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On Rosh Hashanah, Remembering that God Is in Control

Wednesday night marks the beginning of the Jewish New Year, the holiday known as Rosh Hashanah. According to Jewish tradition, this marks the 5772nd birthday of the world.

On this day, the Hebrew Scriptures tell us that God opens the Book of Life and writes down what fate will befall us in the year to follow.

However, it is not until 10 days later, on the holiday of Yom Kippur, that the book is sealed. Therefore, tonight and the ten days that follow are meant to be a time of reflection and repentance for our sins, misdeeds and broken promises.

One lesson imparted upon us by the holiday is that we are not perfect, and never will be, but we can all be worthy of God’s love and forgiveness.

Guideposts contributor Rhoda Blecker wrote a story a few years back about the unorthodox way she learned this important lesson:

“Every year at the High Holidays, we’re asked to reflect on our lives during the past year so that we can resolve to do better in the coming one. As I walked toward the synagogue for the first Rosh Hashanah service, it was hard not to think about all the medical and dental problems we’d had to deal with in the past twelve months. If there was anything I wanted to leave behind, it would have to be the messiness and chaos. I wanted a perfect next year.

I didn’t think I was being unrealistic. Yes, I was going to services without my husband, Keith, who’d had two teeth extracted that morning, but that was the last of the old year, after all, not the start of the new year. There was still a chance everything could be wonderful.

Ushers were handing out the special prayer books for the High Holiday services as we entered the sanctuary. I took a book without looking at it and found a seat with some other women. We chatted until the rabbi began speaking.

Then I looked at the prayer book I’d been handed. A large white label was pasted at the top of its cover.

‘The cover of this book is upside down,’ it read.

For a moment I was just startled. Then I began to laugh. The book was not put together right, but it still had all the prayers in it, and it was being useful, just like all the other books.

And I accepted that the next year would be what it would be.”

Rhoda’s life may have been upside down at times, and with all her family’s medical and dental issues, she certainly couldn’t be blamed for dwelling on the imperfections and problems in her life. But with a misprinted prayer book, she was reminded that God has a purpose for everyone. In the coming year, she’d just have to wait and discover what hers would be. Did she pick the book up by chance? Or was it meant just for her?

On this Rosh Hashanah, whether you’re Jewish or not, take the time to apologize to those you have wronged. And remember that however upside down you may feel, there’s always a way forward.

As we Jews say, “L’Shana Tova.” Happy New Year.

Do you have a Mysterious Ways story to share? Send it to mw@guideposts.org.

One Week in Heaven

I’ve been a neurosurgeon for more than 20 years. Over that time, I’ve heard a lot about angels.

Angels who have shown up in patients’ recovery rooms after a rough surgery, angels who come in dreams to comfort friends of a patient, and angels who visit mourning relatives. Angels who always seem extraordinarily real to the people who see them.

Such people cite convincing details about their angel’s appearance, so the angels don’t seem vague or imaginary at all.

I listened to these stories with sympathy. Neurosurgeons deal with the brain, the single most complex, and least understood, organ in the body. Operating on the brain can be highly traumatic both for patients and their loved ones. So I’d nod my head and say that such blessed events could happen.

Not that I believed any of these angels were real.

The brain is a fantastically efficient machine—efficient enough that if traumatized by illness or surgery, it can actually fool itself into getting better by generating healing imagery. Imagery like a guardian angel, complete with white robes and wings and whatever else a patient might find most comforting.

When patients experienced angelic visitations like this, they were simply benefiting from the marvelously efficient mechanisms that the brain possesses that allow it to automatically soothe and heal itself.

Of course, I never said any of this to my patients. These kinds of experiences can be hugely helpful. It was not my place to burst the bubble of a patient who wanted to believe in angels. If it helped a patient get better, then she could believe in anything she wanted.

So you can imagine my surprise when, during the week beginning the tenth of November 2008, I encountered my own guardian angel.

I awoke in my wife Holley’s and my Lynchburg, Virginia, house an hour earlier than usual, with a nasty backache. Thinking it was left over from the low-grade flu that Holley, our younger son, Bond, and I had been suffering from all week, I tiptoed down to the bathroom and ran a hot tub.

The hot water only made the pain worse. It spread to my head. I managed to get myself back to bed. I flopped facedown beside Holley, and she woke up and asked me what was wrong. A little later Bond awoke and came in as well. Hearing that I had a headache, he reached out and massaged my temples gently.

I screamed in agony. Holley wanted to call an ambulance, but I told her the pain would go away on its own. “Trust me,” I said. “I’m a doctor.”

Holley left me to rest quietly for a while and got Bond ready for school. She stayed out of the room for an hour and a half so as not to wake me. When she finally came back in, she found me lying rigid on the bed, my jaw jutting forward, my eyes rolled back in my head. I was having a full grand mal seizure.

Holley called for an ambulance, and 45 minutes later I was wheeled into Lynchburg General Hospital, where I’d worked for years. By that afternoon, I’d slid deep into a coma: one from which I would not recover for another seven days.

My doctors discovered that I’d contracted a disease, very rare in adults, called bacterial meningitis. Millions of E. coli bacteria had invaded my brain and spinal cord, and were literally eating my cortex—the outermost portion of the brain, and the part responsible for nearly everything that makes us human.

Thought, logic, emotion…it all comes from the cortex. By that Monday afternoon, mine was completely shut down with very, very little likelihood of it working ever again. My chances of survival were small. My chances of surviving as anything more than a vegetable essentially nonexistent.

Family and friends gathered at the hospital, and over the next seven days they kept a vigil at my bedside, praying for my recovery. For the first few days my doctors tried to stay hopeful. By day five, none of them believed I stood a chance of surviving.

So on day seven, they met with Holley and gave her the news that no doctor ever wants to have to deliver.

It was time to take me off life support—to let me die.

Just a room away, I lay in the position I had lain in all week—a ventilator tube down my throat, my face slack, my hands and feet beginning to curl up like leaves as my circulation gradually ebbed away from my limbs. Bond, inconsolable, sat by me, holding my hand.

My eyes popped open. Looking around me like a newborn, I took in a world that everyone believed I had left behind forever.

It took months for me to fully recover physically. I lost almost 20 pounds during my week in a coma, and my brain—miraculously unscathed despite the weeklong bacterial attack—had to work hard to find its bearings again in the physical world.

But the physical recovery was the easy part. There was something else that had to heal as well in the wake of my recovery. I guess you could call it my belief system.

I now believe in angels. Not in some abstract way, but in the same way that I “believe” my car is sitting in my driveway, in the same way that I “believe” that I love my family.

In other words, I don’t really “believe” in angels at all. I quite simply know they are real. During my seven days in a coma, I journeyed to a world above this one: a world indescribably vibrant, vivid, and—most importantly—real.

When I entered this world, the first thing—the first person—that I saw was a beautiful young woman. She had long golden-brown hair, deep-blue eyes, a simple dress of powder blue and indigo and pastel-orange peach. I realized we were riding on the wing of a butterfly!

In fact millions of butterflies surrounded us, vast fluttering waves of them, dipping down and coming back up around us again. It was a river of life and color, moving through the air.

As we floated along together above a landscape of staggering beauty—of trees and clouds and waterfalls—she spoke to me in a language beyond words. And what she told me was, in essence, the same thing that the “imaginary” angels had told all those patients of mine over the years.

That I was loved. That I was safe. That I would always, always be taken care of.

Today, I’m still a surgeon, and still a man of science. I still believe the brain is a staggeringly sophisticated machine, capable of the most extraordinary feats, both when well and when under attack by illness.

But today, when a patient tells me that he or she has been visited by an angel, I no longer marvel at how clever the brain is in creating such realistic illusions.

Angels, I now know, are not illusions at all. I know, because I learned it from my own angel. An angel with blue eyes, who I met on the wing of a butterfly.

Download your FREE ebook, Angel Gifts: Inspiring Stories and Angel Crafts to Nurture Your Creativity

One Soldier’s Amazing Survival Story

Today I read the most incredible story. It comes from the Daily Express, a newspaper in the UK. And it concerns a British soldier, deployed in Afghanistan. The newspaper called what happened to him a coincidence. But it seems to me that something more was at work…

Nineteen-year-old Glenn Hockton was stationed in the Helmand province of southwestern Afghanistan. The province is one of the most dangerous places in the country—notorious producing the world’s largest supply of opium and for being one of the last Taliban strongholds.

One day, Glenn was on patrol when he felt the rosary beads he wore around his neck slip off. He tried to catch them, but they fell to the dusty ground. He bent down and reached to grab them. At that moment, he saw an object loosely covered with dirt, embedded in the ground at his feet.

A land mine.

Glenn did as he was trained. He didn’t move. He called for help. For 45 minutes, he stayed still until his fellow soldiers were able to defuse the explosive.

Was it a coincidence the beads slipped from his neck at that moment, in that place? Maybe.

But there’s more…

Glenn was not a religious man. He brought the beads to Afghanistan because of a story his mother had told him, about his great-grandfather.

His great-grandfather, Sunny, fought in World War II. He was held as a POW by the Nazis, and forced to march away from the advancing Allied forces. While marching, he caught sight of something on the ground in front of him. He stopped walking, and bent over to pick it up.

Just then, a shell exploded in front of Sunny, missing him by a hair.

The object he stopped to pick up? A rosary.

Glenn and Sunny, both saved in wartime, both saved the same way? Now that’s more than coincidence.

Not all of us have stories as dramatic as Glenn’s, but many of us have experienced moments that are too incredible to be only “coincidence.” In next week’s blog, I’ll share a few stories from my own family. Please keep sending me your stories at mw@guideposts.com.

One Rabbi’s Passover Blessing

I had a lot on my mind that sweltering summer day I set out on the 100-mile drive to Minneapolis, where my wife, Caryl, was undergoing treatments after a mastectomy. How would she respond? I worried. Would she beat breast cancer?

Halfway there the air conditioner in my car conked out. Is this a bad sign?

There was a garden center down the road. Might as well get out of the heat for a few minutes, I thought. Maybe I could pick up a plant for Caryl’s room.

I walked into the store and immediately spotted a foot-high lemon tree. It was in full bloom and already had one tiny lemon, about half an inch long, hanging from its branches. The saying “Make lemonade from lemons” popped into my mind. I sat on a bench next to the tree, letting the cool air wash over me. Please, God, I prayed, make good come from Caryl’s illness.

I returned to my car carrying the little lemon tree.

Caryl loved it. “It’s beautiful,” she said. “Thank you.”

Over the next several months, Caryl battled through chemotherapy—seven difficult treatments—and we watched that lone lemon grow, first to the size of a ping-pong ball then even bigger. The day the lemon reached full size we got wonderful news. Caryl was cancer-free!

By April, the time of Passover, the lemon was ripe. “Want to harvest it for our Seder meal tonight?” I asked my wife.

She nodded. “I would like that very much.”

So I plucked the bright yellow fruit from the tree and gave it to Caryl. She squeezed out the juice, mixing it with water and a little sugar. At our Seder celebration that night, we drank the lemonade together in a toast to our future good health. Like the more traditional Passover foods on the table—horseradish to symbolize the bitterness of slavery, parsley to represent new life—the lemonade reminded us that no matter how hard our struggles may seem, God always gives us hope that better things are to come.

They have: Thirteen years later Caryl remains strong and healthy. And that’s the very best sign.

One Family’s Christmas Miracle

It was almost Christmas of 1985—my wife Elba and I had been married for four years, and our daughter Christine was three and a half years old. Our second child, Paul, had just been born a month earlier. He was a seven-month preemie with significant urological problems and an essentially non-functioning kidney. When his condition was diagnosed during the fifth month of Elba’s pregnancy, he was given a 50 percent chance of survival. Doctors monitored his condition in his mother’s womb until there was no other choice but for Elba to be induced into labor.

On the day he was born, Elba was told to hold Paul in her arms for a few minutes before he was taken to the NICU—neonatal intensive care unit. Every visit to the NICU challenged our faith and deepened our love for our son. The daily updates from doctors ranged from good news to not so good.

Whenever we entered the room, we had to wear hospital gowns and wash our hands. The sounds from the equipment in the NICU were alarming and frightening. Paul was inside an incubator with large holes on the side so doctors and nurses could reach in and care for him. It was also the only way we could touch his tiny hands.

We spent Thanksgiving at the hospital as the days in the NICU turned into weeks. When the calendar turned to December we began to wonder if we would also spend another holiday there. All we wanted for Christmas was Paul to get well and come home. Friends, strangers and loved ones prayed along with us for a Christmas miracle.

One evening I walked into the NICU and noticed the incubator next to Paul’s was now empty. I turned to the nurse. She didn’t say a word, but her mood was somber. My heart dropped to my stomach. Would the same thing happen to our son? We kept praying, hoping for a miracle as doctors and NICU nurses worked and cared for him around the clock. Although there was no immediate cure for his condition, they did a procedure that would allow him to be medically stable until further surgeries could resolve the situation.

One morning the doctors came to see us and gave us the news we had been praying for: Paul could come home for Christmas. On a cold December day we walked out of the hospital with a five-pound, handsome baby boy. The Christmas spirit of hope and joy filled our home and hearts. It was and remains the most memorable Christmas in our family and a constant reminder to never lose hope.

Of Healing and Miracles: When Nurses Make a Difference

Nurses are a special breed of caregivers; they are at our sides when we are at our most vulnerable and play a vital role in restoring us to health. Here are some of our favorite Mysterious Ways stories about nurses who help to facilitate healing, both medical and miraculous.

A Nurse’s Comforting Words
She was a nervous wreck as she awaited surgery on her ruptured disk, but a caring nurse comforted her in a way she could never have expected.

This Nurse’s Nightmare Saved a Life
Her unsettling dream didn’t make any sense, until she got to work that night. Then the lessons it taught her proved to be life-saving ones.

With God’s Help and a Caregiver at His Side, He Was Given a Second Chance at Life
The doctors feared he had lost all his higher brain functions, but God—and one dedicated caregiver—knew otherwise.

A Heaven-Sent Caregiver for the World’s Best Nurse
After devoting her life to caring for others, her mother deserved special treatment in her final years. But where would they find just the right caregiver?

A Nurse and a Bible Verse Helped Him to Fully Heal
A burn victim questions whether he deserves the prayers and support he’s received, but a few choice words of Scripture from the lips of a kindly nurse open his eyes.

Nashville Dreams

After worship services one Sunday night, I stepped outside and heard someone strumming his guitar and singing on the church patio. Man, he’s really good, I thought. It made me think about my own dreams of being a musician. I’d been writing songs since I was eleven years old. My goal was to write a song that would be recorded. But in thirty-five years, it never happened.

Truth be told, I wasn’t really sure how to make it happen. You can send your song to a place like Nashville, Tennessee, and hope someone likes it, but after years without a response, you tend to wonder if anybody has listened to it. It’s a little like playing Ping-Pong by yourself.

After the man’s performance, I walked up to him and struck up a conversation. I said that I had heard good things about the kind of guitar he was playing. He said that he wanted another, but didn’t know where to buy one. “I know a great guitar shop around here,” I told him.

The next day I took him to the shop. While we were looking at guitars, I asked him if he ever collaborated with other songwriters, and he suggested that we write a song together. Two days later we met, and made some headway on a nice song.

That’s when he dropped the bombshell. He told me that he was just about to sign with a record label. “This song we just wrote could very well be on my first album,” he said.

His album did come out and, yes, I was credited with co-writing a song. I now have a relationship with a publisher who listens to all my songs. People congratulate me and call it an accomplishment. But I know better. It’s a miracle.

Download your FREE ebook, Mysterious Ways: 9 Inspiring Stories that Show Evidence of God’s Love and God’s Grace

5 Mystical Moments in the Bible

“I’d be surprised if anything mystical ever happened to me,” we might say. Save that for the really holy folk. But when I consider some of the mystical moments that happened to people in the Bible, they seemed to be just as surprised as any of us would be. Take a look.

1) Moses encounters the burning bush.
Moses is there in the wilderness tending his father-in-law’s flock and God appears to him and speaks from a burning bush. God identifies Himself, saying, “I am who I am.” He has a job for Moses. To lead the Israelites out of Egypt.

Moses is sure that God has chosen the wrong guy. He asks for proof. Why trust a burning bush? God turns Moses’ staff into a snake. His hand is made leprous then healed again. Even then Moses feels inadequate. And yet ultimately does as he’s called to do—with the mystical moments only multiplying (the parting of the Red Sea, manna in the wilderness, the seven plagues, etc.).

2) Jeremiah is given God’s words.
Jeremiah is another reluctant prophet. “I do not know how to speak,” he says when called by God, “for I am only a boy.” Then God puts out His hand and touches Jeremiah’s mouth. “Now I have put my words in your mouth,” God says.

Prophetic words, profound ones, holy writ we still read. Public speaking can be a big fear for many of us. Would that we could trust, like Jeremiah, for God to put the words in our mouths!

3) Jonah is swallowed by the whale.
Jonah was so resistant to doing what God wanted him to do that he got swallowed by a giant fish and sent to Ninevah, exactly where he didn’t want to go. He learned his lesson, though. When he arrived, he did God’s bidding.

God changed him, turned him around, and that can be a key to any mystical experience.

4) Jesus appears to His disciples on the road to Emmaus.
The Resurrection had come about and later that day Jesus walks with two of His disciples as they’re headed to a village called Emmaus.

They talk with Him. It’s a seven-mile journey. They discuss all the things that had happened to Jesus, how He was crucified and died and how the tomb was empty, all the while never recognizing their Lord. Arriving at Emmaus, they ask Jesus to stay with them. Only then, when He is breaking the bread and blessing it, do they know who He is. And in an instant He vanishes.

Sometimes the power of a mystical moment can’t be felt until it is over.

5) Peter is released from prison.
The Apostle Peter is thrown into prison. He is bound with chains and sleeping between two soldiers. Other guards are at the prison door, keeping watch over him. How is he ever going to escape?

Then an angel appears and a light shines in the cell. Peter is awakened, the chains fall off his wrists. He is told to fasten his belt, put on his sandals and leave. He hardly realizes what’s happening to him—he thinks it’s a vision—but does as he’s told. He passes the guards, the gate to the city opens. He is free. What happened to him took him totally by surprise.

Makes me think there are moments out there, ready to take us all by surprise and lead us to places we would never expect to go, doing God’s work.

Editor’s Note: In the original version of this post, Peter’s release from prison was said to have happened to Paul. We regret the error.

Mysterious Ways: The Voice

It was August 1969, a hot, humid night in Ban Me Thuot, Vietnam. I was stationed with the US Army as Communications Chief in charge of all radio communications, located inside the Command Post, a four-room reinforced concrete bunker, surrounded by sandbags.

I got undressed and into my bunk, hoping to get a few hours of sleep before I was on duty again. I rolled over and looked at the clock: 11:30 p.m. Seconds later I heard a voice say, “Get up out of bed now and get fully dressed, steel pot, weapon, everything, and go down to the Command Post.” The voice was so insistent that I got up, got dressed and headed out.

On the way to the bunker I passed the supply room, where the supply sergeant and other personnel were talking. “Sergeant Brackett, where in the world are you going this time of night in your combat gear?” the supply sergeant asked.

“To the Command Post,” I said.

“But why?” he asked.

These guys will think I’m nuts, I thought. “A voice told me to get fully dressed and get down there,” I said.

The sergeant gave me a puzzled look.

I hurried on to the bunker. “Hello, Sergeant, what are you doing here this time of night?” the radio operator asked.

“I don’t really know,” I said, shrugging my shoulders. “A voice told me to get down here now.”

Shortly after midnight the quiet night was split by incoming rounds of enemy attack. We were busy receiving and sending radio communications. AK-47s opened up and we were surrounded by mortar rounds and the sound of rockets falling all around us. After several minutes it got quiet again. I stepped outside the bunker entrance. Right then another mortar hit the mess hall and supply room. Shrapnel bounced off the bunker, hitting me on the wrist. I quickly headed back inside. About an hour later the attack was over.

As soon as it was light my men and I headed out to assess the damage. Our operations building had been hit and the radios there had been destroyed. Even my three-quarter-ton truck was hit on the hood, right in the center of the star. Not a building was spared.

Finally I was able to check on my sleeping quarters. That’s when I saw it. A mortar round had exploded the outside corner of my room, spraying the inside with shrapnel. Right where I would have been sleeping had I not heard that mysterious voice.

Mysterious Ways: The Other Orphan

His name was Mitku. The orphan we’d ultimately decided not to adopt. Though my husband, Michael, and I’d prayed for guidance and believed we’d had no choice, I often found myself thinking about the sick baby who’d been found in the African bush.

Had we done the right thing? Who will care for him?

Michael and I have three biological children and a fourth, the youngest, a daughter we adopted from Guatemala. We certainly had a full house, but recently we felt we’d been blessed enough to give another child a happy home. We heard about Mitku from the adoption agency we use in Oregon.

It was heartbreaking. Mitku had been abandoned after he contracted neonatal tetanus, probably from a rusty instrument used to sever his umbilical cord. Then he had developed pneumonia. Miraculously he’d survived, but not without consequences.

“Mitku may very well have brain damage,” the agency warned us, “and possibly other lifelong disabilities.”

Michael and I spent a lot of time talking it over. Were we really the right ones to give a child with such spe­cial needs a home? With four kids already? I wanted so much to hold this baby in my arms, to nurture him, but could I really promise the kind of devoted care Mitku needed?

In the end we decided no. I prayed for Mitku to be adopted by a family who could give him all the love he needed and deserved. When I closed my eyes I saw his picture—gaunt, sickly, sad.

Michael and I had quickly moved ahead with another adoption, a precious boy named Terefe, also from Ethiopia. In two days we would fly over to formally adopt him and bring him back to his new life in America.

Yet I still found myself think­ing of Mitku, even now as I stood in a long checkout line at Babies “R” Us. I had two of my daughters with me and needed to get the young­est home soon for her nap. Maybe I should just come back later.

I was about to abandon my cart when my glance fell on the blonde woman in front of me. She had one of the cutest babies I’d ever seen—a chubby, giggling little boy, seemingly of African descent.

Was he adopted? I wondered. I had the overwhelming urge to talk to her. We could have something in com­mon. Maybe she had some advice for me. I leaned over my cart and said, “What a precious baby you have!”

“Oh, thank you,” the woman said, extending her hand. “My name is Mandy and this is my son Silas. My husband and I recently adopted him from Ethiopia.”

“What a small world!” I said. I told Mandy all about Terefe and how excited we were about our trip to bring him home. The line inched forward and we talked some more. We discovered that we had a lot in common—we’d even used the same adoption agency in Oregon.

While we chatted, Silas bounced and cooed. “You wouldn’t know it by looking at him,” Mandy said, “but Silas was actually very sick when he was born. They didn’t think he would make it.”

Once more, my thoughts turned to Mitku. If Silas had found a loving, caring home, maybe he would too.

Mandy continued. “Silas actually had neonatal tetanus, then he came down with pneumonia. It’s a miracle that he’s perfectly healthy now.”

Tetanus? Pneumonia?

“What’s his name?” I asked. “His Ethiopian name?”

“Mitku,” Mandy said. “His name was Mitku.”

Of all the places in the world, Mit­ku had found a home right here in my town. And before long, he had a best friend too—our son Terefe.

Download your FREE ebook, Mysterious Ways: 9 Inspiring Stories that Show Evidence of God's Love and God's Grace

Mysterious Ways: The Old Lamplighter

I’m not ready to leave, I thought, pacing around our living room. This house had been our home for 10 wonderful years. I didn’t know how my husband, Gary, could sit there on the couch, casually watching a sitcom. My mind skittered from all the things we had to pack to the things we had to sell to everything we’d be leaving behind.

I stopped in front of my favorite painting. A framed Thomas Kinkade scene of old-fashioned thatch-roofed cottages, light and warmth emanating from every window. It always gave me a sense of calm. It had to come with us. I needed to double-bubble- wrap it. Would it survive our 3,000-mile move? Would I?

Early in our marriage, Gary and I moved often, from Missouri to California, before finally settling down in Eugene, Oregon. All our friends were here now. We loved the mountains, the forests, the rambling Willamette River, even the wet winters. But we were getting older. Gary had fibromyalgia, I had arthritis, and we needed to be somewhere with a more forgiving climate.

A real-estate agent had sent us a listing for the Lamplighter, a retirement community in Port Orange, Florida. “You’ll feel like you are on vacation in paradise!” the ads promised. It did look idyllic. We put a deposit on a property there and put our house on the market. I figured I’d have time to get used to the idea. But our place sold almost immediately. We had to be out in less than a month.

I worried about starting over, making new friends at our age. Florida might be a vacation paradise—but would it ever feel like home?

“You okay?” Gary asked, seeing me staring at the painting.

“I just wish I could be sure moving to Florida is the right decision,” I said.

“I know, honey,” he said. “But I don’t think that that painting is going to tell you.” He went back to his show.

I shook my head. That’s when I noticed the words engraved in gold at the bottom of the frame. I leaned in closer to read it.

“Actually, Gary, it has,” I said. “You know what this painting’s called? Lamplight Lane!

Download your FREE ebook, Mysterious Ways: 9 Inspiring Stories that Show Evidence of God's Love and God's Grace.