Sentences with phrase «seen as a miracle»

Theology, my opinion is that it is the same as science, merely an observation of creation, worded into a way that fits in to the confines of our minds, Our minds work on logic via calculation and when God works outside of that it is seen as a miracle.
The return of the Jews to power has mostly been seen as a miracle in light of the Holocaust.
In fact, one does not really understand the religious meaning of change until he sees it as miracle.
If Penn and Teller went back to that time and did a magic trick, they'd be seen as miracle workers too.
I see it as a miracle!!!!!»
«It's not just the making of babies, but the making of mothers that midwives see as the miracle of birth.»
So, that's why [it was] seen as a miracle.
Something that many people take for granted, I see as a miracle.
It's important to remember that this should» t been seen as a miracle pill and that although it will increase your metabolism without doing anything it is suggested that everyone using this should take part in some physical exercise, whether it be a walk round a park, a jog or a hard workout in the gym.
In 1963 when Mount Agung erupted and killed 1,700 people, the lava flows missed the temple by meters and was seen as a miracle and a sign from the gods.

Not exact matches

In the US, having sat in many an ER waiting room for hours at a stretch, the idea of a hospital seeing nearly 9 out of 10 patients in four hours would be regarded as a miracle.
And this is the miracle of the human mind — to use its constructions, concepts, and formulas as tools to explain what man sees, feels and touches.
Japan's «Bubble Economy» era occurred at the end of its three - decade old «Economic Miracle» that began after World War II and saw the country's fortunes blossom as it became the world's automobile and electronics manufacturing powerhouse.
Whether I see it as a privilege, an honor, a miracle or beauty or all of it is for me to decide.
I suppose I am guilty of this as well, refusing to believe the miracles that the bible says have happened, but considering I have yet to see a true, bonafide miracle in my life like the ones that happened all the time in the bible, I think my skepticism is slightly more healthy than your unwavering naive belief.
Can say that I believe in every thing that you disbelief of when it comes to the Creator and the Creation of universe, life and guidance, God has given me hearing, seeing, thinking and heart feelings to see and experience signs and small miracles to have faith in him and continue with good deeds I was told of in his Holy Book although am not perfect at that but nothing to lose but contrary to that there are more to gain in life and life after... For those disbelievers they lose their senses by being locked and blocked from such experiences... It is all about souls as verses speak for them selves;
Have I seen what I could call a bona fide miracle (such as a leg grow or a tumor disappear..
To argue that historians might judge such and such to be a miracle because they believe antecedently in the religion that regards such miracles as signs of the intervention of its deity is to open the floodgates for all religious claims to miracles and, indeed, even to nonreligious «miracles» such as the widespread reports that people have seen Elvis Presley.
As they pray together, Camille has seen a number of miracles take place among these women.
Although Christian New Testament scholars regard Jesus as savior (or at least founder of our faith) and Jewish New Testament scholars see him as a beloved ancient compatriot (or at least an honestly misguided visionary), they all participate in the quiet miracle of our times.
Catholics see the miracle as God's seal of approval, a way of verifying that the saint really is in heaven.
We see God choose lepers to discover the miracle just as it is women coming to the tomb with their own material concerns who discover the great miracle.
That window has transformed the equation, as millions of parents have seen their unborn children and witnessed the miracle of life.
But these miracles no longer have religious significance for us, and could not carry these claims if not seen as true.
To say that «what happened in Jesus was of the Spirit» is not a factual claim dependent upon a biological miracle, but a way of seeing Jesus that immediately involves seeing him as the decisive disclosure of God.
And Yahweh is jewish terminology is the same now that mean Allah and Yahweh are the same being but christian god is unknown I don't know what he is, And Muhammad in the Qur» an is the last of all Prophets and Messengers and is known as Rehmat ul alimeen the mercy of the world he forgive his most bitterest enemies who tortured him and his followers for believing in one true God.Now Muhammad never try to fake a miracle, the pig is forbidden to eat even in the jewish testament and so even here bible agrees but I don't know why christians eat pork.Secondly wine was forbidden because Muhammad's companions saw the evil in it.So please don't speak without having proper knowledge or Blurting out made up stories that actually have no sense, the jews call Jesus the false prophet, Sorcerer, Necromancer etc would you beieve those stories or be angry.Surely we both know the answer
If you set your personal bias aside for two seconds and research the personal histories of both, it's pretty easy to see whether they are truly following Christ, who even as He performed his miracles, still made the recipients do some work for it that, for some, though the requests were simple, required too much of them.
I saw a deaf man begin to speak in tongues which was astounding and a young girl hear from a dead ear and an elderly catholic lady stand up straight as God ungnarled her arthritic back... those were times of awe... I was 16, 17, 18 — young, naive and I saw miracles, healings, incredible things but most of all hundreds of people come to faith.
So, NC, your god will burn me in hell for all eternity for; Being exactly the way he made Having perfectly rational doubts (as Tomas did and he saw how many miracles?)
With this clue we can see that, whatever we may make of particular «miracles», the miracle - stories as a whole are saying precisely this: that where Jesus was, there was some incalculable and unaccountable energy at work for the dispersal of evil forces and the total renewal of human life; and that this was nothing less than the creative energy of the living God.
As for the value of the «miracle,» we have seen abundant evidence for the fact that miracles have no value in themselves.
God is a God of signs, and, as we have seen, what are called theophanies on the one hand, and miracles on the other, are never anything but signs for the purpose of attracting our attention.
John the Baptist discerned this by a miracle and the voice he heard, but not by seeing him as a man.
Faith travels around the world telling people about Jesus and has seen many miracles and healings as a result
[18:55] Nothing prevented the people from believing, when the guidance came to them, and from seeking the forgiveness of their Lord, except that they demanded to see the same (kind of miracles) as the previous generations, or challenged to see the retribution beforehand.
i've seen «miracles» and the such, they are just as easily explained.
He believed its very existence — and emergence, after the Holocaust — was something close to a miracle; and saw its endurance as symbolic of any community's struggle to maintain a vibrant presence in a dangerous and unpredictable world.
See John 20:30; Mark 16:17 - 20; John 2:11; Acts 2:22: («Ye men of Israel, hear these words: Jesus of Nazareth, a man approved of God among you by miracles and wonders and signs, which God did by him in the midst of you, as ye yourselves also know»); Acts 2:43: -LRB-»... and many wonders and signs were done by the apostles»); Acts 4:29 - 30: «And now, Lord, behold their threatenings: and grant unto thy servants, that with all boldness they may speak thy word, By stretching forth thine hand to heal; and that signs and wonders may be done by the name of thy hold child Jesus»); Hebrews 2:3 - 4: («How shall we escape, if we neglect so great salvation; which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord, and was confirmed unto us by them that heard him: God also bearing them witness, both with signs and wonders, and with divers miracles, and gifts of the Holy Ghost, according to his own will»); Romans 15:17 - 19: («I have therefor whereof I may glory through Jesus Christ in those things which pertain to God.
Ad nauseum, No, actually this was a continuation from a prior post regarding why some see an event as a miracle and others as a mathematical probability.
It is not a correct inference to take Paul's list in I Corinthians 12:28 — first apostles, second prophets, third teachers, then workers of miracles, then healers, administrators, speakers in various kinds of tongues — and see all of these as «set - aside» persons performing such functions on a specialist basis.
For in that case the assertion of God's sovereignty would be seen as a universal truth which can by logical reasoning be made intelligible to everyone; the miracle would then be regarded as a universally accredited, extraordinary event, from which the conclusion may be drawn that it depends upon a divine cause.
The belief in miracles denies that the causality of events is a necessity comprehensible by reason; whoever sees an occurrence as a miracle ascribes it directly to the will of God.
Remember Simon the magician who saw what miracles the disciples were doing, also started using the name of Jesus as part of his stock and trade, Jesus said «let it be».
You can be against abortion in that you think human life is a miracle and would like to see as few as possible and also not want abortion to be illegal because that's disempowering for women.
Indeed, even subsequent Elijah traditionists have touched the narratives here and there so as to say to the rival Elisha people, «But you see, our prophet too was quite a miracle worker!»
When questioned by his friends as to how such a miracle could have happened, the man replies, anecdotally, «All I know is that I once was blind, and now I can see
It's the actual spiritual experience and the miracles that I've seen with my own eyes that it couldn't have been no one but God that perform such wonderful deeds in my life as well on some of the people that I prayed for, including their healing.
But as you go through life, these tiny miracles add up, like little grains of sand, until many years from now, you have millions and billions of grains of sand, and you look back at your life, and see miles and miles of gleaming white beach.
If you saw a miracle, your faith would be lost as well; Jesus would become a scientific fact.
The theme of glory frames the miracle story, as Jesus will later say to Martha: «Did not I tell you that if you would believe you would see the glory of God?»
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