Miracles of Jesus, an empty wooden fishing boat on the calm Sea of Galilee at dawn

All the Miracles of Jesus: The Complete List and What They Reveal About the Savior

Jesus healed the sick, calmed a storm with a word, fed thousands from a boy’s lunch, and called dead men out of their graves. The Gospels are full of these moments, and they were not tricks or legends. They were real acts of God’s power, witnessed by crowds, written down by the men who saw them.

Here you will find the miracles of Jesus grouped by type and told briefly, one by one, along with what each kind meant then and what it still means for you now. The stories are worth reading for their own sake. They are also pointing at something, and the closer you look, the more you see who Jesus is.

Table of Contents

What Is a Miracle? Understanding the Signs of Jesus

A miracle is an act of God’s power that does what nature cannot do on its own. When Jesus turned water into wine or gave sight to a man born blind, something happened that no ordinary cause could explain. God stepped in.

The Gospel of John rarely calls these events miracles. He calls them signs. A sign is not there to impress you. It points past itself to something greater, the way a road sign is not the destination but tells you where the destination is.

John says it plainly at the end of his book: “And many other signs truly did Jesus in the presence of his disciples, which are not written in this book: But these are written, that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing ye might have life through his name” (John 20:30-31).

DAILY BREAKTHROUGH BREAD

A slice of Scripture every morning

One short, Christ-centered devotional in your inbox every day. Free, and you can unsubscribe any time.

That is the difference between a miracle and a sign. Miracle tells you what happened. Sign tells you why. Every wonder Jesus did was meant to lead someone to trust Him.

How Many Miracles Did Jesus Perform?

The four Gospels record about thirty-seven distinct miracles that name a place, a person, or an occasion. Counting the summary accounts, where He healed whole crowds at once, many lists put the total around forty or even higher. The number moves depending on how you count, which is why you will see different totals in different books.

Part of the reason is that the same miracle often appears in more than one Gospel. When Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John each describe Jesus feeding the crowd, that is one miracle told four times, not four separate ones. Careful readers count it once.

The larger reason is that the Gospels never tried to record everything. Matthew tells us Jesus “went about all Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, and preaching the gospel of the kingdom, and healing all manner of sickness and all manner of disease among the people” (Matthew 4:23). That is not one healing. That is countless healings folded into a single sentence.

John ends his Gospel by admitting the same thing: “And there are also many other things which Jesus did, the which, if they should be written every one, I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books that should be written” (John 21:25).

So the honest answer is that we do not know the full number, and that is good news, not a gap. The miracles we have are a sample, chosen and written down so we would believe. Jesus did far more than any list can hold.

The Complete List of the Miracles of Jesus (With Bible References)

Here is the whole list at a glance, thirty-seven of them, numbered and grouped by the four types, with the Bible references so you can turn to each one. Where a miracle appears in more than one Gospel, all the references are given. After the list, each miracle is told in turn with its own short story below.

  1. Healing. Cleansing a man with leprosy: Matthew 8:1-4; Mark 1:40-45; Luke 5:12-14
  2. Healing the centurion’s servant: Matthew 8:5-13; Luke 7:1-10
  3. Healing Peter’s mother-in-law of a fever: Matthew 8:14-15; Mark 1:29-31; Luke 4:38-39
  4. Healing the paralyzed man lowered through the roof: Matthew 9:1-8; Mark 2:1-12; Luke 5:17-26
  5. Healing two blind men: Matthew 9:27-31
  6. Healing the man at the pool of Bethesda: John 5:1-15
  7. Restoring the withered hand: Matthew 12:9-13; Mark 3:1-5; Luke 6:6-10
  8. Healing the woman with the issue of blood: Matthew 9:20-22; Mark 5:25-34; Luke 8:43-48
  9. Healing the deaf man who could barely speak: Mark 7:31-37
  10. Healing the blind man at Bethsaida: Mark 8:22-26
  11. Healing the man born blind: John 9:1-12
  12. Healing the woman bent over for eighteen years: Luke 13:10-17
  13. Healing the man with dropsy: Luke 14:1-6
  14. Cleansing the ten lepers: Luke 17:11-19
  15. Healing blind Bartimaeus: Matthew 20:29-34; Mark 10:46-52; Luke 18:35-43
  16. Healing the nobleman’s son at a distance: John 4:46-54
  17. Healing the crowds at Gennesaret: Matthew 14:34-36; Mark 6:53-56
  18. Healing the multitudes by the Sea of Galilee: Matthew 15:29-31
  19. Healing the servant’s ear at Jesus’ arrest: Luke 22:50-51
  20. Casting out demons. Freeing the man with an unclean spirit in the synagogue: Mark 1:21-28; Luke 4:31-37
  21. Freeing the demon-possessed man among the tombs: Matthew 8:28-34; Mark 5:1-20; Luke 8:26-39
  22. Freeing a man who could not speak: Matthew 9:32-34
  23. Freeing a man who was blind and mute: Matthew 12:22; Luke 11:14
  24. Delivering the Canaanite woman’s daughter: Matthew 15:21-28; Mark 7:24-30
  25. Delivering the boy with a foul spirit: Matthew 17:14-21; Mark 9:14-29; Luke 9:37-43
  26. Raising the dead. Raising the daughter of Jairus: Matthew 9:18-26; Mark 5:21-43; Luke 8:40-56
  27. Raising the widow of Nain’s son: Luke 7:11-17
  28. Raising Lazarus: John 11:1-44
  29. Power over nature. Turning water into wine: John 2:1-11
  30. The first great catch of fish: Luke 5:1-11
  31. Calming the storm: Matthew 8:23-27; Mark 4:35-41; Luke 8:22-25
  32. Feeding the five thousand: Matthew 14:13-21; Mark 6:30-44; Luke 9:10-17; John 6:1-14
  33. Walking on the water: Matthew 14:22-33; Mark 6:45-52; John 6:16-21
  34. Feeding the four thousand: Matthew 15:32-39; Mark 8:1-9
  35. The coin in the fish’s mouth: Matthew 17:24-27
  36. Cursing the fig tree: Matthew 21:18-22; Mark 11:12-25
  37. The second great catch of fish after His resurrection: John 21:1-14

The Four Types of Miracles Jesus Performed

The miracles fall into four groups, and seeing them this way makes the whole picture clearer. Each group shows His authority over a different part of the world we live in: over the body, over the unseen realm of dark spirits, over death, and over creation itself. Here is each miracle told in turn, one group at a time.

Miracles of Healing: Power Over the Body

Most of the miracles are healings. What stands out is not only the power but the reach.

He touched people no one else would touch, and He met the whole person, healing the body and forgiving the soul. No condition was too far gone. No person was too unclean.

Cleansing a Man with Leprosy

A leper knelt before Jesus and said, “if thou wilt, thou canst make me clean.” A leper was untouchable under the law, cut off from family and worship, yet Jesus put forth His hand and touched him, and the leprosy left him at once (Matthew 8:1-4; Mark 1:40-45; Luke 5:12-14).

Healing the Centurion’s Servant

A Roman officer asked Jesus to heal his paralyzed servant but felt unworthy to have Him come under his roof, trusting that a word from a distance would be enough. Jesus marveled at his faith and healed the servant in that same hour (Matthew 8:5-13; Luke 7:1-10).

Healing Peter’s Mother-in-Law

Peter’s wife’s mother lay sick with a fever. Jesus touched her hand, the fever left her, and she rose and served them (Matthew 8:14-15; Mark 1:29-31; Luke 4:38-39).

Healing the Paralyzed Man Lowered Through the Roof

Four friends tore open a roof to lower their paralyzed friend down to Jesus. Seeing their faith, Jesus first forgave the man’s sins, then told him to take up his bed and walk, showing He had authority over both body and soul (Matthew 9:1-8; Mark 2:1-12; Luke 5:17-26).

Healing Two Blind Men

Two blind men followed Jesus, crying out for mercy. He touched their eyes and said, “According to your faith be it unto you,” and they could see (Matthew 9:27-31).

Healing the Man at the Pool of Bethesda

A man had been unable to walk for thirty-eight years, waiting beside a pool for a healing that never came. Jesus simply told him to rise, take up his bed, and walk, and he was made whole (John 5:1-15).

Restoring the Withered Hand

In the synagogue on the Sabbath, Jesus told a man with a shriveled hand to stretch it out. As the man obeyed, his hand was fully restored, even as the religious leaders watched for a reason to accuse Him (Matthew 12:9-13; Mark 3:1-5; Luke 6:6-10).

Healing the Woman with the Issue of Blood

A woman who had bled for twelve years pressed through the crowd, believing that if she only touched His garment she would be healed. She was made whole the instant she touched the hem, and Jesus told her, “thy faith hath made thee whole” (Matthew 9:20-22; Mark 5:25-34; Luke 8:43-48).

Healing the Deaf Man Who Could Barely Speak

People brought Jesus a man who was deaf and could hardly speak. Jesus took him aside, touched his ears and tongue, looked up to heaven, and said, “Ephphatha,” which means Be opened, and the man heard and spoke plainly (Mark 7:31-37).

Healing the Blind Man at Bethsaida

Jesus led a blind man out of the town and healed him in two stages. At first he saw men as “trees, walking,” and after Jesus touched his eyes again he saw everything clearly (Mark 8:22-26).

Healing the Man Born Blind

Jesus anointed the eyes of a man blind from birth with clay and told him to wash in the pool of Siloam. He came back seeing, and his healing became a public testimony that divided the whole city (John 9:1-12).

Healing the Woman Bent Over for Eighteen Years

A woman had been bent double for eighteen years, unable to straighten up. Jesus called her over, laid His hands on her, and immediately she stood up straight and glorified God (Luke 13:10-17).

Healing the Man with Dropsy

On the Sabbath, in a Pharisee’s house, Jesus healed a man suffering from dropsy. Then He asked the watching leaders why they would pull an animal out of a pit on the Sabbath but begrudge a man his healing (Luke 14:1-6).

Cleansing the Ten Lepers

Ten lepers cried out for mercy, and Jesus sent them to show themselves to the priests. As they went they were cleansed, but only one, a Samaritan, turned back to give thanks (Luke 17:11-19).

Healing Blind Bartimaeus

Blind Bartimaeus sat begging by the road and would not stop crying out to Jesus, even when the crowd tried to silence him. Jesus called him over, told him “thy faith hath made thee whole,” and he received his sight and followed Him (Matthew 20:29-34; Mark 10:46-52; Luke 18:35-43).

Healing the Nobleman’s Son

A royal official begged Jesus to come heal his dying son. Jesus told him, “thy son liveth,” and the man believed and went home to find the boy healed at the exact hour Jesus had spoken (John 4:46-54).

Healing the Crowds at Gennesaret

When Jesus landed at Gennesaret, people carried their sick to Him from all around and begged just to touch the hem of His garment, and as many as touched Him were made perfectly whole (Matthew 14:34-36; Mark 6:53-56).

Healing the Multitudes by the Sea of Galilee

Great crowds brought the lame, the blind, the mute, and the maimed to Jesus, and He healed them all. The people watched the mute speak and the lame walk, and they marveled and glorified the God of Israel (Matthew 15:29-31).

Healing the Servant’s Ear at Jesus’ Arrest

When Peter drew a sword and cut off the ear of the high priest’s servant, Jesus rebuked the violence, touched the man’s ear, and healed him, showing mercy even in the hour of His own betrayal (Luke 22:50-51).

Casting Out Demons: Power Over the Unseen Realm

Jesus also confronted powers that people could not fight on their own. These moments show that the darkness is real and that Jesus is stronger than all of it. When His enemies accused Him of working by demonic power, He answered, “But if I cast out devils by the Spirit of God, then the kingdom of God is come unto you” (Matthew 12:28). Every deliverance was the kingdom of God pushing back the kingdom of darkness.

The Man in the Synagogue at Capernaum

As Jesus taught in the synagogue, a man with an unclean spirit cried out. Jesus commanded the spirit to be silent and come out of him, and it left him at once, and the people were amazed at His authority (Mark 1:21-28; Luke 4:31-37).

The Man Among the Tombs

A man so tormented that no chains could hold him lived among the tombs, cutting himself night and day. Jesus cast out the legion of demons that held him, and the man was later found sitting, clothed, and in his right mind (Matthew 8:28-34; Mark 5:1-20; Luke 8:26-39).

The Mute Man Who Could Not Speak

People brought Jesus a man who could not speak because a demon held him. Jesus cast out the demon, the man spoke, and the crowds marveled that nothing like this had been seen in Israel (Matthew 9:32-34).

The Blind and Mute Man

A man who was both blind and unable to speak was brought to Jesus, and He healed him so that the man both saw and spoke. The crowds were amazed and began asking whether this could be the Son of David (Matthew 12:22; Luke 11:14).

The Canaanite Woman’s Daughter

A Gentile mother begged Jesus to free her demon-tormented daughter and would not be turned away, answering Him with humble, persistent faith. Jesus honored her great faith, and her daughter was healed from that very hour (Matthew 15:21-28; Mark 7:24-30).

The Boy with a Foul Spirit

A desperate father brought his son, whom a spirit repeatedly threw into fire and water, after the disciples had failed to help. Jesus rebuked the spirit and healed the boy, and told His disciples this kind comes out only by prayer and fasting (Matthew 17:14-21; Mark 9:14-29; Luke 9:37-43).

Raising the Dead: Power Over Death

Three times the Gospels show Jesus giving life back to the dead. Each of these people would die again one day, so their raising was a preview, a promise that death does not get the last word where Jesus is present. Standing at Lazarus’s grave He said, “I am the resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live” (John 11:25).

Jairus’s Daughter

Jairus, a synagogue ruler, begged Jesus to heal his dying daughter, but word came on the way that she had already died. Jesus went in, took her by the hand, said, “Damsel, arise,” and her life returned to her (Matthew 9:18-26; Mark 5:21-43; Luke 8:40-56).

The Widow of Nain’s Son

Jesus met a funeral leaving the town of Nain, a widow burying her only son. Moved with compassion, He touched the bier, told the young man to arise, and gave him back to his mother alive (Luke 7:11-17).

Lazarus

Lazarus had been dead four days when Jesus arrived at the tomb. He wept with the grieving sisters, then cried with a loud voice, “Lazarus, come forth,” and the dead man walked out still bound in his grave clothes (John 11:1-44).

Power Over Nature: Authority Over Creation

The last group shows Jesus commanding the created world itself. The disciples asked the right question after the storm went still: “What manner of man is this, that even the wind and the sea obey him?” (Mark 4:41). The One who commands the wind is the One who made it, for Scripture says of Christ that “by him all things consist” (Colossians 1:17). The same word that holds creation together is the word that stilled the sea.

Turning Water Into Wine: The First Miracle

At a wedding in Cana of Galilee the wine ran out, a real embarrassment for the family, and Mary brought the problem to her Son. Jesus had servants fill six stone jars with water, and it became wine better than what was served first. John calls it “the beginning of miracles,” and it “manifested forth his glory; and his disciples believed on him” (John 2:11).

The First Great Catch of Fish

After a whole night of catching nothing, Peter obeyed Jesus and let down the nets one more time, and they enclosed so many fish the nets began to break. Peter fell down at Jesus’ feet, and Jesus told him that from now on he would catch men (Luke 5:1-11).

Calming the Storm

A fierce storm rose on the sea and threatened to sink the boat while Jesus slept. The terrified disciples woke Him, and He rose, rebuked the wind and the waves, and there was a great calm (Matthew 8:23-27; Mark 4:35-41; Luke 8:22-25).

Feeding the Five Thousand: The Miracle in All Four Gospels

A crowd of five thousand men, besides women and children, had followed Jesus into a lonely place with nothing to eat but a boy’s five loaves and two fish. Jesus gave thanks, and everyone ate until they were full, with twelve baskets left over. This is the only miracle recorded in all four Gospels, and the next day Jesus told the crowd, “I am the bread of life” (Matthew 14:13-21; Mark 6:30-44; Luke 9:10-17; John 6:1-14).

Walking on the Water

In the darkest part of the night Jesus came to the struggling disciples, walking on the sea. Peter stepped out and walked toward Him, began to sink when he looked at the wind, and Jesus caught him and calmed the storm (Matthew 14:22-33; Mark 6:45-52; John 6:16-21).

Feeding the Four Thousand

Another great crowd had stayed with Jesus three days and had nothing left to eat. From seven loaves and a few small fish He fed four thousand men, besides women and children, with seven baskets left over (Matthew 15:32-39; Mark 8:1-9).

The Coin in the Fish’s Mouth

When the temple tax came due, Jesus told Peter to cast a hook into the sea and open the mouth of the first fish he caught. Inside was a coin, exactly enough to pay the tax for them both (Matthew 17:24-27).

Cursing the Fig Tree

Finding a fig tree covered in leaves but bearing no fruit, Jesus spoke against it, and by the next morning it had withered from the roots. He used the withered tree to teach His disciples about faith and prayer (Matthew 21:18-22; Mark 11:12-25).

The Second Great Catch of Fish

After the resurrection, the disciples fished all night and caught nothing, until Jesus called from the shore and told them to cast on the right side of the boat. The net filled with a hundred and fifty-three fish, and John knew at once that it was the Lord (John 21:1-14).

The Greatest Miracle: The Resurrection of Jesus

Every person Jesus raised eventually died again. Jairus’s daughter, the widow’s son, and Lazarus all lived out the rest of their days and were buried in time. There is one resurrection in the Gospels that is different, and it stands above every other miracle: His own.

When Jesus rose from the grave, He did not come back to a life that would end again. He rose never to die, and Scripture makes this the center of everything: “For if the dead rise not, then is not Christ raised: And if Christ be not raised, your faith is vain; ye are yet in your sins” (1 Corinthians 15:16-17).

All the other miracles show His power. The resurrection proves it holds even against death, and it is the ground of the hope every believer carries. Because He lives, those who belong to Him will live also.

Why Did Jesus Perform Miracles?

The miracles were not random displays of power. Scripture gives clear reasons behind them.

First, He acted out of compassion. Again and again the Gospels tell us Jesus was “moved with compassion” toward the sick, the grieving, and the hungry (Matthew 14:14).

He was not detached from human suffering. He saw a widow burying her only son and His heart broke for her before He raised the boy. The miracles were love in action.

Second, they proved who He was. When John the Baptist sent from prison to ask whether Jesus was the promised One, Jesus pointed to the miracles as the answer: “Go and shew John again those things which ye do hear and see: The blind receive their sight, and the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, and the deaf hear, the dead are raised up, and the poor have the gospel preached to them” (Matthew 11:4-5).

These were the very signs the prophets said the Messiah would bring (Isaiah 35:5-6). The works testified that He was the Christ.

Third, they revealed the Father. Jesus said He did nothing on His own: “The Son can do nothing of himself, but what he seeth the Father do” (John 5:19). He worked in the power of the Holy Spirit, as Peter later preached, “how God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Ghost and with power: who went about doing good, and healing all that were oppressed of the devil; for God was with him” (Acts 10:38). Every miracle was a window into the heart of God.

Fourth, they gave a foretaste of the kingdom. Every healed body, calmed storm, and raised corpse was a preview of the world God is bringing, where “God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain” (Revelation 21:4). The miracles were samples of that coming day breaking into this one.

Read also: Why Do We Need the Holy Spirit

Faith and the Miracles of Jesus

Faith shows up all through these stories, but not in a single, tidy pattern. Sometimes the faith belonged to the person who was healed. Jesus told the woman with the issue of blood, “Daughter, thy faith hath made thee whole” (Mark 5:34).

Sometimes the faith belonged to someone else entirely. It was the faith of four friends that got the paralyzed man to Jesus, and “when Jesus saw their faith,” He acted (Mark 2:5).

And sometimes faith was missing. In His own hometown of Nazareth, “he could there do no mighty work, save that he laid his hands upon a few sick folk, and healed them. And he marvelled because of their unbelief” (Mark 6:5-6). Unbelief was not powerful enough to stop God, but the Gospel connects it to how little was received there.

This is where many honest readers get stuck. If faith mattered then, why does God heal some and not others now? Scripture does not hand us a formula, and we should be careful not to invent one. Faith matters, but the miracles were always His free gift, never something a person could trigger by trying hard enough.

When healing does not come, it is not proof that someone failed to believe correctly. Anyone who has sat by a sick bed knows the pain of that question, and the Bible never uses it to shame the sufferer. It calls us to trust the goodness of God even when we do not understand His timing.

Read also: 10 Reasons to Have Faith in God

What the Miracles of Jesus Are Not

It helps to be clear about what these signs were never meant to be.

They were not magic, and they were not power on demand. Jesus did not perform on command or to satisfy curiosity. When Herod finally met Him and “hoped to have seen some miracle done by him,” Jesus answered him nothing (Luke 23:8-9).

They were not spectacle or self-service either. In the wilderness, when the devil urged Him to turn stones into bread to prove Himself, Jesus refused (Matthew 4:3-4). He never used His power to serve Himself or to show off. Every miracle served someone else’s need or pointed to the Father’s glory.

And they were never meant to be the thing our faith rests on instead of Christ Himself. Jesus was direct about people who would only believe if they saw a wonder: “Except ye see signs and wonders, ye will not believe” (John 4:48). He called the demand for a sign the mark of “an evil and adulterous generation” (Matthew 12:39).

After the resurrection He told Thomas, “blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed” (John 20:29). The miracles were meant to lead people to trust Him, not to become a substitute for that trust. Even so, some who saw them still turned away, and His enemies went as far as crediting His power to the devil (Mark 3:22). A miracle can point to Christ, but it cannot force a heart to receive Him.

Does Jesus Still Perform Miracles Today?

This is a real question for anyone praying over a diagnosis or a situation that will not budge. Scripture says of Christ, “Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever” (Hebrews 13:8). He has not changed. He still heals, still provides, still moves in ways we cannot explain, and believers across the world can testify to answered prayer.

At the same time, the Bible never promises that every prayer will be answered exactly as we ask, and it never treats God as a machine that gives out miracles when we push the right buttons. Some of the most faithful people in Scripture were not delivered from their trials. Chasing miracles as guaranteed rewards for enough faith is not what Jesus taught, and it can leave hurting people blaming themselves when the answer does not come. God is free, and He is good, and He can be trusted with the outcome either way.

The greatest miracle He still works every single day is the one that changes eternity. He takes people who were “dead in trespasses and sins” and makes them alive (Ephesians 2:1-5).

“If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature” (2 Corinthians 5:17). A raised body eventually dies again. A soul brought from death to life in Christ lives forever.

What the Miracles of Jesus Teach Us

Read together, these stories do more than inform us. They shape how we come to God.

They teach us to bring our real needs to Him honestly, the way the leper, the blind man, and the grieving widow did. Nothing was too small or too far gone. They teach us to offer the little we have, like the boy with five loaves, and to trust Him to do more with it than we could.

They teach us to trust His timing even when He delays, as He did with Lazarus, without demanding a sign as the price of our faith. And most of all they teach us to look past the gift to the Giver, to let every good thing He does lead us closer to Him rather than just to the next thing we want.

The same Jesus who healed the sick and calmed the sea is not a figure locked in the past. He is alive, and He is reachable. Whatever you are carrying, He is the kind of God who draws near to it.

Frequently Asked Questions

What Was the First Miracle Jesus Performed?

His first recorded public miracle was turning water into wine at a wedding in Cana of Galilee (John 2:1-11). John calls it “the beginning of miracles.”

What Was Jesus’ Greatest Miracle?

His own resurrection stands above the rest, because He rose never to die again and it secures the believer’s hope (1 Corinthians 15). Among the miracles during His ministry, the feeding of the five thousand is the most widely known, since it is the only one recorded in all four Gospels.

What Is the Difference Between a Miracle and a Sign?

They describe the same event from two angles. Miracle names the act of power. Sign names its purpose, because it points beyond itself to who Jesus is and calls people to believe in Him (John 20:30-31).

Which Miracles Are Unique to the Gospel of John?

John records several signs the other Gospels do not, including turning water into wine, healing the man at the pool of Bethesda, healing the man born blind, and raising Lazarus from the dead. John built his Gospel around a set of these signs to show that Jesus is the Son of God.

Did Jesus Perform Miracles by His Own Power?

Jesus worked in union with the Father and in the power of the Holy Spirit. He said, “The Son can do nothing of himself, but what he seeth the Father do” (John 5:19), and Acts 10:38 says God anointed Him with the Holy Ghost and with power. The miracles revealed the whole heart of God, not the Son acting alone.

The miracles of Jesus are not a museum of past wonders. They are windows. Through them you see a Savior who has power over sickness, over the darkness you cannot fight, over the storms that frighten you, and over death itself. And the same Jesus who did all of this is alive right now, ready to be trusted with your life. Look through the sign, and you will find Him standing on the other side of it.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top