Our God is a God of miracles. This is a phrase I recently read in a book by
Karen Kingsbury. Which is funny because
earlier today I was thinking about a question they asked us at the end of
confirmation (when I was in 7th or 8th grade). Talk about random…
The question was something along
the lines of “What is something that you consider a miracle?” At the time, I wrote down that a baby was a
miracle. This is very true-I mean think
about it. How do our bodies form exactly
the way they’re supposed to the majority of the time. If something was even the tiniest fraction
off from the way it’s supposed to be, life wouldn’t exist. We have exactly the right level of
acids/bases in our cells. We hold the
only temperature that we could survive at.
Our cells couldn’t survive on their own and yet they come together to
make a human that can think, feel, read, write, or encourage. I work as a labor and delivery nurse, and
trust me, hearing babies take their first breath and cry for the first time is
one of the greatest miracles there is.
We were after all, knitted together perfectly in our mother’s womb.
So my answer back then was
true. But I was so narrow minded-I’m
sure that about half the people in my class had the same answer because that’s
the cliché, “Babies are miracles.”
Honestly, I remember thinking that that was the only thing I could think
of.
If I had to the answer that
question today, I have no idea what I would say, and not because I can’t think
of anything. I was driving home from
today and thinking about that question and about the possible answers. A rainbow is a miracle. The water bends the light just perfectly to
send bands of color across the sky.
Snowflakes are miracles. Every
snowflake is different and if you’ve ever seen pictures of snowflakes up
close-you know what I’m talking about.
The mountains are miracles.
Someone seeing that God is real and giving his or her life to follow him
is a miracle. It says in the Bible that
we can only see God and know that he is real when he removes the veil from our
eyes.
There are endless miracles all
around us. Miracles happen every single
day. We just have to open our eyes to the possibilities that simple things
count as a miracle. Miracles aren’t
always big and flashy. They aren’t
always unexplainable. (Many of the things I wrote about above can be explained
by science, but that doesn’t make them any less of a miracle.)