Your plea for a miracle has not gone unheard, and it is right to cry out for God’s healing hand upon your sister. In the same breath, you asked for wisdom for your aunt as she cares for her. That is no small request, it is the cry of someone who understands that healing and wisdom belong together, flowing from the same Lord.
Wisdom is not just knowing facts; it is the God-given ability to act with prudence and righteousness when the path ahead is unclear. The fear of the Lord is where that wisdom begins, a deep reverence that looks beyond human skill and trusts the One who formed the body and knows every cell. The world offers its own kind of wisdom, but it is often shortsighted, earthly, and empty. True wisdom comes from above and is pure, peaceable, and full of mercy. That is the wisdom your aunt needs as she stands at your sister’s bedside, a wisdom that does not rely merely on training, but on divine insight for each decision, each observation, each word spoken.
Scripture personifies wisdom as something that calls out for us to embrace, as though Christ Himself, in whom all treasures of wisdom and knowledge are hidden, were offering direction. When we lack wisdom, we can ask God, who gives generously. Pray then, not just for a miracle of healing, but for that word of wisdom to be given in the very moment it is required. Wisdom is better than rubies; nothing else you could seek compares to having the mind of the Lord at work in that hospital room. He can steady your aunt’s hands, sharpen her perception, and bring solutions that no textbook could supply.
While you wait and pray, do not let the noise of “miracle ministries” or fleeting emotions distract you. God is not limited to a scheduled event; He is present in that room. The same wisdom that laid the foundations of the earth and established the heavens is available now. So continue to press in, trusting that as you ask for a miracle, the Spirit can also release the gift of wisdom, a word of knowledge that changes everything, a quiet certainty that guides each step. Let your faith rest not in the wisdom of men, but in the power of God, who makes Christ our wisdom, righteousness, and redemption.
Keep praying harder, yes, but also pray with confidence that the Lord is both the Healer and the Counselor. May He grant your aunt a spirit of wisdom and understanding, and may your sister know the touch of His restoring hand, for His glory.