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This is actually a thread from 2011. I don’t know that any of the original posters are still invested in this thread.Arizona Mike, Jmcrae?
This is actually a thread from 2011. I don’t know that any of the original posters are still invested in this thread.Arizona Mike, Jmcrae?
Do you know what the documented amputee regrowing a limb was that they were talking about?This is actually a thread from 2011. I don’t know that any of the original posters are still invested in this thread.
No, I haven’t heard of any documented cases of amputees being healed.Do you know what the documented amputee regrowing a limb was that they were talking about?
Thanks! What’s also interesting about this, is, according to one article I read about it, it says his leg didn’t regrow, but it was the same leg that was amputated.Sorry, I just saw the thread.
The cured amputation is known as the Miracle of Calanda. For its time, it’s well attested to by medical testimony. You can read the Wiki article about it here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miracle_of_Calanda
It’s of interest that the claims that have been made to try to explain this event are as bizarre as the miracle - such as the idea that the man could have bound his lower leg tightly behind his thigh to only simulate being amputated, yet in all the years this was going on in a small town, no one noticed. (It’s also contradicted by the medical testimony.)
Try doing that yourself with a couple of belts (better yet, don’t) and you can feel the excruciating pain it provokes after a couple of minutes. You also have the problem of the foot sticking out from where your backside is, which you think *someone *in the town might have noticed.
It would be a lot easier to simply fake being blind.
So, it seems to have happened at least once.
No. That is impossible today.Dumb question alert: is it at all possible that after two and a half years, they could’ve reattached the leg?
Given 17th century medical technology, no. And the leg would have decomposed.Thanks! What’s also interesting about this, is, according to one article I read about it, it says his leg didn’t regrow, but it was the same leg that was amputated.
Dumb question alert: is it at all possible that after two and a half years, they could’ve somehow reattached the leg?
I
This begs the question of why there is no recorded case of an amputee that has been healed in the modern era. I’m sure there are amputees who have prayed to God for him to physically heal them. I’m not accepting “God answers prayers, but not in the way we expect” because I’m sure that there would at least be one recorded amputee being healed in modern history, even if it means many others will have to make do with emotional healing.
To heal an amputee, meaning that the missing limb is miraculously restored, and only God can do this. Why doesn’t He cure amputees? How do we know He doesn’t just because there may not be any records of the event. There is certainly much circumstantial evidence that claim He did miracles, bringing a person to life, which is greater than restoring a limb. Faith is required to believe, not reason, and faith is reasonable.I just fi
It’s also important to take into consideration that the amputee is not testing God. The amputee desperately wants his/her situation to be resolved, and has placed his trust that God will answer the prayer favourably.
What’s a better theological response? Serious answers only please.