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Author Topic:   Miracles and their Effect of Faith
Tusko
Member (Idle past 123 days)
Posts: 615
From: London, UK
Joined: 10-01-2004


Message 1 of 39 (402083)
05-24-2007 6:06 AM


If God is like Monet (and they certainly both have big beards), then the Lord appears to be in the equivalent of a water-lilly phase at the moment i.e. you really have to squint to make out his miracles amongst the murk.
It seems strange to me that he used to be really enthsiastic about doing miracles. You couldn't stop him, like a boring person at a party. When Jesus was kicking around, he'd make the lame walk, the blind see, and the tone-deaf play the ukelele. Now? Nada.
My question to believer and non-believer alike is this: why has he gone so... subtle?
Now, you might argue that this is all about faith, and that if we are made to believe through our eyes etc... then that totally goes against what it is that God is trying to achieve by making people have faith. Fine. But, if this is the case why did he ever do miracles at all?
A few things come from this. For instance - were all those people who where converted to Christianity by seeing a loaf and a carp feed thousands of people (and if I'd seen it, I probably would have been converted too, credulous type that I am) somehow denied 'proper' faith like subsequent generations of Christians have enjoyed? After all, their belief was only born from the evidence of their own eyes, not from some purer, deeper, less tangible faith.
I guess this topic could lean over into the actual desirability of faith as we understand it. I'm easy really, as long as people can help me to address this problem. Although I've couched it in slightly facetious terms, its a serious question.
Any takers? I don't really mind where it goes, but would Faith and Belief be appropriate?
Clearly, this topic assumes that God exists, and that the contents of the Old and New Testement are totally kosher, so to speak, so its going to be more rewarding if we just take these things for granted.

Replies to this message:
 Message 3 by ikabod, posted 05-24-2007 10:10 AM Tusko has replied
 Message 6 by jar, posted 05-24-2007 12:05 PM Tusko has replied
 Message 21 by RAZD, posted 05-24-2007 8:13 PM Tusko has replied

  
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Message 2 of 39 (402090)
05-24-2007 7:49 AM


Thread moved here from the Proposed New Topics forum.

  
ikabod
Member (Idle past 4515 days)
Posts: 365
From: UK
Joined: 03-13-2006


Message 3 of 39 (402104)
05-24-2007 10:10 AM
Reply to: Message 1 by Tusko
05-24-2007 6:06 AM


seem to my recall that all the miracles occur only when a major prophet ie Moses , or Jesus is about to "channel" the miracles . No major holy personage no miracle ... unless you count faces in buns/potatoes/oil slicks as miracles .
ok there are a few , mainly healing miracles linked to shrines / statues ect .. but all the major suffer need at least a "saintly" figure
the lack of these would seem to be the limiting factor .
the church's (plc) seem to have stopped producing them , and no new prophets stepped up lately .
As to why , may be its a change in direction from gods marketing people , as you say its easy to belive when you see a major body of water split in half .. may be today its more about faith than belief .

This message is a reply to:
 Message 1 by Tusko, posted 05-24-2007 6:06 AM Tusko has replied

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Tusko
Member (Idle past 123 days)
Posts: 615
From: London, UK
Joined: 10-01-2004


Message 4 of 39 (402105)
05-24-2007 10:47 AM
Reply to: Message 3 by ikabod
05-24-2007 10:10 AM


You're completely right; they only seem to happen in a big and impressive way when there's a major prophet strutting around. Yes, there is a necessity for saints to do miracles (I think) to get the nod, but if you want seas cleft in twain or mountains moved, then someone like Jesus or Moses or someone has to be around.
I guess my question was prompted by the feeling that there is some kind of double-standard being applied by some modern religious types. On the one hand they say that God's performance of miracles to gain worshipers would today be somehow unseemly. I briefly ran through an argument that might concievably be made by a theist who thought this in the OP. Yet on the other hand - at least for those who believe the miracles reported in the gospels actually happened - they think it was pretty cool for the Lord to go drumming up support among the 'grass roots' with gratuitous displays of miracleworking.
So why is this? Was the middle-east two thousand years ago an inherently more cynical time, which required a heavier hand than today's folk need?
One obvious alternative, and the one I subscribe to is that the gospel writers were telling porkies or had porkies told to them and these miraculous things didn't actually happen.
Edited by Tusko, : No reason given.
Edited by Tusko, : No reason given.

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 Message 5 by Taz, posted 05-24-2007 11:45 AM Tusko has replied

  
Taz
Member (Idle past 3313 days)
Posts: 5069
From: Zerus
Joined: 07-18-2006


Message 5 of 39 (402108)
05-24-2007 11:45 AM
Reply to: Message 4 by Tusko
05-24-2007 10:47 AM


Tusko writes:
So why is this? Was the middle-east two thousand years ago an inherently more cynical time, which required a heavier hand than today's folk need?
We can't say that there has been no miracles at all in the last 2 thousand years. For all we know, those miracles could have gone unnoticed or unreported.
We can only reliably say that there has been no major miracles during the last 100 years, when we actually have the proper tools and knowledge to call out the fakes. 100 years is not a very long time. Even in biblical times, I'm pretty sure god went for 100 years without raining down brimstone and fire or something to that effect.


We are BOG. Resistance is voltage over current.
Disclaimer:
Occasionally, owing to the deficiency of the English language, I have used he/him/his meaning he or she/him or her/his or her in order to avoid awkwardness of style.
He, him, and his are not intended as exclusively masculine pronouns. They may refer to either sex or to both sexes!

This message is a reply to:
 Message 4 by Tusko, posted 05-24-2007 10:47 AM Tusko has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 7 by Tusko, posted 05-24-2007 1:49 PM Taz has replied

  
jar
Member (Idle past 416 days)
Posts: 34026
From: Texas!!
Joined: 04-20-2004


Message 6 of 39 (402111)
05-24-2007 12:05 PM
Reply to: Message 1 by Tusko
05-24-2007 6:06 AM


Miracles were never all that common.
It seems strange to me that he used to be really enthsiastic about doing miracles. You couldn't stop him, like a boring person at a party. When Jesus was kicking around, he'd make the lame walk, the blind see, and the tone-deaf play the ukelele. Now? Nada.
Well, that's not quite accurate.
Miracles stand out in the Biblical stories because they were the exception to the rule, something unexpected. Jesus himself commented on that and you can read about it in Luke4:21-32.
The majority of the story in the Bible is not miracles, it is relationships, God's relationship with man, Man's relationship with God and man's relationship with his fellow man and the world we live in.
A few things come from this. For instance - were all those people who where converted to Christianity by seeing a loaf and a carp feed thousands of people (and if I'd seen it, I probably would have been converted too, credulous type that I am) somehow denied 'proper' faith like subsequent generations of Christians have enjoyed? After all, their belief was only born from the evidence of their own eyes, not from some purer, deeper, less tangible faith.
Not at all, and that too is the real meaning of many of the stories about Jesus, including some of the miracles themselves. There is nothing wrong with looking for evidence, for being skeptical. That is the underlying point in the story of Thomas, or of Peter walking on water.

Aslan is not a Tame Lion

This message is a reply to:
 Message 1 by Tusko, posted 05-24-2007 6:06 AM Tusko has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 8 by Tusko, posted 05-24-2007 2:08 PM jar has replied

  
Tusko
Member (Idle past 123 days)
Posts: 615
From: London, UK
Joined: 10-01-2004


Message 7 of 39 (402121)
05-24-2007 1:49 PM
Reply to: Message 5 by Taz
05-24-2007 11:45 AM


You are quite right about this. However, It's pretty safe to say that whether we correctly ascribe apparently miraculous events to an omnipotent deity or not, if God wants miracles to be correctly interpreted and taken seriously, then he has the power to 'make it so'. After all, he's done it before.
If you look at it from the point of view of someone who believes that the biblical miracles actually took place, then you have to find an explanation for why they got some, and none of the subsequent people really got anything impressive at all. You basically have to come to the conclusion that for whatever reason, God hasn't thought it appropriate to reveal himself to later populations in the way that he was doing circa 20 AD.
My initial reaction to this is - isn't that preferential treatment for a bunch of first-century sandal-wearers? My second reaction is - if faith without evidence is really such a virtue, then why was God allowing 'offical', 'authorised' honest-to-Himself miracles to happen in front of anyone? Finally - did this exposure to certifiable miracles (in the eyes of a believer) compromise the faith that the very founders of the faith might have had?
Just a thought!
Edited by Tusko, : No reason given.
Edited by Tusko, : After all, he's done it before.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 5 by Taz, posted 05-24-2007 11:45 AM Taz has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 9 by ringo, posted 05-24-2007 2:36 PM Tusko has replied
 Message 18 by Taz, posted 05-24-2007 5:27 PM Tusko has not replied

  
Tusko
Member (Idle past 123 days)
Posts: 615
From: London, UK
Joined: 10-01-2004


Message 8 of 39 (402122)
05-24-2007 2:08 PM
Reply to: Message 6 by jar
05-24-2007 12:05 PM


Re: Miracles were never all that common.
Yes, perhaps I have mischaracterised the gospels somewhat. I agree about the relationships being of greatest significance. However, I think in relative terms what I says might still stand: Jesus was doing a lot more miracles than anyone I've ever met, or even heard existed for two thousand years (assuming I'm a Christian who believes the miracles happened).
I'm glad you brought up Thomas yourself, because that's actually a really interesting example. As with all the other miracles described in the text, its at least second-hand. We obviously have to take his word for it. But Thomas, and a few of his associates if they wanted to, got the chance to actually stick their hands in the wounds, and see that a dead man was alive again. Fantastic. But doesn't there seems to be a fundamental difference here between the spiritual 'servicing' Thomas got from his deity, and the resultant faith that Thomas and his friends experienced (for the purposes of this thread we must assume the biblical Thomas actually existed, and was to all intents and purposes one of the first 'Christians') and the servicing and faith that all subsequent generations have experienced?
Speaking as a non-Christian, if I got the chance to experience miracles of a sufficiently impressive magnitude, then I'd probably believe. To ask for proof is unreasonable, according to scripture, but is it unreasonable for the subsequent generations to expect to freely recieve the 'witness' that the first lot had?
Why did the rules change?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 6 by jar, posted 05-24-2007 12:05 PM jar has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 10 by jar, posted 05-24-2007 2:49 PM Tusko has replied

  
ringo
Member (Idle past 434 days)
Posts: 20940
From: frozen wasteland
Joined: 03-23-2005


Message 9 of 39 (402124)
05-24-2007 2:36 PM
Reply to: Message 7 by Tusko
05-24-2007 1:49 PM


Tusko writes:
... if God wants miracles to be correctly interpreted and taken seriously, then he has the power to 'make it so'.
What would the "correct interpretation" be? Is the point of a miracle to brag about how great God is or to help somebody out? Is it necessary to have a big fanfare for every miracle?
... you have to find an explanation for why they got some, and none of the subsequent people really got anything impressive at all.
Is feeding five thousand people more "impressive" than feeding one?
What if the Red sea was just too muddy to cross? Would it be more "impressive" if it dried up at the right moment or if the water piled up a hundred feet?
Do you think maybe the "impressive" part is the descriptions of the miracles and not the miracles themselves?
... if faith without evidence is really such a virtue....
It isn't.
That's just an excuse that lazy Christians use.

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This message is a reply to:
 Message 7 by Tusko, posted 05-24-2007 1:49 PM Tusko has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 11 by Tusko, posted 05-24-2007 3:03 PM ringo has replied

  
jar
Member (Idle past 416 days)
Posts: 34026
From: Texas!!
Joined: 04-20-2004


Message 10 of 39 (402126)
05-24-2007 2:49 PM
Reply to: Message 8 by Tusko
05-24-2007 2:08 PM


Re: Miracles were never all that common.
To ask for proof is unreasonable, according to scripture, but is it unreasonable for the subsequent generations to expect to freely recieve the 'witness' that the first lot had?
But that is where I think you make the mistake. It is NOT unreasonable to ask for proof. It may be unreasonable though to expect to get it. That is part of the lesson to be learned form the passage I mentioned in Luke.
Jesus shows up at the synagogue and starts off by telling the folk gathered, "I know you heard about the show I put on up the road, and you are likely expecting to see one yourself. But guess what folk, there ain't gonna be a show. Instead, listen to what I tell you. Here is the straight skinny on miracles. First, they are discretionary. Remember when Elijah was sent to put on a show? There had been drought for three and a half years, all over including the boonies. Lots of widows all over Israel. But Elijah was only sent to ONE widow, and get this very straight, she wasn't even a Hebrew. And remember Elisha? There were lepers all over Israel then, but only one was miraculously cured and that was Naaman, the Syrian. You heard me right. Syrian, not even a Hebrew. So don't think that just because you are the Chosen People you are something special. Miracles are an act of volition. They are discretionary. Not for sale or show."
Too many Christians get all hung up on "miracles" and tend to forget that they are discretionary. They are also usually pretty prosaic. So Jesus fed the crowds that showed up to listen to him, and made the beer run at the party. The miracles, if they happened, were not the message. Like Jesus told the folk gathered in Nazareth, "The message ain't the show, folk. Listen to what I say!"

Aslan is not a Tame Lion

This message is a reply to:
 Message 8 by Tusko, posted 05-24-2007 2:08 PM Tusko has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 12 by Tusko, posted 05-24-2007 3:23 PM jar has replied

  
Tusko
Member (Idle past 123 days)
Posts: 615
From: London, UK
Joined: 10-01-2004


Message 11 of 39 (402130)
05-24-2007 3:03 PM
Reply to: Message 9 by ringo
05-24-2007 2:36 PM


Ringo writes:
What would the "correct interpretation" be?
It's what God wants it to be. I'm assuming for the purposes of this thread that a Christian who believes the usual kind of things and thinks that the miracles in the bible actually happened, as they were discribed, is correctly interpreting the gospel accounts - in the sense that they were true as written and true as understood by folks today.
Ringo writes:
Is the point of a miracle to brag about how great God is or to help somebody out?
For the purposes of this thread I'm thinking about miracles from a particular angle: as God's supernatural interventions that bring forth or to galvanise belief in said deity.
From what I've heard of the apparently terrible "Left Behind" books, I actually find their peculiar brand of millenial angst comforting. When all the chosen ones get raptured, then I for one, like the book's hero (I think), am going to start praying very long and very sincerely. I will have been given some pretty impressive miraculous evidence that the evangelical, catastrophist Christianity as favoured in many parts of the States is perhaps actually true. But until I see this, and because I wasn't around in the early first century to see some other cool miracles, then I'm not really in much of a position to believe.
Is it necessary to have a big fanfare for every miracle?
I don't think it's necessary, but assuming that God exists and can do them, its very significant when he chooses to make known that he has done a miracle. Lets call these parting of the seas, feeding the however many, and walking on water miracles 'loud' miracles for the purposes of this thread. God's not ashamed of those. He approved their inclusion in the official biography of his prophets, and today I as a God-fearing Christian I read about them and I'm impressed.
So the question is - if you do happen to be someone who believes that these miracles happened in the first century CE, what kind of rationalisations can you offer to explain why these kind of flashy, faith-provoking miracles aren't happening any more.
Tusko writes:
...if faith without evidence is really such a virtue....
It isn't.
that's just an excuse that lazy Christians use.
Well, I guess that's how it looks to me too, although I'm hoping that someone can at least make me reassess my thoughts on this issue.
This disjunction (between 1)the explanation for why miracles don't happen now and 2)the fact that loads happen in the bible and we're meant to be impressed) is probably the central question of this thread for me.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 9 by ringo, posted 05-24-2007 2:36 PM ringo has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 13 by ringo, posted 05-24-2007 3:23 PM Tusko has replied

  
Tusko
Member (Idle past 123 days)
Posts: 615
From: London, UK
Joined: 10-01-2004


Message 12 of 39 (402134)
05-24-2007 3:23 PM
Reply to: Message 10 by jar
05-24-2007 2:49 PM


Re: Miracles were never all that common.
I was thinking of 'Thou shalt not put the Lord thy God to the proof.' (Matthew 4:7 according to google). Perhaps that isn't relevant to the discussion?
I agree that the gospel miracles are prosaic in the way that I think that Marvel superheroes are prosaic. However, if my eternal soul is at stake, and if Thomas was made to believe only on first-hand miraculous evidence, I somehow feel short-changed as a non-believer to not get the same customer service that the doubter enjoyed.
Also. If I, as a fervent 20th century Christian (who believes that miracles happened as described in the bible), think that it would be a bit tacky for God to perform some really kick-arse miracle today, (like making the sky a new colour or whispering in everybody's ear in a new language that we can all understand that Christianity is the one true faith) because that would stop it being an issue of faith any more - why don't I feel similarly that the biblical miracles were similarly tacky, showy or misguided?
(sorry - offically the worst constructed sentence of all time)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 10 by jar, posted 05-24-2007 2:49 PM jar has replied

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ringo
Member (Idle past 434 days)
Posts: 20940
From: frozen wasteland
Joined: 03-23-2005


Message 13 of 39 (402135)
05-24-2007 3:23 PM
Reply to: Message 11 by Tusko
05-24-2007 3:03 PM


Tusko writes:
For the purposes of this thread I'm thinking about miracles from a particular angle: as God's supernatural interventions that bring forth or to galvanise belief in said deity.
That makes no sense at all. If God's purpose was to "galvanise belief" in Him, all He'd have to do is show up once in a while and let us bask in His glory. If your contention is correct - that miracles are a hit-and-miss affair - then His motivation is clearly not to reinforce His existence.
... because I wasn't around in the early first century to see some other cool miracles, then I'm not really in much of a position to believe.
The thing is, we've seen stuff that's a lot cooler than the events depicted in the Bible. We've seen men walk on the moon, for @#$% sake. Why would a barbecue for 5000 impress you more?
So the question is - if you do happen to be someone who believes that these miracles happened in the first century CE, what kind of rationalisations can you offer to explain why these kind of flashy, faith-provoking miracles aren't happening any more.
Sorry, I was trying to give a rational answer, not a rationalized one.
The rational answer is that the premise is false.

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This message is a reply to:
 Message 11 by Tusko, posted 05-24-2007 3:03 PM Tusko has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 15 by Tusko, posted 05-24-2007 4:06 PM ringo has replied

  
jar
Member (Idle past 416 days)
Posts: 34026
From: Texas!!
Joined: 04-20-2004


Message 14 of 39 (402136)
05-24-2007 3:53 PM
Reply to: Message 12 by Tusko
05-24-2007 3:23 PM


Re: Miracles were never all that common.
I was thinking of 'Thou shalt not put the Lord thy God to the proof.' (Matthew 4:7 according to google). Perhaps that isn't relevant to the discussion?
Well look at Matthew 4. It is reported to be a conversation between Jesus and Satan (second hand at best) and is not Jesus talking to just folk.
However, if my eternal soul is at stake, and if Thomas was made to believe only on first-hand miraculous evidence, I somehow feel short-changed as a non-believer to not get the same customer service that the doubter enjoyed.
Don't worry, your eternal soul is not at stake based on belief or miracles. Listen to the message.
It really is simple.
Also. If I, as a fervent 20th century Christian (who believes that miracles happened as described in the bible), think that it would be a bit tacky for God to perform some really kick-arse miracle today, (like making the sky a new colour or whispering in everybody's ear in a new language that we can all understand that Christianity is the one true faith) because that would stop it being an issue of faith any more - why don't I feel similarly that the biblical miracles were similarly tacky, showy or misguided?
Well, if the purpose of miracles were to somehow convince you of the truth, I think Jesus would agree with you. That was part of what is being pointed out in the Luke passage.
The message ain't the miracles. Miracles were done to achieve some good; to feed people, heal somebody, allay fears, mitigate suffering.

Aslan is not a Tame Lion

This message is a reply to:
 Message 12 by Tusko, posted 05-24-2007 3:23 PM Tusko has not replied

  
Tusko
Member (Idle past 123 days)
Posts: 615
From: London, UK
Joined: 10-01-2004


Message 15 of 39 (402137)
05-24-2007 4:06 PM
Reply to: Message 13 by ringo
05-24-2007 3:23 PM


That makes no sense at all. If God's purpose was to "galvanise belief" in Him, all He'd have to do is show up once in a while and let us bask in His glory. If your contention is correct - that miracles are a hit-and-miss affair - then His motivation is clearly not to reinforce His existence.
I think Jar's example of Thomas the Doubter is very aposite. Tom is a fairly sensible chap who thought that the idea of Jesus' resurrection was a load of old codswallop. But this doubt wasn't treated with the indifference that subsequent generations have had to deal with. Instead he was given pretty intimate, conclusive evidence of the miracle(in the terms of the day, anyway). To me this seems pretty unfair, because no-one get's that kind of service these days. Clearly, however, it doesn't bother modern Christians much because they're still Christian. I was wondering how they squared that particular circle.
By the way: what do you think miracles are for if they aren't to impress (and implicitly effect belief)? Disregard the miracles as allegory for a moment, because to me these extra layers have been added by miracle starved later generations. If you believe they actually happened then you can't escape the fact that they would have impressed the hell out of a load of people at the time, and God being a canny fellow would have known this.
Imagine the reality of the situation, which I imagine you do if you believe the gospel accounts bear any resemblance to the truth. If you were a first century peasant who saw someone doing things that were, in your pretty limited terms of reference, totally incredible and miraculous, then you would be impressed. You might also think that the bloke who was doing these miraculous things should probably be listened to. You would have been swayed by (in your terms) the rock solid evidence of your eyes and ears. People who were affected in this way - and I assume if you are a Christian who believes the accounts, you believe there were at least some - came to the Christian faith in a very different way from anyone else since. Now. As a modern Christian, do you consider the people who were converted in this way lesser because they came to their faith through empirical evidence rather than faith without evidence?
That seems weird to me.
However, maybe you're right and maybe God didn't intend his miracles to impress anyone. If God didn't arrange the biblical miracles to impress then I guess this thread is actually a waste of your time and mine. Whoops!
Moving swiftly on, I agree that it would probably be best if he did show up once in a while to allow us to bask in His glory - it would save a lot of fretting.
The thing is, we've seen stuff that's a lot cooler than the events depicted in the Bible. We've seen men walk on the moon, for @#$% sake. Why would a barbecue for 5000 impress you more?
We probably have to look at the miracles from the perspective of the times in which they occurred. So although I think the technical miracle of being able to watch Doogie Howser, M.D. whenever I want on DVD is in many ways cooler than turning water into wine, it wouldn't have impressed a first century person terribly much to give them a Doogie Howser DVD. They would have no frame of reference or understanding of the technology involved and how cool it is. (But they might have used it as a nice mirror.) I think God is canny and tailors his miracles to the audience. If he were to do any today, they'd have to be a lot more impressive.
So the question is - if you do happen to be someone who believes that these miracles happened in the first century CE, what kind of rationalisations can you offer to explain why these kind of flashy, faith-provoking miracles aren't happening any more.
Sorry, I was trying to give a rational answer, not a rationalized one.
The rational answer is that the premise is false.
For the purpose of this thread, I'm not interested in the rational. I want to try to understand how people justify this apparent (to me anyway) disjunction. I have already suggested one - which you described as laziness. I'm inclined to agree, but it facinates me nonetheless. I want to have an answer to the obvious next question - "If it's tacky to do miracles to impress people - how do you feel about the ones in the bible - which if they actually happened would almost certainly have impressed people?"

This message is a reply to:
 Message 13 by ringo, posted 05-24-2007 3:23 PM ringo has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 16 by ringo, posted 05-24-2007 4:59 PM Tusko has replied
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