The Lord is often silent out of love. But the question
arises: Why don’t miracles happen to everybody? How many sick people and their
relatives entreat God and the saints with faith for healing! But we don’t
always see miracles happening to them! Why is that?
There can’t be a definite answer to this question.
God’s ways are unfathomable.
For who hath known the mind of the Lord? (1 Cor.
2:16), the holy Apostle Paul asks.
The Lord alone can give an exact answer to this
question. It is very hard to explain Divine Providence, God’s will and silence.
We can’t say that “the faith of this person is stronger than the faith of that
one” or that “the Lord loves this person more than that one.” As the Almighty
Himself says through the holy Prophet Isaiah: For as the heavens are higher
than the earth, so are My ways higher than your ways, and My thoughts than your
thoughts (Is. 55:9).
Of course, the following should be noted here. The
Lord is often silent out of love for people. God allows a person to undergo
severe temptations for his salvation. In His omniscience, the Lord sees
perfectly clearly that temptation, illness, or pain will lead a person to
salvation.
The Apostle Paul, who himself cured the sick and
performed miracles, suffered from a serious chronic illness, a thorn in the
flesh (cf. 2 Cor. 12:7). He begged the Lord to heal him three times, but the
Lord did not give him what he requested. His answer was as follows: My grace is
sufficient for thee: for My strength is made perfect in weakness (2 Cor. 12:9).
That is, “My gift is enough for you” because His power
is fully manifested in our weakness.
Many saints who performed miracles over people
suffered from various diseases and other temptations. They did not ask the Lord
to heal them, but they asked Him to give them patience. Our modern saints,
Elders Porphyrios and Paisios, reached the point of asking God to send them
cancer. And, while suffering from this disease, they both rejoiced and
glorified the Lord. Fr. Paisios used to say:
“In illness I learned things that many years of
ascetic labor could not give me.”
Nevertheless, this does not mean that we should not
seek Divine intervention! Otherwise we reject His commandment, Ask, and it
shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto
you (Mt. 7:7), and question the gift and grace that He gave His saints: He that
believeth on Me, the works that I do shall he do also; and greater works than
these shall he do (Jn. 14:12).
And our business is prayer and the contrite heart. In
other words, let us allow God to enter our hearts and our lives. Because
without our voluntary consent He cannot enter in. He always waits humbly and
respects our personality. The Lord knocks at our hearts but does not enter them
by force.
We must respond to him. And we should share our
requests with Him, doing it not as ill-mannered children but quietly and
humbly. When we ask for something, we should always be ready to fulfil His will
and not force Him.
Nevertheless not as I will, but as Thou wilt… Thy will
be done (Mt. 26:39, 42).
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