T
tonyrey
Guest
False:All you can manage is pathetic ad hominem after pathetic ad hominem.
You have made your opinion abundantly clear with your sarcastic references to divine intervention:Where was I asked about the frequency of miracles? Give the post number. Are you mixing me up with someone else or lying through your teeth? Which is it?
Not sure you can go from that sample, the thread seemed very chocolate box to me.I’m quite sure the vast majority of Catholics, Christians and members of other religions believe miracles often occur in answer to prayer - and even when they are not requested. Support for that view on this forum so far has amounted to 90% - which is consistent with the teaching of the Church that evidence of at least two verifiable miracles is required for canonisation. Is it likely that all the saints were restricted to the basic minimum to satisfy the demand of those who maintain that such events are exceedingly rare?
I didn’t want to spoil the mood, so will say it here instead: If bees making honey or stars twinkling is a miracle, either we’re not thinking it through or a moral statement is being made, that we’re more interested in feeling nice happy thoughts than acknowledging all the suffering in the world.
And if it’s a miracle when a baby is born healthy, or when someone walks away from a car crash or a disaster, either we’re not thinking it through or a moral statement is being made, that we think God condemned the rest, or at best is capricious.
Every time someone falls down and another picks them up.How often do you believe God intervenes to alleviate suffering and answer prayers for our physical needs?
Can you explain how that remark is consistent with the belief that God is a loving Father?