A Tribute

Judith Mills Gray, 2009

The death of a friend always covers life with a hazy gauze of disbelief for some time. In my fitful career I’ve taught several hundred students, and of those several hundred a handful have become friends. When the painful debacle of Nashotah House took place and I was reduced to a weeping mound of incoherent impulses, those who were friends tried to console me. Some had fortunately moved on by that point. Judith Mills Gray was one of those who had become a friend although she had made it to safety before me. Readers of this blog will likely not recognize her name—she never earned lots of money, the measure we use assess a person’s importance these days—but she was an artist, a deeply spiritual woman, and one of the kindest people I have ever known. In a day when the seminary actively discriminated against women, she managed to hang onto a place among the boys and did so with good humor. After my short stint as Registrar, she came along to lift that burden from my shoulders. When she left the seminary, my tiny family sat in her tiny house and wished her the joy that Nashotah could never offer.

Just two years ago we went to visit her in her native West Virginia. She was proof to me at that point that recovery from institutional abuse is possible, but I could see there were still scars. Many of those who suffered through years at the seminary left very bitter—I count myself among them—but Judith rose above it all. She was not perfect—none of us are—but she was a person determined to leave this world a better place than she found it. That is a tall order when the church, the putative bastion of good, turns all its guns on you. As Judith and I shared what would become our final reminiscences together, I sensed that ultimately she had come out the winner.

We are all born into a life with far more questions than answers. Jesus seemed to have had the idea that it was good to console those in difficulty, heal wounds, and try to make your fellow sojourners happy. Judith followed that path without the benefit of having the answers. Along the way we shared many laughs and quite a few tears. We both had experienced the face that the church carefully hides from the wider public, the face that finds Jesus a little too idealistic and hate and revenge a simpler and more effective option. Judith never returned hate for hate. She continued trying to find a path where, although not ordained, she could still minister to others. For those few of us fortunate enough to know her, she was an example of how to make gold out of lead. In my case, I know that there will be lead in my life for quite some time now that she is gone. I also know that lead can, and sometimes does, turn to gold.

13 thoughts on “A Tribute

  1. Martha Berger

    Thank you for singing the praise of this woman – whose presence was somehow larger than life to me. Not because of flamboyance, but because she was so very true/real. I am grateful she was solace to you, over the years, and in the shadow of the valley of death (NH).

    Like

  2. Vicki Natzke

    Thank you for sharing your thoughts about Judy. She was always available to listen when times were tough and rejoice when they were not.

    Like

  3. Nicholas Gray

    Thank you so mutch, I have enjoyed reading this tribute to my Mother. I know how much your friendship meant to her, she spoke of you offten in our conversations. I appreciate your kindness and honesty, the Nashota years were definently difficult for her but I know they were some of her best. I know, because nothing else had ever challenged her in such a unique way. My mother had this amazing abilty to listen and communicate with everyone. I can say she never met a stranger. She will be greatly missed by our family.

    Like

    • Steve Wiggins

      Thank you, Nicholas. Our thoughts are with you in this difficult time. In our time together at Nashotah Judi frequently mentioned you and Harper–I know she thought the world of you. Her impact on those around her was larger than I think she ever realized.

      Like

    • Scott Waters

      Nicholas, Thanks for forwarding this to me. I was shocked to see that your Mom had passed away. What a fabulous woman she was. Seeing her picture takes me right back to you and I in High School together. She was so generous and kind to me and I will never forget the fun I had spending time with you and her back in Nashville. You are in my prayers Nicholas. I will be thinking of you a lot in the days to come.

      Like

  4. Pingback: RIP | The Lonely Goth's Guide to Independent Catholicism

  5. R Christopher Heying

    I am so thankful for this beautiful tribute to Judi, who from the moment we met until the moment she died was my friend. The tributes to her genuineness on right on the mark. She was as real as they get, a mark of her spirituality to be sure but so also of her gift for hospitality, a welcome into her home (where I sipped many a scotch and slurped not a few cups of coffee through the years). Through the most difficult years of my ministry, Judi was always there, ready to talk, to assess, to suggest creative possiblities but mostly to be fully present with me and to love me. I feel greatly blessed to have known her and for her being a godmother to my daughter Mary Grace. Though thankful that her suffering has now ended, I am going to miss her terribly even as I know through faith that she now takes her place among a great cloud of witnesses who not only watch but encourage us. Thank you so much, Dr. Wiggins, for your spot-on tribute. She was thrilled beyond words that you and your lovely family were able to visit her in Helvetia, time she treasured always. May she rest in peace and rise in glory!

    Like

    • Steve Wiggins

      Fr. Heying,
      Thank you for your kind words, but more especially for being with Judi at the end. We should all be fortunate to have such a true friend at our side when the end comes!

      Like

  6. Betty Roberson Fisher

    thank you so much for writing such a wonderful tribute to a woman who touched me in several wonderful ways. She showed me how to laugh when things seems dire and to believe that the right thing to do was the only way! I will always remember Judi with a big smile on my face and a grateful heart! God Bless You Judi.

    Like

    • Betty Roberson Fisher

      thank you so much for writing such a wonderful tribute to a woman who touched me in several wonderful ways. She showed me how to laugh when things seems dire and to believe that the right thing to do was the only way! I will always remember Judi with a big smile on my face and a grateful heart! God Bless You Judi.

      Leave a Reply Cancel reply

      Like

  7. Cindy Lou Mills

    I thank each of you who have responded to Steve’s blog and to you, Steve, for posting it. It has taken me a while to post my own response, as I have been in the process of intense emotional healing regarding the death of my sister. She was my truest friend as well as an incredible, creative, spiritual sis. It was my honor to care for her here in Nashville while she withstood multiple invasions to her body, both from the cancer and from those wonder-workers at Vanderbilt who worked diligently to help her have as long and productive a life as absolutely possible. We knew from the get-go that her cancer, short of a miracle, was not operable, but that surgery could help ease her pain and allow her more adventures…And adventures we surly had. Her spirit and psoitive attitude toward all that was happening to her never faltered and was extended even to the individuals who tended to our needs and cared for her in the end.

    I was the one who was more often than not reduced to a blubbering mass of emotions watching someone I loved so dearly physically deteriorate over the course of the year that she lived with me. We were both blessed with a network of folks who were new and old friends and to have become involved with an amazing little parish, St. Marks. These folks fully embrased us although new to their fold, and wer instrumental in making Judi’s final month on earth a blessed experience. Judi and I had everything we needed at all times, except, of course, her physical health. To all those who were involved in her life and death I owe you my heart and forever gratitude. Judi was, indeed, a special and unique woman who managed to touch each life with whom she came in contact.

    Last Saturday, following her death on June 1st, I had a great need to run away to the WV mountains we love so dearly, and to Helvetia and Blue Rock, where I could lick my wounds and move toward healing from such a great loss in my life. It is from this beautiful place that I am finally able to respond to this communication. On the morning of the day Judi’s mind left me on this earthly plane to explore places I could not go and see people I could not see we had our last morning coffee and sister-chat about the trip we would take to Helvetia and to Blue Rock in the next week. I guess she knew that her body could not withstand such a journey, although planned and desired since the day I moved her from the mountain, and that it was time to escape the pain and physical discomfort that has become her body. I miss her, but on her death bed I promissed her that I would live for the both of us, and I certainly intend to keep that promise.

    I can never say thank you enough to those who called and spoke to Judi, even though she could not respond in those final days, and to the special angels (you know who you are) who helped keep our last year together full of spirituality, love, and community, whether long distance or face-to-face in our home.

    To my sister I say “you will forever go where I go…I love you, and miss you with my entire being, but you have left me in good hands”.

    If you wish to do something in honor of Judi, please make a donation to Alive Hospice in your area, or to the one in Nashville that took care of Judi. I know she would appreciate this.

    Love to all,
    Cindy

    Like

Leave a reply to R Christopher Heying Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.