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Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

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Page 1: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

Page 2: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

What is a miracle?

Page 3: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

What do Christians believe about miracles?

Jesus performed many miracles when he was on

earth. He was God incarnate so God must be able to perform miracles too.

Christians believe God still interacts with the world

today and performs miracles in response to prayers and

for those in need.

Christians believe God is all powerful and all-knowing,

aware of what we need so he must be able to perform

miracles

Page 4: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

So what miracles did Jesus do?

Exorcised some demons Luke 8:27-33

Jesus sent the demons out of a possessed man and sent them into some pigs who then ran and drowned in a river.

Healed a woman’s bleeding – Luke 8: 43-48

The woman had been bleeding non-stop for 12 years reached out and touched Jesus’ cloak. He declared that her faith in his power has healed her.

Lazarus is raised from the dead – John 11:17-44

Jesus’ friend Lazarus, brother of Mary and Martha, died. Jesus arrived after he had been dead for four days. He went into the tomb and called him forth, raising him from the dead.

Jesus turned water into wine – John 2:1-11

Jesus’ first miracle. At a wedding in Cana, the wine ran out so Jesus ordered the jars to be filled with water which he turned into wine.

Jesus walks on water Matthew 14: 22-33

The disciples are in a boat after Jesus had been teaching and were some distance from land. Jesus joined them by walking out onto the water.

Page 5: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

Biggest miracle of them all?

Jesus’ resurrection – where would Christians be without it?

Page 7: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

They were Biblical times; what relevance do these miracles have now?

To answer question 2 fully, you need to use the correct skills of explanation and application. In other words, explain the details

well and apply them to modern life.

So, what impact can they have?

Impact one…

Consider the story of John Rajah….

…conversion

Page 8: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

Demonstrates God’s existence and power!

Reinforces a person’s beliefs

Gives focus for prayer

Gives people hope for the future

Page 9: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

Miracle - a study of how God might interact withhumanity, by looking at the concept of miracleCandidates should be able to demonstrateknowledge and understanding of:

• different definitions of miracle, including anunderstanding of Hume;• the biblical concept of miracle and the issuesthis raises about God’s activity in the world;• the concept of miracle, and criticisms made byHume and Wiles;• the implications of the concept of miracle forthe problem of evil.Candidates should be able to discuss whethermodern people can be expected to believe inmiracles, and whether miracles suggest anarbitrary or partisan God. Candidates should beable to discuss these areas critically and theirstrengths and weaknesses.

Page 10: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

From the Latin miraculum – ‘wonder’

Page 11: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

• different definitions of miracle, including an understanding of Hume;

Page 12: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

WHAT REALLY IS A MIRACLE?• In common English usage

Page 13: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

It’s a miracle no one was killed!

Is it??

Page 14: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?
Page 15: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

1. RELIGIOUS UNDERSTANDINGOF THE TERM MIRACLE

Page 16: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

• More specific than a wonderful event or escape

• Something extraordinary which has been brought about by God for a particular purpose

• Something must be more than just unexpected

• It must be in apparent violations of the laws of nature

• Must have some kind of religious significance

Page 17: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?
Page 18: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

AO1 In support of miracles…

• Macquarrie• Aquinas• Evans

Page 19: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

1. Macquarrie ‘Principles of Christian Theology’ 1966

• A miracle has to be something which is attributable to God, in addition to it being a wonderful event

• ‘In a minimal sense, a miracle is an event that excites wonder..but it is evident in a religious context the word ‘miracle’ carries more than just this minimal sense.. It is believed that God is in the event in some special way, that he intends is the author of it and intends to achieve something special by the end of it’

Page 20: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

2. Steven Evans – ‘The Philosophy of Religion’

• Argued that miracles are not just magic tricks.

• ‘Obviously the miracles of a religion such as Christianity are not merely bizarre events or stunts. They have a function and a purpose, and usually that function is a revelatory one’

Page 21: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

3. Thomas Aquinas – Summa Contra Gentiles 13th century

Attempted to define different events which could be interpreted as miraculous

Recognised that to call an event miraculous is to put an interpretation onto what happened and express an opinion about it

Argued that for an event to be properly worthy of the name miracle it has to be an event which is intrinsically wonderful, not just wonderful to this person but not to that person (this would rule out the ordinary birth of a healthy baby)

It must have a cause which is absolutely hidden

Page 22: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

4. (late addition) Richard Swinburne

• It is important to be clear about what the laws of nature are - they are not necessarily fixed truths

• Perhaps God can suspend natural laws on occasions – e.g. sometimes a lovng parent relaxes certain rules in response to a child pleading.

• Miracles have to be occasional – if they were more regular life would be confusing

Page 23: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

5. John Polkinghome (late addition)

• Defends the possibility of miracles particularly the resurrection of Jesus.

• All that science can tell us is that a given event is against normal expectations not that it cannot happen at all

Page 24: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

6. C.S Lewis

• Defended Christian belief in miracles• We’re faced with a choice about how we view the world.• We are either naturalists (reality is totally physical) or

supernaturalists (non –physical things may exist soul/God)• Naturalism is self-defeating. If you are just a physical

being subject to laws of cause and effect as all physical objects are then your decision to believe in naturalism is physically caused, you have no choice about what you believe.

• Your decision is caused by physical factors.

Page 25: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

•Attempted to rank miracles

Page 26: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

1.

2.

3.

‘Those in which something is done by God that nature can never do’ Examples from the Bible: God makes a shadow move backwards (Isaiah 38)

God does something that nature can do, but not in that sequence and connection’ People being able to see after being blind – in the natural order people can see first and then become blind

‘something done by God, which is usually done by the operation of nature, but is done without the working of natural principles, as when one is cured by divine power of a fever, in itself naturally curable’

Page 27: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

DAVID HUME

‘A wise man proportions his belief according the evidence’

Page 28: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

EMPIRICIST

SCEPTIC

Our knowledge of the world should come from the observations made by our senses

Thought we cannot reason accurately beyond what we see and hear as this requires us to make assumptions

Page 29: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

By very definition, miracles are beyond the realms of reasonable belief.

They can’t happen!

For a miracle to be called a miracle, it must be something that never happens in the normal world – and therefore miracles do not happen by their very definition!

Page 30: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

David Hume - Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding

• A miracle may be accurately defined, a transgression of a law of nature by a particular volition of the deity or by the interposition of some invisible agent

• Known as the violation definition - its key claim is that a miracle is a violation or breaking of a natural law

Page 31: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

No sensible person could ever believe that a miracle had happened – other interpretations are far more likely

Page 32: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

‘I flatter myself, that I have discovered an argument of a like nature, which, if just, will, with the wise and the learned, be an everlasting check to all kinds of superstitions and delusions and consequently will be as useful as the world endures’

Page 33: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

Based on our past experience, we know this doesn’t happen!

Page 34: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

• Stories of miracles tend to come from ‘ignorant and barbarous places and nations’ rather than from well educated people

• Therefore their testimonies are not to be trusted!!!

• These people are more likely to be gullible and less familiar with rational/scientific theories!

Page 35: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

HOWEVER…

Page 36: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

‘Myth of God Incarnate’ (group of authors)

MAURICE WILES

Rejects miracles but for different reasons than Hume

Page 37: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

• Didn’t reject the concept of miracle for scientific reasons

‘Certainly the notion of miracle cannot simply be ruled out on scientific grounds as logically impossible, since the world we know is not a closed, deterministically ordered system’

Page 38: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

• The problem with miracles: making sense of the morality and wisdom of God

Page 39: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

vs

Page 40: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

• Another philosopher shook his head and said with a weariness of disgust ‘while the cancer wards and the hospital wards of the world are full of suffering and dying people, you get your beach ball back. Somewhere in the world at that very moment , people were being murdered and you got your beach ball back’ Tom Morris

Page 41: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

• Wiles objection to the traditional view of miracles is on moral grounds

• If there is a God who sometimes performs these sudden miraculous interventions in the world, then it must be an arbitrary God

• ‘A God who has favourites, a God who can be unfair and a God who lacks compassion’

Page 42: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

• Any occasion where God intervenes with the natural order to help individuals or groups raises issues about consistency and fairness

• God would have to be arbitrary and partisan

Page 43: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

Is a God who performs occasional arbitrary miracles worthy of worship?

Page 44: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

‘Wiles believed it is better theologically to believe in a God that does not do any miracles, than in one that was not morally good ‘

(Ina Taylor)

Page 45: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

Wiles believed that there was in effect a single miracle of creation and that God’s creation was good –

it doesn’t require intervention in the form of other miracles

Page 46: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

Conclusion 1 Conclusion 2

God performs random, arbitrary miracles and is therefore not worthy of worship

God does not intervene at all

Page 47: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

AO2 – Maurice Wiles

Page 48: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

• Wiles views allow people to believe in God yet still uphold the laws of science

Page 49: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

• Allows believers to reinterpret the idea of prayer. Prayer is not about presenting a wish list to God but about allowing an individual to connect to God’s will.

Page 50: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

AO2 – Maurice Wiles

Page 51: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

• Wiles might not like the concept of a God who performs occasional miracles, but nevertheless, the Bible is quite clear that that IS how God operates

1.

Page 52: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

• Wiles is wrong to judge God’s actions by human moral standards. If God wants to cure a blind man but not save the people of Hiroshima, because it is God’s choice it will be the right thing to do – even if we cannot understand it.

2.

Page 53: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

Wiles misses the point of miracles – they are not meant to be simply helping people in need, but have the purpose of revealing something of God. Therefore, a comparatively small miracle might be more significant because of what it shows about God

3.

Page 54: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

for Wiles!!

Page 55: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

‘Miracles are not possible in the world today’

Discuss (35)

Yes No

AquinasWardSwinburnePolkinghorneCS Lewis

HumeWiles

Page 56: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

• different definitions of miracle, including an• understanding of Hume;• • the biblical concept of miracle and the issues• this raises about God’s activity in the world;• • the concept of miracle, and criticisms made by• Hume and Wiles;• • the implications of the concept of miracle for• the problem of evil.• Candidates should be able to discuss whether• modern people can be expected to believe in• miracles, and whether miracles suggest an• arbitrary or partisan God. Candidates should be• able to discuss these areas critically

Page 57: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

• Critically assess the view that the concept of miracle is inconsistent with belief in a benevolent God.

Examples of miracles which show God to be benevolent

God can’t always intervene – parent

God wouldn’t only help a few Wiles – logical inconsistency no miraculous intervention preventedauschwitz or hiroshima

• Response – if he did this too often we wouldn’t hav elaws of nature at all. If the sea dried up every day to prevent people from drowning. We’d never know what the natural world would do next. BUT if there is a GOD who performs miracles he must be an arbitrary God rather than an omni – benevolent God. (He seems to perform miracles on a whim rather with any real love/consistency)

• FREE WILL – interference ?

• BUT

Are we wrong to judge God’s actions by human standards? We can’t fully understand the mind of God

Does Wiles miss the point of miracles? They ar enot meant to be simply helping people in need, but hav ethe purpose of revealing something about God therefore a comparatively small miracle might be more significant

‘Another philosopher shook his head and said with a weariness of disgust ‘while the cancer wards and and the hospital wards of the world are full of suffering and dying people, you get your beach ball back. Somewhere in the world at that very moment , people were being murdered and you got your beach ball back’

‘The gods give to mortals but not everything at the same time’ Homer 9 th Century BC

Page 58: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

REVISION…

Page 59: Miracles in Christianity – what do people believe and what impact do these beliefs have?

M A E

H W

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