Something Miraculous [UPDATED]

To witness a miracle is to be given a gift you cannot earn, explain, or repay. It rewires your internal map. Before the miracle, you believed in cause and effect. After the miracle, you believe in and yet .

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. something miraculous

Something miraculous does not deny the existence of pain, science, or probability. It simply says: These are not the only forces at work. To witness a miracle is to be given

And that, perhaps, is the most miraculous thing of all. After the miracle, you believe in and yet

To witness a miracle is to be given a gift you cannot earn, explain, or repay. It rewires your internal map. Before the miracle, you believed in cause and effect. After the miracle, you believe in and yet .

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.

Something miraculous does not deny the existence of pain, science, or probability. It simply says: These are not the only forces at work.

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