The Strongest Place
In 1892, German surgeon Julius Wolff published a discovery that still guides orthopedic medicine today. Known as Wolff's Law, it describes something remarkable about how broken bones heal. When a fracture occurs, the body doesn't simply glue the pieces back together. Instead, it floods the break site with a substance called callus — a rough, dense tissue that bridges the gap. Over weeks and months, the bone remodels itself under the stress of daily use, laying down new mineral along the lines of greatest pressure. The result? The healed fracture site often becomes denser and stronger than the surrounding bone that never broke at all.
The strongest place in the bone is the place that was once shattered.
The apostle Paul understood this principle long before modern medicine confirmed it. "We also glory in our sufferings," he wrote, "because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope" (Romans 5:3-4). God does not waste a single fracture in our lives. Every season of breaking — grief, failure, illness, loss — becomes a site where the Holy Spirit deposits something denser and more resilient than what was there before.
If you are in a season of mending right now, take heart. The healing is not merely restoring you to what you were. The God who knit your bones together in the womb is rebuilding you stronger at the very place where life broke you. The strongest place in your faith may be the place that once shattered.
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