Something Miraculous -

We use the word miraculous lightly these days. We call a last-minute parking spot a miracle. We call a perfectly brewed coffee miraculous. But a true miracle—the real thing—is different. It doesn't just surprise you. It undoes you.

And that, perhaps, is the most miraculous thing of all. something miraculous

It looks like a stranger stopping their car on a empty road at 2:00 AM. It looks like a single, healthy cell dividing inside a body that had been given up on. It looks like a child, born into a war zone, who laughs at a butterfly. That is the miracle—not that the problem vanished, but that something good found a crack in the wall of the impossible and squeezed through. We use the word miraculous lightly these days

The cancer went into remission, and yet the doctors had no answer. The check arrived in the mail, and yet you hadn't told anyone your need. The relationship healed, and yet every book said it was too late. But a true miracle—the real thing—is different

But here is the secret about something miraculous: it rarely arrives with trumpets or burning bushes. More often, it arrives in disguise.

We use the word miraculous lightly these days. We call a last-minute parking spot a miracle. We call a perfectly brewed coffee miraculous. But a true miracle—the real thing—is different. It doesn't just surprise you. It undoes you.

And that, perhaps, is the most miraculous thing of all.

It looks like a stranger stopping their car on a empty road at 2:00 AM. It looks like a single, healthy cell dividing inside a body that had been given up on. It looks like a child, born into a war zone, who laughs at a butterfly. That is the miracle—not that the problem vanished, but that something good found a crack in the wall of the impossible and squeezed through.

The cancer went into remission, and yet the doctors had no answer. The check arrived in the mail, and yet you hadn't told anyone your need. The relationship healed, and yet every book said it was too late.

But here is the secret about something miraculous: it rarely arrives with trumpets or burning bushes. More often, it arrives in disguise.