Monday, February 25, 2019

Rest in Peace and Rise in Glory Phyllis!


Homily for the Repose of the Soul of Phyllis J. Onechyk

February 23, 2019 – St. Paul’s Episcopal Church Sacramento 

The Holy Gospel                                                                                                      
 Matthew 5:1-9

When Jesus saw the crowds, he went up the mountain; and after he sat down, his disciples came to him.  Then he began to speak, and taught them, saying:
 “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
 “Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.
 “Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.
 “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.
 “Blessed are the merciful, for they will receive mercy.
 “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God.
 “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.
Today we gather to remember our dear Phyllis Onechyk.  It is never easy to see such a gracious lady leave our midst, but she was ready to go.  Phyllis passed away on Christmas day shortly after receiving the last rites of the church.  Exactly as she wanted.  However, I have to say that this service is not exactly something that Phyllis wanted.  She did not want us to make a fuss over her death.  She told me in no uncertain terms many years ago that I was to hurry up and get ordained so that I could do her simple graveside service.  That is all she wanted.  Small and simple.  At the time I told her that would not work. I told her too many people loved her and would need to gather to share in our loss.  At which point I got the Phyllis look – Chris and Joe know it well.  It’s the exacerbated mother look.  I continued to say that I would be happy to do the small graveside service first, which I did, and hopefully she would be ok with a larger gathering at the church later.  To which she agreed.  So here we are.

The lessons today are perfect in so many ways for Phyllis.  Although I have to admit I was a little surprised by the reading from Proverbs.  That is until I read it in a different translation.  Phyllis would always comment to me how she liked to read the Sunday lessons in the Authorized version – also known as the King James version, because she loved the poetry of the Elizabethan English.  And the current translation used in most Episcopal Churches can be a little devoid of the original Poetry.  To remedy that I turned to a newly release translation of the Hebrew Bible by the renowned Jewish scholar Robert Alter.  One of his goals was to render in English the poetry that is in the Hebrew.  His translation starts the reading from proverbs this way:

“A worthy woman who can find?
            Her price is far beyond rubies.
The heart of her husband trusts her,
And no prize does he lack.”

And that certainly describes the Phyllis that I knew.  A woman whose value is far beyond rubies.  Phyllis was a woman that loved in such  amazing ways.  Phyllis was a woman that supported people in a quite and yet fierce way.  Phyllis was not just a goer to church, she was not a seat warmer! Phyllis was one who lived the Gospel.  She was one who preached the Gospel at all times – and as attributed to St. Francis – used words only when necessary.  I have so many stories to tell about my interactions with Phyllis that we could be here all day!  So I will share a few special ones that I have.

About ten years ago as I was helping Phyllis clear the altar vessels after a Sunday service.  She looked at me as said.  “Rik would you hurry up and get ordained a priest.  I am ready to die, and I want you to do my service!”  At that point I was not even officially in the process to become ordained.  And that is a long story in itself.  Suffice it to say that my path to ordination was not an express lane type of journey.  It was more like wandering on a lovely English lane stopping for tea and visiting with the locals.  At that time I told her that she would have to live a bit longer if she wanted to wait until I was ordained as I was not back in “the process”.  And as you might guess I once again got the “Mother look.”  For in Phyllis’ mind there was no doubt that I should be ordained – even if there was doubt in my mind.

Phyllis was a woman of great faith.  It was at times a quiet faith – one that tried to stay out of the spotlight.  Many years ago Phyllis took a spiritual gifts Lenten study course that I co-led with Loreen Kleinschmidt.  One of the goals was to take a Myers Briggs type personality test to help identify ones spiritual gifts.  During the sharing of the gifts surveys Phyllis announced that she did not have any spiritual gifts.  Someone asked her what the survey said.  She said is indicated she had the gift of faith.  At which several people announced that indeed she did have the gift of faith!  And furthermore if they were in the hospital she is the one they would want to visit them.  Forget the clergy they wanted Phyllis!   I think she was a little shocked at this revelation.  And for a while she did go on home communion visitations with other members of the congregation.

Her gift of faith for years now has been a ministry of feeding and listening.  Before I was ordained I took over from Lynell in officiating at the Wednesday noon service.  It was a service of noon day prayers with an emphasis on healing.  Wednesday was also that day that the Altar Guild would come to clean brass and tidy up during the week so I had a ready-made congregation. 

Shortly after I started officiating those services Phyllis approached me and asked if it would be OK to have a light lunch after the service.  I replied that I thought it would be wonderful to which she said she would make it happen.  And she did.  The first few weeks were what I expected.  Subway type sandwiches cut up with chips and soda.  Then things changed.

Phyllis noticed that many of the people who she was feeding with these lunches where unhomed and likely did not get regular meals.  So the “simple lunch” morphed.  Suddenly instead of simple sandwiches, Phyllis, with the assistance of Chris, Joe and Sue, started bringing in full lunches.  Homemade shepherd’s pie, spaghetti with meat balls, baked beans with ham and many more – not exactly lite fare.  And it always came with vegetables, a roll, and something sweet for dessert.  The lunches then moved from the back of the church to the parish hall.

Once in the parish hall we would leave the noon service to find places set at tables and Phyllis insisted that our guests be served – not wait in line like a soup kitchen but be served like guests in one’s home – for Phyllis they were guests in God’s home and she wanted them to be treated as beloved children of God.

Phyllis’ feeding grew our noon service – and she also took on feeding people on Fridays after that service too.  We went from a noon service with the altar guild and a few unhomed folk to a service with up to 25 people where lunch was served to 30 or more.  For many it is likely the only home made hot meal they get.

Phyllis would always sit quietly to the side and make sure that everyone got their fill.  She would engage all sorts and conditions in conversation and listen to them and offer unconditional love.  Phyllis would give hugs to people that many would, like the story of the good Samaritan, cross the street to avoid.  One Wednesday – after this had been continuing for several years Phyllis said to me.  “Rik – you know I was ready to die several years ago.  I was tired and ready to go.  But now I have found a new purpose and want to live a little longer.”

Phyllis continued with this ministry of faith and feeding – both feeding the physical and feeding the soul of so many people – right up until her final short illness.  Although I suspect in recent months more of the workload fell on her children Chris and Joe. 

Everyone loved Phyllis.  And Phyllis loved everyone.  Phyllis lived the beatitudes.  Not the simple sweet beatitudes that we can use to justify inequality by telling folks that it is ok that they are poor now because God will take care of them later.  No Phyllis lived the beatitudes in the radical way that Jesus meant them.  She lived them by helping to usher in God’s dream of love to this corner of 15th and J streets.  She helped God usher in God’s dream where all of God’s creation is good.  Where all of God’s beloved children are treated with respect and dignity – no matter their social status, no matter their income, no matter their ability to take showers!  Phyllis loved everyone.

Just this past Wednesday one of the homeless youth that attends on a fairly regular basis was not sure who it was who had died.  I showed him Phyllis’ picture on my phone, and he was crushed.  As he talked to me a tear escaped his eye as he said that she always treated him kindly.  Treated him with respect and love. 

There are so many more stories of Phyllis that can and should be told.  And I invite you to tell your Phyllis stories – as I know there are more that are out there.  There are stories about her time with family, there are stories about her time in the Federal prosecutor’s office in Sacramento – a time I know little about.  But I know she was loved by all who encountered her in the prosecutor’s office.  One of my yoga buddies asked me how I knew Phyllis after I shared the news of her passing on my Facebook page.  He shared how Phyllis took him under her wing as he started as a very green attorney after just a couple of years as a military JAG.

Today we gather to remember our beloved Phyllis.  We are here to shed a tear because our world has become a little coarser without her light.  We are here to mourn our loss not Phyllis’ loss.  Phyllis was ready to go home to the bosom of God.  Phyllis was part of this peculiar people we call the church.  We believe that while her mortal life with us is no longer that it has not ended but it has changed.  We believe that Phyllis has gone to that place “Where sorrow and pain are no more, neither sighing, but life everlasting.”

And I can just picture Phyllis in that place.  Insisting that everyone have a place at the grand banquet table and that they be served.  While I know that Phyllis, in the grand church of England and episcopal church stereotype, knows which fork to use at the fancy tables I see Phyllis heading over to find those who did not have that opportunity.  I can imagine Phyllis reuniting with her beloved husband and family.  But I also see Phyllis seeking out those who our society treated as outcasts.  I imagine Phyllis seeking out a young man who for a time lived in a tent in our parking lot and passed away much too young just days after Phyllis’ passing.  I see her sitting down at the great heavenly banquet surrounded by family who have gone before and also all those that our society saw as outcast, people our society has treated as the other. 

Phyllis worked, in her own quiet way, to help bring about the promise of the beatitudes in our world.  And now I see Phyllis helping God make sure that they are fulfilled in the world to come.

Today we gather to remember our beloved Phyllis.  She was so many things to so many people.  She was a ray of God’s light to so many in the darkness.  We will miss Phyllis.  It is my hope that those of us that have been a recipient of her love and her light will follow in her footstep.  That we too will find ways to bring a ray of light to our world.  That we will work to bring love to this world even as we mourn our loss at Phyllis’ death.

Amen.