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Funeral For A Gardener
Contributed by James Jackson on Jan 11, 2022 (message contributor)
Summary: This was a funeral sermon I preached for a dear woman who was known in the community for her beautiful garden
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Lee Ann, thank you for helping us get to know your mama a little better. Both you and Gena shared so many stories about your mom. They say a good eulogy makes the people who knew the person glad they did, and the people who didn’t wish they had. Your family has done that so well.
There are others that have shared tributes and memories. On the tribute wall on Ridout’s website, Yvonne Evans wrote, “Sherry’s friendship was one of my life’s great blessings. I have so many memories of happy times we shared. Love and prayers to her family—she cherished you all.”
And Diane Lively, Sherry’s niece, wrote, Let me tell you a little bit about my Aunt Sherry!! I have been truly blessed to have her as my aunt for 54 years! Not one time in that period of time have I had not felt her love for me and our family! She always had a smile on her face and we have nicknamed her and her two sisters the giggle girls! My heart is truly broken but I know that she is in heaven with the ones that went before her! What a celebration that must be! I love you and I miss you already Aunt Sherry!! God truly blessed me with an aunt like you!
I can tell you personally what a blessing Sherry was to me. I first met her when I was on staff at First Baptist Church across town. She was always faithful to come to my Sunday school class. When Glynwood asked me to be their pastor, Sherry started coming here, and she jumped in so quickly that it was like she had always been here. She hardly ever missed a Wednesday night prayer meeting, even though the plastic folding chairs hurt her back. When she told me that, I wheeled one of the nicer chairs from my conference room into the Fellowship Hall.
One Wednesday I forgot to do that. And as I was talking to someone else, I heard the sound of an office chair being rolled across the tile floor. I looked up, and here came Sherry and Olivia, rolling their chairs around the corner from my conference room. I apologized for forgetting, and they were like, “Don’t worry! We’re good!”
I would always see the twinkle in Sherry’s eye. I knew she loved to laugh. When LeeAnn and Gena told me that their mama would always let them play in the rain when they were little, I had no problem believing that.
I know Sherry loved to travel. She and David had invested in a time share vacation plan while the girls were growing up, and some of their fondest memories are those times in Florida, the Grand Canyon, New York, Hawaii—you guys really went everywhere, didn’t you? And even in her later years, Sherry still loved to travel. She went to Scotland with a First Baptist group just a couple of years ago, and she loved being involved with the senior center in Prattville, taking multiple trips with them.
But one of Sherry’s greatest passions was gardening. She was a Master Gardener, and until David passed away a few years ago, their home in Prattville looked like a page out of one of the Southern Homes and Gardens magazines she and her sisters would pore over together. One of the daughters told me, “Now we’re going to have to Google the gardening advice we need.”
Because there were wildflowers, tomatoes, azaleas, roses, all nourished from a natural spring that fed into a pond on their property.
And that’s an image I want us to think about as we think about Sherry’s relationship with Jesus. I’d like to read Psalm 1 to you. Psalm 1 is written about a man’s growing relationship to the Lord. But because I believe it describes Sherry so well, with your permission I’m going to change the pronouns.
Psalm 1:
1 Blessed is the woman
who walks not in the counsel of the wicked,
nor stands in the way of sinners,
nor sits in the seat of scoffers;
2 but her delight is in the law[b] of the Lord,
and on his law he meditates day and night.
3 She is like a tree
planted by streams of water
that yields its fruit in its season,
and its leaf does not wither.
In all that she does, he prospers.
4 The wicked are not so,
but are like chaff that the wind drives away.
5 Therefore the wicked will not stand in the judgment,
nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous;
6 for the Lord knows the way of the righteous,
but the way of the wicked will perish.
When Sherry was around twelve years old, she trusted Jesus as her savior and Lord. At that point, she became like that tree planted by streams of water. That’s how Jesus described himself. He said, “I am living water, and if you drink from me, you will never thirst again.”