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Only Online: In Memoriam
James William (Bill) Whedbee, Ph.D.
Nancy B. Lyon Professor of Biblical Studies
September 24, 1938-January 22, 2004
From Denise Bergez '77
My name is Denise Bergez. I was a student of Bill Whedbee’s in the
1970’s.
You would think that, as a former student of Bill’s, I would be here today
to speak about the intellectual vistas Bill opened up for me.
And it is true that, sitting in Bill’s Old Testament class, eager to
understand my Judeo-Christian heritage, I was inspired by Bill’s love for
the peoples of The Book and their great and timeless questions about the
meaning of faith, of suffering — of life. And I was excited by the tools
of biblical analysis Bill introduced me to.
But that was the only class I took from Bill. Alone, it does not explain
why I am here today.
There was the summer I had a work-study job creating an annotated
bibliography for Bill of what French Biblical scholars were writing about
the minor prophets. Sitting with my stack of books in the Honnold Library
those hot afternoons, I was so….BORED! But I didn’t dare admit it to Bill,
fearing I’d insult his life’s work. It was only the week before Bill died,
when I was visiting with Tamara, that I learned the liberating truth: Bill
was bored by that project, too! (I can just see Bill now, bent in laughter
over that one.)
Clearly, my academic career does not fully explain my presence here today.
What, then?
Was it Bill’s open-heatedness, his remarkable honesty about his joys and
his sorrows? (for he had a such large share of both) — ?
Was it his ability to laugh heartily, even as he winced, at his own
foibles?
I did not see Bill more than 8 or 10 times these past 27 years. Yet I came
away from each visit enlivened by having laughed – a lot! – and by having
shared something that felt very real to me, very true. Bill was like that.
Call it his quality of soul.
Then there was Bill’s faithfulness: the scrawled, almost illegible letters
arriving every few years. The invitation to his wedding to Tamara. The
phone calls out of the blue. Yes, the calls. I will never forget, and I
will always be grateful for, his call the night before his surgery last
summer. After more than a year of our not being in contact, he called to
explain his cancer and the upcoming surgery, and to say what we both knew
was an unspoken good-bye, just in case…
Surely, all of this should be more than enough to explain why I am here
today to pay tribute to Bill Whedbee. And yet, there is something deeper,
something beyond words…
Isn’t it just a little ironic Bill, given your passion to understand — a
passion that deeply touched my own — isn’t it ironic that in the end, I am
unable to fully explain the unfolding of a friendship that began in
embarrassed boredom in Honnold Library, and that has led me to this stage
today? I cannot explain it, except to say, as you did during our final
meeting, “Somehow, I always knew it was there.”
And I cherish this mystery.
Thank you, Bill. I love you.
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