by jimwalton » Tue Jul 31, 2018 5:25 pm
Certainly there are liars and fakers out there, fer sher, but that doesn't mean we can cavalierly relegate all claims of miracles to the trash pile. it sure would be nice to very miraculous claims with careful scientific research, but they are as the Lord gives the ability. I don't know what your knowledge of the Bible is, but in the New Testament there were times when Paul healed some people, and one guy he even raised from the dead. But then there are other times when Paul asked prayer for his sick friend. Well, why didn't he just heal him? It's because Paul didn't have the power in himself to use willy-nilly, but rather only when God empowered him for such. You can't just set up a science experiment.
And, yes, there was one time in the OT when Elijah called down fire from heaven (1 Ki. 18). One time.
> The healing thing just seems to me like someone is taking advantage of scared desperate people looking for a cure for some dealing condition.
First of all, some people are scared when faced with a desperate health crisis. Second, it's not legitimate to claim that every described healing is scared stupid people willing to fall for anything.
> I’ve seen people claim to heal people in front of my eyes before, I’ve seen it ‘happen’ with broken bones and blindness myself. Check in with the ‘healed’ a few days later, still wearing glasses and still needing crutches. They were unhealed.
Yeah, I know this happens, and it's all too common. There are a lot of charlatans and fakers out there. We've even seen plenty of exposes on TV. They have people planted in the audience, and they use tricks and blah blah. A bunch of fakers. But again, that doesn't mean everyone is. I could point out a group of horrible politicians right now, but that doesn't everyone who is a politician is a scoundrel and a jerk.
> Without proof this just seems like a lot of liars leading the easily led.
No doubt a bunch of them are. We can't just be too stupid or too gullible and fall for everything. And of course I advocate proof as well, but there's just no way to do a science experiment, isolate all the factors, and then do a miracle on demand. I've known people whose bodies were riddled with cancer, and then it was, like, just gone. The doctors say, "We can't explain it." The religious people cry "miracle," and the non-religious say, "isn't the body amazing?" How could you ever, and I mean EVER, set up a situation where every factor was controlled so that you would know that it was a divine or a natural consequence. I don't think there is such a test. Cancer is suddenly gone from the body with no natural explanation, and even then people will say, "Well, something natural must have happened." They say that because they don't allow for the supernatural. In the case of my son, the doctors weren't doing anything. He had an IV drip, EKG monitor on, and they were waiting. They said there was nothing they could do. They were not expecting him to live. The next day he was talking. The doctors said they had no explanation. So, did something natural happen or did something divine, and how would you ever know?
Certainly there are liars and fakers out there, fer sher, but that doesn't mean we can cavalierly relegate all claims of miracles to the trash pile. it sure would be nice to very miraculous claims with careful scientific research, but they are as the Lord gives the ability. I don't know what your knowledge of the Bible is, but in the New Testament there were times when Paul healed some people, and one guy he even raised from the dead. But then there are other times when Paul asked prayer for his sick friend. Well, why didn't he just heal him? It's because Paul didn't have the power in himself to use willy-nilly, but rather only when God empowered him for such. You can't just set up a science experiment.
And, yes, there was one time in the OT when Elijah called down fire from heaven (1 Ki. 18). One time.
> The healing thing just seems to me like someone is taking advantage of scared desperate people looking for a cure for some dealing condition.
First of all, some people are scared when faced with a desperate health crisis. Second, it's not legitimate to claim that every described healing is scared stupid people willing to fall for anything.
> I’ve seen people claim to heal people in front of my eyes before, I’ve seen it ‘happen’ with broken bones and blindness myself. Check in with the ‘healed’ a few days later, still wearing glasses and still needing crutches. They were unhealed.
Yeah, I know this happens, and it's all too common. There are a lot of charlatans and fakers out there. We've even seen plenty of exposes on TV. They have people planted in the audience, and they use tricks and blah blah. A bunch of fakers. But again, that doesn't mean everyone is. I could point out a group of horrible politicians right now, but that doesn't everyone who is a politician is a scoundrel and a jerk.
> Without proof this just seems like a lot of liars leading the easily led.
No doubt a bunch of them are. We can't just be too stupid or too gullible and fall for everything. And of course I advocate proof as well, but there's just no way to do a science experiment, isolate all the factors, and then do a miracle on demand. I've known people whose bodies were riddled with cancer, and then it was, like, just gone. The doctors say, "We can't explain it." The religious people cry "miracle," and the non-religious say, "isn't the body amazing?" How could you ever, and I mean EVER, set up a situation where every factor was controlled so that you would know that it was a divine or a natural consequence. I don't think there is such a test. Cancer is suddenly gone from the body with no natural explanation, and even then people will say, "Well, something natural must have happened." They say that because they don't allow for the supernatural. In the case of my son, the doctors weren't doing anything. He had an IV drip, EKG monitor on, and they were waiting. They said there was nothing they could do. They were not expecting him to live. The next day he was talking. The doctors said they had no explanation. So, did something natural happen or did something divine, and how would you ever know?