with a passionate love. Live each day to the fullest, and if God ever brings a teen to mind to pray for or reach out to, act immediately. Keep fighting for your kids, and “leave it all on the field” so that if suicide does happen, you can know you did all you could.
  • Mourn with those who mourn – don’t give advice and for goodness sakes don’t say “Everything happens for a reason.” Just be present and weep when you want to weep. 
  • Avoid “If only…” – it is so tempting to torment yourself with thoughts of “if only I had done this, etc”. I chose to affirm the fact that we have loved Adam well as a Christian community, which we have. Focus on the positive memories and how you have worked on someone’s behalf. Ultimately, the choice of someone to take their own life is just that: their own choice. Beating yourself up after the fact will not change what has happened. While incredibly sad that someone has taken their own life, there are also other potential suicides you have also possibly prevented over the years. If there is any positive side to “if only” thoughts, let it be an inspiration to reach out to teenagers that much more. God will do what is absolutely best – You will be asked the question, “Is he/she in heaven? Is he/she in hell?”. The short answer is: you don’t know. The long answer: God is perfect. Honestly, none of us really know at the time of death, especially in terms of a suicide where the profession of faith of the individual is in question. It is dishonest to give a false hope, or conversely, a false judgement. The grave is very silent and death is final on this side of eternity. What we can do, however, is trust in Jesus’ words, remember Jesus as the Good Shepherd, remember that a teenager is still a child, and that God will do what is perfect, just, loving, and eternally secure. We are not God, but we can trust in God’s perfect Word and God’s perfect character. 


I will always love and miss Adam. I will think of him for the rest of my life. He has made an indelible mark on my life.

Ministry and loving others is a risk. You never know what is going to occur.

However, I think we can all agree its a risk worth taking.

It is always better to love and lose someone than not to love at all.

Keep up the good fight.

Sunday, April 10, 2016

Epic Fail: how we can learn from our failures

Here is the transcript from the first message in our Epic Fail series:

When I talk about fails tonight, its about moral failures when we know we screwed up and can make it right..  I’m not referring to when someone you love gets sick, or passes away, or disaster.  Some things are not so simple they can be explained as “it happened for a reason.” Or that it happened “for our good”.

 Our moral failures, however, we can learn from.

The myth of “be safe”
We’re not talking about this to make anyone feel ashamed for failing.  We’ve all failed and will fail.   All of life can be a risk.  Its always better to try and potentially fail then not try at all. Where do we see Jesus praying this?  Where do we see him admonishing people to “be safe”?  
Where do we see the disciples or people in church history concerned about failure?   The possibility of failure is always present.  God doesn’t call us to be afraid of failure or to “be safe”, he calls us to be faithful, in prayer, willing to be used by God.

Some fails are avoidable.
If you are responsible at the beginning, some fails are avoidable. That's wisdom. Putting things off isn't just lazy, it's a spiritual issue. If you devote work for Christ you do it well and do it quickly.

Story. Me skipping school mom saw dad said "what if I skipped work everyday?" Burn. Fail would've been avoided if I was just faithful with my task, which was simple: go to school and do the work. Was it fun at the time to go to school?  Not always.  But it was certainly better than getting busted for skipping school and getting in trouble, that’s for sure.

When you fail, how do you respond?  
Feeling shame after we fail is to be expected, and shame doesn’t feel good.  You want to make it go away as soon as possible.  But running from your shame, and your failure, is one of the worst things you could ever do.  

We all fail:  don’t let shame hold you down.  What is shame?  Its our conscience helping us know right from wrong.  But what is our conscience?  

Don’t run from conscience.  Shame is God trying to get your attention to help you make better decisions.  Shame is how we can learn right from wrong.  Shame is not a bad thing.  Those who are wise and make good decisions are those who listen to God’s counsel through their conscience, through their shame.  Listening, and learning from, our shame can help prevent more failures in the future.  Is this easy?  Not at all.  Its actually one of the most emotionally difficult things to do.  
Its a choice to learn from your shame.  Its a decision to seek to grow in wisdom at any cost.  Its a choice to learn from shame, a choice that should come from your love for Christ.  You want to do better because your love him.  Don’t just learn from your mistakes because you have to.  Do it because you want to honor God in all that you do and because you love Jesus.  

Failure is how we learn
Crosby scholars and my dad story - failed, grounded for 73 years, no (home) phone, super tense.

The Bible is full of flawed people who made mistakes and God used them anyway.

God is with you.  Remember God’s character
Deut 31:6 - Be strong and bold; have no fear or dread of them, because it is the Lord your God who goes with you; he will not fail you or forsake you.”

Psalm 111:2-4

2 How amazing are the deeds of the Lord!

   All who delight in him should ponder them.
3 Everything he does reveals his glory and majesty.
   His righteousness never fails.
4 He causes us to remember his wonderful works.
   How gracious and merciful is our Lord!

God has never failed and will never fail.  It can be hard to imagine someone who has never failed.  In fact, everyone you know has failed at one time or another, but God hasn’t.  

In fact, if you truly believe in God, failure should not even be in your vocabulary.  Total failure sounds like there is no hope, no future, no silver lining, but for those who know the Lord, we know that our failures are not the end.  God is with us in our failures.

Let’s look at the ultimate epic fail, or so it seemed to everyone at the time:  the cross.  When Jesus was given a fake trial and crucified, it looked like the biggest epic fail in history.  The movement was over, his followers were scattered, all was lost.  Then God proceeded to take what looked like death, and turn it into life.  Not only was Jesus raised from the dead, God then poured out the Spirit on the early church, as you heard this morning in Sunday school, to bring radical change to the world.  

28 We know that all things work together for good for those who love God, who are called according to his purpose. Rom 8:28

When you’re in the midst of a gigantic fail, its very hard to see anything positive out of it.  But if you keep faith, and trust God, God can use it for the good
- this applied to Jesus as well.  

Jesus was faithful to God to the point of death, whatever the cost.  Clearly in the garden of Gethsamane the night before, as he prayed all night long, Jesus was struggling.  He felt the weight of what he knew he had to do, and was so crushed the Bible says that blood emitted from the pores of his skin.  Jesus was willing to fail in the eyes of the world because 1) he was faithful to the will of His father and 2) he knew our sin had to be atoned for.  

Jesus willingly entered into this “ultimate fail”...out of love.  

What failures are you struggling with?  How is shame holding you down?  Accept the forgiveness of God and move on.  Shame can force us to pick our offering back up and hold onto it again.  You are forgiven.  Leave it on the altar.  Confess your failure and keep on moving.  

Maybe someone has failed you.  God calls us to forgive them.  Forgiving someone won’t change the past, but it can change your future.  God’s forgiveness can turn your fail into a bright future.

God doesn’t want you to stay stuck in your yesterday.  He want to set you free for today and tomorrow.  

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