Hummingbirds are also associated with the dead because of their ability to hover in place while they drink nectar from flowers. The Hopi people believe that when a hummingbird dies, it becomes a spirit guide for humans on earth.
The hummingbird is a symbol of joy and freedom, but also of death. In Greek mythology, the hummingbird was a symbol of love and happiness. It was believed that this tiny bird could bring joy to anyone who encountered it.
Bible Verses About Humming birds
The hummingbird is a tiny bird with a big personality. It’s one of the most beautiful creatures on earth, with iridescent feathers and a long tail that can be beat more than 50 times per second. These tiny birds are also among the most well-known symbols in the world.
Hummingbirds have been associated with many things throughout history, including love, war and death. Here are some Bible verses about hummingbirds:
The hummingbird is a small bird that can fly fast and hover in one place. They are often seen visiting flowers for nectar.
The hummingbird is one of the most popular birds in the world and has a long history of symbolism. The Aztecs believed the hummingbird was an incarnation of their god Quetzalcoatl, who they believed to be the god of civilization, wisdom and learning.
Hummingbirds also have a connection with death as they were often used as symbols in funerals in Central America. The Aztecs would often bury their dead with real hummingbirds as offerings to Xochipilli, the god of games, flowers, dance and song.
In South America, hummingbird feathers were used as decorations on their clothing because they believed it brought them luck and strength.
- Psalm 103:11 (NIV): “He makes grass grow for the cattle, and plants for people to cultivate— bringing forth food from the earth.”
- Isaiah 40:31 (NIV): “Those who hope in the LORD will renew their strength. They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint.”
- Psalm 147:9-10 (NIV): “He gives [hummingbirds] their food in abundance so that they sing for joy.”
- Psalm 147:9: “He giveth to the beast his food, and to the young ravens which cry.”
- Psalm 104:11: “They shall come and sing for joy in thy courts; they shall be glad, for thou shalt make them inherit the earth.”
- Genesis 1:21: “And God created great whales, and every living creature that moveth, which the waters brought forth abundantly, after their kind, and every winged fowl after his kind…”
Psalm 147:10
He sends forth his command to the earth; his word runs rapidly.
Proverbs 30:17
The eye of the Lord watches over those who do right, but the mouth of the wicked conceals violence.
Psalm 147:10-11
He sends forth His command to the earth; His word runs very swiftly. He gives snow like wool; He scatters frost like ashes. He casts forth His ice like morsels; who can stand before His cold?
Hummingbird Christian Meaning
What the Hummingbird Shows Us About God’s Handiwork
When God seems invisible, he may just be moving faster than we can see.
A few years ago, I sat on the front porch of an old farmhouse in Vermont writing a new song with two friends. We sipped coffee, looking out over a summer field and testing lyrics that we scribbled in our notebooks. Above us, at the corner of the house, hung a hummingbird feeder. Tiny winged visitors stopped by intermittently to eavesdrop on our song while sipping nectar from the glass globe.
Hummingbird wings move at about 50 beats per second. But when they fly, hummingbirds can appear completely motionless. A miracle of fitness and form, God made these creatures to be a delicate display of paradox: They are still and active at the same time.
These birds are a moving metaphor for the kind of trust that God outlines in Isaiah 30:15: “You will be delivered by returning and resting; your strength will lie in quiet confidence” (CSB throughout). When I think of God’s grace at play in my own life, my most successful moments happen when I hold steady at the center. Confidence is not found in productivity, but in quietness of heart.
We are not measured by our success. We are simply called to faithfully rely upon God for the outcome of our efforts. “Such is the confidence we have through Christ before God. It is not that we are competent in ourselves to claim anything as coming from ourselves, but our adequacy is from God” (2 Cor. 3:4–5).
But the hummingbird metaphor extends beyond the physics of wings. By design, hummingbirds, like many migratory birds, accomplish great feats of travel by trusting that God will guide them where he has hard-wired them to go. They take their GPS coordinates from the moon, the weather changes, and their God-given intuition.
The coronavirus pandemic scrambled our life-coordinates as school went virtual, meet-ups with friends slowed, and church became a livestream. Our lives have been separated into pieces—as my middle-school-age daughter and I were discussing recently—like one of those “best friends” necklaces shaped like a broken heart. We feel lost and incomplete, holding one half of the heart around our neck and hoping to put it back together again soon.
Colossians 1:19–20 speaks directly to this sense of wandering: “For God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him, and through him to reconcile everything to himself, whether things on earth or things in heaven, by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross.” God is pulling the broken pieces of our lives back to wholeness.
He does not always do this in ways we expect. And that is one of the miracles of grace: God doesn’t just hand back the two sides of the necklace, nor does he simply return us to something we have lost. Instead, he himself restores and reconciles all things to himself. As he leads birds hundreds of miles year after year to return to the places where they belong but could never find on their own, he continually brings us to something new, giving us a hope and a future we never could have imagined.
He doesn’t promise that the journey will be peaceful. Instead, “he is our peace” (Eph. 2:14). Three years after that day spent song-writing in Vermont, I was working on an album in Nashville when the pandemic halted recording. For several years I had been gathering songs for this project, songs to protest anxiety, songs of comfort over fear. It turned out to be a timely effort as the other musicians and I were all faced with the sudden challenges of illness and isolation.
As we worked, I stumbled on a work-tape recording of a song I had written called “Patient Kingdom.” I had forgotten all about the song. We included it at the last minute, and it became the album’s title, a divinely orchestrated surprise. Recording Patient Kingdom long-distance across four states produced something in the end more beautiful than we could have known.
Our plans are not like his plans. As the hummingbird moves, his wings are invisible to us. So too the work of God is often hard to see in the moment, but nevertheless something remarkable is happening. This is what the Lord says: “Look, I am about to do something new; even now it is coming. Do you not see it?” (Isa. 43:19).
Bible Verses About Birds Praising God
Matthew 6:26-28
Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life[a]? And why do you worry about clothes? See how the flowers of the field grow. They do not labor or spin. Matthew 6:26-28
Luke 12:24
Consider the ravens: They do not sow or reap, they have no storeroom or barn, yet God feeds them. And how much more valuable you are than birds! Luke 12:24
These Bible Verses about birds continue to remind us how God will ALWAYS take care of us even more so than His creations. While the bird sings praises each and every morning, so should God’s children.