The story of A & E is in some ways close to fairy-tale in Tolkien’s sense.
**FWIW, the notion of miracle a lot of people seem to have is not the RC one: the RC notion may be objectionable on various grounds, but the notion of miracle espoused by Fundamentalists RC & Protestant is not it; so the objections against the Fundamentalist understanding need distinguishing from whatever objections tell against the other. **
**Miracle cannot be defended - let alone vindicated - merely by asserting God’s power. The problem with arguments based merely in GP, is that anything becomes possible: if that argument is valid, maybe this post is typed by a tortoise: if “God can do anything”, then He can cause this poster to be a tortoise without knowing it, & to type an intelligible post. Nonsense & foolery remain both, even if one prefixes the phonetic elements “God can”. This doctrine of GP destroys all possibilities & degrees of certainty - I may think I am typing; but I could be eating porridge on the Moon instead. If God can do anything, nothing is certain; not even lack of certainty. A very little thought shows that such a doctrine makes reliable knowledge of the world around us impossible - If anything can have the properties of anything, clothes may warm on one occasion, & burn upthe wearer on another. This is a world of nightmare, a world in which trees can bleed, men turn to stone, children turn to birds, & women to trees. **
**As for what this absurd doctrine does to Biblical exegesis - the less said, the better. It ceases to be implausible that Superman should fly from Metropolis in 2008 AD to Mesopotamia in 2348 BC & pick up all the different breads of beasts of the world in a second of senses-shattering sound, taking them all off to Noah to be packed aboard the Ark - for God can easily allow this: it perfectly accounts for the otherwise unaccountable presence of all these animals on that one vessel. And thereby, it protects the perfect inerrancy of the Bible. **
**If miracles are not impossible, it is no big deal that they happen. If we cannot tell what is plausible in nature from what is not, if the very category of the plausible is non-existent, then miracles & the non-miraculous become equally unmeaning. **