How often do miracles occur?

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I believe God intervenes constantly because Jesus told us that He is a loving Father who cares for His children. Not only persons but animals must be spared from unnecessary pain and suffering. In other words the world is a far better place than most people think!
 
While not wanting to invoke reductio ad Hitlerum, the pointless extermination of six million Jews in the Holocaust would have been a good time for intervention. You’d need a stunningly convincing argument that it happens at all when it didn’t happen then.

For whatever reasons, God clearly doesn’t physically intervene with any great frequency. Agreed He created a wonderful world, agreed He’s a loving Father, but it’s up to us to build the kingdom of God.
 
My dear friend,

I believe all creation is a miracle , and whenever anything or everything happens in creation , no matter what it is , it is miraculous , as God can only work miraculously , and just because you may think you have logical or rational explanations for something or everything does nt mean they / it are not miraculous. Indeed you cannot really explain anything at all , let alone everything , without in the end concluding it must be miracuolus. Every time a prayer is answered it is a miracle too , many don’t know. My 2 cents dear friend.

God bless and Love you 👍🙂

John
 
While not wanting to invoke reductio ad Hitlerum, the pointless extermination of six million Jews in the Holocaust would have been a good time for intervention. You’d need a stunningly convincing argument that it happens at all when it didn’t happen then.

For whatever reasons, God clearly doesn’t physically intervene with any great frequency. Agreed He created a wonderful world, agreed He’s a loving Father, but it’s up to us to build the kingdom of God.
I remember one of my first lessons in at university by a philosophy professor. He was talking about Leibnitz and how he believed that the order in the world given by God was the best imagniable. If this world were different, it would be worse. The example was that in 1755 an eartquake hit Lissabon, Portugal, very hard causing ten thousands deaths. According to this theory it was the best imagniable, because in another world were those people wouldn’t have died more deaths would have occured (for example) somewhere else. And every “evil” in the world could give birth to a better thing (huge impact of philosophy and the European Enlightment). I found it a beautiful theory to explain the horrors, pains and suffering in the world.

He also told the story of a female professor he knew, of Jewish origin. She was a Leibnitzian and gave a lecture to an auditorium of students. After the lecture a student asked her about Leibnitzs theory and why God would have let the Jews being massacred during WWII. She repeated that it was the still the best imagniable world and also good came out of it. Without the concentration camp we wouldn’t for example have the exepticional art works made by the prisoners.

I probably didn’t express myself well in English and using philosophy in English would for me be a challenge of course. I hope my point didn’t go lost. 🙂
 
While not wanting to invoke reductio ad Hitlerum, the pointless extermination of six million Jews in the Holocaust would have been a good time for intervention. You’d need a stunningly convincing argument that it happens at all when it didn’t happen then.

For whatever reasons, God clearly doesn’t physically intervene with any great frequency. Agreed He created a wonderful world, agreed He’s a loving Father, but it’s up to us to build the kingdom of God.
Careful; that sounds like you’re preaching the need for “works”. 🙂

Out of the ashes of the Holocaust, (and my own family miraculously escaped);
-the nation of Israel came to be again
-humanity got to see just what WE are capable of (do you think this hasn’t given pause to many?)
-true Evil revealed itself in the world. God has allowed this to be a warning… but still we turn away…
-there are many individual stories of the miraculous that came out of that horror; and there were amazing people who stood up for what was right.

Think about what you are demanding God to have done: essentially reorder the ENTIRE world to what ends?

As to the original post: John Russel Jr. said it better than I was going to.
Every moment of every day is a miracle, if you don’t see that, then you need to pray more.
Pray, pray, pray. It’s our connection to God. God allowed some pretty horrible things in my life so that I could see this … it’s amazing how thick we can be ~sigh~.🤷
 
Every time the words of Consecration are uttered.
… the pointless extermination of six million Jews in the Holocaust would have been a good time for intervention…
You could add the ongoing murder of unborn children: apparently more than a billion in the last 50 years. etc. etc. etc.
But remember that God doesnt allow evil unless a greater good can come out of it; but in this life, we dont necessarily see and/or understand the good. We have to be prepared to try to think outside the proverbial “box”.
God is also a respecter of our exercising of free will; and we have to be prepared to live with the consequences.

Every evil that afflicts us is the result of SIN…
 
I agree with C.S. Lewis when he said that miracles are the exception, not the rule. And for this beautiful world to work as God intends, I figure that He wouldn’t have to miraculously intervene as often as we think (I really think that it only happens when He really wants to make Himself known, which we know He wants to do, but not commonly in ways such as these I suppose).

-Prophesy
 
I remember one of my first lessons in at university by a philosophy professor. He was talking about Leibnitz and how he believed that the order in the world given by God was the best imagniable. If this world were different, it would be worse. The example was that in 1755 an eartquake hit Lissabon, Portugal, very hard causing ten thousands deaths. According to this theory it was the best imagniable, because in another world were those people wouldn’t have died more deaths would have occured (for example) somewhere else. And every “evil” in the world could give birth to a better thing (huge impact of philosophy and the European Enlightment). I found it a beautiful theory to explain the horrors, pains and suffering in the world.

He also told the story of a female professor he knew, of Jewish origin. She was a Leibnitzian and gave a lecture to an auditorium of students. After the lecture a student asked her about Leibnitzs theory and why God would have let the Jews being massacred during WWII. She repeated that it was the still the best imagniable world and also good came out of it. Without the concentration camp we wouldn’t for example have the exepticional art works made by the prisoners.

I probably didn’t express myself well in English and using philosophy in English would for me be a challenge of course. I hope my point didn’t go lost. 🙂
Welcome
to the forum, Guillamus! Your English is very good and very well understood. 🙂

Thos who believe there could be a better world have to demonstrate how it is feasible…
 
While not wanting to invoke reductio ad Hitlerum, the pointless extermination of six million Jews in the Holocaust would have been a good time for intervention. You’d need a stunningly convincing argument that it happens at all when it didn’t happen then.
You are assuming God** never** intervened during the Holocaust…
For whatever reasons, God clearly doesn’t physically intervene with any great frequency. Agreed He created a wonderful world, agreed He’s a loving Father, but it’s up to us to build the kingdom of God.
How do you know clearly that God doesn’t physically intervene with any great frequency?
 
My dear friend,

I believe all creation is a miracle , and whenever anything or everything happens in creation , no matter what it is , it is miraculous , as God can only work miraculously , and just because you may think you have logical or rational explanations for something or everything does nt mean they / it are not miraculous. Indeed you cannot really explain anything at all , let alone everything , without in the end concluding it must be miracuolus. Every time a prayer is answered it is a miracle too , many don’t know. My 2 cents dear friend.

God bless and Love you 👍🙂

John
John, the warmth of your post is a refreshing contrast to those that envision God as an aloof Creator who takes little interest and almost no action to help His children when they are in dire need. How can we possibly know what occurs in the bodies, minds and souls of the victims of torture and massacre?

God bless
 
Hi, all,

I remember one time, watching a father and toddler in the YMCA swimming pool. The tyke couldn’t have been much over three years old, he was so small that the shallow water was over his head. But, his head was above water. His father held him up with one hand, until the tyke got the gist of swimming. Then, the father let go and swam beside his son, while the tyke paddled along.

And, that’s God the Father, the Good Father. We may not know it, until we need Him, but He’s right there, to be there when we need Him.

Anymore, looking at this cruel world, I am beginning to think that love is the miracle.

God loves all of you,
Don
 
He also told the story of a female professor he knew, of Jewish origin. She was a Leibnitzian and gave a lecture to an auditorium of students. After the lecture a student asked her about Leibnitzs theory and why God would have let the Jews being massacred during WWII. She repeated that it was the still the best imagniable world and also good came out of it. Without the concentration camp we wouldn’t for example have the exepticional art works made by the prisoners.
Your English is fine, and I think you just proved that female philosophy professors can be every bit as silly as their male colleagues :). The best possible world is one in which some pictures made by slaves are a greater good than their six million pointless deaths? That’s the very best imaginable world? Wow!!! Logically then, we should enslave as many people as possible to make the world even better :rolleyes:. Some philosophy professors need a smart tap on the head every so often.
 
Careful; that sounds like you’re preaching the need for “works”. 🙂
😃
Out of the ashes of the Holocaust, (and my own family miraculously escaped);
-the nation of Israel came to be again
-humanity got to see just what WE are capable of (do you think this hasn’t given pause to many?)
-true Evil revealed itself in the world. God has allowed this to be a warning… but still we turn away…
-there are many individual stories of the miraculous that came out of that horror; and there were amazing people who stood up for what was right.
The problem is that this best possible world stuff discounts the pointless deaths of six million people in favor of us survivors. It looks at the world from our perspective when the six million probably wouldn’t have seen it our way. Evil can’t become less evil by re-categorizing it as a good or as a warning, not for the victims.
*Think about what you are demanding God to have done: essentially reorder the ENTIRE world to what ends? *
I wouldn’t dream of demanding that of God, I’m simply stating the fact that for six million people He didn’t intervene, and for millions of others in natural disasters He didn’t intervene either. This is a rock solid fact we know about God.
 
You are assuming God** never** intervened during the Holocaust…
Perhaps He did, but for many, many more He didn’t. This is just an inescapable fact of life.
How do you know clearly that God doesn’t physically intervene with any great frequency?
Aren’t miracles supposed to be inexplicable and wondrous?
John, the warmth of your post is a refreshing contrast to those that envision God as an aloof Creator who takes little interest and almost no action to help His children when they are in dire need. How can we possibly know what occurs in the bodies, minds and souls of the victims of torture and massacre?
I’d agree that ultimately creation is inexplicable and wondrous, i.e. a miracle. But we can agree on that without redefining evil to wish it away. Are we really supposed to think that the world is a better place because of 9/11 or the Japanese earthquake? What would be the point? :confused:
 
Your English is fine, and I think you just proved that female philosophy professors can be every bit as silly as their male colleagues :). The best possible world is one in which some pictures made by slaves are a greater good than their six million pointless deaths? That’s the very best imaginable world? Wow!!! Logically then, we should enslave as many people as possible to make the world even better :rolleyes:. Some philosophy professors need a smart tap on the head every so often.
Inocente, I very much respect your thinking. My feeling is that a great deal of the ‘good’ to which people refer when they talk of the ‘greater good’ to be found in suffering is actually the means we sentient beings seek to cope with the evil and misery we experience as a matter of course. This is absolutely not to devalue the efforts people make to find the best in a bad situation, but simply to acknowledge that if an omnipotent, perfectly benevolent creator existed and actually intervened, those who produced such poignant art would be far happier than they were…
 
You are assuming God** never**
How can you possibly **know **what occurs in the bodies, minds and souls of the victims?
How do you know clearly
that God doesn’t physically intervene with any great frequency?
Aren’t miracles supposed to be inexplicable and wondrous?

“supposed” is a very appropriate description!
John, the warmth of your post is a refreshing contrast to those that envision God as an aloof Creator who takes little interest and almost no action to help His children when they are in dire need. How can we possibly know what occurs in the bodies, minds and souls of the victims of torture and massacre?

I’d agree that ultimately creation is inexplicable and wondrous, i.e. a miracle. But we can agree on that without redefining evil to wish it away. Are we really supposed to think that the world is a better place because of 9/11 or the Japanese earthquake? What would be the point?
Evil is evil regardless of the consequences but if you believe in God you must believe it is subordinate to His power and love - and that every tear will be wiped away…
 
I agree with C.S. Lewis when he said that miracles are the exception, not the rule. And for this beautiful world to work as God intends, I figure that He wouldn’t have to miraculously intervene as often as we think (I really think that it only happens when He really wants to make Himself known, which we know He wants to do, but not commonly in ways such as these I suppose).

-Prophesy
God does not **have to **intervene but a loving Father intervenes on every possible occasion to help and console His children even when He wants to do so - and does so - without making Himself known!
 
Evil is evil regardless of the consequences but if you believe in God you must believe it is subordinate to His power and love - and that every tear will be wiped away…
Rev 21? Isn’t that about a future where death is conquered, not the here and now.

Suppose you were given the chance to stop the Holocaust and save six million lives. Of course you would without a second thought. Without that senseless suffering it would be a better world, better than our current world. But God didn’t intervene, in six million cases He did not intervene. Ours is obviously not the best possible world.

I’m not trying to be difficult here bro, maybe God does sometimes intervene but in six million cases He didn’t. Don’t know why, not trying to philosophize, it’s just a cold hard fact.
 
Rev 21? Isn’t that about a future where death is conquered, not the here and now.

Suppose you were given the chance to stop the Holocaust and save six million lives. Of course you would without a second thought. Without that senseless suffering it would be a better world, better than our current world. But God didn’t intervene, in six million cases He did not intervene. Ours is obviously not the best possible world.

I’m not trying to be difficult here bro, maybe God does sometimes intervene but in six million cases He didn’t. Don’t know why, not trying to philosophize, it’s just a cold hard fact.
Hi, inocente,

Hasn’t it ever occurred to you, that our God did intervene in the thousands of lives which were saved from that Holocaust? And, that’s not God’s fault about the six million lost, because the shepherds he had for the six million didn’t act? Or, maybe some of those six million did not obey God and leave before the Nazis gathered them?

Dear inocente, it’s the devil’s place to blame God; please, don’t keep in place with Satan.

God loves you,
Don
 
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