Under the weight of reality, humans believe in miracles, but “believe” is an understatement. We “believe” in miracles just as we “believe” our own existence, our own hands.
Sometimes it's just potential – it needs to wake up.
If miracles don't exist, what are we doing here, are these grassy, wet, populated cannonballs passing through the Milky Way?
Revelation is not about wisdom. It's about awakening.
Miracles cannot be denied. Perhaps they are not scientifically proven, but this assumption is wobble in itself.
I don't know how miracles will happen. There are no scripts or receipts. And this often neglects scientific testing in essence. Over the last two,000 years, one thing has been proven. All miracles come from Jesus of Nazareth.
In the age of digital networks of information, Christ has glided through the dreams of millions of unbelievers.
People have dreamed of Jesus across the Middle East, where hostility towards Christianity is deeply circulating. Usually he introduces them to someone, a stranger.
Warning shot
When Abraham and Sarah entered the gha, Abraham, fearing his life, told everyone that Sarah was his sister.
King Abimelech, who does not know the truth, took Sarah to his house. That night, God appeared to him in a dream with a horrifying message: “You are as good as you are dead for the woman you have taken, she is a married woman” (Genesis 20:3).
Abimelek sued his innocence. He didn't know that she was married. God admitted this, but warned him: either return Sarah or suffer the consequences.
This dream was more than a warning. It was rare for non-Israels to receive direct messages from God.
In the Bible world, dreams are deeper than unconscious thoughts. They are where heaven and earth meet.
Synchronism
A few years ago, I was dressed in the idea of Carl Jung, a Swiss psychologist who led a new form of Christianity.
Jung saw dreams as the source of prophecy. He called them “parental events.” Science is something that cannot be explained. If there is a theory about miracle, this may be it. It is an event bound by meaning, not a cause.
I like to think it's playful. That my Creator, the Creator, leaves behind a clue to his love.
One of his big ideas is synchrony, meaningless and inexplainable. Think of it as “sync.” But adjustment is divine.
Mark Twain was born in 1835. This is the year Halley's Comet passed Earth. He predicted that he would die when it returned. In 1910, the comet reappeared – the day after his death.
The song comes out just like a message sent from a static, just as you are thinking of a dead person. Numbers, phrases, and chance encounters. A book that found you the right person at the right time. Fate clashes in ways that are too romantic to ignore.
Synchronism proves that everything is connected. The overall experience is so well-made that it feels literary, like a novel intertwined with themes, premonitions and dramatic irony.
And dreams – they are cyclists' agents.
Even before reading Jung, I doubted the idea of accidents and accidents. But Jung gave me science – the science of habits. Suddenly, I was owned with meaningful connections and vivid dreams. Symbol fire. The outer world is in sync with my thoughts, the infinite dialogue between the soul and itself: the most private.
Solomon's Wisdom Dream
Early in his reign, Solomon went to Gibeon to offer his sacrifice. That night, God appeared to him in a dream and said, “I will ask you to do whatever you want me to give you” (1 Kings 3:5).
It was a test. Solomon may have sought power, wealth, or victory. Instead, he sought wisdom – to rule properly, judge correctly, and identify good from evil.
God was pleased. He gave Solomon's wisdom immeasurably, and threw wealth and honor.
Unlike other biblical dreams that often require interpretation, this was clear. There are no riddles. Just a conversation, a moment of divine intimacy. Jesus' dreams have this same quality, as in the final preview of Revelation, as if revealing themselves in the sharpest and most cinematic way possible.
Greek Apocalypsis It does not mean destruction. It means revelation. Dream shape, naked vision. It's not about God's wrath, it's about his love. The Second Coming is not a final explosion of God's wrath.
The Book of Revelation is already happening: in Golgotha, on a hill shaped like a skull. 33rd year. The cross was unveiled – a great revelation that shattered history back and forth.
Simone Weil and the Dream of Being
Simone Weil is one of my favourite authors. Weil was a French Jewish philosopher and after his mysterious experiences at the foot of the cross, he was deeply influenced by Christian mysticism and theology.
Weil believed that we would experience God's love indirectly through people and purposes in the world.
She believed in a retreating God – not to abandon, but to create space for freedom.
Her absence, she wrote, would allow the world to breathe. But in that very retreat, he leaves a trace – signs that the soul is scattered like a constellation to continue.
Weil called this “the tacit love of God.”
At the heart of her thoughts is creation, and as amazing as it is, it is. Unlike destruction that destroys bulldozes and erasures, removal is a clear cancellation.
It moves inversely at the moment before something is formed when it existed in pure possibilities, not origin, but return rather than meaningless. In creation, Weil saw the highest calling of the soul. It saw the highest calling of the soul, in order to let go of self until there was only being, and the ego-deprived light of love.
It is a dream of turning back, a building that does not decrease but recovers. Weil suggests that the world is not a prison to escape, but a teacher who guides us towards our dreams of returning.
“Love is not comforting,” she wrote. “It's light.”
It's been hidden since the foundations of the world
Jacob was exhausted and alone, stopped overnight in a barren place. He put his head on the rock and fell asleep. He then dreamed of a ladder that stretched from Earth to heaven. The angels rose and descended.
At the top, the Lord said, “Your descendants will become like dust on the earth. … I will be with you, and I will watch over you wherever I go” (Genesis 28:14-15).
Jacob woke up. The ground beneath him suddenly felt sacred.
“The Lord is certainly in this place, and I did not know it… this is nothing but the house of God, and this is the gates of heaven” (Genesis 28:16).
This dream was a turning point. Jacob may have been a fugitive, but he was not abandoned. Ladder – The bridge between heaven and earth marked the moment he began to realize that God's presence was not confined to altars or temples. Like the wind, it reaches places that are invisible but undeniable.
The existence of God in creation is a mystical paradox. His revelation is also his cover-up, so he reveals himself in the world, but beyond our full understanding.
Revelation is not about wisdom. It's about awakening. It's about looking up at the sky. “If you look at the work of your heavens, your fingers, your moon, and the stars, what is the star you have placed, the one who cares about him, and the son of the man whom you care about him?” (Psalm 8:3-4).
The Dreamer Joseph
Joseph's dreams shaped his life. As a boy, he saw a vision of wheat shaking before him. It bends with respect for the sun, moon and stars. Their jealousy burned when he shared them with his brothers. Soon they betrayed him and sold him to slavery on foreign lands.
But Joseph's gift did not disappear.
In an Egyptian prison, he interpreted the dreams of the Pharaoh Cup Bearer and Baker. One recovered and the other was executed. When Pharaoh himself was troubled by a dream of seven fat cows eaten by the seven Ganthos, he could not decipher whatsoever except Joseph.
The dream was a warning: seven years of abundance followed by seven years of hunger. Recognizing Joseph's divine wisdom, Pharaoh promoted him to power.
Dreams of almost ceasing the crucifixion
In the midst of history's most important trial, when Jesus of Nazareth stood before Pontius Pilate, another person – almost forgotten – was warned by the other side.
Although unknown in the Bible, Pilate's wife, later known as the traditional Claudia Procrat, had a dream.
When Pilate made his judgment in an attempt to navigate the political and religious storms around Jesus, a message from his wife reached him.
dream. It's not a whisper from the High Priest, it's not a threat from Rome, it's a dream.
We don't know what she saw – it just means that it tormented her. Perhaps she had witnessed a brutal execution before it happened, or saw Jesus in the glory of God, or simply felt overwhelming fear. Whatever it was, she suffered. She then warned her husband to leave.
The logic of dreams
Beyond the small raindrops of grace that will save each and every one of us throughout our lives, there is proof everywhere coded into all mysteries of mystery, like the enormous nature of our universe.
Birth is a miracle. From the moment of conception and the clustering of cells to the first flapping of the heartbeat, life itself is an act of God. Parent-child relationships are miraculous. Children are probably the most miraculous of them.
The other day, my 4-year-old told me, “You're my king.” It knocked me to the side. I felt so honored that my miracle, my child, could see me like her king, with all my flaws.
And when I realized that God might feel the same way, I bumped into the side. So I say it, because people hear it even when they dream. Jesus is the king.





