Set your affairs in order, for you are going to die. You will not recover from this illness. 2 Kings 20:1 NLT
Handling final affairs can be sobering but helpful.
Sometime before my father died, he arranged most of his final
affairs. Although he never visited the funeral home and selected a casket, he
did have his order of service mapped out, as well as a burial site chosen. This
made it much easier on Mom and us boys when he died.
Later, when Mom remarried, she and her new husband went even
further. Even though they decided to keep the original burial plots they had
selected from previous marriages, they redrew their wills. Mom, too, has
planned out her funeral service. The only thing we three sons will have to do
is choose her casket.
Finalizing our final affairs isn’t pleasant, but it’s wise.
King Hezekiah faced his mortality when he became deathly ill. Isaiah the
prophet visited him and told him to arrange his affairs. He would soon die.
A loved one’s death is taxing on a family. Having a will made
so a particular state can’t take what doesn’t belong to them—or so the family
members won’t get bottled up in legal battles as they divide the loved one’s
estate--is vital. What a will states doesn’t always please family members, but
having one is still more advantageous than not.
Picking out a burial plot and then taking a trip to the
funeral home to select a casket and make arrangements to pay for final affairs
isn’t a bad idea either. No one enjoys facing their mortality, but already
having the final details taken care of gives the family more time to grieve
properly.
Whether or not we want it to be, life is brief—even when it’s
eighty or more years. Anne Bradstreet, one of the two noted poets from Puritan
America—in writing of the death of her grandchild—wrote:
Or sigh thy days so soon were terminate
Sith thou are settled in an everlasting state.
Though life is tenuous and uncertain—as is proven every day
by terrorist acts, natural disasters, and other tragedies--we don’t have to
live with fear. Bradstreet concluded her poem with the line: “Is by His hand
alone that guides nature and fate.”
Planning your final affairs is prudent; ensuring your life
is securely in God’s care is even more so.
Father, knowing life is precious but brief, help me to live
prepared to meet you.
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