Grace Seeker
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Every religion seems to have its own set of "miracles" which speak to the faithful. There are usually two sets, those that are from the foundation of the religion and involve stories surrounding those who were key players in its past. Thus Islam cites miracles of Muhammad (pbuh) and Christianity cites miracles of Jesus (pbuh) in our respective scriptures, and other groups do the same. Then there are modern day "miracles". Some of these are tenuous at best, often little more than anomalies that catch our fancy, easily explain, but to which we attach some sort of spiritual significance. And some of these seem to defy explanation and might truly be classified as miraculous. The problem is, do they prove anything? Does the miracle of one religion have a cancelling out effect on the miracle of another? Or perhaps they should be interpreted in some other light altogether? That is rather than proving my faith as superior to yours (or vice versa), perhaps they are simply reminders to all of us that there is still something out their bigger than ourselves, something/someone to which we need to give our attention.
I'm providing a link to the "miracle" which got me thinking along these lines, but I don't post it as a "proof" of anything (and hope no one else tries to prove anything in this thread), only to get us to be in conversation about what we can learn when such miracles occur in our own lives.
Doctors At Loss To Describe Patient's Recovery
I'm providing a link to the "miracle" which got me thinking along these lines, but I don't post it as a "proof" of anything (and hope no one else tries to prove anything in this thread), only to get us to be in conversation about what we can learn when such miracles occur in our own lives.
Doctors At Loss To Describe Patient's Recovery