BELMONT, Miss. (BNC) by Adam Cozort — I have the honor of speaking at the funeral of a kind-hearted and generous sister in Christ who passed on to her reward Sunday night, at age 87. Nothing came easy for Sister Norma Taylor.
She worked hard through many situations that would have brought down other people. She raised six children and two of her grandsons after they lost their parents. She was humble and generous, sometimes to a fault, but her love for her family and her fellow Christians was never questioned.
In the time that I knew her, Sister Norma had a phrase that she used regularly that truly embodied her approach to life.
“It’s just one of them things,” she would often say.
That phrase would be uttered both in good times and bad. When encouraging someone else, or lying in the hospital dealing with her own problems. Whether talking to me about a lesson I had just presented, or dealing with some problem she couldn’t control, she approached them all with the mentality that life is “just one of them things.”
You see, Sister Norma understood that life is not about fair and unfair, nor does it set upon the point of only having good things happen in life. She understood that sunshine and rain come upon both the just and the unjust (Matthew 5:45), and that there are many things that are part of life that are outside of the control of we mere mortals.
Among the things that she discussed with me as “just one of them things” was death.
She knew that it was one of those things that comes to all men. While concerned for the welfare of her family, she did not fear death, for she knew she was ready to face that which comes to all of us. She understood the principle of Revelation 14:13,
“Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth … that they may rest from their labors; and their works do follow them.”
She had done everything necessary to prepare for the day that came on Sunday and could approach it with the same attitude as she had everything else in life.
I will miss Sister Norma. The conversations we had, the encouragement she gave, the calls to check on someone sick in my family when she was worse off than we were.
As I was preparing to speak at the funeral of her son a few years ago, I asked her if there was anything she wanted me to say. Her response was, “Tell it like it is, because some there might not get to hear it again and they need to hear it now.”
With that in mind, I must ask: are you ready for death? Do you know what God expects of you to be acceptable in his sight, and have you done it? Are you sure that what you currently believe is the truth, or are there questions in your mind?
Have you repented (turned away) of the sin in your life (2 Peter 3:9), and been immersed in water for the remission of your sins (Acts 22:16)? Are you living your life by walking in the light of Christ and letting him guide your steps (1 John 1:7; Galatians 2:20), or are you trying to walk your own path hoping that God will accept it because he loves you?
The Bible is clear about what God commands man to do in obedience to him, but they must be done while opportunity exists today. Remember, tomorrow is not guaranteed and death is “just one of them things.”
Are you ready? Are you sure?
Adam works with the Second Street congregation in Belmont MS. This article was first published on his weblog.
2016-03-17 at 8:40 am
May our dear sister rest in peace
She has live her life for God and her reward await her. Rest in peace dear sis! !