Thursday, February 25, 2016

Raphaël Picon

When news, good or tragic, hit us, we remember our surrounding with great precision. Where were we when a man walked on the moon… when we heard that lady Di had died… when we saw the images of 9/11 for the first time…

I was sitting with Irvin in a Starbuck in Orlando, in Florida, the day before we flew home. I was absentmindedly looking through facebook on my phone. On my French friends pages, I saw several times pictures of a young man with blond hair, smiling. Before I could even read the captions, I understood and felt my heart sink. Raphael Picon had died.


Raphael was a theologian and a pastor who had spent several years in the US with his family, pastor of an American church. He became a Professor and Dean at the faculté de theologie de Paris where I studied, arriving after my time there had ended. 
As a Dean, Raphael had quickly disentangled issues I had as I was trying to gather evidences of my credits. This allowed me to see my “Licence de theologie” validated as equivalent of a Master of Divinity, saving me from three additional years of seminary.  

I eventually met Raphael and his wife Cécile thanks to our common friend Olivier. Both of them worked with passion on the magazine Evangile & Liberté. We enjoyed several lunches and dinners together, meeting at the home of Olivier and Aurélie, the six of us abundantly talking about churches and seminaries, families, children and travels. Raphael and Cecile were fluent in English which helped Irvin to be part of the conversations.

A few weeks after our last encounter, Raphael found out that he had a brain tumor. Such a diagnosis could have created a total unraveling. Instead, he calmly started a treatment of daily chemo and radiotherapy while reading the drafts of his last book on Emerson “le sublime ordinaire” (daily or ordinary sublime). 

In a warm email, he thanked me for asking the prayer chains I belong to pray for him. One of his friends had slipped a prayer for him in the Western Wall in Jerusalem, he mentioned. Those initiatives meant a lot to him. But after those months of harsh treatments, another tumor was found and this time was not operable. From then on, news never ceased to be bad news. Until now.

I wished I could have gone to the memorial services and to the ceremonies at the Faculte de theologie. I thought a lot – I still do – about Cecile. We share the same first name, and years at the same high school although we did not know each other yet. Thanks to Olivier, I was able to read the testimony of his oldest son, who is 15, which ends that way:

“My father accepted his illness naturally as well as his upcoming death. And he did so for us, for the livings. He never expressed any concern about our future, the future of the four of us. He never gave us advice, because he trusted us, his “ordinary sublime”. He was convinced that life would resume if it had even ever stopped. He fully accepted suffering and death, to the point he led us in forgetting about it – and maybe forgetting it himself – in an ultimate and eternal gesture of life.”

What is a blessing? Irish poet John O’Donohue says it is “a circle of light drawn around a person… a gracious invocation where the human heart pleads with the divine heart. When a blessing is invoked, a window opens in eternal time.”

The life of Raphael, his books, his family and the memories he left behind are such blessings. The windows he left open for us have sowed and enriched our existence.