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Better Than a Miracle

January 21, 2026
00:00

Do you want to be a past or present-tense miracle?

Guest (Female): Welcome to Joni Eareckson Tada: Sharing Hope. Joni, you've lived with total paralysis for decades now, and I'm wondering if you still encounter people who pray for your healing?

Joni Eareckson Tada: Honestly, not too often anymore, but, Shana, not long ago there was this Instagram post of me and my quadriplegic friend Renee Bondi. We were sitting in our wheelchairs together singing, "You're a good, good Father. It's who you are." We were having such fun, and Renee was singing melody and me harmony. I guess it was watched a lot, and in answer to your question about healing, one viewer named Barbara wrote this.

She said, "Something became so clear to me watching you and Renee singing so happily in your wheelchairs. I've often wondered why the Lord did not heal you because the miracle would have brought glory to his name. But then it hit me so hard while watching that post of you two quadriplegics singing. If God had healed you both, it would have been a miracle that just came and went. We would always refer to it in the past tense."

"But instead, and this is what hit me, you and your friend are both present-tense miracles of resurrection power far beyond any physical miracle. You are not a burning bush that the world saw in the past. You are a bush that's still aflame, beautifully burning in the present tense." When I read that, I just put my head back and said, "Hallelujah!" because Barbara just described what a true miracle it is for me and my quadriplegic friend Renee to live with total paralysis and yet sing with joy to God.

"You're a good, good Father," and he is. Barbara nailed it when she said that it takes the miracle of resurrection power far, far beyond any physical miracle. My friend Renee would agree it takes the power of the resurrection talked about in Ephesians chapter one, that same power as the mighty strength that raised the Lord Jesus from the dead. It takes that kind of grave-splitting power to keep us persevering, enduring, trusting, smiling, and singing as we sit day after day, year after year in our wheelchairs.

I hope and pray that many others who watch that little video will experience the same revelation because Renee and I support the claim of Christ that his power is best displayed when we're at our weakest. I want to say a quick word about Barbara's comment when she wrote, "You are a bush that is still aflame, beautifully burning in the present tense." That bush she's referring to is in Exodus, the burning bush that Moses saw.

It was the actual presence of God, a flame in the bush. Moses thought it was curious that this dry desert bush in flames wasn't burnt up. It just kept glowing and burning and aflame. It should have burnt up, but it didn't. Christians who suffer greatly and yet graciously, like my quadriplegic friend Renee, often make others curious because we are like a flaming bush unconsumed, causing people to ask like Moses, "Why is this bush not burnt up?"

John Newton observed that the strength and stability of such believers—these fellow Christians who endure great hardships yet keep their hearts bright and their smiles fresh because of Jesus—can only be explained by the miracle of God's sustaining grace.

Guest (Female): That's right, Joni! And hey, listening friend, come see that short video of Joni and Renee singing because we've put it up today for you on joniradio.org. Sing along with us because God is indeed a good, good Father. It's who he is.

This transcript is provided as a written companion to the original message and may contain inaccuracies or transcription errors. For complete context and clarity, please refer to the original audio recording. Time-sensitive references or promotional details may be outdated. This material is intended for personal use and informational purposes only.

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About Joni Eareckson Tada: Sharing Hope

Joni Eareckson Tada: Sharing Hope is a broadcast ministry of Joni and Friends committed to bringing the Gospel and practical help to people impacted by disability around the world. Joni and Friends has been advancing disability ministry for over 40 years. Their mission to glorify God, communicate the Gospel and mobilize the global church to evangelize, disciple and serve people living with disability answers the call found in Luke 14 to “bring in the poor, the crippled, the blind and the lame… so that my house will be full.”

About Joni Eareckson Tada

Paralyzed as the result of a diving accident at age 17, Joni Eareckson Tada envisions a world where every person with a disability finds hope, dignity, and their place in the body of Christ. As the Founder and CEO of Joni and Friends, she is known worldwide as an author, speaker, disability rights advocate and radio personality. Her 10,000 radio programs are broadcast across the country and around the world, inspiring listeners to realize that there is hope in every hardship.
Joni Eareckson Tada is an esteemed Christian stateswoman and respected global leader in disability advocacy. Although a 1967 diving accident left her a quadriplegic, she emerged from rehabilitation with a determination to help others with similar disabilities. Mrs. Tada serves as CEO of Joni and Friends, a Christian organization which provides programs and services for thousands of special-needs families around the world. President Reagan appointed Mrs. Tada to the National Council on Disability, then reappointed by President George H.W. Bush. During her tenure, the ADA was passed and signed into law. Mrs. Tada served as advisor to Condoleezza Rice on the Disability Advisory Committee to the U.S. State Department. She served as Senior Associate for Disability Concerns for the Lausanne Committee for World Evangelization. The Colson Center on Christian Worldview awarded Joni Tada its prestigious William Wilberforce Award, and she was also inducted into
Indiana Wesleyan University’s Society of World Changers. 
Joni Eareckson Tada has been awarded several honorary degrees, including Doctor of Humanities from Gordon College and Doctor of Divinity from Westminster Theological Seminary. She is an effective communicator, sharing her inspirational message in books, through artwork, radio, and other media. Joni Tada served as General Editor of the Beyond Suffering Bible, a special edition published by Tyndale for people affected by disability. Joni and her husband Ken were married in 1982 and reside in Calabasas, California.

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