‘Night falls
As darkness reappears
The madness and the fears close behind now
Faith calls me to question who I am
With neither myth nor man stand beside them....
As darkness reappears
The madness and the fears close behind now
Faith calls me to question who I am
With neither myth nor man stand beside them....
...the scarcity of miracles we'd found’
From
‘A Scarcity of Miracles’ by Jackszyk, Fripp and Collins (a ‘King Crimson
Projekct’)
A true miracle is – by definition – an action
or intervention of God which cannot be explained by the normally observed laws
of nature. I am not going to attempt to get into a discussion on whether or not
miracles do or ever have occurred beyond noting that I am a believer in both
the possibility and the occurrence of such events. That said, I think that
there are many far from reliable – even extremely dubious – claims of
‘miracles’ and I think that true miracles are much rarer occurrences than some
suppose or claim.
But,
as a Christian it seems to me that one cannot affirm (as I do) that God has
taken on human flesh in Jesus, who rose again from the dead and so forth,
without affirming the possibility of the miraculous. I could go on....
However,
it is not my intention to begin a discussion on the nature or possibility of
miraculous occurrences.
But
nor am I simply thinking about ‘miracles’ in terms of the common colloquial
usage when the word is often used to describe a beneficial event that is statistically unlikely but not actually
contrary to the laws of nature, such as surviving a natural disaster, or a welcome coincidence or simply a ‘wonderful’
occurrence, regardless of likelihood, such as a birth etc.
I am (knowingly and intentionally) using the
term ‘miracle’ loosely but not unthinkingly, and in that ‘loose’ use of the
term I am about to contradict something I said in one of my posts a few days
ago. Reflecting upon the difficult times we have faced in recent months I wrote
‘I have longed for miracles, but experienced
none’.
I suppose what I meant was that there had been
precious little sign of God at work in a way that would actually change or
relieve our situation. It was not a complaint that there had been no divine
intervention contravening the laws of nature, but rather that there had been no
clear indication of an answer to prayer or a ‘coincidence’ of events that might
indicate a divine response.
A ‘Scarcity of Miracles’, in other words.
But I was not being quite accurate.
While I cannot go into detail, there has been
an astounding (almost unbelievable... perhaps – yes – ‘miraculous’) coincidence
of circumstances that has given us incredible hope and has provided for us a
way out of the worst of our situation. While I can’t tell the full story, it
has shone such light into our darkness that it has had an utterly
transformative effect. And it all came about due to an almost impossible
‘coincidence’ of events.
Now, as I have already said, strictly speaking
a coincidence does not a miracle make! But in our context and given our prayers
and taking into account the utterly incredible nature of the ‘coincidence’, its
complete transformation of our circumstances and its dramatic effect upon us, I
will settle for thanking God for this ‘miracle’.
Archbishop William Temple[1]
once replied to his critics who regarded answered prayer as no more than
coincidence, ‘When I pray, coincidences happen; when I don’t, they don’t.’
Quite.
[1]
This quote has also been attributed to others. But the point is not who said it
(or even who first said it)!
This is good news, David! Thank you for sharing it.
ReplyDeleteThanks Roger
ReplyDelete"And if you think that is a coincidence I wish you a very dull life."
ReplyDeleteG.F. MacLeod