T
TheLittleLady
Guest
For most Canonizations there are researched, documented, miracles.
It depends. See “Catholic encyclopedia” (https://www.catholic.com/encyclopedia/Miracle): it mentions “the glory of God and the good of men”, “evidences attesting and confirming the truth of a Divine mission, or of a doctrine of faith or morals”, “Miracles are wrought to attest true sanctity”, “As benefits either spiritual or temporal”.Could someone explain to me the major point of miracles? Is it to strengthen the faith of those that already believe or is it to convince non believers or those of other faiths of the truth of God? Or, something else?
“For me”?I’ve looked into many miracles and, for me, every single one has either a natural explanation, fraud, or just a statistical likelihood of happening anyway.
You say that as if that indicated a problem with evidence and not a problem with you. Let’s see what this confident (though implicit) claim is based on:Not a one has convinced me.
Yep. “I like to think that” - a textbook example of wishful thinking.Yes, I’m a skeptic but I like to think that a truly unexplainable event by experts would be accepted by me.
I do not mean to sound disrespectful, but this is a typical situation. Based on my life experience, the gift of God is not for the faithless. I have had at least 3 times in my life when something miraculous happened but I never lacked faith, I lacked other things but never faith. I even consider a miracle that so far I have never undergone surgery in my life while so many people in my family have suffered much. Of course I do not claim to be special in any way, but just my personal observation that faith comes first.But I’ve had nothing occur in my life that I could view as miraculous. I’ve had unusual experiences and some coincidences but they were rather ordinary and nothing that seemed to be leading me to God.
That would explain a lot!but just my personal observation that faith comes first.
That seems to be a wrong direction of investigation to me.Hello everyone, new to the forum. I am an Agnostic who’s searching to find the truth. Since I’m trying to find out if Christianity and Catholicism in specific is true, if it includes actual miracles, it would only speak for it. My issue is that most miracle claims are either too far into the past with not much evidence, or things that seem impressive at first sight, but turn out not so, like the Incorruptibles a lot of whom have been found to have been mummified (St Margaret of Cortona for example).
Are there any miracles that you consider really defensible?
Not so fast! Today’s culture is by far, indisputably, undoubtedly, clearly, concisely, demonstrably, unarguably the most superstitious age of all. Why? Because of superstitious evolution. Today’s superstitions have only built upon the layers of superstition practiced by preceding generations. And, the decreasing levels of belief in anything outside of the self have only fueled the superstitious fires.Why do you think miracles were so plentiful back in the more superstitious past and so seldom declared today?
I tried for over four years. I never wanted to lose my faith…it just happened and I desperately tried everything. I finally accepted that I no longer believed. I’m still fascinated by why I lost my faith and how others retain theirs. Somehow, I’m just different or unable to believe.Why not try “scientifically” checking out the Faith yourself? Why not say, for 4 or 6 or 8 weeks,
I apologize. There are so many people who just want to scoff.I tried for over four years. I never wanted to lose my faith…it just happened and I desperately tried everything. I finally accepted that I no longer believed. I’m still fascinated by why I lost my faith and how others retain theirs. Somehow, I’m just different or unable to believe.
Again, without revealing the origin of the test samples, the experts compared the Buenos Aires lab reports with those from Lanciano. They concluded that the reports must be from the same samples. Both samples revealed an “AB”-positive blood type, which occurs in 5% of the population. The DNA is identical, and there are features to indicate that the man came from the Middle East. (It is also noteworthy that these lab results match up with those from the Shroud of Turin and the Cloth of Oviedo.)Please quote from the article where it says we have Jesus’ DNA.
No… much bigger news if there is something wrong!Surely if scientists possessed the DNA of Jesus it would be worldwide news.