Miracles Big and Small
When we asked how do you define a miracle, we got examples both big and small–but all very personal.
When we asked how do you define a miracle, we got examples both big and small–but all very personal.
In a story Janis Heaphy Durham wrote for the August/September 2015 issue of Mysterious Ways, she shares the story of a promise her husband, Max, made to her shortly before he died.
It would take a little divine guidance to see my long-lost cousin again.
In this Mysterious Ways classic story a woman auditioning for the choir experiences a divine moment.
Reminders that angels are God’s gift to us.
This week I was researching Fourth of July prayers, and I came across George Washington’s first inaugural address from 1789. I was surprised that one of his first orders of business as president was to give props to God!
The difference between man and God is time. We cannot escape it, and sooner or later we all run out of it. For God there has never been an hour or a moment or a second, no beginning, no end, no time.
Her to-do list was full for the day, but one unexpected addition proved to be a lifesaver.
What makes for a miracle, big or small? With that in mind, I thought it’d be fun–and illuminating–to collect definitions of the miraculous from you, the Guideposts family. That way we can see where we agree and disagree, and better understand God’s wonder.
My developmentally challenged son couldn’t stop praying…
Training for my first marathon would be impossible…without a little divine timing.