New Jersey sheriff’s funeral Mass shows Church’s development of approach to suicide
CNA Staff, Feb 6, 2024 / 07:00 am (CNA).
The tragic suicide of a beloved sheriff in a small county in New Jersey shows how the Catholic Church, which once banned Catholic funerals for those who died by suicide, now responds to suicide.
“Suicide is a human tragedy that shakes families and shatters hearts,” Paterson Bishop Kevin Sweeney said in a statement to CNA following the death of Passaic County Sheriff Richard Berdnik. Hundreds gathered at the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in the Diocese of Paterson for the wake and funeral of the sheriff, a Catholic and fourth degree Knight of Columbus.
Berdnik, who had more than 40 years of experience in law enforcement, died last month from a self-inflicted gunshot to the head.
The rector of the cathedral, Monsignor Geno Sylva, knew Berdnik and his family for many years. He gave the homily at the funeral Mass last Wednesday. In it, Sylva recalled “our sheriff” working on fixing the HVAC unit before his nephew’s baptism in the same cathedral.
“As we gather here today, it is not about the sheriff getting into the side panel of a heating system to fool with its mechanics, but it is about recalling how Richard Berdnik got into our hearts to change our lives,” he said at the funeral on Wednesday.
Sweeney offered the commendation prayers at Berdnik’s funeral.
“In the face of tragedy, mercy is the healing promise of God,” he said in a press statement. “Our first priority is to protect the sacred gift of life. A close second is Christian determination to be instruments of God’s mercy for the broken and despairing.”
“While the Church has in the past forbidden Christian funerals and burials for those who take their own lives,” Sweeney noted, “developments in modern psychology indicate that emotional imbalance, grave suffering, or fear more often than not diminish responsibility for such a desperate decision.”
For the majority of the Church’s history, those who died by suicide were buried in separate, unconsecrated plots and were not granted Catholic funerals.
The practice has since changed, with a growing focus on suicide prevention and mental health support.
Suicide rates have increased since 2000, according to one study by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. About 1 in 5 Americans reportedly live with some form of mental illness, and as of 2022, more than 4% of Americans above the age of 18 report suffering from depression.
The Association of Catholic Mental Health Ministers (CMHM) is one ministry in the Church dedicated to helping parishes and dioceses establish mental health ministries by providing free resources.
Deacon Ed Shoener, co-founder of CMHM, knows firsthand the importance of providing good pastoral care in the face of mental health crises. His daughter Katie, who struggled with bipolar disorder, died by suicide in 2016.
“It’s not that uncommon, sadly, for families to be affected by suicide,” he told CNA. “So, when Katie died, I thought it would be good to be very open about it here in our small town of Scranton [Pennsylvania].”
Shoener, along with family and friends, founded The Katie Foundation in his daughter’s honor.
“There’s a lot of work that needs to be done in pastoral care for people [who] live with these conditions,” Shoener said. “I would love to see the day come, some day, when people who have a mental health condition or mental illness think that the first place they should go to, after seeing a professional, for spiritual support, is the Catholic Church — that the Catholic Church will be known as the place that understands mental health, mental illness, and knows how to support people and guide them through this.”
Shoener’s hope came a little closer to fruition recently as the Vatican held its first conference on mental health ministries last week in Rome.
Shoener, who attended the event and met Pope Francis, gathered with other mental health ministers from countries around the world, including the U.S., Moldova, India, and South Africa.
While spiritual ministry is not a substitute for professional mental health care, Shoener noted that it should not be neglected.
“We’re mind, body, and spirit, and we do a fairly decent job of dealing with the mind and the body, but all too often the spiritual lives of people experiencing these illnesses get cut short. It doesn’t get the attention it needs,” he said.
In addition to other free materials, Shoener, along with the chaplain of CMHM, Bishop John Dolan of Phoenix, co-wrote the book “When a Loved One Dies By Suicide.” The two also worked on a film series based on the book in the hopes of reaching more people.
Shoener noted that there are still places where people with mental illness are “not understood,” so the ministry helps address this stigma.
“We accept people the way we are,” he said. “If this schizophrenia doesn’t go away, that’s fine; come on into the Church. We still support you and love you. If your depression is overwhelming and you can hardly pray, please, come into the Church … That’s what this ministry is about, is providing spiritual support and letting people know that they’re loved.”
The judicial vicar of the Diocese of Paterson, Father Marc Mancini, shared how the Church has developed its teaching on suicide in the recent past, noting how No. 2283 of the Catechism of the Catholic Church “truly captures the shift.”
It reads: “We should not despair of the eternal salvation of persons who have taken their own lives. By ways known to him alone, God can provide the opportunity for salutary repentance.”
“Suicide is a complex matter,” Mancini explained. “Because the person is overwhelmed with sadness and pain, he or she does not execute a fully discerned and truly free decision to suddenly conclude his or her life.”
“The sanctity of life is primary, as taught by the Church,” he added. “Always. Nevertheless, the Church also has taught, as truly just is our God, his mercy is beyond human understanding and endures forever.”
Source: https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/256743/new-jersey-sheriff-s-funeral-mass-shows-churchs-development-of-doctrine-on-suicide
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That is the God affect to show the evil doers in public for men to make a choice go along with evil or expose the evil upon all man kind while the Catholic Church Pedophiles who praised even Hitler are now out in the open and it is not the Church but the Evil that has taken over and Good man must remove it
Our Lord Jesus Christ, during His agony in the garden at the beginning of the Passion was certainly tempted to commit suicide in view of the bitter calice He was about to drink. There is no doubt that the devil was whispering to shorten the anguish. Jesus even ask the Father to possibly take away this terrible cup, but Our Lord did as God wanted, which was to drink the bitter calice until the end. So Our Lord did not commit suicide and consumed the sacrifice of Redemption. That’s the only lesson to all Catholics. This lesson of redemption was imitated by all the saints in their respective martyrdom, which martyrdom were all, without exception either violent or lancinent. All martyrs have certainly performed a much lesser work of redemption than Our Lord’s but they did their best, including the great martyrs such as St. Stephen or (yesterday’s feast) St. Agatha, or again St. Maximilien Kolbe who took the torture as a trade for an other.
Acting as a genuine Catholic to the best of one’s ability is named a “co-redemptor”. Being a co-redemptor as an imitation of JCOL is what makes a saint. Someone who dodges pains & sufferings given by God is the opposite to a redemption for both one’s self as well as for the others. An individual who commits suicide, missed a godly opportunity to re-purchase his own, or several souls. This is why the RCC condemns suicide.
The philosophers have predictably found excuses. The mystique and suspicious Marthe Robbin claimed that a…
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The philosophers have predictably found excuses. The mystique and suspicious Marthe Robbin claimed that a relative of hers who committed suicide might have been forgiven due to a wishful sorrow at the instant of the pulling of the trigger (of a hunting shot-gun). Some creative theologians have put words in the mouth of St. John-Marie Vianney (the Curé d’Ars) who supposedly explained that an individual jumping off a bridge might have had time to repend during the seconds prior hitting the ground down below. This may explain fervent prayers, but does that permit a requiem mass? Certainly not! since it sends a confusing message to the entire body of the Church. The current antipope has already send such a confusing message that “suicide in order to avoid torture” is permissible. Well! go tell that to the real saints in heaven, and even to Our Lord Jesus Christ! Especially now that euthanasia begins been discussed by the fathers of the Church, which evidently has become a counter-church.
This high visibility funeral mass to a suicided is a scandal and no matter the big words of neuro-science & the human respect attitude, the one who laughs nastily is Satan, because if once he failed in the garden of Gethsemane, and during two thousand years thereafter, he finally has achieved his goal at gaining countless souls for his hellish kingdom.
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SECOND COMMENT: Suicide is obviously a demission to a God given opportunity at participating to the vast work of co-redemption of the communion of the saints. The Redemption is a purchase in the form of a barter: The sins offend God, the sufferings which is endured with joy by a mortal is a pay back. This is hard to accept this reality in our soft world, but this is the whole of Christianity. Jesus Christ did that. He suffered infinitely by leaving heaven in order to lodge into the womb of a woman, who became the New Arch of the Covenant. Him who is the infinite God suffered a nine month long confinement; then He grew as an infant to a child and to an adult. He was contradicted for 30 years and 3 months and died on a Cross. That was Jesus Christ’s barter. He is the Redeemer for the whole world because He suffered with grace, and since He is God He became the Redeemer of the entire human race, under some conditions which we all know: Jesus Christ asked the disciples to “imitate the master”. That is what the Church is all about. The RCC is not a bureaucratic institution filled with cushy careerists in mitre and round collars. It is to imitate the master, that is enduring some sort of “a” martyrdom: Blood martyr as Jesus or St. Dismas (the good thief) or white martyr such as the Virgin Mother of Christ or the other Maries standing at the foot of the Cross is a part of the communal work of Redemption which represent a sacrifice pleasing to God. Dodging either martyrdom…
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… Dodging either martyrdom for His Christ is cheating God. More so! Our Lord said that “Once you take the plow, there must not be any turning back”. Someone who prefers an expedient suicide as opposed to a God’s given cross is verily “turning back”.
I wished not having to use such rude analogies, but, please see my strong words as a charitable reset to all erroneous modernist ideas, which are the devil’s poisonous suggestions in disguise.
Saint Romuald, abbot & follower of St. Benedict -feast day February 7, please pray for us. Amen.
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