Bob Hamera is hosting our Spiritual Journey cohort this month. He invited us to reflec on miracles. “What are the everyday miracles in your life?”  You’re invited to join us here.

I admit to struggling with miracles – never knowing if I truly believe in them or not. The Catholic Church teaches that miracles are signs or wonders which can only be attributed to divine power. Okay. I’m certain that I’ve thought to myself: That is God at work.

Scripture is filled with Jesus’s miracles: turning water to wine, walking on water, feeding 5000, healing people, rising from the dead. As I’ve grown older, I spend less time looking for how to explain something and instead, reveling in the wondrous result. And I see it every day. Showing a parent: I got this. Letting go of fear and taking someone’s hand. Accepting and loving those our culture says are unlovable. Calling out the wrongs. Changing the trajectory of someone’s life by the good you do in your own.

In his forthcoming book, Come Forth: The Promise of Jesus’s Greatest Miracle, Fr. James Martin, S.J. interprets the calling forth of Lazarus: I think of the invitation for all of us to leave behind in our “tombs” whatever keeps us bound, unfree, dead. 

For nothing
is impossible for God

Whether in healing, in hope, in life, perhaps the miracle is the shift that takes place in how we see something.

 

I offer this poem by Arun Kumar, “I lost myself” (click here)

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