New Church Life January/February 2016 | Page 36

new church life: jan uary/february 2016 these three; it was harmony. Harmony between faith and science; work and home; truth and love; harmony among people and harmony among species. Her learning to play the violin as a child taught her about how things work together to create harmony, and so did the diatoms of the Chesapeake Bay. And to keep things in balance and harmony you need to find their center. To Sherri that center was what she had found as a teenager. Keeping the Lord at the center helped her find a harmony of love and truth, religion and science, home and work. Now she, as the good benthic diatom she was, would never insist that others share her views. But her belief in one Creator led her to believe that all of creation, including humankind, and all creatures great and small, even in this world and the next, have a lot in common. In the sparkling diatoms under her microscope, in their selfless, angelic service to the planet, in the balance in which so many of them lived, in their variety and sheer beauty and amazingness, she saw divine and heavenly qualities reflected. All around her, in her husband and children, in faculty and students, in her friends, in the mud of the Pamlico River with its shells and stones and shark teeth treasures, in the richest of locations where the flowing fresh water meets the undulating salt tide, in simple sunlight and lifesustaining water, she saw the face of God. When it was time to go, she went peacefully. On Monday, November 23, although she had been somewhat agitated earlier in the evening, her breathing became calmer, then quieter, then intermittent. Dave and Zia and Anji by her side realized at 11:23 p.m. on 11/23 that she was no longer breathing. When the hour met the day and the day met eternity, she lay gazing steadily into a high corner of the room, with a peaceful expression and an inextinguishable light in her eye. (For information about the new Dr. Sherri Rumer Cooper Research Fund – and how to contribute to it – see pages 74-75, as well as the Bryn Athyn College website, www.brynathyn.edu.) In the sparkling diatoms under her microscope, in their selfless, angelic service to the planet, in the balance in which so many of them lived, in their variety and sheer beauty and amazingness, she saw divine and heavenly qualities reflected. All around her . . . she saw the face of God. 32