“Difficulty is the very atmosphere of miracle, it is a miracle in its first stage. If it’s to be a great miracle, the condition is not difficulty, but impossibility.”
_Lettie B. Cowman, Streams in the Desert
Ms. Cowman sounds a bit like a Army recruitment sergeant.
I get it, God is a miracle working God and we should never stop hoping he will work one on our behalf.
But…
I stick with my old adage: “Counting on a miracle is usually a bad strategy.”
“The difficult we do immediately; the impossible takes a little bit longer.”
― U.S. Navy Seabees Construction Battalions WWII
There’s two things you can count on when it comes to miracles – they’re rare and you never know when one will drop.
So here’s my advice:
Since they’re so rare and so unpredictable and are mostly about God’s agenda (not ours), it’s probably best to never include “a miracle” as a part of your success formula.
Your plans for succeeding should be like making mashed-potatoes: Make them so good that they’re delicious without the gravy. And if God decides to work a miracle on your behalf, well…that’s the gravy.
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