“Today’s reading from the Acts of the Apostles tells us about Paul and Silas being beaten, chained, and thrown into prison. They were not imprisoned because they did evil, but because they chose to do what was right and faithful before God.
Imagine their situation. Their bodies were wounded. Their feet were locked in chains. The prison was dark, cold, and hopeless. Yet the Bible tells us something surprising: “About midnight, Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns to God.”
Not complaining. Not cursing. Not losing faith. They prayed. They sang. This is the power of deep faith. A person truly rooted in God may suffer, but does not easily lose hope.
Many people today are also living in different kinds of prisons.
Some are imprisoned by fear. Some by anxiety and depression. Some by anger, guilt, addiction, pride, or broken relationships. Others are imprisoned by poverty, sickness, or painful memories. Outwardly, they may look free, but inwardly they are chained.
The reading today reminds us: even in our darkest prison, God can still enter. At midnight—the darkest hour—an earthquake came. The prison doors opened, and the chains were broken. This is not only a physical miracle. It is also a spiritual message: God can break chains that human strength cannot remove.
Sometimes we think our problems are permanent. We say: “This is who I am already.” “This situation will never change.” “My family will never heal.” “I can never recover.”
But God specializes in opening locked doors. One sincere prayer can begin healing. One act of forgiveness can free the heart. One confession can remove years of burden. One encounter with God can change a life.
Notice also the jailer in the story.
At first, he was only doing his duty. But after witnessing faith in the middle of suffering, he asked one of the most beautiful questions in the Bible: “What must I do to be saved?”
The suffering of Paul and Silas became a testimony that led another person to God.
Sometimes your quiet faith during suffering becomes the light that leads others back to the Lord.
When your family sees you still praying despite hardships…still kind despite pain…still hopeful despite disappointments…you become a living witness that God is real.
And finally, the story ends not in despair, but in joy. The jailer and his family were baptized, and their home was filled with rejoicing.
This is what God does. He transforms prisons into places of grace. He turns pain into testimony. He changes darkness into light.
So today, let us ask ourselves: What chains in my life need to be surrendered to God? What prison inside me needs healing? Am I still able to pray even during midnight moments of life?
Brothers and sisters, midnight is not the end of the story. For those who continue trusting God, morning always comes.”