Summary: Funeral sermon for Melvia Jean Harrison, victim of interstitial lung disease.

“Bless the Lord ... who heals all your diseases.” What an

astounding claim! What an extravagant promise! The Lord

heals all your diseases. Not some of them, not most of

them, but all of them. Do we believe that? Do we think that

is true?

Then, if the Lord heals all our diseases, what about Melvia

Harrison’s disease? Why did not the Lord deal with

interstitial lung disease? Can we who knew and loved Melvia

Harrison bless a Lord who heals all diseases, but who

missed this one?

True, we have gathered today not so much to wrestle with

theological questions as to say farewell. We have come

together not for a seminar in logic or a short course in

theology, but we are here to hear good news and to be

assured of eternal life. Our minds are not set for dealing with

unanswerable questions today. Nevertheless, the issue

lingers: can the Lord heal all our diseases? Melvia Harrison

believed it and prayed for it. Some of you sat with her in her

living room, as did I, and prayed with her toward that. “All

your diseases” – is it empty promise, claiming too much; or is

it a precious reality we have not understood? “All your

diseases” – is it breezy salesmanship from the Lord, like the

used car salesman who promises that his wares will run

forever? Or is it something more profoundly true than we

have ever thought? We deserve to know. And Melvia’s

memory is best honored by discovering the “allness” of all!

The Psalmist seems very committed to “allness”: “All that is

within me, bless his holy name .. do not forget all his benefits

.. who forgives all your iniquity, who heals all your diseases.”

Is there truly good news in this “all” business?

I first came to know Melvia Harrison as more than someone

sitting in our pews when I visited with her as she was

considering membership in this church. She had been here

on several occasions, and I had noticed her. She was not

hard to miss, with the breathing tubes and oxygen tank. I

wanted to respond to her interest in our church, and I wanted

to know more about her health concern.

I found out that Melvia Jean Harrison was a great deal more

than a sick person. She was not going to be defined by her

disease. She was going to be vastly more than a person

whose options were limited by illness. She was going to be

far more than someone struggling for the breath of life.

Melvia Harrison did not define herself as nothing more than a

suffering patient; she saw herself as one who was being

healed and becoming whole. In our visit, Melvia told me

about her disease only because I pressed her for

information. But she was far more interested in talking about

other things. She was clear that I was there to meet Melvia

Jean Harrison, the whole person, and not just Melvia the

bearer of breathing tubes!

Does that give us a clue about the God who is presumed to

heal all our diseases? Listen to the way the Psalmist points

to the allness of God.

I

“Bless the Lord, O my soul, and do not forget all his benefits

– who forgives all your iniquity.” God’s desire for us to be

whole begins with His intention to deal with all of our spiritual

sickness. God forgives all our iniquity; God deals first with

our spiritual disease.

I trust that no one will think me guilty of lack of respect if I

speak of Mrs. Harrison as in need of forgiveness, because all

of us are in need of forgiveness. The Bible says that “all

have sinned and come short of the glory of God”. There’s

that “all” word again. There are no exceptions. All have

sinned, all need forgiveness. But hear the good news: the

Lord forgives all our iniquities.

Melvia Harrison found that. Her heart yearned for a profound

and life-changing encounter with the living God. Like more

than a hundred members of this church, Melvia worked

through a discipleship course called, “Experiencing God”.

This course forces anyone who participates to examine his

own heart, to scrutinize motives, and, above all, the

“Experiencing God” course focuses on obedience – knowing

and then actually doing the will of God for your life. Melvia

worked through “Experiencing God” and there renewed her

confidence that God had dealt with her, not just out here on

the surface, but down at the very core of who she was. God

had dealt with the issue of sin.

If God is going to heal all our diseases, He must begin with

all our iniquities. He must begin with our spiritual selves.

Nothing else really happens until that is done. So today we

are grateful that God’s allness forgave all her iniquities.

II

But God did something more for Melvia’s all. He not only

forgave all her iniquities; He also redeemed her life from the

depths of despair. He brought her back from disappointment

and frustration. The Psalmist puts it in a very picturesque

way; He says that God “redeems your life from the Pit”.

Isn’t that graphic? Doesn’t that say it all? We speak about

something being “the pits”. When something is just awful,

excruciatingly bad, the worst, we say it was “the pits”. I’ve

heard people talk about their work that way – my job is the

pits. I’ve listened to people describe their houses that way –

my basement is the pits. They mean that there everything

has deteriorated so far they cannot imagine it getting any

worse. The lowest of the low. The pits.

But God redeems your life from the Pit. Melvia was

determined that her life be useful and positive. Sick as she

was, she focused on the needs of others and did her best to

serve them. Some of us would go to console her – two of

our deacons brought her Communion only a few weeks ago

– and she would say, “I want to help”. “I can bake

something. Do you need a cake for some occasion?” Melvia

had discovered, with the help of the Lord, that the way to

climb out of the emotional pit that sickness wants to dig for

you is to focus on the needs of others. If you plant yourself

in a pity party, you will plummet to the pits pronto! But if you

plant your feet on higher ground and focus on what you can

do for others, the pits will turn to lofty planes.

This truth the Lord put deep into Melvia’s hear. He

redeemed her life from the Pit. If God is to heal all our

diseases, He begins with all our iniquities, and then He

works with all our disappointments. God’s allness redeemed

her from the Pit.

III

But there is still more. Still more to God’s all. God has

promised to deal with all our iniquities, all our despair, and

more, God has promised to deal with all our relationships.

With all our loneliness. With all our anxieties. The Psalmist

is quick to say that the Lord “crowns you with steadfast love

.. He satisfies you with good as long as you live”.

The Lord “crowns you with steadfast love”, for He knows that

we are made for fellowship, and that we cannot live without

someone to care for us. He “satisfies [us] with good as long

as [we] live”, for He knows that we must matter to somebody.

We need to know that when all is said and done, there is

someone there for us, and we are not alone. Steadfast love

and satisfaction.

Family, thank you for your presence for Melvia. Thank you,

Mr. Harrison, for more than forty years of marriage, faithful

companionship, quiet, steady, unassuming presence.

“Steadfast love” – constant and certain. It’s so important. It

was God’s gift for her and for you.

Thank you, Christopher and Andre and Michael, for your

exceptional devotion to your mother. She spoke of you

often, with great affection. She was proud of your

achievements and astonished at your strength. You stayed

by her side and treated her with tenderness. You were the

instruments through which the Lord crowned her with

steadfast love. You were the marks of her satisfaction. We

honor you for that.

And thank you, people of God, who embraced her in this

fellowship. Melvia came to us looking for a church that

would reach out, express concern, demonstrate interest, and

connect. You did that. Some of you had known her from

your nursing profession connections; many of us knew

others of her family already in this church. But all of us

reached out, touched her, embraced her, and she felt at

ease in this spiritual family. She felt satisfied here. Thank

you, people of God, who were the channels for God’s love.

Through all of you, God gave His allness. He filled up an

empty soul, He fueled a starving heart, He crowned Melvia’s

life with steadfast love. He satisfied her with good things as

long as she lived.

Conclusion

But still .. all your diseases? Have we dealt with that issue?

It may be that God dealt with all of Melvia’s iniquity, forgiving

her completely. It may be that God dealt with all of her

despair, redeeming her life from the pits by pointing her

toward serving others. And it may be that God dealt with her

need for love and satisfaction by surrounding her with family

and church. But what of all her diseases? He heals “all your

diseases.” That promise lingers.

Friends, God has not promised that this earthly life will

persist forever. God has not built us to remain in this frame

of dust endlessly. We do not like to think about that, but it is

true. The youngest and the most healthy of us will someday

face mortality. God has said, right here in this Psalm, that

“he knows how we are made, he remembers that we are

dust” But then it says that, “ the steadfast love of the Lord is

from everlasting to everlasting on those who fear him.” This

life is brutally short, but the love and care of God are not

limited to this life alone, but are from everlasting to

everlasting.

Brothers and sisters, remember today that God, who has

done all this, is able to do even more. Remember that God,

who has forgiven iniquity, is able to provide freedom forever.

Remember that God, who has redeemed despair, is able to

give complete joy. Remember that God, who has

surrounded us with steadfast love, is able to hold us into

eternity. Remember that God, who gave life, who created

this mortal body, has promised, in Christ Jesus, the gift of a

new body: imperishable, undefiled, whole, without pain,

without suffering, without shortcomings. God has declared,

no more sickness, no more pain, no more suffering, no more

dying. All diseases healed. All. For “the steadfast love of

the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting on those who

[fear] Him.”

Family, trust God today. Because Jesus Christ is raised

from the dead, I know that Melvia too will live. Because she

trusted this Christ as her savior, I know that she will be with

the Lord forever. Because she came to God in faith, hearing

His word, sharing with His people, and, most of all, because

she believed in the allness of God, today He has healed all

her diseases. And He can heal all of yours too – your

heartache, your sorrow, your disappointment, your doubts,

your fears. All. All. Only trust Him, only trust Him. All your

diseases.