In my previous article about the healing power of the mind, I confessed that I have been praying for my mother to be healed from an incurable disease that has dramatically affected her speech. In that article, I revealed that I had received a most unexpected (but welcome) email from spiritual healer Carol Everett, inspiring me to ask for her help. If you happened to read that article, you might be wondering how my mother is doing. Well, in my honest opinion, she's doing much better. In fact, I'd have to say that my mother's condition has improved significantly. However, if you asked me if my mother has been completely healed, I'd have to say no...at least, not yet. Helped, or improved, absolutely. But completely healed? No. Not yet. What does this mean? How should I interpret what I would describe as good, but not an instantaneous cure? Should I be discouraged? I don't think so. Was I asking too much of God, to heal an elderly woman? Absolutely not. The Creator of this universe from absolutely nothing, the Animator of lifeless matter into a living organism, can literally do anything He wants. This "naturally" includes healing the sick and even resurrecting the dead. However, the phrasing of that sentence was deliberate and crucial to get right...it's what God wants, not what I want, that matters. God is our Creator, not our personal valet. It would be arrogant and foolish to make demands of God. Admittedly, some atheists have created websites asking clever questions like "why won't God heal amputees?" to mock the idea that literally, there is nothing … [Read more...]
Do miracles really occur?
[SPOILER ALERT: if you haven't seen the movie Miracles from Heaven and don't know the story but want to see it, this article will spoil the ending, so you might not want to read it yet.] Some people don't believe in miracles, because they don't believe in a supernatural God. However, only the first dictionary definition of "miracle" refers to divine intervention; it offers a more secular alternate definition that describes miracles merely as any extremely unusual event or accomplishment. Samuel Clemens (a.k.a. "Mark Twain") wrote: Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities. Truth isn't. And what is the truth? Quid est veritas? As the author of three novels and three nonfiction books and articles, let me assure you that writing non-ficton is considerably easier than creating the plot of a novel from scratch. The fictional story must appear to be plausible enough to the reader that he or she becomes willing to suspend his or her disbelief. The same isn't the case for stories purported to be true -- they simply require verifiable evidence to support any claims being made in the account. Take the plot of the movie Miracles from Heaven, for example. The main story simply sounds ludicrous -- a young girl suffering terribly from a rare, incurable stomach disease falls thirty feet inside a rotted tree, landing on her head. But the fall that should have killed young Anna Beam allegedly cured her. Though her neck should have been broken, and her skull smashed in pieces, not only does she survive with only … [Read more...]