As I type these words, it has been exactly one week since my mother passed away.
Since the dawn of time there have been folks who were “taken up” with
the consideration that, given the right circumstances, the dead would
find a way to come back and make themselves known to the living; with
mixed results, I might add.
Harry Houdini promised his wife that
after his demise, if it were at all possible, he would find a way to
grace her presence with his presence one last time. And although the
troubled woman hosted séance after séance, the world famous magician
failed to master his greatest trick of all.
My grandmother told a
story that shortly after the passing of her brother, she heard footsteps
on one end of the house, and the stride seemed like that of her dear
brother, Russell.
My own mother claimed that she awoke from a nap
one afternoon, a few days after the death of my father, only to cast her
gaze on a wicker rocking chair in the corner of her bedroom. She was
both startled and comforted to see my father in the chair. And while he
never said a word, his countenance was aglow, and he wore the most
joyful smile on his face. A few seconds later, the manifestation (if
that is what it was) disappeared.
One of his staff members tells a poignant story about Elvis Presley.
It seems Elvis was laid out in an open coffin in the Peacock Room at
Graceland the night before his burial, and those nearest and dearest to
the rock star kept a constant vigil throughout the wee hours of the
morning. And not unlike Harry Houdini, Elvis had promised his family and
friends that if it were possible, he would, in one fashion or another,
“show up” after his death.
As dawn gave way to morning light, Elvis’
“band of brothers” prepared to move the casket to the waiting hearse;
which lay just beyond the front door. It was all they could manage, but
the eight pall bearers managed to squeeze the heavy casket through the
narrow front door.
Suddenly, as the pall bearers navigated the
steps leading down to the awaiting hearse, the air resounded with a loud
“Pop”; like the sound of a rifle shot. And as members of the funeral
party raised their heads upward, a large tree branch fell from 30 thirty
feet above, landed on an awaiting car, and came to rest just behind the
funeral vehicle. (There was not a trace of wind at the time, and upon
examination the limb was found to be green and healthy).
And as the startled crew gained their composure, “The King’s” right hand man marveled, shook his head, and exclaimed,
“So you had to have the last word, huh, Elvis?”
King Saul was a prime example of a man who attempted to “conjure up”
the dead when he asked the Witch of Endor to supplicate for him to
Samuel the Prophet.
Lord Byron offered a poignant comment on 1st Samuel, Chapter 28 when he said,
I have always thought this the finest and most finished witch scene
that ever was written or conceived, and you will be of my opinion if you
consider all the circumstances of the actors of the case, together with
the gravity, simplicity and density of the language. It beats all the
ghost scenes I have ever read.
I don’t know what you believe about
life after death, and the remote possibility the dead can come back and
flit unseen around those whom they loved in life. But I am convinced
that the appearance of a deceased loved one is less an If, than a When;
among some who are left behind. To be sure, I am just as convinced that,
as Christians, we should not fall victim to this mentality.
While
scripture is crystal clear about the practice of conjuring up departed
spirits, and attempting to interact with them who have stepped across
the threshold which separates the living from the dead, nonetheless, I
am thankful that many have experienced some ethereal occurrences which
were seemingly sent as some sort of initial and momentary assurance that
a loved one had successfully negotiated the journey from this life to
the next.
By William McDonald, PhD. Excerpt from (Mc)Donald's Daily Diary. Vol. 40. Copyright pending
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