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Jesus at the Wedding |
I carried the jars, filled to the brim, though I did not understand why. But when the water touched the lips of the master of the feast, I saw the impossible become real. That day, I witnessed His glory with my own eyes.
The scent of figs and crushed herbs lingered in the courtyard as Amara pulled another bucket of water from the well. Her arms trembled, but she dared not rest. The wedding was in full swing, and the whispers had started:
The wine is gone.
She was new to this household — barely known by name, tucked in the background like a broom. But even she understood the shame such a failure would bring. A wedding without wine was more than a party ruined; it was a stain on a family’s name.
She had just reached the last stone jar when she heard a woman’s voice, low but firm:
“Whatever He says to you, do it.”
Amara looked up.
The woman had a calm strength about her, like one who’d seen storms and still stood tall. But it was the man beside her that caught Amara’s attention. He wasn’t dressed like the wealthy, nor did He act like the curious. His eyes… they were kind, yet commanding — like He saw things others couldn’t.
He looked toward the servants. Her.
“Fill the waterpots with water,” He said.
She blinked. The pots were massive — six stone vessels, used for ritual cleansing, each one large enough to bathe a child.
Fill them? Now?
With what? Hope?
But something in His voice made her feet move before her mind could protest. She grabbed the nearest bucket and began hauling.
Trip after trip. The sun climbed higher. Her tunic clung to her. Others joined in, grumbling under their breath. But not Amara.
She kept glancing back at Him — wondering who He was… and why she suddenly cared so much.
Finally, the last pot brimmed. The water rippled near the lip.
Then — He spoke again.
“Draw some out now, and take it to the master of the feast.”
A fellow servant looked at her, eyebrows raised. Amara nodded and stepped forward.
She dipped the ladle. The water looked… different. There was a richness to its color — a red so deep it shimmered in the light. Her hands trembled as she carried it.
The master of the feast lifted the cup and took a sip.
His brows shot up.
“Stop the music!” he shouted. “Bring the bridegroom!”
The musicians froze, unsure. The crowd murmured.
“Everyone brings out the best wine first,” the master said, loud enough for all to hear. “But you… you saved the best for last!”
Gasps followed. Laughter. Applause. The mood shifted like a river breaking through a dam.
Amara stood motionless. No one noticed her, of course. But she had seen it.
She had drawn water.
She had delivered wine.
Her hands had carried a miracle.
She glanced back toward Him.
He hadn’t moved. Just watched. Quiet, steady.
His mother gave the smallest smile.
Amara stepped aside, heart racing. The celebration roared back to life — but something eternal had just taken root in her.
🕊️ An Echoes of Scripture Story
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