I stared out of my hotel window, some random raindrops hitting the glass. I was looking down on the seriously overcrowded streets of Port-au-Prince I had just left. From one perspective I could see some stately mountains and the Caribbean Sea, but my eyes kept returning to the flood of people walking. I was pretty sure they weren't wearing fitbits or counting their steps, this is the way they live their days, walking.
And so the existential shock I anticipated began to hit me. I was in a different world again. Bringing 75 young girl dresses for a medical missionary to distribute in hospitals and orphanages had been a fair warning that my heart would be vulnerable.
The first blow to my heart happened that morning at the boarding gate at Orlando International Airport. Glancing through my texts, I saw the note about Dell's passing. I was still in disbelief when Kevin's voice rang out, "Well, how is Bishop Buffington this morning?" I looked up, tried for a smile, and stammered, "Shocked, stunned. He was 100 years old but strangely he wasn't supposed to die."
Here's a clip from an August 10, 2004 letter Dell wrote to me:
"Dear, dear Carl,
You have been besieged with such oppressively serious stuff, recently, I would like to throw at you something on the lighter side-maybe even a chuckle or two. Please give serious consideration to my death and memorial service.
First of all I have no plans of dying soon nor, as far as I know, does God. In recent times, considering the way things have been going, I have from time to time thought I might avoid dying but I figure so many more things apparently must happen before Jesus returns, the odds are I won't last that long... now, when I do kickoff, regulation burial is not in the cards for me..."
God love you,
He was one who clearly walked with his Lord. He had a refreshingly joyful and quiet confidence about him. For a season, Thom Shaw and I would meet him for a breakfast at a diner on Fairbanks Avenue and we would leave filled, uplifted, and refreshed. I'm thankful for the few precious steps I got to share with Dell on this earth.
I still haven't heard the details of his last step here and first step into the fullness of the Kingdom, but somehow suspect it was not unlike Enoch's:
"Enoch walked with God; then he was no more, because God took him away." Gn 5.24
In Thanksgiving for the life of Dell Loyless,