The message I heard in church this week caused me some cognitive dissonance. That’s another way of saying it made me think I was thinking something different from our pastor. That’s not unusual, but when it happens, I feel the need to discern whether my disagreement puts me in the right or the wrong. It also forces me to decide whether I need to discuss the differences with my pastor. There are many things of a non-essential nature that honest Christians can disagree about; few of them rise to the level of necessary confrontation. If you have not noticed it yet, my wife will confirm for you that I am way too concerned about semantic details. Words mean things, and I want to use and hear them used the with right meanings.
This week’s message
was from the book of Acts where a lame man was healed and a woman,
Dorcas/Tabitha, was raised from the dead. The point our pastor drove home was
that many people believed in Jesus because of the miracles they witnessed. He
asked us if more people would believe today if they saw miracles. Then he
stepped of the cliff, semantically speaking, to suggest that we do see miracles
every day. He suggested that our advanced scientific knowledge has revealed
“miracles” at many levels. A tree is a miracle. The structure of an atom is a
miracle. The wonder of the stars is a miracle. Hmmm.
At that
point I was wriggling in my seat and biting my tongue. My wife gets righteously
upset when I allow my semantic proclivities to rise while we are still in the
pew, so to speak. But I haven’t stopped thinking about it, so here I write.
Strictly speaking, a miracle is a departure from what is natural. The
Oxford Dictionary says a miracle is, “a surprising and welcome event that is not explicable by natural or scientific laws and is
therefore considered to be the work of a divine agency.” Lame men walking and
dead women rising is not natural – it’s supernatural or miraculous. To say that
God’s creation is miraculous does not fit the strict definition.
However, the next entry in the
dictionary says, “an amazing product or
achievement, or an outstanding example of something” might be called a miracle.
My semantic accuracy meter begins to rise. My pastor may have been correct that
an atom or a star is “amazing.” God’s creation is certainly amazing, but if we
use the word “miracle” this loosely, I fear we devalue the true worth of the
miracles performed by Peter or anyone else reported in the Bible record. When
God intervenes to suspend or reverse the course of nature, He shows His
sovereign power over that which He has made. He can break the rules, if you
will, and do truly amazing things, things that are not part of the course of
nature.
The paradigm
shift away from a position of faith to one of reason that began with the
so-called Enlightenment was based on the belief that science, aka nature, would
reveal her secrets in such a way that faith in a divine Creator would no longer
be necessary. And here we are. We can explain all sorts of things that were
considered “miraculous” in the pre-scientific world. However, there are a few
things that still have the scientists baffled, chief among them are where the
universe came from, and what the essence of life is. Darwin and the Big Bang
are proving to be a bust where origins are concerned. And no one anywhere has
ever created life from scratch. We don’t even know what life is, really. We
talk about organic and inorganic as categories, but we have no idea what makes
a thing organic – alive.
The Bible
teaches that God created our known universe out of nothing. He spoke; it
became. The Bible also teaches that life comes from God. In Genesis God
breathed life into Adam and presumably did something similar for all the living
creatures He made. From that point on, the creation of life became procreation
or continuation of what God had started. Because of Adam’s rebellion, the life
he received from God was limited by the introduction of death and decay. Sin’s
death sentence puts an end to the miracle of life for all creatures. But there
is another miracle waiting.
Paul makes
an interesting statement in 1
Corinthians 15 about life. He states that each form of living thing –
humans, animals, birds, fish – have a distinct flesh. The word “flesh” is a
biblical synonym for life. He goes a step further to say that when a believer
dies, his earthly body is “sown in corruption… dishonor… and weakness” meaning
that it decays. He says it is sown a “natural body,” but it is raised a
“spiritual body.” In the coming resurrection, the restoration of all things
perfect, Paul says we will have a different kind of life. That will be a true
miracle because it will not be natural, but supernatural. That’s the
miracle I’m waiting for.
Related posts:
Think
Supernaturally; What’s
Glorious
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