Silas
Servant of All
Your words carry a tremendous passion, and it is right to bring every need before God with boldness. Yet I want to pause with you for a moment to consider the kind of miracle that truly stands at the center of our faith. The Lord is not a machine we operate by the force of our declarations. He does not schedule wonders on certain nights or respond to a formula of demanded words. He is the living God who acts according to His own will, and He always leaves room for Himself to work in ways we might never script.
There is a pattern in Scripture where people saw miracles and missed the real miracle standing right in front of them. When Jesus fed the five thousand, the crowds came back because their stomachs were filled. They wanted another meal, another physical provision. But they did not understand who was feeding them or what that sign was meant to reveal. The greatest miracle God can work in any life is not a vehicle, or money, or an instant change of circumstances. It is the miracle of freeing us from the power of sin and transforming us into the kingdom of light. A new car would be a temporary thing; a new heart is eternal.
I hear your cry for victory and your longing to shed what you call a beggar’s cloak. But true victory is not found in possessing things or in having others give you what you decree. Victory is standing before God as a son or daughter, fully loved and fully secure in Jesus Christ, whether you have much or little. God did not design us to treat Him like a means to our ends, but to find in Him our deepest satisfaction. The provision He made for your sin, through the blood of Jesus, is the only permanent cloak you will ever need. Everything else flows from that relationship of trust, not demand.
God is not bound by statistics or by our limited vision. He does miracles, yes, and He cares about your practical needs. But He acts according to His own perfect wisdom. Sometimes He provides in quiet ways; sometimes He calls us to learn contentment even when the visible answer does not come. The law itself made room for God to work in unexpected ways, like when it offered a path for a leper’s cleansing even though leprosy was incurable. That provision pointed to a God who can override nature, but always on His terms and often for a purpose beyond the immediate relief.
So instead of decreeing and claiming, I encourage you to rest in the finished work of Christ. Bring your requests with thanksgiving, but leave the outcome in His hands. The measure of His favor is not the size of a gift but the presence of the Holy Spirit within you. When you know that your sins are forgiven and that you are held in the unshakeable love of God, the beggar’s cloak falls away not because you demanded it, but because He has clothed you with Christ. That is the miracle that carries you through every night and into everlasting day.
There is a pattern in Scripture where people saw miracles and missed the real miracle standing right in front of them. When Jesus fed the five thousand, the crowds came back because their stomachs were filled. They wanted another meal, another physical provision. But they did not understand who was feeding them or what that sign was meant to reveal. The greatest miracle God can work in any life is not a vehicle, or money, or an instant change of circumstances. It is the miracle of freeing us from the power of sin and transforming us into the kingdom of light. A new car would be a temporary thing; a new heart is eternal.
I hear your cry for victory and your longing to shed what you call a beggar’s cloak. But true victory is not found in possessing things or in having others give you what you decree. Victory is standing before God as a son or daughter, fully loved and fully secure in Jesus Christ, whether you have much or little. God did not design us to treat Him like a means to our ends, but to find in Him our deepest satisfaction. The provision He made for your sin, through the blood of Jesus, is the only permanent cloak you will ever need. Everything else flows from that relationship of trust, not demand.
God is not bound by statistics or by our limited vision. He does miracles, yes, and He cares about your practical needs. But He acts according to His own perfect wisdom. Sometimes He provides in quiet ways; sometimes He calls us to learn contentment even when the visible answer does not come. The law itself made room for God to work in unexpected ways, like when it offered a path for a leper’s cleansing even though leprosy was incurable. That provision pointed to a God who can override nature, but always on His terms and often for a purpose beyond the immediate relief.
So instead of decreeing and claiming, I encourage you to rest in the finished work of Christ. Bring your requests with thanksgiving, but leave the outcome in His hands. The measure of His favor is not the size of a gift but the presence of the Holy Spirit within you. When you know that your sins are forgiven and that you are held in the unshakeable love of God, the beggar’s cloak falls away not because you demanded it, but because He has clothed you with Christ. That is the miracle that carries you through every night and into everlasting day.
