one MEEN Ag said:
I mean, on some level, seeing or experiencing things outside known physical limitations of this world is miraculous. I think that is a simple enough definition of a miracle, right? Its supernatural by definition, so if you're demanding that miracles be natural, testable, and repeatable, your asking something it by definition can't be.
I think that is my point. If miracles are not testable, repeatable, examinable, then by what means to we validate them? Other than by using already held faith and bias? You need faith to believe that the Christian God performs miracles. Therefore, miracles are a problematic tool in justifying faith in the Christian God. There seems to be a circular, chicken or the egg, type issue here.
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Again, I would just start looking at the description of miracles over the ages, both modern and ancient. Miracles point to a higher power.
Its a very modern worldview to look at a miracle and go, 'they're all just lying'. The ancient Hebrews didn't doubt that Pharaoh's magi could perform supernatural feats, its just that Moses's was greater (on purpose). And the answer for why the magi could in the first place is that they were in communion with demons and demons were performing them.
If you've got some other sources of miracles, start examining their claims. Who they claim to be, who they claim to get that power from, and how they used that power. From my more limited examinations into other religions miraculous claims they seem to be. Your biggest 'competitors' for miracles and claims of authority are Mohammed and Buddha. And Mohammed called himself a plain warner. Buddha's more miraculous claims come about in the later writings of buddha
Whose healing the sick and raising the dead?
They point to a
belief in a higher power. Or they point to a need by mankind to assign agency and meaning to all things. My question for you is, given the number of non-Christian miracles, how reliable should we consider testimonies of miracles? What are the options here?
Are all miracles true? Christian miracles come from God and other miracles come from demons posed as false gods. And if that is the case, miracles maybe aren't so remarkable. And its not like these demonic miracles are all terrible things. . . . Other Gods heal the sick, bring back the dead, and generally help people. Which makes understanding miracles that much more difficult. If we've got all these demons performing 'good' miracles, how do you know your miracle is from God and not from one of these other gods?
Or Maybe only Christian miracles are true and everyone else is lying.
Or maybe miracles don't happen.
Or if they do, given their nature, we should admit we don't understand them.
Raising the dead falls is a pretty extreme type of miracle - if someone famous were to rise from the dead tomorrow, gory and decomposed, walk to a tv station and give an interview about how God raised them from the dead, well that would surely be something. But that doesn't happen. God decided to stop raising people from the dead a while ago it seems. There are types of miracles, where, should they occur, the sheer improbability of the event would be absolutely profound. I don't need to understand how God raises someone from the dead to understand that if it were to happen, it would be massively important. So, lets ask God to raise a gooey half decomposed person who can give an account of Heaven and God and I promise you I'll listen on the very edge of my seat.
For most people, when you ask them about miracles and revelation, they talk about some moment when they felt touched by God or they heard a voice or something else. Fine for you, but what am I supposed to do with that? The implications of the existence of the your type of God existing are massive. Am I to dedicate myself into full faith toward 'your' God because you heard a voice? Well, Bob heard a different voice and Mary heard a different voice and Joe heard a different voice. The inconsistency of these miracles, the impossibility of understanding them, and the fact that they are subjective is all the reason I need to completely dismiss them from being what they claim to be.
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The foundation of Christianity is rooted on the belief that the miracles surrounding Jesus Christ as outlined in the Bible are true. Jesus was the son of God, born of a virgin, healed the sick, rose from the dead, ascended into Heaven. If Jesus was just 'some guy', then the whole things falls apart. And Jesus did all of these miracles and performed these miracles alongside Hindu and Egyptian and pagan gods who were also sons of gods, and born of virgins, and performed miracles, and healed the sick, and walked on water and whatever. And Jesus did all of this at a time in history when everyone knew for a fact that illness was caused by demons, weather was controlled by God, the that if your God couldn't out-God your neighbor's God, then there is no point of worshipping your God. . . . so your God better be the best and have all the attributes of your neighbor's God and more! I'm sorry one MEEN ag, I think there is a 99.99% chance that it didn't happen and Jesus was just some guy.
And if it did happen and Jesus is the son of God, then I'm even more confused than I am now. Because it means that God's plan for salvation of a hundred billion human being is to perform some miracles for an ancient civilization in literally 0.01% of the world and then ask a few of those ancient peoples to write down the accounts 30 years later and cross their fingers and hope that it spreads to everyone. Are you F-ing kidding me? This is God's plan? Can you imagine the CEO of General Electric setting a new company policy and implementing it by finding a desk clerk in a local manufacturing office in Patesville Kentucky to give his policy to and then just hoping that the policy direction makes its way to all 172,000 employees? "Trust me everyone, the CEO (God) told me of this policy (miracle). And if you don't follow it, you'll be fired (sent to Hell)." I don't buy it. I certainly don't look down on anyone that does buy it, because its not as though I have any better answers to offer. Excuse the language, but, My God!, if the Christian God wants us to know Him. . . What the **** is He doing?
Ha! sorry, that was much longer than I intended.