When the Power Came Back On
On February 13, 2021, Winter Storm Uri slammed into Texas with temperatures the state hadn't seen in a generation. In Austin, a young mother named Maria Gonzalez sat in her apartment with her two children huddled under every blanket they owned. The power had been out for three days. The darkness wasn't just visual — it was suffocating. No heat. No light. No way to warm formula for the baby. She described the silence as "heavy," pressing down on everything. The world outside her window was a blank, frozen void.
Then, at 2:47 a.m. on the fourth morning, the refrigerator hummed. The hallway light flickered. The baseboard heater clicked and began to glow. Maria wept. Her oldest daughter, barely five, looked up and whispered, "Mama, somebody turned the world back on."
That little girl understood something theologians have wrestled with for centuries. Genesis tells us that before the Almighty spoke, everything was formless, void, and shrouded in darkness. Creation wasn't a gentle unfolding — it was an invasion. God's voice broke into the chaos like electricity surging through dead wires. "Let there be light" wasn't a suggestion. It was a command that restructured reality itself.
Whatever darkness you're sitting in this morning — grief, confusion, a future you cannot see — the same God who shattered the primordial void with a single sentence has not lost His voice. He is still speaking. And when He speaks, the lights come on.
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