"Some of you lingered among the sheepfolds, and you found a dove's wings covered with silver, its feathers with yellow gold." Psalms 68:13.
We had mournfully returned to my fathers house off US27 a mile outside Williston, to finalize the moving of his belongings. In March we had come to Orange Hill Cemetery, to lay my father, The Rev.Luther Ray Stokes, in one of the many plots he had purchased years ago. My father had moved from Crawfordville, Florida some ten years earlier to Williston, no doubt in preparation for his final resting place.
As I opened the door into his house, the small wren-like bird flew around the foyer and into the blinds, tired from his long confinement. I was able to easily take the bird from the blinds in his weak state and take him outside. There, he looked about the yard in seeming wonder on my fingers, in no grand hurry to fly away.
I let him sit as long as he chose, before in unusual manner, he cocked his little head at me, as if to communicate something, then flew up into the dogwood tree.
I knew of my fathers love for the outdoors, the many times, in Williston and at Crawfordville, he would just sit and observe from his porch or garden, the wonders of God's creation. With his passing went so much knowledge of the outdoors from gardening to the wildlife, I so miss today.
This past week, we were again called to Williston and Orange Hill, this time to lay to rest, my wife's youngest full sister, Melissa at age 43. Devon, Melissa's sister Kim's daughter, told this story. The day following the funeral, Devon was at her grandmother Billie Earl's house in Williston, and went into the utility room off the carport. There, in the blinds, was this small hummingbird, with gold breast feathers and dark wings. In his weak condition, Devon was able, like I was, to capture the little bird, which rested in her hand for a moment before flying off outside.
When I heard of this, I thought back to the bird in my father's house, and like him, Melissa too was a lover of all creatures and things at a disadvantage, wanting in some way to help.
Then there was the third manifestation at the cemetery the day of Melissa's burial. This young man, dressed in all black, going by the name of Gibson, rode in the funeral procession with the lead sheriff car. At the cemetery, he went over to my wife saying he knew she was the one most hurting, that he wanted to tell her that Melissa was OK, handing Melanie a funeral obituary scribbled with mostly scripture verses. And then he was gone. No one knew who he was.
I venture to say, in the two birds and the mysterious man in black, we were witness to the presence of the Lord's ministering spirits. They are all about, usually in plain view from our blinded eyes. Blessed are we when we perceive or gain a glimpse into their ministering work.
