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Introduction

When we think of Dolly Parton, we often picture a larger-than-life persona: a country music legend with an undeniable presence, warm heart, and unforgettable voice. However, like all of us, she’s given some thought to the inevitable – and her choice of funeral song may surprise you.

In a world where many gravitate toward songs that reflect lasting love and heartbreak, Parton’s choice is deeply rooted in family, faith, and sentimentality. The country icon has expressed a strong wish for the hymn “If We Never Meet Again” to play at her funeral, a song that takes on personal significance due to its religious origins and its connection to her family’s history.

During a 2014 conversation with Entertainment Weekly, Parton candidly shared her hopes, though she was not optimistic that her family would adhere to her request. “I’m sure they’ll be playing ‘I Will Always Love You’ when I die, just like they did with Whitney Houston,” she said, referring to the iconic ballad she wrote and made famous. “When they picked her coffin up and started in on that song, I started to cry, and I thought, ‘Oh my Lord.’ That’s when it hit me that she was really gone.”

Despite this inevitable association with her most famous song, Parton’s heart remains tied to “If We Never Meet Again,” a moving country-gospel tune that reflects the idea of reunification in heaven. She explained that it was a song her father adored, and it was also sung at his funeral in 2000. Parton’s connection to the song goes even further: decades before her father’s passing, she included the very same lyrics in her 1974 track “Sacred Memories”, from her album Love Like A Butterfly. In that song, Parton sings:

“If we never meet again this side of heaven,
I will meet you on that beautiful shore,
Where the charming roses bloom forever,
And where separations come no more.”

The lyrics reflect her spiritual upbringing and connection to her family’s church, where she first discovered music. For Parton, this song not only ties into her religious roots but also encapsulates the love and bond she shares with her late father. It’s a poignant and fitting tribute to a life well-lived and a legacy that will continue on in the hearts of those who knew her best.

As she expressed, she hopes that this hymn will be sung as she “waves goodbye to planet Earth,” a gentle reminder that her life, like the song, has come full circle. For the woman whose music has touched so many, it is only fitting that her final moments be underscored by the song that connected her to her most cherished memories.

Video

Lyrics

Soon we’ll come to the end of life’s journey
And perhaps we’ll never meet anymore
Till we gather in Heaven’s bright city
Far away on that beautiful shore

If we never meet again this side of Heaven
As we struggle through this world and its strife
There’s another meeting place somewhere in heaven
By the side of the river of life
(Where the charming roses bloom forever)
(And where separation comes no more)

If we never meet again this side of Heaven
I will meet you on that beautiful shore

Oh, they say we shall meet by the river
Where no storm clouds ever darken the sky
And they say we’ll be happy in Heaven
In the wonderful sweet by and by
(Where the charming roses bloom)

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Vince Gill has 22 Grammy Awards. Twenty-two. More than any male country artist who ever lived. But ask him which song of his career means the most, and he won’t mention a single trophy. He’ll talk about a funeral. In the mid-’90s, Gill was carrying something heavy. His brother had passed, and a close friend — a young man with a whole life ahead — was gone too soon. Gill sat with that grief for years before he turned it into music. What came out wasn’t a country song in any way people expected. It was a hymn. Barely any drums. Just that Oklahoma tenor reaching so high it felt like the man was trying to hand-deliver the words somewhere past the ceiling. Nashville heard it and didn’t know what to do at first. Country radio wasn’t sure where to put it. But people at funerals knew. Churches knew. Families burying someone they loved too much knew. The song won CMA Song of the Year. George Jones requested it for his own memorial. Vince’s wife Amy Grant — herself a music icon — once said she still can’t hear it without stopping whatever she’s doing. Gill has played this song at hundreds of funerals over the years, sometimes flying across the country just to sing it for a grieving family. He never charges a dime. “If that song can bring somebody five minutes of peace during the worst day of their life,” he told a reporter once, “then it did more than I ever could.” Twenty-two Grammys, and the song that defines Vince Gill is one he wishes he never had a reason to write. Do you know which song that is?