Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Mother sues priest after he said her teenage son’s suicide was ‘against God’ at funeral

Lawsuit claims father whispered ‘please stop’ to reverend during speech

Marisa Iati
Wednesday 20 November 2019 18:17 GMT
Comments
Linda Hullibarger has accused the church of irreparably harming her family with an 'insensitive' homily
Linda Hullibarger has accused the church of irreparably harming her family with an 'insensitive' homily (Getty/iStock)

Your support helps us to tell the story

From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.

At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.

The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.

Your support makes all the difference.

The homily at Maison Hullibarger's funeral began typically enough: the priest acknowledged the anguish of the 18-year-old's parents and asked God to use his words to bring them light.

Then the reverend Don LaCuesta's message took a sharp turn.

“I think that we must not call what is bad good, what is wrong right,” Mr LaCuesta told mourners at his parish in Temperance, Michigan.

“Because we are Christians, we must say what we know is the truth - that taking your own life is against God who made us and against everyone who loves us.”

Jeffrey and Linda Hullibarger were stunned. They had not revealed how their son had died outside of a close circle of friends and relatives, but Mr LaCuesta went on to say the word “suicide” six times and suggest that people ending their own lives was an affront to God.

Nearly a year after Mr LaCuesta presided over the funeral on 8 December 2018, Linda Hullibarger has filed a lawsuit against him, Our Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic Church and the Archdiocese of Detroit, alleging that the homily irreparably harmed her already devastated family.

The action filed last Wednesday elevates to the legal realm the Hullibargers' ongoing effort to seek greater accountability from the archdiocese.

“That funeral was not for our son, not for our other kids, not for my family,” Linda Hullibarger told The Washington Post.

“In my opinion, he made our son's funeral about his own agenda.”

Melinda Moore, a co-lead of the faith communities task force at the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention, said faith leaders are important partners in preventing suicide and responding when it happens.

She said homilies like Mr LaCuesta's reflect the stigma that suicide still carries in faith communities and often reinforce loved ones' feelings of responsibility, shame and anguish.

Ms Hullibarger alleges in her lawsuit, filed in Michigan state court, that Mr LaCuesta's homily caused that type of heartbreak after she and her husband turned to their long-time parish for comfort.

Mr LaCuesta failed to show compassion when he met the couple to plan the funeral, the lawsuit says, and instead went right to talking about the church's availability.

The Hullibargers told the priest they wanted the funeral to celebrate the life of Maison, a freshman at the University of Toledo who was studying criminal justice. The couple also wanted the funeral to spread a positive message about kindness to others, and the lawsuit says Mr LaCuesta agreed to the requests.

The parents did not disclose how their son had died, nor did the priest ask, according to the lawsuit.

After hundreds of people gathered at the church for the service, Mr LaCuesta said in the homily that God could forgive suicide as he forgives all sins when people seek his mercy. He said God could judge someone's whole life without considering only “the worst and last choice the person made”.

“Because of the all-embracing sacrifice of Christ on the cross, God can have mercy on any sin,” Mr LaCuesta said, according to a copy of his homily published by the archdiocese.

“Yes, because of his mercy, God can forgive suicide and heal what has been broken.”

Mourners were visibly upset to learn the cause of Maison's death, according to the lawsuit.

Jeffrey Hullibarger approached the pulpit and whispered to Mr LaCuesta to “please stop” talking about suicide, the lawsuit says, but the priest did not change course. He allegedly finished the service without letting the family read their chosen scripture passages or say final words about Maison.

Other people later told Linda Hullibarger that they had heard similarly insensitive homilies about their loved ones from Mr LaCuesta, the lawsuit says.

The family met with Archbishop Allen Vigneron and Bishop Gerard Battersby but was dismissed, according to the lawsuit. Mr Battersby allegedly told Linda Hullibarger to “let it go.”

The family called for Mr LaCuesta's removal, but the priest told his parishioners that he preferred to stay and to serve the parish community. He remains listed on the church's website.

Linda Hullibarger told The Post that she thinks the homily posted online was a more caring version than the one Mr LaCuesta actually gave. The archdiocese declined to comment on that allegation.

Archdiocesan spokesperson Holly Fournier declined to comment on the lawsuit but pointed to a statement that the archdiocese made in December to apologise for hurting the Hullibarger family, rather than comforting them.

“We acknowledge ... that the family expected a homily based on how their loved one lived, not one addressing how he passed away,” the statement said.

“We also know the family was hurt further by Father's choice to share Church teaching on suicide, when the emphasis should have been placed more on God's closeness to those who mourn.”

The Catholic Church has long held that suicide contradicts the responsibility of each person to protect the life that God gave them.

Until the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s, people who killed themselves were not allowed to receive a Christian burial. The Catechism of the Catholic Church, approved by Pope John Paul II in 1992, maintains that suicide is “gravely contrary to the just love of self” but acknowledges that many people who end their lives have a mental illness.

“Grave psychological disturbances, anguish, or grave fear of hardship, suffering, or torture can diminish the responsibility of the one committing suicide,” the catechism says.

Many members of the clergy are inadequately trained on suicide and do not know how to help a deceased person's family and friends, said Ms Moore, who is also a psychology professor at Eastern Kentucky University.

She said faith leaders should listen to the bereaved, express condolences, refer to scripture for guidance and talk about how the deceased person lived - not just how they died.

“Saying that it's a sin, it's an act of the devil, imposing your own thinking on this and not really looking to your own church's teaching on this is something that I think faith leaders need to not do,” Ms Moore said.

The Washington Post

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in