I don’t just believe it. I know it.
I’ll get straight to the point: yes, miraculous cures do exist.
Not just in ancient books, or stories told with a fuzzy, faraway air.
I say it because it happened to me.
And if you’ve got a few minutes, I’ll tell you.
It all started with a rather discouraging diagnosis.
A few years ago, I was diagnosed with a bladder problem.
The surgeon’s verdict was that part of my bladder would probably have to be removed, as it had become too large.
Suffice it to say that I wasn’t particularly enthusiastic.
At that time, I belonged to a Pentecostal church, where people could, during services, share aloud what they felt were inspired messages. Everyone was free to receive, or not.
And I hadn’t told anyone about my health worries.
First message: “There will be no operation”.
The Sunday after my medical appointment, a man I didn’t know came forward and said this:
“Someone here is afraid to have surgery. God tells you: there will be no operation.”
I raised an eyebrow.
Then I tucked the sentence away in a corner of my memory, saying to myself: we’ll see.
Second message: “I heal you now”.
A few weeks later, another person – also unknown to me – stood up and said:
“God says to you: I heal you now.”
And then I felt something strange and powerful.
Like an energy surging through my body. A tingling, a sudden contraction in my belly.
Neither painful, nor distressing. More like… alive.
Again, I didn’t say anything. I just waited for the next exam.
What the surgeon told me…
Ultrasound done.
The surgeon looks at the screen, looks at my chart, then looks at me, a little confused:
“Your bladder is back to normal. I don’t understand… But there’s no need to operate anymore.”
I didn’t dare reply: “It was God who sent me a laser beam of love.“
I was a little afraid he’d send me to another ward… this one psychiatric.
But I know.
I know I’ve been cured. Without treatment, without surgery.
And I’m not an isolated case.
Miraculous healings are real, and far more common than you might think.
I’ve told very few people about it until now. But it gave me the certainty that “miraculous” healings can happen. And, of course, I’m not the only one to say so. Far more spectacular is the case of Anita Moorjani, who was cured of terminal cancer in just a few weeks and without treatment after a NDE. But there are countless other stories of healings that can only be described as “miraculous”.
If you’re interested in this subject, I invite you to read the book by Doctor Patrick Theillier, who for 12 years was in charge of the Bureau des Constatations Médicales at the Sanctuaire de Lourdes. He, too, was able to witness the unbelievable: sick people are regularly cured of physical or mental illnesses without any possible “rational” explanation: Lourdes, land of cures
So, yes, miracles do exist
But they can’t be ordered.
I don’t believe the miracle is a reward, or that having “enough faith” is enough to obtain it.
I hadn’t asked for anything, and I didn’t feel particularly deserving.
Why do some people heal and others don’t?
Why me?
I don’t have the answer.
Not here. Not now.
But one thing is certain: beyond the visible, something is at work. Someone loves us and can heal us.
And sometimes that love heals.
Against all odds.
On the subject of healings, see also the article Lourdes, Land of healings and miracles.