Saturday being the day of Sabbath rest, we Orthodox often have memorial services this day, and pray for those who rest in death, waiting for the Resurrection. For that reason I thought to share these words spoken at a funeral earlier this year. But also, my parish has seen two of our community fall asleep in death this month, and we are feeling the sorrow right now. Read on to hear what the rabbis say:
“If you have a heavy heart and are grieving, that is OK. We weep for those we love and who have loved us. One hears from time to time: ‘Oh, you should not cry. He is in a better place.’
But Christ God Himself wept at the death of his friend Lazarus. And the rabbis say that God weeps at the death of every human being. So, don’t be afraid to weep.
“You can also hear it said among some Christian groups: ‘Oh, that is not Father Anthony. He is with the Lord! That is just a shell.’ I ask you then who is that there in our midst?! You see, to be a human being is to be a soul enfleshed, that is, a soul wrapped in a physical body. Angels do not have bodies.
“The tragedy of death is that the union of soul and body is torn asunder! That is why Christ died a real human death, and rose from the dead as a real human person, his body and spirit united again. Fr. Anthony’s body is as much Fr. Anthony as is his soul which awaits the last day when it will receive a new body.”
-Archbishop Benjamin at the funeral of Father Anthony Karbo, March 2024
Memory eternal!

Thank you for these words.
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Grieving doesn’t operate on cue. You go with it when it hits the hardest. I find the holidays are often a season of sorrow — that’s a lovely way to put it.
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I’m glad you have shared this beautiful description of our lives, our souls and bodies. I’ll be saving it.
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I think that on those special days like Thanksgiving and Christmas we miss our loved ones that have died even more than usual.
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Yes.
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