Bible Verse Of The Day

October 11, 2025

Echoes of Faith: The Boy with the Sky in his Eyes| Short Fiction

 



The Boy with the Sky in His Eyes

In 'The Boy with the Sky in His Eyes", we meet Noah whose time seemed to be running out… until something extraordinary happened in the quiet of night. Read the full story below »



Just outside the heart of Nashville, in a quiet neighborhood full of old trees and wide skies, there lived a boy named Noah., there lived a boy named Noah. At seven years old, he had a laugh that could melt the hardest heart and eyes the color of a clear summer sky. He was the light of his mother’s life, the little brother every neighbor’s child adored, and the reason the town’s old bookstore still smelled like cookies—because he loved to sit by the window, reading stories while nibbling chocolate chip treats.

But Noah was sick.

He’d been born with a rare heart condition—hypoplastic left heart syndrome. For years, his life was a carousel of appointments, procedures, and hospital stays. His body carried the weight of machines and medications, rather than scrapes and soccer dreams. Now, his doctors said what no parent wants to hear: he needed a transplant. Soon.

“There’s nothing more we can do,” one said, his tone flat, eyes tired. “We’ve exhausted the treatments.”

“There are no hearts available,” another added.

Noah’s mother, Rebecca, held her son close that night, her tears soaking into his soft hair as he whispered, “It’s okay, Mama. God can fix anything.”

She wanted to Noah believe that. But but faith was getting harder to hold onto.

Autumn came. The tree leaves began to fall. Noah grew quieter. His laughter faded. The corner seat at the bookstore gathered dust. Rebecca prayed, not just with words—but in how she held his hand, how she showed up every single day. She pleaded for something to change. But the transplant list remained long, and the clock didn’t stop.

One night, when the hospital halls were silent and sterile, Rebecca stepped into the small chapel tucked beside the nurses’ station. The air smelled faintly of wax and old wood. She didn’t kneel. She simply sat and stared at the cross on the wall, hollowed out by fear.

“I’m not asking for anything fancy,” she whispered. “Just one more day. Just… let me keep my boy.”

There was no voice in the room. No thunderclap. Just the flicker of a candle and her heart beating against the silence.

She stayed until morning.

Three days later, Noah slipped into unconsciousness. Machines tracked every fragile heartbeat. His breathing slowed to a whisper.

Rebecca curled beside him on the narrow hospital bed, stroking his curly blonde hair. She sang to him, not because it would heal him—but because it was the only thing she had left to offer.

The doctors stood back. One of them said, “You might want to call family.”

And then, at 3:14 a.m., the door flew open.

A nurse, breathless, burst in. “We’ve got a heart.”

Rebecca stared at her. “What?”

“An accident just came in. Pediatric donor. The blood type… the size… it's a perfect match.”

The room moved in fast-forward after that—papers, scrubs, questions, signatures. A team prepped. A surgeon Rebecca had never seen before nodded at her once before disappearing into the operating wing.

She stood in the hallway alone, stunned. It didn’t feel real.

But it was.

The surgery took hours. Rebecca sat in the waiting room with Noah’s stuffed bear in her lap, numb.

She thought of the other mother somewhere, getting a very different call.

She whispered thanks, not even sure to whom. To the donor’s family. To the universe. To God, maybe. It didn’t matter. Gratitude swelled in her chest like light through a stained-glass window.

When the lead surgeon stepped out, he removed his mask and spoke two words she would never forget:

“He’s stable.”

Noah woke days later. His voice was raspy, but his eyes—still sky-blue—were clear.

“I had a dream,” he whispered.

Rebecca leaned in. “What kind of dream?”

“There was a man. He stood in the clouds. He smiled at me and said, ‘Not yet, little one. Not yet.’”

She didn’t speak. Just pressed her forehead to his and closed her eyes.

Weeks turned into months. Noah grew stronger. He walked again. Laughed again. The bookstore chair welcomed him back like an old friend.

People in town whispered about what happened.

Some said the hospital’s chapel candle burned through the entire night of the transplant, never flickering. One of the older nurses claimed she saw a man standing outside the building at sunrise, face glowing in the mist. When she looked again, he was gone.

Rebecca didn’t explain any of it.

When asked, she only smiled and said, “He got a second chance. That’s all I need to know.”

One quiet morning, long after Noah had returned home, Rebecca found herself back in that same chapel. She didn’t have questions this time. Just thanks.

She lit a candle, sat down in the back pew, and let the silence wrap around her.

There was no thunder. No voice. Only peace.

She looked at the candle burning steadily in front of her.

“I don’t know how,” she said quietly, “but thank you, Lord."

Years later, Noah stood tall at his middle school graduation, taller now, with stronger lungs and a wide, easy smile.

He didn’t remember much from the hospital. But sometimes, when the sky was especially clear and the clouds hung low, he’d pause, just for a second.

As if listening for something.

And maybe—just maybe—something was listening back.

Because sometimes, the impossible happens.

Not loudly. Not with trumpets or thunder.

But in the quiet.

In the flicker of a candle.

The whisper of a promise.

And the steady beat of a heart that shouldn’t have made it… but did.

🕊️ An Echoes of Faith Story

Sometimes, the miracle comes just after you’ve stopped expecting it—but not before God’s already planned it.

October 5, 2025

Sanctified Steps: Lord, Send It Now| Psalm 118:25 (KJV)

 

Lord Send It Now: 320x180

📖 Scripture:

“Save now, I beseech thee, O Lord: O Lord, I beseech thee, send now prosperity.”Psalm 118:25 (KJV)


Devotional Reflection:

There are moments when our spirit aches for something only God can give — not next week, not when the world calms down, but now.

The psalmist’s cry — “Save now, Lord, send now prosperity” — wasn’t born from impatience, but from faith in motion. It’s a desperate, holy kind of confidence that believes God can step into chaos and turn it into calm.

When Peter walked on water, he looked at the waves and began to sink — yet he didn’t try to save himself. He cried out, “Lord, save me!” And immediately, Jesus reached out His hand (Matthew 14:30–31).

That’s what “Send it now” faith looks like — it’s not demanding, it’s trusting.
It’s knowing that even in the storm, God’s timing is perfect, and His help is never delayed.

Today, as headlines shout fear and uncertainty, let your heart whisper a different sound:

Lord, send peace where there is war.
 Send hope where there is despair.
 Send healing where the world is broken.
And send faith where many have stopped believing.”

Because God still moves now. He still saves now.

Reflection Questions:

  1. What “now” moment are you believing God to move in today?
  2. How can you express faith while waiting for His answer?
  3. When has God shown up just in time for you before?

Daily Wisdom Insight:

Faith doesn’t rush God — it invites Him.
When you cry, “Lord, send it now,” heaven hears it as worship, not worry.

Practical Application:

Today, take a few minutes to pause and say this prayer out loud wherever you are. Speak it with expectancy. Then, write down one “now” request you’re believing God for. Keep it close — your breakthrough may already be on the way.

Prayer:

Lord,

When the world grows weary,
and hearts grow faint,
remind us You are still the God who moves suddenly.

Save now, Lord —
send Your mercy into our homes,
Your peace into our cities,
Your provision into our hands.

Save now, Lord —
not because we are worthy,
but because You are faithful.

Send now Your presence,
Your protection,
Your prosperity —
not just in things,
but in wisdom, health, and grace.

Do it for Your glory,
and we’ll give You the praise.

In Jesus’ name,
Amen.

💬 Discussion Questions:
  1. Where have you seen God move “immediately” in your life, like He did for Peter?
  2. How can you encourage someone else who’s waiting for their “now” moment from God?

🔗Discover More:

Visit the Sanctified Steps page for devotionals that strengthen faith for every season. 🌿