Are Miracles For Real?
According to Skeats’ Etymological
Dictionary, the word miracle is
rooted in the smi of Sanskrit,
related to our smile. In this sense of the word, a miracle is
something that makes us smile with awe and wonder. It’s not often that we can do that; but it doesn’t seem like
a bad thing. And yet, nothing
irritates some materialists more than talk of ‘miracles.’ Why is that? Materialists
are atheists, but miracle suggests the idea of a God who can suspend the laws
of nature and thus perform miracles.
Now that sounds spooky and potentially full of unnerving
surprises. Materialists seem to prefer
an orderly universe that can be predicted and of course controlled. Sorry, but
the universe is not only spooky, it’s top-heavy with mysteries and enigmas
larded with puzzles and conundrums.
Speaking of miracles, it’s my hobby to collect accounts of
them, and lately have glommed onto to Pierre de Rudder’s miraculously fused
tibia and fibula. This is a famous
19th century case. De Rudder
was a Belgian peasant who broke his leg, leaving his leg bones split apart and
exposed. The best medicine of his
day failed to help him, and he suffered much pain and discomfit for eight
years. Under the care of a skeptical
patron, De Rudder finally was permitted to visit Oostakker’s shrine of Our Lady
of Lourdes. He had wanted to do
this all along, but his former patron refused to underwrite the journey. The new patron was also skeptical, but
chose to send de Rudder out of the goodness of his heart.
De Rudder stood before the statue of the Madonna and prayed
for her assistance, saying it was for the sake of his children and wife. Suddenly, it was all over; the infected
wounds of eight years immediately vanished. The two bones fused and the
infection cleared. It was revealed by the bones of de Rudder after death that a
strip of new bone materialized that fused the two broken bones; the new bone
was whiter than the old bones. The case caused a sensation in Europe. The evidence for the reality of this event—numerous
eye-witness reports, medical documentation, postmortem autopsy--was massive. But
it was not enough to convince fanatical anti-clericals from trying by every
devious argument to throw water on the evidence.
So does de Rudder’s healing qualify as a “miracle”? If by miracle you mean events that physical
science is completely unable to explain, then the term “miracle” fits. And yes, such stories do make us smile
with intellectual amazement. However,
in this basic sense of the word, divine intervention is not implied. It is no
argument to hold that whatever science cannot explain implies the existence of
God. I have a more useful
definition of miracle as denoting a scientific mystery that occurs in the
context of religious beliefs, persons, practices.
In fact, all sorts of historical phenomena are unexplained,
from the guiding voices of Joan of Arc to the thirty-five years of Joseph of
Copertino’s very public levitations.
And, much to the chagrin of our materialist friends, miracles—scientific
mysteries--are rife in modern times.
I’ll just mention two recent cases: in India, 1995, and
since, periodically, the Ganesh milk
dematerializations and in Zeitun, Egypt, for three years (1969-1971), a silent interactive woman made of light,
believed to be the Virgin Mary, appearing more or less regularly. The phenomenon, with reported healings, and
other bizarre effects, was witnessed by millions. An incredible lack of curiosity reigns in the scientific
world toward matters that profoundly challenge it scientifically.
But science should not be squeamish about events that baffle
their most ingrained assumptions. For that is the way to the expansion of
knowledge. But the odds are
against it in these religion-tinted cases. In the halls of academe, a cloak of silence is draped around
the forbidden phenomena. But to my mind there is nothing more contracted than a
mind with inflexible assumptions of what is possible.
Given our definition of miracle, there are countless examples,
from cases that are minor but still baffling to those that I call singularities,
novelties that open up new dimensions of the possible. Joseph of Copertino was a singularity
that opened up a new dimension of experience of gravity. Joseph is just one of a collection of
human singularities I’m currently working on.
It must sound strange to speak of the abundance of
miracles. And yet the truth is that
the best minds wilt before the common miracles that stare us in the face night
and day: for, by our definition, it is a miracle that anything at all exists
and that we are conscious of existence.
Science does not know why something rather
than nothing exists. And
science is clueless as to why we are conscious. Our very being and basic human
awareness are scientific mysteries. So it seems we’re surrounded, pervaded by
the miraculous, a fact that warrants some humility. And for the fun of it, we ought to keep our minds open—just
in case something miraculous bops us on the head.
Aw, this was an extremely nice post. Taking a few minutes and actual effort
ReplyDeleteto make a very good article… but what can I say… I put things off
a lot and never manage to get nearly anything done.