October 2020 — pg. 3
Missing the Miracles
By Jeff Finley
Do you believe in miracles? If so, have you prayed for a miracle?
Did you experience a miracle?
Perhaps the last question may be the hardest to answer. Some
miracles may not immediately be seen as miraculous, but we may
later recognize God’s supernatural involvement. In other instances,
we may never realize the ways in which God intervened miraculously
on our behalf. After all, “we know that in all things God works for the
good of those who love him, who have been called according to his
purpose” (Romans 8:28).
Of course, God’s work isn’t always recognizable when we’re
suffering. If we are “hard pressed on every side, but not crushed” (2
Corinthians 4:8), a miracle may be necessary to avoid being crushed.
After hard pressing, however, we may not feel like we experienced a
miracle even when we did.
My wife and I were married for a decade without being able to
have a child. We prayed earnestly for a medical miracle, received
anointing with oil, and visited multiple doctors. A church friend
provided additional hope when she told us that God revealed to her
that we would have a baby. That prophecy seemed to come true when
a doctor finally confirmed a pregnancy, but a subsequent ultrasound
revealed a devastating miscarriage.
We eventually pursued adoption. After two years of research,
paperwork and financial investment, our miracle seemed to arrive
when we got the call that a newborn boy’s biological parents had
chosen us to become his forever family. We drove to the hospital and
met the adorable boy whom we believed was our miracle. The next
day, a phone call informed us that quickly shifting circumstances
meant the boy would no longer be available for adoption.
When we later got a call from a different adoption agency about a
baby boy several states away, I was skeptical. Space constraints won’t
allow the details, but I now see the miraculous hand of God in the
events that led to our son joining our family.
Our experiences do not negate the miraculous ways in which God
physically heals other people of infertility. As Chuck White explains
in this issue of LIGHT + LIFE, the New Testament includes examples
in which one person miraculously received physical healing while
another equally deserving Christian did not.
God’s ways are not our ways (Isaiah 55:8–9). His miracles are
real even though they don’t always come in the ways we expect.
As Carolyn Moore writes in Seedbed Publishing’s “Supernatural,”
“Christianity is not a faith with a few miracles sprinkled in for effect.
Christianity is a miracle with some good stories thrown in. Miracles
are the cornerstone of the Christian faith. To extract them from the
gospel of Jesus Christ would be to extract the heart of God for the
people He created.”
Some Christians insist miracles ceased after the early church,
but believers around the world testify otherwise. Other people claim
Jesus as a great teacher, but they conclude a person would have to be
ignorant to believe in miracles. C.S. Lewis — no intellectual slouch —
countered, “Belief in miracles, far from depending on an ignorance of
the laws of nature, is only possible in so far as those laws are known.”
According to 1 Corinthians 12, the Spirit of God gives some
people “miraculous powers” while some others have the gift
of “distinguishing between spirits” (v.10). The latter gift also is
important because things may appear to be miracles without coming
from God. The “man of lawlessness,” as described in 2 Thessalonians
2, “will use all sorts of displays of power through signs and wonders
that serve the lie” (v.9). Matthew 24:24 and Mark 13:22 also warn of
“false messiahs and false prophets” performing “signs and wonders
to deceive.”
Don’t fall for fake miracles. Don’t miss the real miracles either. +
Jeff Finley is this magazine’s executive
editor. He joined the LIGHT + LIFE team
in 2011 after a dozen years of reporting
and editing for Sun-Times Media. He is
a member of John Wesley Free Methodist
Church where his wife, Jen, serves as the
lead pastor.
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/JaC0_Yvffr0C?hl=en&gbpv=1&bsq=“Belief in miracles, far from depending on an ignorance of the laws of nature, is only possible in so far as those laws are known.”