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Difference between revisions of "Miracles"

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== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_36524" /> ==
== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_36524" /> ==
<p> Three distinct New [[Testament]] Greek words represent miracles: seemeion , "a sign"; teras , "a prodigy"; dunamis , "a mighty work." [[Septuagint]] uses seemeion and teras for [[Hebrew]] 'owt and mopheth (&nbsp;Exodus 7:9). ''Seemeion'' , "sign," views the miracle as evidence of a divine commission: &nbsp;John 3:2, "no man can do these signs (Greek) which Thou doest except God be with him" (&nbsp;John 9:30; &nbsp;John 9:33; &nbsp;John 15:24; &nbsp;Luke 7:19-22); teras , "prodigy" or "wonder," expresses the effect on the spectator; dunamis , "mighty work," marks its performance by a superhuman power (&nbsp;Acts 2:22; &nbsp;2 Corinthians 12:12; &nbsp;2 Thessalonians 2:9). The "sign" is God's seal, attestation, or proof of a revelation being genuine. Jesus' miracles were not merely wonders but signs; signs not merely of His power, but of the nature of His ministry and of His divine person. </p> <p> A grand distinction peculiar to Christianity is, it won the world to it in an age of high civilization, through a few preachers of humble position, on the evidence of miracles. Basing its claim on miracles the creed of the slave became eventually the faith of the Caesars. Muhammed on the contrary, even in a half-enlightened age and country, pretended no miracle. Christ and His apostles still less than Mahomet among friends would have dared to allege miracles, in the midst of hostile Jews and skeptical Romans, unless they were true. This claim is the more striking, since John the Baptist, though coming "in the spirit and power of Elias," the great miracle worker of the Old Testament, never claimed miraculous power; so far is [[Scripture]] from indiscriminately gratifying men's love of the marvelous at the cost of truth. </p> <p> Similarly, Abraham, David, and other Old Testament heroes never appear as miracle workers. Early Christian writers, Justin Martyr, Tertullian, and Origen, occasionally appeal to miracles in proof of Christianity; but state that their pagan opponents, admitting the facts, attributed them to magic; which accounts for the fewness of their references to miracles. The Jewish writings, as the Sepher Toldoth Jeshu, also the extant fragments of Celsus, Porphyry, and Julian, admit the fact of the miracles, though ascribing them to magic and evil spirits. In the case of the resurrection (&nbsp;Matthew 28:11-15) and the cure of the blind man (John 9) the Jews made a self confuted charge of fraud. The early Christian apologists allege in support of Christianity: </p> <p> '''(1)''' the greatness, number, completeness, and publicity of the miracles; </p> <p> '''(2)''' the beneficial tendency of the doctrine; </p> <p> '''(3)''' the connection of the miracles with prophecy and the whole scheme of redemption from Adam to Christ. The miracles must have been altogether different from the wonders of exorcists, magicians, etc.; else they would not have gained for the gospel so wide and permanent an acceptance. The effect of Philip's ministry on the Samaritans, in opposition to Simon Magus (Acts 8), proves this. The holy character of Christ and His apostles, and the tendency of Christianity to promote truth and virtue, are against the origination of the miracles from evil spirits or jugglery. In the fourth century miracles had ceased (Chrysostom on 1 Corinthians 11-13); in the third, miracles are alleged, but are suspicious, as wrought among those already believing and predisposed to accept prodigies credulously. The ecclesiastical miracles are not attested by inspired writers. The apostles alone could transmit the power of working miracles to others. [[Cornelius]] was an exception, being the firstfruit of the Gentiles. </p> <p> But Philip could not impart it; Peter and John must come to confer on his [[Samaritan]] converts miraculous gifts, by laying on of hands (&nbsp;Acts 8:15-20; &nbsp;Acts 10:44-46; &nbsp;Acts 19:6; &nbsp;Mark 16:17-18). Christianity being once proved and attested to us, the analogy of God's dealings leads us to expect He would leave it to make its way by ordinary means; the edifice being erected, the scaffolding is taken down; perpetual miracle is contrary to His ways. The ecclesiastical miracles alleged are ambiguous, or tentative, or legendary, i.e. resembling known products of human credulity and imposture. Many are childish, and palpably framed for superstitious believers, rather than as evidences capable of bearing critical scrutiny. Most of them are not told until long after their presumed occurrence. [[Herein]] the New Testament miracles wholly differ from them. The Christian miracles are: </p> <p> ''(1)'' [[Recorded]] by contemporaries. </p> <p> ''(2)'' In the same country. </p> <p> ''(3)'' Not based on transient rumor, but confirmed by subsequent investigation, and recorded in independent accounts. </p> <p> ''(4)'' Not naked history, but the history combined with the institution and with the religion of our day, as also with the time and place of the miracle recorded and of Christianity's origin. </p> <p> ''(5)'' With particular specification of names, places, dates, and circumstances. </p> <p> ''(6)'' Not requiring merely otiose assent, as the popular superstitions on which nothing depends, but claiming to regulate the opinions and acts of people. </p> <p> ''(7)'' Not like popish miracles in Roman [[Catholic]] countries, in affirmation of opinions already formed, but performed amidst enemies, converting men from their most cherished prejudices; there was no anterior persuasion to lay hold of, Jesus' miracles gave birth to the sect; frauds might mix with the progress, but could not have place in the commencement of the religion. </p> <p> ''(8)'' Not an imaginary perception, as Socrates' demon; the giving sight to the blind leaves a lasting effect; in those of a mixed nature the principal miracle is momentary, but some circumstance combined with it is permanent; Peter's vision might be a dream, but the message of Cornelius could not have been; the concurrence could only be supernatural. </p> <p> ''(9)'' Not tentative, where out of many trials some succeed, as the ancient oracles, cures wrought by relics, etc. </p> <p> ''(10)'' Not doubtful miracles, as the liquefaction of Januarius' blood, cures of nervous ailments. </p> <p> ''(11)'' Not stories which can be resolved into exaggerations. </p> <p> ''(12)'' Not gradual, but instantaneous for the most part (&nbsp;Luke 18:43); not incomplete; not merely temporary, but complete and lasting. </p> <p> ''(13)'' [[Witnessed]] to at the cost of suffering and death. (Paley, Evidences of Christianity.) </p> <p> A miracle is not a "violation of the laws of nature" (Hume), but the introduction of a new agent. Such introduction accords with human experience, for we see an intelligent agent often modifying the otherwise uniform laws of nature. "Experience" informs us of human free will counteracting the lower law of gravitation. Infinitely more can the divine will introduce a new element, counteracting, without destroying, lower physical law; the higher law for a time controls and suspends the action of the lower. Or, "law" being simply the expression of God's will, in miracles God's will intervenes, for certain moral ends, to suspend His ordinary mode of working. The wise men following the star, and then receiving further guidance from the Scripture word, illustrate the twofold revelation, God's works, and God's word, the highest guide. Both meet in the Incarnate Word (Matthew 2; &nbsp;2 Peter 1:19-21). As disturbance has entered the world by sin, as nature visibly attests, God must needs miraculously interfere to nullify that disturbance. </p> <p> Hume alleged against miracles their contrariety to "experience," and that experience shows testimony to be often false. But "experience" is not to be limited to our time and knowledge. The "experience" of the witnesses for Christianity attests the truth of miracles. However improbable miracles are under ordinary circumstances, they are probable, nay necessary, to attest a religious revelation and a divine commission. "In whatever degree it is probable that a revelation should be communicated to mankind at all, in the same degree is it probable that miracles should be wrought" (Paley, Evidences of Christianity). That they are out of the ordinary course of nature, so far from being an objection, is just what they need to be in order to be fit signs to attest a revelation. It is as easy to God to continue the ordinary course of the rest of nature, with the change of one part, as of all the phenomena without any change. It is objected, miracles "interrupt the course of nature." </p> <p> But as that course really comprises the whole series of God's government of the universe, moral as well as physical, miracles are doubtless included in it. In this point of view [[Butler]] remarks, nothing less than another world, placed in circumstances similar to our own, can furnish an argument from analogy against the credibility of miracles. They have some known general laws, e.g. they are infrequent, they are signs attesting a revelation; and probably have other laws as yet unknown. The testimony to Christian miracles is that of concurrent and contemporaneous witnesses. The religion so attested specifically differs from the false religions which false miracles have been alleged to support. To draw from the latter a reason against the former is utterly illogical. The argument is the other way, namely, since palpably false religions were propped up by false miracles a pure religion like Christianity is not likely to rest on false miracles. </p> <p> In estimating the value of the testimony to Christ's miracles it is to be remembered there is no counter testimony. The unbelieving Jews admitted them, but attributed them to Satan. Jesus replied, Satan would never help to overthrow his own kingdom. Besides the evidential value of miracles, they are intimately and internally connected with Christianity as a new creation springing from God manifest in the flesh. That the new creating powers brought into the world in Christ should manifest themselves in miraculous agencies was a necessary consequence of His own manifestation or epiphany. The redemption of mankind from sin was typified, and its earnest given, in the redemption of individuals from the ailments which are sin's consequences. Christ's "bearing our griefs and carrying our sorrows" in His own assumed manhood guaranteed His healing human sicknesses and infirmities. </p> <p> The miracle of active compassion necessarily flowed from His divine power and human sympathy combined in His incarnation, of which the atonement is the crown (&nbsp;Matthew 8:17; &nbsp;Isaiah 53:4). The history and separate existence of the [[Israelite]] church (the sole instance of a pure theism in the ancient world) it is impossible to explain without accepting the miracles which the same Scripture records; so Christianity and [[Christendom]] can only be explained by accepting the miracles which introduced them. Both dispensations were inaugurated by miracles, and then mainly left to ordinary providence; only that the Old Testament church, at times when surrounding paganism, as in Elijah's times, threatened to swamp it, was vindicated by miracles. Its miracles are miracles of power, to impress a rude age; the New Testament miracles were miracles of love. </p> <p> The Old Testament miracles were for the foe's destruction; Christ's were miracles of mercy, except the withering of the fig tree and the sending the demons into the swine to perish, both symbolical lessons of warning to man. Many miracles were typical; as the "tongues" manifested the universality of the Christian dispensation designed for every tongue, so counterworking the division of man from man through the confusion of tongues at Babel; the casting out of demons symbolizes Christ's coming "to destroy the works of the devil." Miracles thus were manifestations of the Holy Spirit's presence and operation in the church. The Old Testament miracles attested God's presence as King of the theocracy; though this involved a continual series of miracles, yet as the theocracy was temporary and local those miracles did not violate God's ordinary government of the world by the laws of nature. The Christian miracles on the contrary, as attesting a permanent and universal dispensation, were properly limited to its commencement. </p> <p> Christ performed His miracles more for others' preservation than His own. Christ's mission, doctrine, and life, and Christ's miracles mutually depend on one another. Those were worthy objects for which to suspend the so-called (lower) laws of nature, and they illustrate the new spiritual and material creation which He introduces into our fallen world. Therefore that His miracles were false would be far harder to believe than that the testimony which supports them is true. Pritchard observes, Christ's miracles, as His parables, go on the principle of the law of continuity of the human with the divine. So the ten [[Egyptian]] plagues have a demonstrable connection with Egyptian phenomena, in most cases not reversing, but developing, nature's forces for a foretold particular end and at a defined time. (See [[Egypt]] ; EXODUS.) </p> <p> Thus the first plague turning the Nile to blood answers to the natural phenomenon of the water becoming, before the rise, first green, then clear yellow about the 25th of June, and gradually ochre red through microscopic cryptogams and infusoria, at times smelling offensively (&nbsp;Exodus 7:17-21). The supernatural element was the sudden change at Moses' word and act, killing the fish and making the water unfit for use, results not following the ordinary discoloration. So the frogs, accordant with natural phenomena usual in September, but miraculous in extent, intensity, and connection with Moses' word and act. So the dust, or black fertile soil of the Nile basin, called "chemi ," from whence Egypt's ancient name was derived, producing "lice" or tick. </p> <p> So the dogflies or else beetles; and the murrain, an epidemic often in December succeeding the inundation; and the boils, hail, locusts, and "darkness which might be felt," arising from masses of fine sand filling the atmosphere, the S.W. wind blowing it from the desert. That miracles harmonize with nature in some degree is what we might expect, since the God of revelation is the God of nature. The style of the same author in a new book will resemble his style in former books, only with such changes as the subject requires. The book of nature and the book of redemption are from the same God, written in different characters, but mutually analogous. [[Leslie]] (Short Method with the Deists) observes four notes of truth in the [[Mosaic]] miracles: </p> <p> '''1.''' They were such as men's senses can clearly judge of. </p> <p> '''2.''' Publicly wrought; two nations, [[Israel]] and Egypt, were affected by them, and above two million [[Israelites]] for 40 years witnessed them. </p> <p> '''3.''' Public monuments and, what is more convincing, outward observances continually were retained in commemoration of the facts. </p> <p> '''4.''' These monuments and observances were set up at the time the events took place, and continued without interruption afterward. (Compare &nbsp;Deuteronomy 8:4; &nbsp;Exodus 20:18; &nbsp;Exodus 40:38; &nbsp;Exodus 8:10; &nbsp;Exodus 8:23; &nbsp;Exodus 8:22; &nbsp;Exodus 9:5; &nbsp;Exodus 9:18; &nbsp;Exodus 9:25-26; &nbsp;Exodus 10:4-5; &nbsp;Exodus 10:14; &nbsp;Exodus 10:22-23; &nbsp;Exodus 12:29; &nbsp;Exodus 16:17, etc.; &nbsp;Exodus 19:10, etc.; &nbsp;Joshua 3:16; Numbers 16; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 5:22-23; Numbers 21; 2 Kings 18). </p> <p> Graves (Pentat. 6) observes we have two histories of Moses and his miracles, one in his book, the other in Israel's laws and ceremonies which are a living witness, not only of the [[Pentateuch]] history in general, but also of the miracles it records (&nbsp;Exodus 13:1; compare &nbsp;Numbers 3:11; &nbsp;Numbers 3:46); its facts are inseparably connected with the miraculous. However indifferent nations become as to religion, they never are so as to property; now miracles were the foundation of the Hebrew polity and of the tenure and regulations of property, e.g. the [[Jubilee]] restoration. And the religion and government were so closely connected as to presuppose a peculiar providence rewarding or punishing temporally obedience or disobedience. The effect of the miracles under Joshua kept all his generation faithful to Jehovah, so real and convincing were they (&nbsp;Joshua 24:31; &nbsp;Judges 2:7). </p> <p> Messiah's miracles were foretold (&nbsp;Isaiah 35:5-6; &nbsp;Isaiah 42:7), and so were asked for by John [[Baptist]] (&nbsp;Matthew 11:2-4), and made the ground by the people of calling Him "Son of David" (&nbsp;Matthew 12:23; &nbsp;John 7:31). Their aim was not merely to astonish, for many were wrought in behalf of and before obscure persons. When asked for a startling "sign from heaven" He refused (&nbsp;Luke 11:16). The 40 miracles of Christ recorded are but samples out of a greater number (&nbsp;John 2:23; &nbsp;John 20:30-31; &nbsp;Matthew 4:23; &nbsp;Matthew 8:16; &nbsp;Matthew 9:35; &nbsp;Matthew 12:15; &nbsp;Matthew 14:14; &nbsp;Matthew 14:35-36; &nbsp;Matthew 15:30; &nbsp;Matthew 19:2; &nbsp;Matthew 21:14). Three He restored to life in an ascending gradation: Jairus' daughter just dead, the [[Nain]] widow's son being carried to burial, Lazarus four days dead and decomposing (&nbsp;Matthew 9:18; &nbsp;Luke 7:11-12; John 11). </p> <p> Six demons He cast out, two of which witnessed He is "the Holy One ... the Son of the Most High God" (&nbsp;Mark 1:24; &nbsp;Mark 5:2; &nbsp;Matthew 9:32; &nbsp;Matthew 15:22; &nbsp;Matthew 17:15; &nbsp;Luke 11:15). [[Seventeen]] He cured of sicknesses, fever, leprosy, palsy, infirmity, withered hand, issue of blood, dropsy, blindness, deafness, muteness (&nbsp;John 4:47; &nbsp;John 5:5; &nbsp;John 9:1; &nbsp;Matthew 8:2; &nbsp;Matthew 8:5; &nbsp;Matthew 8:14; &nbsp;Matthew 9:2; &nbsp;Matthew 9:20; &nbsp;Matthew 9:27; &nbsp;Matthew 12:10; &nbsp;Mark 8:22; &nbsp;Luke 13:11; &nbsp;Luke 17:12; &nbsp;Luke 18:35; &nbsp;Luke 22:51); this class is that of miracles bringing in love relief to suffering man. Another class shows His control over nature: creating wine out of water (John 2); feeding 5,000 and 4,000 with bread multiplied manifold (&nbsp;Matthew 14:16; &nbsp;Matthew 15:36); passing unseen through a crowd, setting aside natural laws (&nbsp;Luke 4:30); giving draughts of fish when the fishermen had caught none (&nbsp;Luke 5:4; &nbsp;John 21:6); stilling the storm (&nbsp;Matthew 8:26); walking on the sea (&nbsp;Matthew 14:25), God's attribute, &nbsp;Job 9:8; transfiguring His countenance (&nbsp;Matthew 17:1); directing the fish with the tribute shekel to Peter, and Peter to the fish (&nbsp;Matthew 17:27). </p> <p> Another class is: His overawing men; twice turning out of the temple the sellers and moneychangers (&nbsp;Matthew 21:12; &nbsp;John 2:13); alone dud unarmed striking fear into the officers sent to take Him twice (&nbsp;John 7:45-46; &nbsp;John 18:6). He justified His healing on the [[Sabbath]] on the same ground as God is above the Sabbath law, working on it as on other days for the sustenance of all life and being (&nbsp;John 5:17), "My Father worketh hereto and I work," thus as the Jews truly alleged calling "God His own (in an exclusive sense, idion ) Father," and "making Himself equal with God." Love to man, unweariedly active, is as conspicuous in His miracles as power. The connection of His miracles with His redeeming work is the reason why faith was the needed preliminary on the part of the recipients of healing (&nbsp;Mark 6:5-6; &nbsp;Mark 7:29; &nbsp;Matthew 9:28-29). If miracles were mere wonders anyone would have been a fit witness of their performance. </p> <p> But the miracles were designed to attract the witnesses to His kingdom. They were symbolical of spiritual needs met by the Redeemer; vehicles of instruction as well as signs of His divine commission. [[Performed]] in His own name and in the first person, "I say unto thee" (&nbsp;Luke 7:14); but the apostles' miracles were in His name (&nbsp;Acts 3:6; &nbsp;Acts 4:10-12). Faith in His power to heal the body prepared the way for faith in His power to heal the soul. Disbelief disqualified for appreciating miracles. To work miracles before hardened unbelievers would only aggravate their opposition, sin, and condemnation (&nbsp;John 15:24; &nbsp;John 9:39-41). They crowned their enmity by attributing His casting out of demons to Beelzebub. The "sign" of Jonah in his virtual burial and resurrection, and the sign of their destroying the temple of His body and His raising it in three days (&nbsp;John 2:18-21; &nbsp;Matthew 16:4), were the only sign which remained to convince them. </p> <p> His resurrection is the central miracle toward which all the rest converge. He would give them no such sign as they craved, a startling phenomenon in the sky visible and indisputable to all. He would still give such signs of unobtrusive mercy as hereto; if they not only still reject them but also His resurrection, there only remains the last condemning sign, the Son of man coming with the clouds of heaven (&nbsp;Revelation 1:7; &nbsp;Daniel 7:9-13). His name is "Wonderful" or "miracle" (&nbsp;Isaiah 9:6; &nbsp;Judges 13:18-19). He is an embodied miracle, the [[Miracle]] of miracles. His incarnation and His resurrection include all between, and involve the wonders of Pentecost. Christ's charge that the eye witnesses should not report His miracles (&nbsp;Matthew 9:30; &nbsp;Mark 5:43; &nbsp;Mark 7:36) was in order that men should not dissociate the wonder from His redeeming work. </p> <p> To John the Baptist on the contrary He sent a report of His miracles, because John was not likely to dissever His miracles from His person and His work. His gestures, laying hands on the patient, anointing the blind eyes with clay, putting His finger into the deaf ear and touching the dumb tongue, creating much bread out of little not out of nothing, condescending to use means though in themselves wholly inadequate, all are tokens of His identifying Himself with us men, signs of His person at once human and divine and of His redeeming and sympathizing work for us. If the incarnation be denied, Christianity's existence is an effect without an adequate cause; grant the incarnation, and miracles are its necessary concomitant and natural consequence. To deny testimony because of the improbability of the facts attested would involve the denial of the Napoleonic history and other facts notoriously true. </p> <p> The truth of the miracles is confirmed incidentally by the fact that in no nation but Israel have the knowledge and worship of the one true God, the Creator, been maintained by the mere light of nature, and Israel was far from overtopping other nations in mental power and civilization. A divine power alone could have so elevated Israel by an extraordinary call, confirmed by miracles. The prophecies, the morality, the structure of the Bible, and Christianity's conquest of the Roman world and its public establishment about 300 years after the execution of its [[Founder]] as a malefactor, similarly confirm the miracles which attest to its divinity. The improbability of the Christian religion being established WITH miracles is not nearly so great as the improbability of its being established WITHOUT miracles. Strauss' mythic theory, namely, that the story of Jesus embodies the nation's cherished idea of what the [[Messiah]] was expected to do, and therefore was believed to have done, is counter to the fact that the Jews expected a reigning Messiah, who should not die but deliver them from their Roman masters. </p> <p> The gravity, simplicity, and historical consistency of the New Testament incidents with the otherwise known circumstances of the times, and the internal marks of the date of writing being soon after the occurrence of the facts, are all against the mythic theory, especially in a non-legendary but historical age. How unlike they are to the really mythic apocryphal Gospels, e.g. that of Nicodemus, the Ebionites, etc. No miracles of Jesus' youth are mentioned; there is no description of His personal appearance, nor of His doings in the world of spirits; no miracles of the [[Virgin]] Mary: omissions sure to be supplied in a legendary story. The hostility of the Jewish nation to Christianity confirms the gospel miracles. Had the Jews been generally converted by them, the septic might argue with plausibility that the facts had been invented or exaggerated to gratify the national propensity, credited without examination or proof, and all inquiry checked at the only period when inquiry could have detected imposition. </p> <p> But now we are certain that the gospel miracles were wrought in the presence of enemies, and so subjected to the severest scrutiny. Joel (&nbsp;Joel 2:28-29-31) apparently foretells a fuller outpouring of the Spirit accompanied with "prophesying," "dreams," and "wonders," in connection with and before "the great and terrible day of the Lord" (compare &nbsp;Zechariah 12:10). Also &nbsp;Matthew 24:24; &nbsp;Matthew 24:29, "false Christs and prophets shall show great signs and wonders, inasmuch that if it were possible they shall deceive the very elect ... immediately after ... the sun shall be darkened." So &nbsp;2 Thessalonians 2:9, "the coining of that wicked one, the man of sin, shall be after the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders." </p> <p> The same three terms occur for Jesus' miracles (&nbsp;Acts 2:22; &nbsp;Hebrews 2:4); for as the Egyptian magicians imitated Moses (&nbsp;2 Timothy 3:1-8), so antichrist imitates Christ's works as a "sign" of divinity, real but demoniac. The test of miracles is their being wrought, or not, in support of doctrine in accordance with God's known word and revelation; for God cannot by subsequent revelation contradict Himself (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 13:1-5; &nbsp;Galatians 1:8-9; &nbsp;Revelation 13:11-15; &nbsp;Revelation 19:20; &nbsp;1 Kings 13:11-26). </p>
<p> Three distinct New [[Testament]] Greek words represent miracles: '''''Seemeion''''' , "a sign"; '''''Teras''''' , "a prodigy"; '''''Dunamis''''' , "a mighty work." [[Septuagint]] uses '''''Seemeion''''' and '''''Teras''''' for [[Hebrew]] ''''''Owt''''' and '''''Mopheth''''' (&nbsp;Exodus 7:9). ''Seemeion'' , "sign," views the miracle as evidence of a divine commission: &nbsp;John 3:2, "no man can do these signs (Greek) which Thou doest except God be with him" (&nbsp;John 9:30; &nbsp;John 9:33; &nbsp;John 15:24; &nbsp;Luke 7:19-22); '''''Teras''''' , "prodigy" or "wonder," expresses the effect on the spectator; '''''Dunamis''''' , "mighty work," marks its performance by a superhuman power (&nbsp;Acts 2:22; &nbsp;2 Corinthians 12:12; &nbsp;2 Thessalonians 2:9). The "sign" is God's seal, attestation, or proof of a revelation being genuine. Jesus' miracles were not merely wonders but signs; signs not merely of His power, but of the nature of His ministry and of His divine person. </p> <p> A grand distinction peculiar to Christianity is, it won the world to it in an age of high civilization, through a few preachers of humble position, on the evidence of miracles. Basing its claim on miracles the creed of the slave became eventually the faith of the Caesars. Muhammed on the contrary, even in a half-enlightened age and country, pretended no miracle. Christ and His apostles still less than Mahomet among friends would have dared to allege miracles, in the midst of hostile Jews and skeptical Romans, unless they were true. This claim is the more striking, since John the Baptist, though coming "in the spirit and power of Elias," the great miracle worker of the Old Testament, never claimed miraculous power; so far is [[Scripture]] from indiscriminately gratifying men's love of the marvelous at the cost of truth. </p> <p> Similarly, Abraham, David, and other Old Testament heroes never appear as miracle workers. Early Christian writers, Justin Martyr, Tertullian, and Origen, occasionally appeal to miracles in proof of Christianity; but state that their pagan opponents, admitting the facts, attributed them to magic; which accounts for the fewness of their references to miracles. The Jewish writings, as the Sepher Toldoth Jeshu, also the extant fragments of Celsus, Porphyry, and Julian, admit the fact of the miracles, though ascribing them to magic and evil spirits. In the case of the resurrection (&nbsp;Matthew 28:11-15) and the cure of the blind man (John 9) the Jews made a self confuted charge of fraud. The early Christian apologists allege in support of Christianity: </p> <p> '''(1)''' the greatness, number, completeness, and publicity of the miracles; </p> <p> '''(2)''' the beneficial tendency of the doctrine; </p> <p> '''(3)''' the connection of the miracles with prophecy and the whole scheme of redemption from Adam to Christ. The miracles must have been altogether different from the wonders of exorcists, magicians, etc.; else they would not have gained for the gospel so wide and permanent an acceptance. The effect of Philip's ministry on the Samaritans, in opposition to Simon Magus (Acts 8), proves this. The holy character of Christ and His apostles, and the tendency of Christianity to promote truth and virtue, are against the origination of the miracles from evil spirits or jugglery. In the fourth century miracles had ceased (Chrysostom on 1 Corinthians 11-13); in the third, miracles are alleged, but are suspicious, as wrought among those already believing and predisposed to accept prodigies credulously. The ecclesiastical miracles are not attested by inspired writers. The apostles alone could transmit the power of working miracles to others. [[Cornelius]] was an exception, being the firstfruit of the Gentiles. </p> <p> But Philip could not impart it; Peter and John must come to confer on his [[Samaritan]] converts miraculous gifts, by laying on of hands (&nbsp;Acts 8:15-20; &nbsp;Acts 10:44-46; &nbsp;Acts 19:6; &nbsp;Mark 16:17-18). Christianity being once proved and attested to us, the analogy of God's dealings leads us to expect He would leave it to make its way by ordinary means; the edifice being erected, the scaffolding is taken down; perpetual miracle is contrary to His ways. The ecclesiastical miracles alleged are ambiguous, or tentative, or legendary, i.e. resembling known products of human credulity and imposture. Many are childish, and palpably framed for superstitious believers, rather than as evidences capable of bearing critical scrutiny. Most of them are not told until long after their presumed occurrence. [[Herein]] the New Testament miracles wholly differ from them. The Christian miracles are: </p> <p> ''(1)'' [[Recorded]] by contemporaries. </p> <p> ''(2)'' In the same country. </p> <p> ''(3)'' Not based on transient rumor, but confirmed by subsequent investigation, and recorded in independent accounts. </p> <p> ''(4)'' Not naked history, but the history combined with the institution and with the religion of our day, as also with the time and place of the miracle recorded and of Christianity's origin. </p> <p> ''(5)'' With particular specification of names, places, dates, and circumstances. </p> <p> ''(6)'' Not requiring merely otiose assent, as the popular superstitions on which nothing depends, but claiming to regulate the opinions and acts of people. </p> <p> ''(7)'' Not like popish miracles in Roman [[Catholic]] countries, in affirmation of opinions already formed, but performed amidst enemies, converting men from their most cherished prejudices; there was no anterior persuasion to lay hold of, Jesus' miracles gave birth to the sect; frauds might mix with the progress, but could not have place in the commencement of the religion. </p> <p> ''(8)'' Not an imaginary perception, as Socrates' demon; the giving sight to the blind leaves a lasting effect; in those of a mixed nature the principal miracle is momentary, but some circumstance combined with it is permanent; Peter's vision might be a dream, but the message of Cornelius could not have been; the concurrence could only be supernatural. </p> <p> ''(9)'' Not tentative, where out of many trials some succeed, as the ancient oracles, cures wrought by relics, etc. </p> <p> ''(10)'' Not doubtful miracles, as the liquefaction of Januarius' blood, cures of nervous ailments. </p> <p> ''(11)'' Not stories which can be resolved into exaggerations. </p> <p> ''(12)'' Not gradual, but instantaneous for the most part (&nbsp;Luke 18:43); not incomplete; not merely temporary, but complete and lasting. </p> <p> ''(13)'' [[Witnessed]] to at the cost of suffering and death. (Paley, Evidences of Christianity.) </p> <p> A miracle is not a "violation of the laws of nature" (Hume), but the introduction of a new agent. Such introduction accords with human experience, for we see an intelligent agent often modifying the otherwise uniform laws of nature. "Experience" informs us of human free will counteracting the lower law of gravitation. Infinitely more can the divine will introduce a new element, counteracting, without destroying, lower physical law; the higher law for a time controls and suspends the action of the lower. Or, "law" being simply the expression of God's will, in miracles God's will intervenes, for certain moral ends, to suspend His ordinary mode of working. The wise men following the star, and then receiving further guidance from the Scripture word, illustrate the twofold revelation, God's works, and God's word, the highest guide. Both meet in the Incarnate Word (Matthew 2; &nbsp;2 Peter 1:19-21). As disturbance has entered the world by sin, as nature visibly attests, God must needs miraculously interfere to nullify that disturbance. </p> <p> Hume alleged against miracles their contrariety to "experience," and that experience shows testimony to be often false. But "experience" is not to be limited to our time and knowledge. The "experience" of the witnesses for Christianity attests the truth of miracles. However improbable miracles are under ordinary circumstances, they are probable, nay necessary, to attest a religious revelation and a divine commission. "In whatever degree it is probable that a revelation should be communicated to mankind at all, in the same degree is it probable that miracles should be wrought" (Paley, Evidences of Christianity). That they are out of the ordinary course of nature, so far from being an objection, is just what they need to be in order to be fit signs to attest a revelation. It is as easy to God to continue the ordinary course of the rest of nature, with the change of one part, as of all the phenomena without any change. It is objected, miracles "interrupt the course of nature." </p> <p> But as that course really comprises the whole series of God's government of the universe, moral as well as physical, miracles are doubtless included in it. In this point of view [[Butler]] remarks, nothing less than another world, placed in circumstances similar to our own, can furnish an argument from analogy against the credibility of miracles. They have some known general laws, e.g. they are infrequent, they are signs attesting a revelation; and probably have other laws as yet unknown. The testimony to Christian miracles is that of concurrent and contemporaneous witnesses. The religion so attested specifically differs from the false religions which false miracles have been alleged to support. To draw from the latter a reason against the former is utterly illogical. The argument is the other way, namely, since palpably false religions were propped up by false miracles a pure religion like Christianity is not likely to rest on false miracles. </p> <p> In estimating the value of the testimony to Christ's miracles it is to be remembered there is no counter testimony. The unbelieving Jews admitted them, but attributed them to Satan. Jesus replied, Satan would never help to overthrow his own kingdom. Besides the evidential value of miracles, they are intimately and internally connected with Christianity as a new creation springing from God manifest in the flesh. That the new creating powers brought into the world in Christ should manifest themselves in miraculous agencies was a necessary consequence of His own manifestation or epiphany. The redemption of mankind from sin was typified, and its earnest given, in the redemption of individuals from the ailments which are sin's consequences. Christ's "bearing our griefs and carrying our sorrows" in His own assumed manhood guaranteed His healing human sicknesses and infirmities. </p> <p> The miracle of active compassion necessarily flowed from His divine power and human sympathy combined in His incarnation, of which the atonement is the crown (&nbsp;Matthew 8:17; &nbsp;Isaiah 53:4). The history and separate existence of the [[Israelite]] church (the sole instance of a pure theism in the ancient world) it is impossible to explain without accepting the miracles which the same Scripture records; so Christianity and [[Christendom]] can only be explained by accepting the miracles which introduced them. Both dispensations were inaugurated by miracles, and then mainly left to ordinary providence; only that the Old Testament church, at times when surrounding paganism, as in Elijah's times, threatened to swamp it, was vindicated by miracles. Its miracles are miracles of power, to impress a rude age; the New Testament miracles were miracles of love. </p> <p> The Old Testament miracles were for the foe's destruction; Christ's were miracles of mercy, except the withering of the fig tree and the sending the demons into the swine to perish, both symbolical lessons of warning to man. Many miracles were typical; as the "tongues" manifested the universality of the Christian dispensation designed for every tongue, so counterworking the division of man from man through the confusion of tongues at Babel; the casting out of demons symbolizes Christ's coming "to destroy the works of the devil." Miracles thus were manifestations of the Holy Spirit's presence and operation in the church. The Old Testament miracles attested God's presence as King of the theocracy; though this involved a continual series of miracles, yet as the theocracy was temporary and local those miracles did not violate God's ordinary government of the world by the laws of nature. The Christian miracles on the contrary, as attesting a permanent and universal dispensation, were properly limited to its commencement. </p> <p> Christ performed His miracles more for others' preservation than His own. Christ's mission, doctrine, and life, and Christ's miracles mutually depend on one another. Those were worthy objects for which to suspend the so-called (lower) laws of nature, and they illustrate the new spiritual and material creation which He introduces into our fallen world. Therefore that His miracles were false would be far harder to believe than that the testimony which supports them is true. Pritchard observes, Christ's miracles, as His parables, go on the principle of the law of continuity of the human with the divine. So the ten [[Egyptian]] plagues have a demonstrable connection with Egyptian phenomena, in most cases not reversing, but developing, nature's forces for a foretold particular end and at a defined time. (See [[Egypt]] ; [[Exodus]] </p> <p> Thus the first plague turning the Nile to blood answers to the natural phenomenon of the water becoming, before the rise, first green, then clear yellow about the 25th of June, and gradually ochre red through microscopic cryptogams and infusoria, at times smelling offensively (&nbsp;Exodus 7:17-21). The supernatural element was the sudden change at Moses' word and act, killing the fish and making the water unfit for use, results not following the ordinary discoloration. So the frogs, accordant with natural phenomena usual in September, but miraculous in extent, intensity, and connection with Moses' word and act. So the dust, or black fertile soil of the Nile basin, called " '''''Chemi''''' ," from whence Egypt's ancient name was derived, producing "lice" or tick. </p> <p> So the dogflies or else beetles; and the murrain, an epidemic often in December succeeding the inundation; and the boils, hail, locusts, and "darkness which might be felt," arising from masses of fine sand filling the atmosphere, the S.W. wind blowing it from the desert. That miracles harmonize with nature in some degree is what we might expect, since the God of revelation is the God of nature. The style of the same author in a new book will resemble his style in former books, only with such changes as the subject requires. The book of nature and the book of redemption are from the same God, written in different characters, but mutually analogous. [[Leslie]] (Short Method with the Deists) observes four notes of truth in the [[Mosaic]] miracles: </p> <p> '''1.''' They were such as men's senses can clearly judge of. </p> <p> '''2.''' Publicly wrought; two nations, [[Israel]] and Egypt, were affected by them, and above two million [[Israelites]] for 40 years witnessed them. </p> <p> '''3.''' Public monuments and, what is more convincing, outward observances continually were retained in commemoration of the facts. </p> <p> '''4.''' These monuments and observances were set up at the time the events took place, and continued without interruption afterward. (Compare &nbsp;Deuteronomy 8:4; &nbsp;Exodus 20:18; &nbsp;Exodus 40:38; &nbsp;Exodus 8:10; &nbsp;Exodus 8:23; &nbsp;Exodus 8:22; &nbsp;Exodus 9:5; &nbsp;Exodus 9:18; &nbsp;Exodus 9:25-26; &nbsp;Exodus 10:4-5; &nbsp;Exodus 10:14; &nbsp;Exodus 10:22-23; &nbsp;Exodus 12:29; &nbsp;Exodus 16:17, etc.; &nbsp;Exodus 19:10, etc.; &nbsp;Joshua 3:16; Numbers 16; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 5:22-23; Numbers 21; 2 Kings 18). </p> <p> Graves (Pentat. 6) observes we have two histories of Moses and his miracles, one in his book, the other in Israel's laws and ceremonies which are a living witness, not only of the [[Pentateuch]] history in general, but also of the miracles it records (&nbsp;Exodus 13:1; compare &nbsp;Numbers 3:11; &nbsp;Numbers 3:46); its facts are inseparably connected with the miraculous. However indifferent nations become as to religion, they never are so as to property; now miracles were the foundation of the Hebrew polity and of the tenure and regulations of property, e.g. the [[Jubilee]] restoration. And the religion and government were so closely connected as to presuppose a peculiar providence rewarding or punishing temporally obedience or disobedience. The effect of the miracles under Joshua kept all his generation faithful to Jehovah, so real and convincing were they (&nbsp;Joshua 24:31; &nbsp;Judges 2:7). </p> <p> Messiah's miracles were foretold (&nbsp;Isaiah 35:5-6; &nbsp;Isaiah 42:7), and so were asked for by John [[Baptist]] (&nbsp;Matthew 11:2-4), and made the ground by the people of calling Him "Son of David" (&nbsp;Matthew 12:23; &nbsp;John 7:31). Their aim was not merely to astonish, for many were wrought in behalf of and before obscure persons. When asked for a startling "sign from heaven" He refused (&nbsp;Luke 11:16). The 40 miracles of Christ recorded are but samples out of a greater number (&nbsp;John 2:23; &nbsp;John 20:30-31; &nbsp;Matthew 4:23; &nbsp;Matthew 8:16; &nbsp;Matthew 9:35; &nbsp;Matthew 12:15; &nbsp;Matthew 14:14; &nbsp;Matthew 14:35-36; &nbsp;Matthew 15:30; &nbsp;Matthew 19:2; &nbsp;Matthew 21:14). Three He restored to life in an ascending gradation: Jairus' daughter just dead, the [[Nain]] widow's son being carried to burial, Lazarus four days dead and decomposing (&nbsp;Matthew 9:18; &nbsp;Luke 7:11-12; John 11). </p> <p> Six demons He cast out, two of which witnessed He is "the Holy One ... the Son of the Most High God" (&nbsp;Mark 1:24; &nbsp;Mark 5:2; &nbsp;Matthew 9:32; &nbsp;Matthew 15:22; &nbsp;Matthew 17:15; &nbsp;Luke 11:15). [[Seventeen]] He cured of sicknesses, fever, leprosy, palsy, infirmity, withered hand, issue of blood, dropsy, blindness, deafness, muteness (&nbsp;John 4:47; &nbsp;John 5:5; &nbsp;John 9:1; &nbsp;Matthew 8:2; &nbsp;Matthew 8:5; &nbsp;Matthew 8:14; &nbsp;Matthew 9:2; &nbsp;Matthew 9:20; &nbsp;Matthew 9:27; &nbsp;Matthew 12:10; &nbsp;Mark 8:22; &nbsp;Luke 13:11; &nbsp;Luke 17:12; &nbsp;Luke 18:35; &nbsp;Luke 22:51); this class is that of miracles bringing in love relief to suffering man. Another class shows His control over nature: creating wine out of water (John 2); feeding 5,000 and 4,000 with bread multiplied manifold (&nbsp;Matthew 14:16; &nbsp;Matthew 15:36); passing unseen through a crowd, setting aside natural laws (&nbsp;Luke 4:30); giving draughts of fish when the fishermen had caught none (&nbsp;Luke 5:4; &nbsp;John 21:6); stilling the storm (&nbsp;Matthew 8:26); walking on the sea (&nbsp;Matthew 14:25), God's attribute, &nbsp;Job 9:8; transfiguring His countenance (&nbsp;Matthew 17:1); directing the fish with the tribute shekel to Peter, and Peter to the fish (&nbsp;Matthew 17:27). </p> <p> Another class is: His overawing men; twice turning out of the temple the sellers and moneychangers (&nbsp;Matthew 21:12; &nbsp;John 2:13); alone dud unarmed striking fear into the officers sent to take Him twice (&nbsp;John 7:45-46; &nbsp;John 18:6). He justified His healing on the [[Sabbath]] on the same ground as God is above the Sabbath law, working on it as on other days for the sustenance of all life and being (&nbsp;John 5:17), "My Father worketh hereto and I work," thus as the Jews truly alleged calling "God His own (in an exclusive sense, '''''Idion''''' ) Father," and "making Himself equal with God." Love to man, unweariedly active, is as conspicuous in His miracles as power. The connection of His miracles with His redeeming work is the reason why faith was the needed preliminary on the part of the recipients of healing (&nbsp;Mark 6:5-6; &nbsp;Mark 7:29; &nbsp;Matthew 9:28-29). If miracles were mere wonders anyone would have been a fit witness of their performance. </p> <p> But the miracles were designed to attract the witnesses to His kingdom. They were symbolical of spiritual needs met by the Redeemer; vehicles of instruction as well as signs of His divine commission. [[Performed]] in His own name and in the first person, "I say unto thee" (&nbsp;Luke 7:14); but the apostles' miracles were in His name (&nbsp;Acts 3:6; &nbsp;Acts 4:10-12). Faith in His power to heal the body prepared the way for faith in His power to heal the soul. Disbelief disqualified for appreciating miracles. To work miracles before hardened unbelievers would only aggravate their opposition, sin, and condemnation (&nbsp;John 15:24; &nbsp;John 9:39-41). They crowned their enmity by attributing His casting out of demons to Beelzebub. The "sign" of Jonah in his virtual burial and resurrection, and the sign of their destroying the temple of His body and His raising it in three days (&nbsp;John 2:18-21; &nbsp;Matthew 16:4), were the only sign which remained to convince them. </p> <p> His resurrection is the central miracle toward which all the rest converge. He would give them no such sign as they craved, a startling phenomenon in the sky visible and indisputable to all. He would still give such signs of unobtrusive mercy as hereto; if they not only still reject them but also His resurrection, there only remains the last condemning sign, the Son of man coming with the clouds of heaven (&nbsp;Revelation 1:7; &nbsp;Daniel 7:9-13). His name is "Wonderful" or "miracle" (&nbsp;Isaiah 9:6; &nbsp;Judges 13:18-19). He is an embodied miracle, the [[Miracle]] of miracles. His incarnation and His resurrection include all between, and involve the wonders of Pentecost. Christ's charge that the eye witnesses should not report His miracles (&nbsp;Matthew 9:30; &nbsp;Mark 5:43; &nbsp;Mark 7:36) was in order that men should not dissociate the wonder from His redeeming work. </p> <p> To John the Baptist on the contrary He sent a report of His miracles, because John was not likely to dissever His miracles from His person and His work. His gestures, laying hands on the patient, anointing the blind eyes with clay, putting His finger into the deaf ear and touching the dumb tongue, creating much bread out of little not out of nothing, condescending to use means though in themselves wholly inadequate, all are tokens of His identifying Himself with us men, signs of His person at once human and divine and of His redeeming and sympathizing work for us. If the incarnation be denied, Christianity's existence is an effect without an adequate cause; grant the incarnation, and miracles are its necessary concomitant and natural consequence. To deny testimony because of the improbability of the facts attested would involve the denial of the Napoleonic history and other facts notoriously true. </p> <p> The truth of the miracles is confirmed incidentally by the fact that in no nation but Israel have the knowledge and worship of the one true God, the Creator, been maintained by the mere light of nature, and Israel was far from overtopping other nations in mental power and civilization. A divine power alone could have so elevated Israel by an extraordinary call, confirmed by miracles. The prophecies, the morality, the structure of the Bible, and Christianity's conquest of the Roman world and its public establishment about 300 years after the execution of its [[Founder]] as a malefactor, similarly confirm the miracles which attest to its divinity. The improbability of the Christian religion being established WITH miracles is not nearly so great as the improbability of its being established WITHOUT miracles. Strauss' mythic theory, namely, that the story of Jesus embodies the nation's cherished idea of what the [[Messiah]] was expected to do, and therefore was believed to have done, is counter to the fact that the Jews expected a reigning Messiah, who should not die but deliver them from their Roman masters. </p> <p> The gravity, simplicity, and historical consistency of the New Testament incidents with the otherwise known circumstances of the times, and the internal marks of the date of writing being soon after the occurrence of the facts, are all against the mythic theory, especially in a non-legendary but historical age. How unlike they are to the really mythic apocryphal Gospels, e.g. that of Nicodemus, the Ebionites, etc. No miracles of Jesus' youth are mentioned; there is no description of His personal appearance, nor of His doings in the world of spirits; no miracles of the [[Virgin]] Mary: omissions sure to be supplied in a legendary story. The hostility of the Jewish nation to Christianity confirms the gospel miracles. Had the Jews been generally converted by them, the septic might argue with plausibility that the facts had been invented or exaggerated to gratify the national propensity, credited without examination or proof, and all inquiry checked at the only period when inquiry could have detected imposition. </p> <p> But now we are certain that the gospel miracles were wrought in the presence of enemies, and so subjected to the severest scrutiny. Joel (&nbsp;Joel 2:28-29-31) apparently foretells a fuller outpouring of the Spirit accompanied with "prophesying," "dreams," and "wonders," in connection with and before "the great and terrible day of the Lord" (compare &nbsp;Zechariah 12:10). Also &nbsp;Matthew 24:24; &nbsp;Matthew 24:29, "false Christs and prophets shall show great signs and wonders, inasmuch that if it were possible they shall deceive the very elect ... immediately after ... the sun shall be darkened." So &nbsp;2 Thessalonians 2:9, "the coining of that wicked one, the man of sin, shall be after the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders." </p> <p> The same three terms occur for Jesus' miracles (&nbsp;Acts 2:22; &nbsp;Hebrews 2:4); for as the Egyptian magicians imitated Moses (&nbsp;2 Timothy 3:1-8), so antichrist imitates Christ's works as a "sign" of divinity, real but demoniac. The test of miracles is their being wrought, or not, in support of doctrine in accordance with God's known word and revelation; for God cannot by subsequent revelation contradict Himself (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 13:1-5; &nbsp;Galatians 1:8-9; &nbsp;Revelation 13:11-15; &nbsp;Revelation 19:20; &nbsp;1 Kings 13:11-26). </p>
          
          
== Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary <ref name="term_81143" /> ==
== Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary <ref name="term_81143" /> ==
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== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_67663" /> ==
== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_67663" /> ==
<p> No sincere believer in the inspiration of scripture can have a doubt as to real miracles having been wrought by the power of God both in O.T. and N.T. times. It is philosophy so-called, or scepticism, that mystifies the subject. Much is said about 'the laws of nature;' and it is confidently affirmed that these are irrevocable and cannot be departed from. To which is added that laws of nature previously unknown are frequently being discovered, and if our forefathers could witness the application of some of the more recent discoveries, as the computer, mobile telephone, etc., they would judge that miracles were being performed. So, it is argued, the actions recorded in scripture as miracles, were merely the bringing into use some law of nature which had been hidden up to that time. </p> <p> All this is based upon a fallacy. There are no laws <i> of </i> nature, as if nature made its own laws: there are laws <i> in </i> nature, which God in His wisdom as [[Creator]] was pleased to make; but He who made those laws has surely the same power to suspend them when He pleases. Though laws in nature hitherto unknown are being discovered from time to time, they in no way account for such things as dead persons being raised to life, the blind seeing, the deaf hearing, the lame walking, and demons being cast out of those who were possessed by them. Neither has natural philosophy discovered any law that will account for such a thing as an iron axe-head swimming in water. The simple truth is that God, for wise purposes, allowed some of the natural laws to be suspended, and at times He put forth His almighty power, as in supplying the Israelites with manna from heaven, and in feeding thousands from a few loaves and fishes, or by recalling life that had left the body. </p> <p> The words translated 'miracle' in the O.T. are </p> <p> 1. <i> oth </i> , 'a sign,' as it is often translated, and in some places 'token.' &nbsp;Numbers 14:22; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 11:3 . </p> <p> 2. <i> mopheth, </i> 'a wonder,' as it is mostly translated: it is something out of the ordinary course of events. &nbsp;Exodus 7:9; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 29:3 . </p> <p> 3. <i> pala </i> , 'wonderful, marvellous.' &nbsp;Judges 6:13 . </p> <p> Moses was enabled to work miracles for two distinct objects. One was in order to convince the children of Israel that God had sent him. God gave him three signs to perform before them: his rod became a serpent, and was again a rod; his hand became leprous, and was then restored; and he could turn the water of the Nile into blood. &nbsp;Exodus 4:1-9 . </p> <p> The other miracles, wrought by him in Egypt, were to show to [[Pharaoh]] the mighty power of God, who said, I will "multiply my signs and my wonders in the land of Egypt . . . . and the [[Egyptians]] shall know that I am Jehovah, when I stretch forth mine hand upon Egypt." &nbsp;Exodus 7:3-5 . The ten plagues followed, which were miracles or signs of the power of God — signs not only to the Egyptians, but also to the Israelites, as is shown by the reference to them afterwards. &nbsp;Numbers 14:22; &nbsp;Judges 6:13 . </p> <p> By the following list it will be seen that there were many other miracles wrought in O.T. times — by Moses in the wilderness; by the prophets in the land; and some through the direct agency of God from heaven, as the deliverance of the three from the fiery furnace, Daniel from the lions, etc. All the miracles were indeed the acts of God, His servants being merely the means through which they were carried out. </p> <p> [[Principal]] MIRACLES IN THE OLD TESTAMENT. </p> <p> <i> In Egypt. </i> </p> <p> Aaron's rod becomes a serpent &nbsp;Exodus 7:10-12 </p> <p> <i> The Ten Plagues. </i> </p> <p> Water made blood &nbsp;Exodus 7:20-25 </p> <p> [[Frogs]] &nbsp;Exodus 8:5-14 </p> <p> [[Lice]] &nbsp;Exodus 8:16-18 </p> <p> [[Flies]] &nbsp;Exodus 8:20-24 </p> <p> [[Murrain]] &nbsp;Exodus 9:3 - &nbsp;6 </p> <p> [[Boils]] and blains &nbsp;Exodus 9:8-11 </p> <p> [[Thunder]] and hail &nbsp;Exodus 9:22-26 </p> <p> [[Locusts]] &nbsp;Exodus 10:12-19 </p> <p> [[Darkness]] &nbsp;Exodus 10:21-23 </p> <p> Death of the [[Firstborn]] &nbsp;Exodus 12:29-30 </p> <p> [[Parting]] of the Red Sea &nbsp;Exodus 14:21-31 </p> <p> <i> In the Wilderness. </i> </p> <p> Curing the waters of [[Marah]] &nbsp;Exodus 15:23-25 </p> <p> [[Manna]] from heaven &nbsp;Exodus 16:14-35 </p> <p> Water from the rock at [[Rephidim]] &nbsp;Exodus 17:5-7 </p> <p> Death of [[Nadab]] and [[Abihu]] &nbsp;Leviticus 10:1 - &nbsp;2 </p> <p> The earth swallows the murmurers, and </p> <p> the death of Korah, [[Dathan]] and [[Abiram]] &nbsp;Numbers 16:31-40 </p> <p> Budding of Aaron's rod at [[Kadesh]] &nbsp;Numbers 17:8 </p> <p> Water from the rock at [[Meribah]] &nbsp;Numbers 20:7-11 </p> <p> The brazen serpent: Israel healed &nbsp;Numbers 21:8 - &nbsp;9 </p> <p> Balaam's ass speaking &nbsp;Numbers 22:21-35 </p> <p> Parting the [[Jordan]] &nbsp;Joshua 3:14-17 </p> <p> <i> In the Land. </i> </p> <p> Fall of Jericho's walls &nbsp;Joshua 6:6-25 </p> <p> Staying of the sun and moon &nbsp;Joshua 10:12-14 </p> <p> Withering and cure of Jeroboam's hand &nbsp;1 Kings 13:4 - &nbsp;6 </p> <p> [[Multiplying]] the widow's oil &nbsp;1 Kings 17:14-16 </p> <p> [[Raising]] the widow's son &nbsp;1 Kings 17:17-24 </p> <p> [[Burning]] of the captains and their companies &nbsp;2 Kings 1 . &nbsp;10-12 </p> <p> [[Dividing]] of Jordan by Elijah &nbsp;2 Kings 2:7-8 </p> <p> Elijah carried to heaven &nbsp;2 Kings 2:11 </p> <p> Dividing of Jordan by Elisha &nbsp;2 Kings 2:14 </p> <p> [[Cure]] of the waters of [[Jericho]] &nbsp;2 Kings 2:19-22 </p> <p> [[Supply]] of water to the army &nbsp;2 Kings 3:16-20 </p> <p> [[Increase]] of the widow's oil &nbsp;2 Kings 4:2-7 </p> <p> Raising the Shunammite's son &nbsp;2 Kings 4:32-37 </p> <p> [[Healing]] of the deadly pottage &nbsp;2 Kings 4:38-41 </p> <p> Feeding the 100 with 20 loaves &nbsp;2 Kings 4:42-44 </p> <p> Cure of Naaman's leprosy &nbsp;2 Kings 5:10-14 </p> <p> [[Swimming]] of the iron axe-head &nbsp;2 Kings 6:5-7 </p> <p> Resurrection of the dead man on touching Elisha's bones &nbsp;2 Kings 13:21 </p> <p> [[Return]] of the shadow on the dial &nbsp;2 Kings 20:9-11 </p> <p> <i> Among the Gentiles </i> </p> <p> [[Deliverance]] of the three in the fiery furnace &nbsp;Daniel 3:19-27 </p> <p> Deliverance of Daniel from the lions &nbsp;Daniel 6:16-23 </p> <p> Jonah saved by the great fish &nbsp;Jonah 2:1-10 </p> <p> In the N.T. three Greek words are used, similar to those in the O.T. </p> <p> 1. τέρας, 'a wonder,' which in the A.V. is always thus translated and often associated with the word 'signs:' 'signs and wonders.' People were generally amazed at the miracles performed. </p> <p> 2. σημεῖον, 'a sign.' This word is translated 'signs,' 'miracles,' 'wonder,' and in &nbsp; 2 Thessalonians 3:17 'token': it is the word invariably used in John's gospel. </p> <p> 3. δύναμις, 'power:' translated 'miracles,' 'mighty works,' 'powers.' These three divinely selected words explain the nature of miracles. They were 'wonders' that arrested the attention of the people; they were 'signs' that God had visited His people, and that the acts of the Lord Jesus identified Him with the promised Messiah; and they were 'powers,' for they were superhuman. These three words are applied to the miracles of the Lord Jesus in &nbsp; Acts 2:22; to those wrought by Paul, &nbsp;2 Corinthians 12:12; and to the work of Antichrist, the man of sin, in a future day. &nbsp;2 Thessalonians 2:9 . </p> <p> The miracles by the Lord and His apostles were nearly all wrought for the welfare of men, curing them from the diseases of mind and body, and dispossessing them of demons, thus spoiling the kingdom of Satan. The cursing of the fig-tree differs from the others: it was a sign of God's judgement on the Jews. From the wording of several passages it is conclusive that not nearly all the miracles of the Lord are recorded. &nbsp;Mark 6:55,56; &nbsp;John 21:25 . </p> <p> It is stated in &nbsp;Mark 16:16-18 that those who should believe on the Lord Jesus, by the testimony of the apostles, would be able to work miracles; and there is ample testimony in early church history that this was the case, especially in casting out demons. Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, and Tertullian testified to the heathen persecutors that there was power in the name of Jesus to effect this, and the persecuting emperors were invited to witness it. While the Christians were being persecuted, such signs would be a visible evidence of the power of God and the value of the name of the Lord Jesus. By the time the emperors professed Christianity, followed by the masses (the 4th century), Christ had been well accredited on the earth: hence there was no further need of such signs. Satan in the days of the apostles had his counterfeits (cf. &nbsp; Acts 8:9; &nbsp;Acts 13:6-8; &nbsp;Acts 19:19 ), as he certainly has had since, and will have in the future, when he will be allowed to bring in his strong delusion: cf. &nbsp;Matthew 24:24; &nbsp;2 Thessalonians 2:9,10; &nbsp;Revelation 13:13,14 . </p> <p> Though not called a miracle, isnot the conversion of a sinner a miracle? It seems impossible for one who has been turned from darkness to light, and has been created in Christ Jesus, with the fruits and effects following, to doubt the reality of other miracles recorded by God in His sacred writings. </p> <p> In the accompanying list of miracles in the N.T. it will be noticed that some are found in one gospel only — each of the gospels having miracles peculiar to itself — a few are in two gospels; many in three; and only one that is recorded in all four. None but God could have made these selections. Indeed the scriptures are themselves as clear a manifestation of the power and wisdom of God as are any of the miracles. </p> <p> PRINCIPAL MIRACLES IN THE NEW TESTAMENT. </p> <p> MIRACLES </p> <p> Two blind men cured - &nbsp;Matthew 9:27-31 . </p> <p> [[Dumb]] spirit cast out - &nbsp;Matthew 9:32,33 . </p> <p> [[Tribute]] money in mouth of fish - &nbsp;Matthew 17:24-27 . </p> <p> [[Deaf]] and dumb man cured - &nbsp;Mark 7:31-37 . </p> <p> Blind man cured - &nbsp;Mark 8:22-26 . </p> <p> [[Draught]] of fishes - &nbsp;Luke 5:1-11 . </p> <p> Widow's son raised - &nbsp;Luke 7:11-17 . </p> <p> Woman loosed from a spirit of infirmity - &nbsp;Luke 13:11-17 . </p> <p> The dropsy cured - &nbsp;Luke 14 : l- 6. </p> <p> Ten lepers cleansed - &nbsp;Luke 17:11-19 . </p> <p> Malchus' ear healed - &nbsp;Luke 22:50,51 . </p> <p> Water made wine - &nbsp;John 2:1-11 </p> <p> Nobleman's son cured - &nbsp;John 4:46-54 . </p> <p> [[Impotent]] man cured - &nbsp;John 5 : l- 9 </p> <p> Man born blind cured - &nbsp;John 9 : l- 7. </p> <p> Lazarus raised from the dead - &nbsp;John 11:38-44 . </p> <p> Draught of 153 fishes - &nbsp;John 21:1-14 . </p> <p> Syro-Phoenician's daughter cured - &nbsp;Matthew 15:21-28; &nbsp;Mark 7:24-30 . </p> <p> Four thousand fed - &nbsp;Matthew 15:32-38; &nbsp;Mark 8 : l- 9. </p> <p> Fig tree withered - &nbsp;Matthew 21:18-22; &nbsp;Mark 11:12-24 . </p> <p> Centurion's servant cured - &nbsp;Matthew 8:5-13; &nbsp;Luke 7:1-10 . </p> <p> Blind and dumb demoniac cured - &nbsp;Matthew 12:22; &nbsp;Luke 11:14 . </p> <p> [[Demoniac]] in the synagogue cured - &nbsp;Mark 1:23-28; &nbsp;Luke 4:33-37 . </p> <p> Peter's wife's mother cured - &nbsp;Matthew 8:14-15; &nbsp;Mark 1:30-31; &nbsp;Luke 4:38,39 . </p> <p> [[Leper]] cured - &nbsp;Matthew 8:2 - &nbsp;4; &nbsp;Mark 1:40-45; &nbsp;Luke 5:12-15 . </p> <p> [[Paralytic]] cured - &nbsp;Matthew 9:2 - &nbsp;7; &nbsp;Mark 2:3-12; &nbsp;Luke 5:18-26 . </p> <p> [[Tempest]] stilled - &nbsp;Matthew 8:23-27; &nbsp;Mark 4:36-41; &nbsp;Luke 8:22-25 . </p> <p> [[Demoniacs]] cured at [[Gadara]] - &nbsp;Matthew 8:28-34; &nbsp;Mark 5:1-20; &nbsp;Luke 8:26-39 . </p> <p> Jairus' daughter raised - &nbsp;Matthew 9:18-26; &nbsp;Mark 5:22-43; &nbsp;Luke 8:41-56 . </p> <p> Woman's issue of blood cured - &nbsp;Matthew 9:20-22; &nbsp;Mark 5:25-34; &nbsp;Luke 8:43-48 </p> <p> Man's withered hand cured - &nbsp;Matthew 12:10-13; &nbsp;Mark 3 : l- 5; &nbsp;Luke 6:6-11 . </p> <p> [[Demon]] cast out of boy - &nbsp;Matthew 17:14-18; &nbsp;Mark 9:14-27; &nbsp;Luke 9:37-42 . </p> <p> Blind men cured - &nbsp;Matthew 20:30-34; &nbsp;Mark 10:46-52; &nbsp;Luke 18:35-43 . </p> <p> Jesus walks on the sea - &nbsp;Matthew 14:24-33; &nbsp;Mark 6:47-51; &nbsp;John 6:16-21 . </p> <p> Five thousand fed - &nbsp;Matthew 14:15-21; &nbsp;Mark 6:35-44; &nbsp;Luke 9:12-17; &nbsp;John 6:5-14 . </p>
<p> No sincere believer in the inspiration of scripture can have a doubt as to real miracles having been wrought by the power of God both in O.T. and N.T. times. It is philosophy so-called, or scepticism, that mystifies the subject. Much is said about 'the laws of nature;' and it is confidently affirmed that these are irrevocable and cannot be departed from. To which is added that laws of nature previously unknown are frequently being discovered, and if our forefathers could witness the application of some of the more recent discoveries, as the computer, mobile telephone, etc., they would judge that miracles were being performed. So, it is argued, the actions recorded in scripture as miracles, were merely the bringing into use some law of nature which had been hidden up to that time. </p> <p> All this is based upon a fallacy. There are no laws <i> of </i> nature, as if nature made its own laws: there are laws <i> in </i> nature, which God in His wisdom as [[Creator]] was pleased to make; but He who made those laws has surely the same power to suspend them when He pleases. Though laws in nature hitherto unknown are being discovered from time to time, they in no way account for such things as dead persons being raised to life, the blind seeing, the deaf hearing, the lame walking, and demons being cast out of those who were possessed by them. Neither has natural philosophy discovered any law that will account for such a thing as an iron axe-head swimming in water. The simple truth is that God, for wise purposes, allowed some of the natural laws to be suspended, and at times He put forth His almighty power, as in supplying the Israelites with manna from heaven, and in feeding thousands from a few loaves and fishes, or by recalling life that had left the body. </p> <p> The words translated 'miracle' in the O.T. are </p> <p> 1. <i> oth </i> , 'a sign,' as it is often translated, and in some places 'token.' &nbsp;Numbers 14:22; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 11:3 . </p> <p> 2. <i> mopheth, </i> 'a wonder,' as it is mostly translated: it is something out of the ordinary course of events. &nbsp;Exodus 7:9; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 29:3 . </p> <p> 3. <i> pala </i> , 'wonderful, marvellous.' &nbsp;Judges 6:13 . </p> <p> Moses was enabled to work miracles for two distinct objects. One was in order to convince the children of Israel that God had sent him. God gave him three signs to perform before them: his rod became a serpent, and was again a rod; his hand became leprous, and was then restored; and he could turn the water of the Nile into blood. &nbsp;Exodus 4:1-9 . </p> <p> The other miracles, wrought by him in Egypt, were to show to [[Pharaoh]] the mighty power of God, who said, I will "multiply my signs and my wonders in the land of Egypt . . . . and the [[Egyptians]] shall know that I am Jehovah, when I stretch forth mine hand upon Egypt." &nbsp;Exodus 7:3-5 . The ten plagues followed, which were miracles or signs of the power of God — signs not only to the Egyptians, but also to the Israelites, as is shown by the reference to them afterwards. &nbsp;Numbers 14:22; &nbsp;Judges 6:13 . </p> <p> By the following list it will be seen that there were many other miracles wrought in O.T. times — by Moses in the wilderness; by the prophets in the land; and some through the direct agency of God from heaven, as the deliverance of the three from the fiery furnace, Daniel from the lions, etc. All the miracles were indeed the acts of God, His servants being merely the means through which they were carried out. </p> <p> [[Principal Miracles In The Old Testament]] </p> <p> <i> In Egypt. </i> </p> <p> Aaron's rod becomes a serpent &nbsp;Exodus 7:10-12 </p> <p> <i> The Ten Plagues. </i> </p> <p> Water made blood &nbsp;Exodus 7:20-25 </p> <p> [[Frogs]] &nbsp;Exodus 8:5-14 </p> <p> [[Lice]] &nbsp;Exodus 8:16-18 </p> <p> [[Flies]] &nbsp;Exodus 8:20-24 </p> <p> [[Murrain]] &nbsp;Exodus 9:3 - &nbsp;6 </p> <p> [[Boils]] and blains &nbsp;Exodus 9:8-11 </p> <p> [[Thunder]] and hail &nbsp;Exodus 9:22-26 </p> <p> [[Locusts]] &nbsp;Exodus 10:12-19 </p> <p> [[Darkness]] &nbsp;Exodus 10:21-23 </p> <p> Death of the [[Firstborn]] &nbsp;Exodus 12:29-30 </p> <p> [[Parting]] of the Red Sea &nbsp;Exodus 14:21-31 </p> <p> <i> In the Wilderness. </i> </p> <p> Curing the waters of [[Marah]] &nbsp;Exodus 15:23-25 </p> <p> [[Manna]] from heaven &nbsp;Exodus 16:14-35 </p> <p> Water from the rock at [[Rephidim]] &nbsp;Exodus 17:5-7 </p> <p> Death of [[Nadab]] and [[Abihu]] &nbsp;Leviticus 10:1 - &nbsp;2 </p> <p> The earth swallows the murmurers, and </p> <p> the death of Korah, [[Dathan]] and [[Abiram]] &nbsp;Numbers 16:31-40 </p> <p> Budding of Aaron's rod at [[Kadesh]] &nbsp;Numbers 17:8 </p> <p> Water from the rock at [[Meribah]] &nbsp;Numbers 20:7-11 </p> <p> The brazen serpent: Israel healed &nbsp;Numbers 21:8 - &nbsp;9 </p> <p> Balaam's ass speaking &nbsp;Numbers 22:21-35 </p> <p> Parting the [[Jordan]] &nbsp;Joshua 3:14-17 </p> <p> <i> In the Land. </i> </p> <p> Fall of Jericho's walls &nbsp;Joshua 6:6-25 </p> <p> Staying of the sun and moon &nbsp;Joshua 10:12-14 </p> <p> Withering and cure of Jeroboam's hand &nbsp;1 Kings 13:4 - &nbsp;6 </p> <p> [[Multiplying]] the widow's oil &nbsp;1 Kings 17:14-16 </p> <p> [[Raising]] the widow's son &nbsp;1 Kings 17:17-24 </p> <p> [[Burning]] of the captains and their companies &nbsp;2 Kings 1 . &nbsp;10-12 </p> <p> [[Dividing]] of Jordan by Elijah &nbsp;2 Kings 2:7-8 </p> <p> Elijah carried to heaven &nbsp;2 Kings 2:11 </p> <p> Dividing of Jordan by Elisha &nbsp;2 Kings 2:14 </p> <p> [[Cure]] of the waters of [[Jericho]] &nbsp;2 Kings 2:19-22 </p> <p> [[Supply]] of water to the army &nbsp;2 Kings 3:16-20 </p> <p> [[Increase]] of the widow's oil &nbsp;2 Kings 4:2-7 </p> <p> Raising the Shunammite's son &nbsp;2 Kings 4:32-37 </p> <p> [[Healing]] of the deadly pottage &nbsp;2 Kings 4:38-41 </p> <p> Feeding the 100 with 20 loaves &nbsp;2 Kings 4:42-44 </p> <p> Cure of Naaman's leprosy &nbsp;2 Kings 5:10-14 </p> <p> [[Swimming]] of the iron axe-head &nbsp;2 Kings 6:5-7 </p> <p> Resurrection of the dead man on touching Elisha's bones &nbsp;2 Kings 13:21 </p> <p> [[Return]] of the shadow on the dial &nbsp;2 Kings 20:9-11 </p> <p> <i> Among the Gentiles </i> </p> <p> [[Deliverance]] of the three in the fiery furnace &nbsp;Daniel 3:19-27 </p> <p> Deliverance of Daniel from the lions &nbsp;Daniel 6:16-23 </p> <p> Jonah saved by the great fish &nbsp;Jonah 2:1-10 </p> <p> In the N.T. three Greek words are used, similar to those in the O.T. </p> <p> 1. τέρας, 'a wonder,' which in the A.V. is always thus translated and often associated with the word 'signs:' 'signs and wonders.' People were generally amazed at the miracles performed. </p> <p> 2. σημεῖον, 'a sign.' This word is translated 'signs,' 'miracles,' 'wonder,' and in &nbsp; 2 Thessalonians 3:17 'token': it is the word invariably used in John's gospel. </p> <p> 3. δύναμις, 'power:' translated 'miracles,' 'mighty works,' 'powers.' These three divinely selected words explain the nature of miracles. They were 'wonders' that arrested the attention of the people; they were 'signs' that God had visited His people, and that the acts of the Lord Jesus identified Him with the promised Messiah; and they were 'powers,' for they were superhuman. These three words are applied to the miracles of the Lord Jesus in &nbsp; Acts 2:22; to those wrought by Paul, &nbsp;2 Corinthians 12:12; and to the work of Antichrist, the man of sin, in a future day. &nbsp;2 Thessalonians 2:9 . </p> <p> The miracles by the Lord and His apostles were nearly all wrought for the welfare of men, curing them from the diseases of mind and body, and dispossessing them of demons, thus spoiling the kingdom of Satan. The cursing of the fig-tree differs from the others: it was a sign of God's judgement on the Jews. From the wording of several passages it is conclusive that not nearly all the miracles of the Lord are recorded. &nbsp;Mark 6:55,56; &nbsp;John 21:25 . </p> <p> It is stated in &nbsp;Mark 16:16-18 that those who should believe on the Lord Jesus, by the testimony of the apostles, would be able to work miracles; and there is ample testimony in early church history that this was the case, especially in casting out demons. Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, and Tertullian testified to the heathen persecutors that there was power in the name of Jesus to effect this, and the persecuting emperors were invited to witness it. While the Christians were being persecuted, such signs would be a visible evidence of the power of God and the value of the name of the Lord Jesus. By the time the emperors professed Christianity, followed by the masses (the 4th century), Christ had been well accredited on the earth: hence there was no further need of such signs. Satan in the days of the apostles had his counterfeits (cf. &nbsp; Acts 8:9; &nbsp;Acts 13:6-8; &nbsp;Acts 19:19 ), as he certainly has had since, and will have in the future, when he will be allowed to bring in his strong delusion: cf. &nbsp;Matthew 24:24; &nbsp;2 Thessalonians 2:9,10; &nbsp;Revelation 13:13,14 . </p> <p> Though not called a miracle, isnot the conversion of a sinner a miracle? It seems impossible for one who has been turned from darkness to light, and has been created in Christ Jesus, with the fruits and effects following, to doubt the reality of other miracles recorded by God in His sacred writings. </p> <p> In the accompanying list of miracles in the N.T. it will be noticed that some are found in one gospel only — each of the gospels having miracles peculiar to itself — a few are in two gospels; many in three; and only one that is recorded in all four. None but God could have made these selections. Indeed the scriptures are themselves as clear a manifestation of the power and wisdom of God as are any of the miracles. </p> <p> [[Principal Miracles In The New Testament]]  </p> <p> MIRACLES </p> <p> Two blind men cured - &nbsp;Matthew 9:27-31 . </p> <p> [[Dumb]] spirit cast out - &nbsp;Matthew 9:32,33 . </p> <p> [[Tribute]] money in mouth of fish - &nbsp;Matthew 17:24-27 . </p> <p> [[Deaf]] and dumb man cured - &nbsp;Mark 7:31-37 . </p> <p> Blind man cured - &nbsp;Mark 8:22-26 . </p> <p> [[Draught]] of fishes - &nbsp;Luke 5:1-11 . </p> <p> Widow's son raised - &nbsp;Luke 7:11-17 . </p> <p> Woman loosed from a spirit of infirmity - &nbsp;Luke 13:11-17 . </p> <p> The dropsy cured - &nbsp;Luke 14 : l- 6. </p> <p> Ten lepers cleansed - &nbsp;Luke 17:11-19 . </p> <p> Malchus' ear healed - &nbsp;Luke 22:50,51 . </p> <p> Water made wine - &nbsp;John 2:1-11 </p> <p> Nobleman's son cured - &nbsp;John 4:46-54 . </p> <p> [[Impotent]] man cured - &nbsp;John 5 : l- 9 </p> <p> Man born blind cured - &nbsp;John 9 : l- 7. </p> <p> Lazarus raised from the dead - &nbsp;John 11:38-44 . </p> <p> Draught of 153 fishes - &nbsp;John 21:1-14 . </p> <p> Syro-Phoenician's daughter cured - &nbsp;Matthew 15:21-28; &nbsp;Mark 7:24-30 . </p> <p> Four thousand fed - &nbsp;Matthew 15:32-38; &nbsp;Mark 8 : l- 9. </p> <p> Fig tree withered - &nbsp;Matthew 21:18-22; &nbsp;Mark 11:12-24 . </p> <p> Centurion's servant cured - &nbsp;Matthew 8:5-13; &nbsp;Luke 7:1-10 . </p> <p> Blind and dumb demoniac cured - &nbsp;Matthew 12:22; &nbsp;Luke 11:14 . </p> <p> [[Demoniac]] in the synagogue cured - &nbsp;Mark 1:23-28; &nbsp;Luke 4:33-37 . </p> <p> Peter's wife's mother cured - &nbsp;Matthew 8:14-15; &nbsp;Mark 1:30-31; &nbsp;Luke 4:38,39 . </p> <p> [[Leper]] cured - &nbsp;Matthew 8:2 - &nbsp;4; &nbsp;Mark 1:40-45; &nbsp;Luke 5:12-15 . </p> <p> [[Paralytic]] cured - &nbsp;Matthew 9:2 - &nbsp;7; &nbsp;Mark 2:3-12; &nbsp;Luke 5:18-26 . </p> <p> [[Tempest]] stilled - &nbsp;Matthew 8:23-27; &nbsp;Mark 4:36-41; &nbsp;Luke 8:22-25 . </p> <p> [[Demoniacs]] cured at [[Gadara]] - &nbsp;Matthew 8:28-34; &nbsp;Mark 5:1-20; &nbsp;Luke 8:26-39 . </p> <p> Jairus' daughter raised - &nbsp;Matthew 9:18-26; &nbsp;Mark 5:22-43; &nbsp;Luke 8:41-56 . </p> <p> Woman's issue of blood cured - &nbsp;Matthew 9:20-22; &nbsp;Mark 5:25-34; &nbsp;Luke 8:43-48 </p> <p> Man's withered hand cured - &nbsp;Matthew 12:10-13; &nbsp;Mark 3 : l- 5; &nbsp;Luke 6:6-11 . </p> <p> [[Demon]] cast out of boy - &nbsp;Matthew 17:14-18; &nbsp;Mark 9:14-27; &nbsp;Luke 9:37-42 . </p> <p> Blind men cured - &nbsp;Matthew 20:30-34; &nbsp;Mark 10:46-52; &nbsp;Luke 18:35-43 . </p> <p> Jesus walks on the sea - &nbsp;Matthew 14:24-33; &nbsp;Mark 6:47-51; &nbsp;John 6:16-21 . </p> <p> Five thousand fed - &nbsp;Matthew 14:15-21; &nbsp;Mark 6:35-44; &nbsp;Luke 9:12-17; &nbsp;John 6:5-14 . </p>
          
          
== Bridgeway Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_18865" /> ==
== Bridgeway Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_18865" /> ==
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== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_51351" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_51351" /> ==
<
<
          
          
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_16156" /> ==
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_16156" /> ==