Flying yogis, mind-reading rabbis, levitating monks, saints who
converse with animals, healers who restore sight to the blind and
make the lame walk. Miracles are signs whose meanings emerge from
the specific cultural contexts and religious traditions in which
they occur, yet across religions they serve as expressions of a
common faith that the horizon of possibilities for human life is
not restricted to closed systems of material forces. Despite the
dominance of scientific explanation in the modern world, at the
beginning of the twenty-first century faith in miracles remains
strong, particularly in resurgent forms of traditional
religion.
In Miracles, David L. Weddle examines how five religious
traditions--Hinduism, Judaism, Buddhism, Christianity, and
Islam--understand miracles, considering how they express popular
enthusiasm for wondrous tales, how they provoke official regulation
because of their potential to disrupt authority, and how they are
denied by critics within each tradition who regard belief in
miracles as an illusory distraction from moral responsibility. In
dynamic and accessible prose, Weddle shows us what miracles are,
what they mean, and why, despite overwhelming scientific evidence,
they are still significant today: belief in miracles sustains the
hope that, if there is a reality that surpasses our ordinary lives,
it is capable of exercising--from time to time--creative,
liberating, enlightening, and healing power in our world.
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