P
Psalm89
Guest
This question was raised by Sparetherod in another thread and in this thread I will discuss this idea and actually show it to be a straw man argument against miracles and prayer. It is framed as such:
I am going to make an assumption that should be accurate. Sparetherod does not accept any miracle from the bible or other ancient sources since they cannot be empirically tested with modern scientific instruments and they took place a long time ago. If he did accept the premise then Jesus did fix an appendage after Peter cut off a soldier’s ear and miracles are real and Jesus is who he claimed to be.
Scenario 1: In a doctor’s private practice a man comes in one week and for the flu. This man lost his hand in an industrial accident sometime in the past. A week later he sets up another appointment and has a new hand. The man claims it to be a miracle though; he did not witness it actually happen and woke up with a new hand.
This miracle is easily debunked: It could be a setup as he could have had a cap over one hand. The doctor might have gotten the man confused for somebody else. The doctor might have been taking some medication, be psychotic, have a brain tumor, or be lying about the entire ordeal. Furthermore, nobody actually witnessed the miracle. Even if the doctor had thoroughly examined the man before hand, had pictures, and sworn testimony it would not be sufficient since nobody actually saw it happen. Since this has never been proven to happen empirically, and is a one-time occurrence, ockam’s razor would help us to conclude it is a fraud. Perhaps the doctor caught it on tape as it actually happened, witnessing the entire episode? The next section will deal with this.
Scenario 2: The stadium full of 50 amputees that are miraculously healed. This stadium is filled with 20,000 people including 100 respected doctors and scientists, and 20 video cameras capturing the results. The amputees have been verified as amputees. It is the “big test”, to finally prove that God exists. The Christians, Muslims and others start praying for the amputees. Suddenly a white fire appears over the stadium and in a loud booming voice God apparently says, “I am God, I exist, and now will heal these people.” Within a span of five minutes everyone is healed and new limbs that were never there now exist. A miracle no doubt! An atheist doctor is there, capturing the details, and is then convinced of God’s existence. For the sake of argument he then goes on to become a Muslim thinking it to be the most accurate of the religions about God.
- People have serious disabilities, like loss of limb.
- People pray for healing of disabilities and sickness.
- Some people get well from sickness like cancer, but no one has ever grown a new hand in modern times that was empirically tested.
- For some reason God heals the cancer patients sometimes but never the amputees as far as modern, empirical science knows.
- This demonstrates that one or more of the following:
a. Edifying prayer as no effect or is limited.
b. God is either not omnipotent, omniscient, all good, or any combination thereof.
c. God does not exist.
I am going to make an assumption that should be accurate. Sparetherod does not accept any miracle from the bible or other ancient sources since they cannot be empirically tested with modern scientific instruments and they took place a long time ago. If he did accept the premise then Jesus did fix an appendage after Peter cut off a soldier’s ear and miracles are real and Jesus is who he claimed to be.
Scenario 1: In a doctor’s private practice a man comes in one week and for the flu. This man lost his hand in an industrial accident sometime in the past. A week later he sets up another appointment and has a new hand. The man claims it to be a miracle though; he did not witness it actually happen and woke up with a new hand.
This miracle is easily debunked: It could be a setup as he could have had a cap over one hand. The doctor might have gotten the man confused for somebody else. The doctor might have been taking some medication, be psychotic, have a brain tumor, or be lying about the entire ordeal. Furthermore, nobody actually witnessed the miracle. Even if the doctor had thoroughly examined the man before hand, had pictures, and sworn testimony it would not be sufficient since nobody actually saw it happen. Since this has never been proven to happen empirically, and is a one-time occurrence, ockam’s razor would help us to conclude it is a fraud. Perhaps the doctor caught it on tape as it actually happened, witnessing the entire episode? The next section will deal with this.
Scenario 2: The stadium full of 50 amputees that are miraculously healed. This stadium is filled with 20,000 people including 100 respected doctors and scientists, and 20 video cameras capturing the results. The amputees have been verified as amputees. It is the “big test”, to finally prove that God exists. The Christians, Muslims and others start praying for the amputees. Suddenly a white fire appears over the stadium and in a loud booming voice God apparently says, “I am God, I exist, and now will heal these people.” Within a span of five minutes everyone is healed and new limbs that were never there now exist. A miracle no doubt! An atheist doctor is there, capturing the details, and is then convinced of God’s existence. For the sake of argument he then goes on to become a Muslim thinking it to be the most accurate of the religions about God.