New Church Life January/February 2016 | Page 29

  :  .     and the values she strove mightily to achieve and uphold in her life. Let’s take faith and science as key examples. Now in many ways it seems as though faith and science are hardly on speaking terms in our world. Although they quietly get along in some areas, they are widely seen as incompatible. And some scientists even despise people of faith, and some people of faith despise scientists. Yet Sherri was strong in both faith and science. Let’s take her faith first. She grew up a Methodist, went to Sunday school, got confirmed; asked her ministers many questions and carefully pondered whether the answers made sense to her or not (most of them did!); she read the Bible; and as a teenager attended a youth camp and gave her life to Jesus. And she meant it and stuck with it. For evidence of the strength of her faith we need look no further than the way she carried herself during her terminal illness. She had a poise and calm, even an inner peace, and took all kinds of troubles in stride. When her doctors marveled at her attitude she told them that she knew that no matter how bad a given day was, a good day was coming soon; and she would focus on that. Her faith was beautiful and elegantly simple at its core, but it was no wooden or static thing; at the end of her life, after gaining much wisdom and experience, she was still actively pondering many deep questions. Yet she was also utterly devoted to science, deeply wedded to the scientific method, and delighted by all kinds of truth that could be unearthed from careful, disciplined study. And her hard work and stellar results made her a respected contributor to the field of science. To touch on an issue of balance within science itself, Sherri cared about gender balance. There is much Understanding how crucial diversity, evenness and balance were to Sherri helps us understand the choices she made and the values she strove mightily to achieve and uphold in her life. For evidence of the strength of her faith we need look no further than the way she carried herself during her terminal illness. She had a poise and calm, even an inner peace, and took all kinds of troubles in stride. 25