“X is comforting” does not imply “X is true”.
Honestly, truth to me is based on history and grace. If I had been in control of deciding truth, I dare say without disrespect to the Church, I would have come up with something easy and blatant, not something hard. Not something that calls me to what is unknown but promised to be beyond imagination.
I can read through the 2000 year history of the Church, and I have experienced Grace. Not the protestant understanding of grace, mind you, but real, nearly palpable Grace.
Through history and grace I can say that X is true. This has no meaning for you, though. The conversation must then revolve around another point.
My point is only that we cannot assume that an unlikely reversal in the cancer’s progression is due to God.
Well, given the enormous body of evidence supporting the continuous operation of natural laws, and the fairly sketchy evidence regarding their irregularity, unless an alleged miracle has such a body of proof that its non-happening would be more miraculous than its happening, you would have to assume the natural explanation. It is simply bad logic to attribute a healing to God once such a healing reaches a certain point of improbability. It may seem miraculous, sure, but consider the number of people who do not experience such a healing. The doctor who witnesses such a stroke of luck has simply “won the lottery”.
If God is indeed behind these healings, why would he skip over the amputees? To me, that is evidence that there is no miracle involved, that it is simply a stroke of luck, or an achievement of a great doctor. Could a stroke of luck regrow a limb? No. Could God regrow a limb? Yes.
Very probably, it would be ignored by a large amount of people - however, given proper corroboration of the story, you have my word that I would take it completely seriously, even going to such inconvenient extents as to question my own existence.
Right - it’s a general rule that terminal patients die! But there can be non-divine exceptions to a rule, can there not?
In my opinion, no. Everything tends strongly toward entropy. Getting worse is by far more probable than getting better with a majority of serious medical problems. Terminal patients simply do not spontaneously recover under natural law. They die.
Granted, that’s just an opinion, so I certainly wouldn’t try to force that idea on anyone else. As far as I’m aware, the Church approaches all miraculous events in a very skeptical way. Unlike other assemlies, official approval is not easily granted by the Roman Catholic Church for anything.
If all suffering is designed to be a part of a divine path to holiness, then it follows that rarely would suffering be alleviated by God. When it is, then a person can enjoy the strange mercy. When it isn’t, then there is some spiritual lesson to be learned or example given.
Yes, that would be the position of the dogmatic atheist. Happily, I do not subscribe to any form of dogma - unless rationalism is considered a dogma.
Ah, well that’s good to know then. Yes, you at least seem far more rational than most.
I’ve done a quick bit of research, and I haven’t been able to find anything relating to amputees regrowing their limbs overnight.
A cursory search really doesn’t turn up much. I’m afraid I don’t have too much time to spend on it, but I’ll continue poking around to see what may turn up.
However, the reason I harp on so much about amputees in particular is because an amputee simply cannot grow their limbs back. Sufferers of cancer, diabetes, influenza, and the like are in principle capable of having a full and spontaneous recovery - so miracle stories about such things are tainted, at least to me. A case of an amputee regrowing their limb overnight, though, would literally have no other explanation other than divine intervention (for now, I will leave benevolent aliens/government conspiracy theories aside).
Ah, you’re looking for incontrovertable truth. Absolute proof. Rare are the individuals who are provided with absolute proof.
Yes, I imagine that an amputee having his/her limb restored would be something that could be viewed as proof. I’ll continue looking, simply because I’m interested in the topic now

. I would assume that something that profound would be relatively simple to find. Discounting fraud is somewhat problematic, it seems. If a restoration happened in a developed nation, it would quickly be posted somewhere on the net. Less developed nations do not have that luxury, and the event could not be easily verified as being truthful if it did sneak its way onto the web.
Well, my position is that it is not impossible for God to restore an amputated limb. My position also is centered on the necessity for human suffering in this life, so I would really have no personal problem accepting that perhaps no amputee in this modern world has ever been restored…and may never be. Healings and restorations are not reasons to believe or disbelieve in the Living God, in my opinion. It is very nice to see some amazing recoveries, however.
The purpose of life is to purify the heart. This body is not required to be whole. In fact it seems as if many times the body is required to approach death through tragic medical problems and horrible injury either to give a person, family, or community a wake up call to the reality of their own mortality, as a demonstration of God’s total control in mercy and justice, to bring to the forefront vices and virtues, and/or to show exactly why you don’t transgress certain divine laws.
It seems to me that there are three possible outcomes for people who suffer severely in this life:
- They become bitter, extremely angry, and unstable.
- They retreat into near complete apathy and total self-absorbtion with the concept of “I, the victim”
- They become like sunshine. Kindness and compassion seem to radiate from them. They are rendered fully capable of entering the sufferings of others for positive effect.
There may be more than those three, but these are what I’ve personally seen while looking to see what really happens to those who suffer.