The Impact of Quiet Miracles
FEATURES
- You Mormons Are Ignoramuses: Appreciating the Restoration Doctrine That Adam and Eve “Fell Up” by H. Craig Petersen
- Shamar: What It Means to “Keep” the Commandments in Hebrew by Steve Densley, Jr.
- Currents: Marie Osmond on Alan Osmond’s Death; Most of the Cast of “Secret Lives of Mormon Wives: Orange County” Are Not Members; Radical Left Podcaster Justifies Murder and Looting; and More by Meridian Magazine
- When Symbols Become Idols: Remembering What Points Us to Christ by Spencer Anderson
- Why the Fertile Crescent Matters: A Map That Unlocks the Bible’s Geography and History by Daniel C. Peterson
- The Secret Life of Trees—and What It Teaches Us About Zion by Paul Bishop
- Becoming Brigham, Episode 14 — The Prophet’s Shadow by The Interpreter Foundation
- Hold On to These Indispensable Parenting Principles by H. Wallace Goddard
- How Has Retention Changed over Time? by Deseret News
- Who Would You Be Without Fear? by Anne Hinton Pratt
















Comments | Return to Story
Rochelle HaleFebruary 3, 2023
I believe the Lord's miracles (including personal revelation and inspiration) are all around us. Too often, however, we find ourselves waiting for the "big" things. Several years ago I was assigned to minister to an elderly friend. I already knew her and her adult children with whom she lived, but she had suffered an impairment of some kind and I was deeply concerned about communicating with her. I telephoned and we had a delightful conversation. We could both clearly hear and understand one another. Just this week I had to have some old dental work re-done. The procedure with the endodontist was pretty trying, but when I went to my dentist for my final filling I was in and out of his office within fifteen minutes after a quick, no-numbing-required procedure. In both of these situations, so many prayers were answered.
ADD A COMMENT