We serve a miracle-working God.
Not a distant God. Not a powerless God. Not a God confined to the pages of history—but a living, active, miracle-working God who still moves today.
As we close out this series on the Holy Spirit, one truth must settle deep into our hearts: the same power that raised Jesus Christ from the dead is alive within every believer. Christianity was never meant to be merely intellectual or inspirational. It was always meant to be supernatural.
The Bible is filled with miracle after miracle because miracles reveal the nature of God. From Genesis to Revelation, Scripture paints the picture of a God who invades impossible situations with divine power. He creates worlds with His words, parts seas, heals sickness, raises the dead, delivers the oppressed, and transforms human hearts.
Miracles are heaven touching earth.
We often use the word “miracle” casually in our culture. We talk about the “miracle of medicine” or call someone a “walking miracle.” But a true biblical miracle is more than something impressive or unexplained. A miracle is the direct intervention of God into a seemingly impossible situation—revealing His glory and demonstrating His power.
Miracles cause wonder because they remind us that God is not limited by the natural laws He created. He exists above them.
Jeremiah declared, “Nothing is too hard for You.” Jesus said, “What is impossible with man is possible with God.” Those aren’t motivational slogans; they are declarations about the character of the God we serve.
When God spoke creation into existence, that was a miracle. When He split the Red Sea, that was a miracle. When Jesus turned water into wine, opened blind eyes, healed lepers, cast out demons, fed thousands, and rose from the dead, those were miracles revealing the power and authority of heaven.
And the story did not stop with Jesus.
The early church carried the same supernatural power through the Holy Spirit. Peter healed the lame. Paul saw the sick restored. The apostles operated with boldness and expectation because they understood something many modern believers forget: where the Holy Spirit is present, the miraculous should be expected.
The same Holy Spirit that empowered Jesus lives in believers today.
That truth changes everything.
Acts 1:8 says, “You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you.” The word used for power is dunamis—supernatural, explosive power. God did not fill His church with the Holy Spirit so believers could merely survive life; He empowered them to reveal heaven on earth.
Jesus even told His followers that they would continue His works and do even greater things because He was sending the Holy Spirit. That promise was not reserved for a select few spiritual elites. It was given to all believers.
Miracles are not just for Bible days. They are for today.
There are some who believe miracles ceased with the early church, but Scripture continually points us toward a God who never changes. The same God who healed then still heals now. The same God who delivered then still delivers now. The same God who restored then still restores now.
But the early church did not chase miracles—they pursued God. Miracles simply followed His presence.
That matters because the goal is never to become obsessed with signs and wonders. The goal is intimacy with Jesus. When we pursue the miracle-working God, we begin to see His power flow naturally through surrendered lives.
And maybe today you need a miracle.
Maybe you need healing in your body, restoration in your family, freedom from addiction, breakthrough in your finances, peace in your mind, or salvation for someone you love. Whatever impossible situation stands in front of you, hear this clearly: your limitation does not limit God.
If He can hold galaxies together, He can hold your life together.
The invitation of Jesus is still the same: believe.
Faith does not ignore reality—it trusts that God is greater than reality. Miracles begin where human ability ends.
So don’t lower your expectation. Stir your faith again. Pray boldly again. Believe again.
Because we still serve a miracle-working God. And the same Spirit that raised Christ from the dead still lives in His people today.