Ms Smith,
Charles Austin and I have been ordered not to respond to each other's posts, directly or indirectly. So, I will await your response.
It is I who used the phrase, "step aside," not Pr. Kirchner. From a previous post in response to something that Father Slusser wrote, I responded: : Thank you for sharing this. I do agree that it is very appropriate for a family member, who is ordained, to be invited to preach and/or preside at the funeral - even if it means that the parish pastor step aside.
So, are you suggesting that in such a case the parish pastor should step aside or not? How about in this situation?
"In a most difficult time, the death of a loved one, the community, under the guidance of the pastor, works to be present with the family in their grief and attend to their needs even if this may mean that the pastor step aside to allow someone else to allow someone else to take a role in worship."
In such a case should the parish pastor step aside or not?
Oh dear! I thought I was simply clarifying a point of authorship. First, and now very clear to me, "step aside' was a misstep on my part. I write for a few organizations and I tend to be less formal on this Forum.
The example above is exactly what I was pointing to in suggesting that a pastor may allow an ordained family member (of a denomination with whom the church has pulpit and altar fellowship) have a role of the funeral service, if the parish pastor believes that it is within the wishes of the family and will help the family. My point was that the funeral service is not one of the regularly scheduled services of the congregation. The members of the congregation may - or may not - attend the funeral. But even if members of the congregation do attend, the community is usually quite different than the Sunday morning community. Given how difficult it is to suffer the death of a loved one, the pastor may do certain things to accommodate the family and one of those things may be that s/he invites another ordained pastor (that is, family member) to have a role -- preach/preside/read or some combination thereof.
I shared the story of a family who did not see eye-to-eye with the pastor and (as I've seen happen with 'legacy' memberships, e.g., parents, grandparents) the family simple called in two other clergy when their daughter died. In another situation, a toddler died in a tragic accident in a congregation in NY. The person who had been pastor to this congregation had, months earlier, accepted a call to another congregation and a new pastor was already in place. The family reached out to their former pastor and she declined, telling the couple that they needed to be under the care of the new pastor. I'd say she was spot on.
That's what started all of this Pastor Kirchner. How far, if at all, does one go in helping a family in a time of grief.
I will say that I can't imagine anyone other than my pastor - and I've several close friends who are pastors as well as having served as deacon to Bishop Stephen Bouman - presiding and preaching at my funeral.