|
|
|
SEEING MIRACLES THROUGH A CHILD'S EYES
PREVIEW
--- FULL MOVIE
One of the most meaningful films I have ever encountered is The Girl Who Believes in Miracles. I connected with it instantly, because—like the young girl in the story—my mother began teaching me about miracles as soon as I could speak. As a toddler, I didn’t need “faith” to overcome “disbelief,” because I had no disbelief yet. Life itself was miraculous. The world felt alive, responsive, and full of quiet wonder. So when I watched this film, it didn’t feel like fiction. It felt like recognition. Her experiences with God mirror my own childhood so closely that the movie became my favorite of all time. Not because it is sentimental, but because it portrays something profoundly real: the natural openness children have before the world teaches them to doubt what they feel and see. My own understanding of God deepened even further years later, as an adult. One Sunday, a pastor in my parents’ church explained that the Greek word logos—translated as “the Word” in English Bibles—literally means “the complete concept of everything, past, present, and future.” Hearing that, I immediately thought of John 1:1: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.”
In that moment, the verse opened like a doorway. John wasn’t simply saying “God spoke.” He was pointing to something far more expansive:
That realization brought my childhood experiences into a new clarity. The miracles I had known were not exceptions to the rules of life—they were expressions of the deeper structure of reality itself. |
LEARNING TO SHAPE'S YOUR OWN EXPERIENCES
My boook shares fifty of my own magical experiences in detail, but it doesn’t spend much time explaining how someone can cultivate such experiences for themselves. That is where Napoleon Hill’s Master Key series offers a powerful complement. It approaches magic from the practical side: how to align your mind, intention, and actions so that life responds in meaningful ways. Filmed in 1954, the language is a bit old‑fashioned. Hill speaks of “Divine Providence” rather than “magic,” but the meaning is the same. Divine refers to what is of or like God; providence refers to the protective, guiding intelligence of life. Put together, the phrase describes the same living responsiveness that I call Magic. The terminology may differ, but truth does not age. Hill’s journey began in 1908 when, at just eighteen, he met Andrew Carnegie—the steel magnate, philanthropist, and philosopher. Carnegie challenged him to spend twenty years studying the principles behind American achievement. Through Carnegie, Hill met Thomas Edison, Henry Ford, and hundreds of other innovators and leaders. In total, he interviewed more than five hundred successful individuals, searching for the common thread behind their accomplishments. What he discovered was not luck, nor brute force, nor privilege. It was a pattern—a way of thinking, choosing, and aligning oneself with possibility. Hill spent the rest of his life teaching these principles through books, lectures, and the thirteen lessons captured in this video series. For anyone seeking to create magical results in their own life, these lessons offer a clear, structured path. |
WHEN SCIENCE BEGINS TO CATCH UP
Down The Quantum Rabbit Hole is a nine-part series that shares the latest in what modern science and philosophy understand about magic. For those who look at the world from a technical perspective and seek concrete proof behind what they observe, this video series should be quite interesting. The CGI and other graphics -- as well as the acting -- are high quality and a real help toward understanding the concepts being explained. |