Sunday, April 30, 2017

Are Miracles Possible?

(I signed up for Frank Turek’s on-line course through Cross Examined.org, I am continuing to summarize the lessons as I go through the 2004 book I Don’t Have Enough Faith to Be an Atheist, by Frank Turek and Norman Geisler.[1]  This is a summary of Chapter 8)

A discussion of miracles must start with the reason for miracles. God communicates with us in three ways:  General Revelation (Natural Theology), Special Revelation (the Bible), and Miracles.  A miracle is simply an exceedingly rare event that can't be explained by the natural laws of a regular, orderly universe.  But miracles are not anti-science and are not a "science stopper." To the contrary, we actually need science to have miracles. The universe must be orderly and have regular laws for us to recognize when a miracle happens!  Miracles are a way that God can tell the world that they should be paying attention to what is happening.

Miracles occurred in very small windows of time when God wanted to get a truth across or confirm a new revelation.  Miracles done through people happened in the lifetimes of Moses, Elijah, Elisha, Jesus, and the apostles. Moses needed miracles to deliver Israel out of Egypt and survive in the dessert; this also established the Mosaic Covenant.  Elijah and Elisha needed miracles to deliver Israel from idolatry; to show Israel that they were breaking the Covenant.  Jesus and the apostles needed miracles to confirm establishment of the New Covenant. There has been no need for miracles since because there hasn’t been a need for God to establish another covenant or confirm some new truth.  Because of God’s moral nature, it should be expected that God would want to communicate some important specific information with us so we would better know His purpose.  He used miracles to do this.

A good analogy to explain miracles uses a closed box and an open box.  The closed box would represent the materialist world; the universe is all there is and nothing enters or leaves the box.  An open box would represent a universe in which God could do miracles.  God created the box and all the rules and laws by which things can happen within the box.  He left the box open so every so often he can reach into the box and do something inconsistent with the existing rules and laws.

The greatest miracle of all is that all space, matter, time, and energy came into existence out of nothing.  If God exists and performed the greatest miracle of all by creating the universe (the box), then any other miracle that has happened within the universe would be possible and easy for God to do.  Since God exists, miracles are possible.  If there is a God that can act, then there can be acts of God.

Two of the objections to miracles actually are just objections to the fact that miracles are rare events - which is the definition of a miracle.  So, most objections to miracles are simply objections to the definition.  Richard Dawkins doesn’t think miracles happen because he wouldn’t like doing science if he thought a miracle might suddenly just happen in the regular, orderly universe.[2]  Dawkins doesn’t believe in miracles because he doesn’t like them.  This is similar to David Hume’s objection.  Hume basically said that if miracles happened more often, then he could believe them.  In other words, if there weren’t miracles, then they would be believable.

Another objection to miracles comes from the philosophy of naturalism. If you have the pre-existing mindset that nature is all there is (a closed box) and nothing supernatural exists, then of course miracles are ruled out before even looking at the evidence.  It is ironic that the ancients believed in the miraculous to explain the creation of the universe and after more than 2000 years of scientific study, we have come full circle, back to “super-natural miracles” to explain what we see. Plato talked about a “best soul” who is the maker and father of all who ordered the primordial chaos into the rational universe.  Aristotle concluded that the universe had to be caused by an immaterial, divine, living intelligence; the uncaused first cause. Naturalists now explain creation by referring to a cause outside of our universe. Fine-tuning is explained away by some kind of universe generator, also outside our universe. And the beginning of life is explained by some arguing the earth was “seeded” with life from somewhere outside our observations.  Creation and the beginning of life are both rare events and are now, again, being explained by something we can’t observe and don’t fully understand (kind of like a miracle).    

If God created the universe, then miracles are possible.  By definition, miracles are unusual, rare events that involve the super natural. Dismissing miracles simply because of their definition is a philosophical mind-set, not a decision based on evidence.  A close, honest look at the evidence shows that it is reasonable to believe that miracles actually happened.






[1] Frank Turek & Norman Geisler, I Don’t Have Enough Faith to Be an Atheist, Crossway Books, 2004
[2] Dawkins vs. Lennox debate, Has Science Buried God?, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J0UIbd0eLxw

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.