In 2 Kings 4, we meet a woman from Shunem — a woman who didn’t just believe in God’s power but made room for it. Every time the prophet Elisha passed by, she opened her home to him, offering food and rest. Eventually, she went a step further, building a small upper room on her roof — a simple space with a bed, a table, a chair, and a lamp.

What began as an act of kindness became a sacred invitation. That little room became a place where heaven met earth, where the presence of God could rest and dwell.

“God still visits the places where He’s honored.” — John Cameron

In his message “The Miracle Room,” guest speaker John Cameron reminded us that miracles don’t happen by chance — they happen where there’s room for God to move. The Shunammite woman didn’t know what was ahead of her; she simply honored God in the present. She built a space before she ever needed a miracle — and that act of faith changed everything.

When her long-awaited son suddenly died in her arms, her response was remarkable. She didn’t collapse in despair. She didn’t run to her neighbors or to her own understanding. She went back to the room she had built — the place of presence. She laid her lifeless promise on the prophet’s bed and shut the door behind her.

That room became the meeting place between death and resurrection. It was there, in the stillness of surrender, that life was restored.

“The greatest blessing of a miracle room is that you have a place to go when the child dies.” — John Cameron

Every believer needs a miracle room. It’s not just a physical space — it’s a posture of the heart. It’s the place where we continually meet with God through prayer, worship, Scripture, and fasting. It’s where we bring our pain, our questions, and our disappointments — not to social media or human solutions — but to the One who can breathe life into what feels dead.

A miracle room is where faith is formed in the unseen. It’s where tears become prayers and silence becomes surrender. It’s where you stop striving and start trusting.

“What you feed in your life will come back to you.”

When you feed your praise, joy returns.
When you feed your worship, peace rises.
When you make God a priority, He fills the space you’ve made for Him.

“God gets the best of me; people get the rest of me.” — John Cameron

In a world crowded with noise, distraction, and hurry, it’s easy to let our miracle rooms grow dusty and forgotten. But the same God who met the Shunammite woman still seeks a place to dwell today. He’s looking for hearts that make Him at home — lives that say, “You can stay here, Lord.”

So maybe it’s time to rebuild. Clear a little space. Create a room in your heart where His Spirit can rest, speak, and restore.

Because the truth is both simple and life-changing:
Miracles still happen in the rooms we build for Him.