Sunday, 25 January 2015

Rodney Joseph Wilkins 25th January 1939 to 27th June 2012. A Eulogy.

Here is the text to the Eulogoy I gave at my Dad's funeral in 2012, its been 2 and a half years.


Hello, and thank you all for coming today. I have always thought of funerals as a time to pay tribute. A time to remember and A time to grieve. It is part of the processes of coming to terms with loss, My Father impacted us all in various amounts and various depths, some here will be in deep mourning, others are here to show respect, whatever the reason, however he may have impacted your life, we thank you for coming.

(I am aware of all that my Father was, I lived under his care for 18 years, and knew him for 50 years; today I choose to honour him and to speak only well of him.)

He would have been quite happy to admit he was born into poverty, in an East end family, to very young parents, born at the end of the world’s worst ever depression and with a world war looming less than a year away.

Uncle John could probably give us a bit more detail, I wasn't there and Rod did not talk much about his childhood, he talked about playing on derelict bomb sites, rationed chocolate, he remembered owning his first pair of underpants and the lows of going to school before his Mum could afford to buy him any, he loved his little brother and looked out for him, That may sound like a bleak childhood, and my brief account hides the bleakest facts in the family home, he wouldn’t want me talking about them today, in spite of all this, when he did reminisce, he spoke quite fondly of those times.

He signed up to the RAF in 1958, he got married in 1959 and he never returned to London to live, in 1962 he made Harlow his home, for a man that was happy to embrace change, I was always surprised he never moved home again, he told me he would die at home and true to his word he did just that.

How do I remember him?
  • He showed me how to draw world war two fighters,
  • He had an encyclopaedic knowledge of world war 2, he had a lot of knowledge about lots of things,
  • He had strong teeth and a full head of hair, David and I are grateful for genetics,
  • He wasn’t much for fun and games but I remember He was the King of Space hopper races in our home, undefeated from 1970 until 1973.

For holidays we camped which he quite liked, later we caravanned which he loved. There was often a car that needed fixing; his, Mum’s, mine, David’s, my Grandad’s, a neighbours, a friends, a friend of a friends. There was nothing he couldn't take apart, mend and put back together, when my aged Vauxhall Viva’s engine threw its big ends (or something) he had a second hand engine sitting in the garden, it hadn't worked for years, but it gave my Viva another 2 years life. He wouldn't take any money for the hours of hard work. Until quite recently if you needed the engine mounting bolts loosened he was your man, he was unnervingly strong.

He was a dog lover, maybe we get to keep our pets in heaven and he is up there now with the string of dogs he owned, Lucky and Trixie, Sally, Gunner and Kizzie, even though he didn't do the feeding or the dog walking or playing fetch, they all seemed to gravitate towards him, though that may be because he didn't do the rotten stuff either, like taking them to the vet or wash them.

He didn't have that little voice inside our heads that says; ‘actually this is dangerous’ for instance he had a hankering to take up scuba diving again. So instead of taking the normal route, lessons in a swimming pool etc. he made himself a wet suit, constructed a re-breather devise that seemed to involve Potassium Superoxide, he melted down lead and poured it into moulds to make weights, cut out and glued his own wet suits and away we went, our young men/ young women’s activity to a water filled gravel pit near Dobbs Weir must count as the most dangerous youth activity ever put on by Harlow ward but also the most memorable.

At various times in his life he built model aeroplanes, messed about with walkie talkies, he loved fighter jets and motor cars and on the rare occasion he read a book it would be science fiction.
He used his diving skills to great effect working as a diver on the North Sea and in the Middle East, he apprenticed as a car and van mechanic but was at various times a fireman (in the RAF), he worked in the Construction industry, sold caravans, encyclopaedia’s, freezers and power tools, he ran a crane business and a car repair business  and he’d give up a job on the flimsiest of pretexts and he would usually get another one, even in the most difficult of economic times. Until quite recently he drove a mini cab which still sits on the hardstand in Fullers Mead.

In 1967 he opened the door to the Mormon Missionaries, that simple act changed the lives of many people, his wife, his children, his brother and cousin who he introduced to the church, also other people we have met along the way on missions, in congregations, in our homes. He struggled with the many rules and regulations we have in this church but the scriptures teach us ‘How great shall be your joy if you bring in one soul to our Fathers Kingdom,’ Rod’s actions in his younger days have brought in dozens to the Lord’s kingdom, for this I hope God’s mercy and love have extended to Rod.
If there is a welcoming committee when we get to the other side he will now be reunited with his cousin Ray, his two brothers Charlie and Jimmy, his Mum and his Dad (though on opposite sides of the room), Joyce, Charlie, Gladys and Mac.

He will by now know the answers to some of the questions that have perplexed us all throughout our lives, the true nature of God, the creation of the world, Gods plan for our happiness throughout eternity, on a lighter note he will have learnt that football not formula one is the greatest sport of all time. 

He would have been furious that he missed the British Grand Prix and delighted to have missed the entire Olympics and the rest of our damp summer, no more caravanning holidays for the Wilkins family.

Of all the men I have known, he has probably spoken the fewest words, infuriating at the dinner table, but useful when trying to watch the news, In his last few months I spent more time with him than ever before, his eyesight was so poor, his strength and mobility drained away, we had no option but to talk. We talked about the past, about his Grandchildren, 6 wonderful young people he was very proud of, his two boys whom he found it so difficult to tell them he loved, his marriage which he admits he made a mess of, Molly who he loved and we talked of death which he was ready to embrace and we talked about God and what he could expect to see when he left this world.

For Rod religion and our relationship with God was mostly a theoretical concept rather than a lifelong devotion, he did believe in an afterlife, a judgement and an Eternal reward, he did not walk in the ways of this church, but he was never more than a few footsteps away, a sinner who needs the Lord, just like the rest of us.

There is a life after this one, It is my belief and conviction that we will rise up, at first without our mortal bodies and go to place of peace and rest, eventually to be resurrected. This understanding did not come easily to me, it came by prayer and study and personal revelation.

"For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, who so ever believeth in Him shall not perish but have everlasting life.” John 16:3

1843  William. W. PHELPS TO JOSEPH SMITH: THE PROPHET.
VADE MECUM, (TRANSLATED.) GO WITH ME.

Go with me, will you go to the saints that have died,—
To the next, better world, where the righteous reside;
Where the angels and spirits in harmony be
In the joys of a vast paradise? Go with me.

Go with me where the truth and the virtues prevail;
Where the union is one, and the years never fail;
Not a heart can conceive, nor a nat’ral eye see
What the Lord has prepar’d for the just. Go with me.

Go with me where there is no destruction or war;
Neither tyrants, or sland’rers, or nations ajar;
Where the system is perfect, and happiness free,
And the life is eternal with God. Go with me.

Go with me, will you go to the mansions above,
Where the bliss, and the knowledge, the light, and the love,
And the glory of God do eternally be?—
Death, the wages of sin, is not there. Go with me.
Nauvoo, January, 1843.

Conclusion; I will miss you Dad, Rod believed we would live on, God’s mercy extends to all and all will return to live in God’s home and under His protective care, Jesus taught us that in Fathers house there are many mansions, my mother taught me that one of those will be a place of healing and another teaching, Rod will need to spend time in both, when he has and we can all see the finished article, all of Heaven will sit up and take notice, A choice spirit has returned.


Looking round his home, I was reminded of that C.S. Lewis quote “Has this world been so kind to you that you should leave with regret? There are better things ahead than any we leave behind.”  It is clear to see possessions did not mean anything to him, some worn out clothes, reference books gathering dust since his eyes became too weak to read, an old car on the hardstand, very little for a sentimental soul like me to take away as a memento, how do I keep his memory alive? I will remember and repeat the family stories we all like to hear and to tell, funny stories, cute things the grand children said and did, memories of pets and people. I’ll say things like ‘I remember when Dad was alive….’ And we as a family will keep him here until we are all reunited in Christ, I invite you all to do the same.