(Lisa Robinson)
It is not long before this this topic comes when engaged in a conversation about continuationism vs. cessationism. Some will insist that we still need miracles today. One of the common misunderstandings that I have observed continuationists have concerning cessationists is the charge that cessationists believe that miracles are no longer needed. While I do believe there are cessationists who don’t believe in the existence of miracles, most would deny this charge and be open to the possibility that God can do whatever he wants to win people to Himself.
I think the challenge with the perspective that miracles are needed and the fact that some don’t believe they are, is how a miracle is defined. When some of my Pentacostal and Charismatic brothers and sisters utilize the term is compatible with the belief that the demonstration of signs and wonders as seen in Acts are to be expected such that they are needed to 1) believe the gospel and 2) demonstrate empowerment by the Holy Spirit. But a miracle can be defined more broadly as something out of the ordinary.
Now the cessationist would say that the miracles demonstrated in Acts were done to demonstrate that the validity of the apostles testimony concerning Christ. After all, the record of the Old Testament shows that when God did something new, previously unrevealed, He did so with miraculous events. And God was doing a new thing by bringing both Jew and Gentile together as one body through the sacrificial death of His Son (Ephesians 2:13-16; 3:1-7) marked by the permanent indwelling of the Holy Spirit (Romans 8:9). Jews considered themselves the privilege group and Greeks were accustomed to pagan worship and sought after knowledge. Both groups needed to experience something out of the ordinary to know that what was being proclaimed through the apostles witness was real. But once the New Testament church was implemented, the body of Christ grew and the message spread, there was less reliance on these types of miracles for validation. This is especially true with a completed canon of scripture that indeed validates the testimony of Christ.
On the other hand, the non-cessationist would say there is no prescription for the miraculous ceasing and therefore we cannot “put God in a box”. Another common support for expectation of the miraculous is Jesus declaration to the apostles that they will do “greater works” (John 14:12). Since Jesus performed extraordinary events, the apostles should do that also and by implication any disciple of Christ since that time. God moved that way then and he should move that way now. To not do so might indicate an anemic church.
But I do believe this misses the point of what Jesus was saying. The entirety of John’s gospel was to demonstrate who Jesus was – the Son of God, the Word made flesh who dwelt among men. The miracles he did were to show why he was to be believed, which is supported by John 20:30-31 “these things were written so that you would believe”. Therefore, everything he did was for the purpose of belief. And that was the point all along – to believe in the gospel of Jesus Christ. The greater works were not necessarily the miracles that Jesus performed but that the message concerning him would spread in ways he could not do during His earthly ministry, especially after his resurrection and ascension to heaven.
So that leads back to the question of needing miracles today. I say yes but not necessarily in the manner it occurred in the New Testament. The church of the New Testament did not have access to what we have today nor was the message so prolific as it is. If we insist on out of the ordinary occurrences to happen, then it implies what we have, what God has given us already is insufficient. Moreover, it sets believers up to always expect something out of the ordinary to happen and conditions them for excitement. It negates the quiet working of the Holy Spirit who moves on hardened hearts to motivate a response to the gospel and dismisses any lack of physical expressions as failure of the Holy Spirit’s work. An over-reliance on physical expressions will possibly make faith rest with the occurrences rather than the Holy Spirit’s work in the life of people both to accept the gospel and to live it out. And that was never the intention of the miraculous.
Now, I am not saying that miracles don’t happen or that God will not use them to reach someone. But I do believe the out of ordinary events are not necessarily the events themselves but the impact of God’s work to bring somebody to Himself and sanctify them. Sometimes that will take extraordinary events but more likely, it will not. The incarnation of God the Son, his death, burial and resurrection, the permanent indwelling of the Holy Spirit, the intricately woven testimony of the prophets and apostles WAS the event that sets precedent for God’s working throughout salvation history. That IS the miracle that is needed to believe and live out faith, as 2 Peter 1:3 indicates…”His divine power has granted to us everything pertaining to life and godliness.” Everything else is just gravy.
5 replies to "Do We Still Need Miracles Today To Believe?"
Your last statement is a non-sequitur. If God grants us everything by His power, everything would include miracles. It might be gravy, but it’s His gravy. Yumm!
Again, all arguments depend on what is meant by ‘miracle’.
Believe miracles, but trust the Lord.
I’ve had my share of “experiences” when I met a man who prophesied and told me things he could never have known unless I told him, and seen a man heal people praying in the name of Jesus.
That hasn’t stopped me from coming to dark valleys of doubt to the point where I didn’t know if God was real, especially when one considers that proponents of other religions such as Islam have reported miraculous healing as well. I still think the experiences attributed to Christian faith are used by God to draw people to Him, but at the end of the day, that is not the end-all way to bring people to Christ. (Only undeniable revelation (1 Kings 18:36-39; John 20:24-29) of YHWH/Jesus can do that.)
Just like the false dilemma of Inerrancy being the foundation of our faith, I don’t think most people should bank everything on “experience” and miracles (extremely important as they are). At the end of the day, my faith is not predicated on Inerrancy or miracles but the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
[…] I’m neither a cessationist nor a continuationist. Rather, I’m a Christian who is open to the supernatural workings of God, in his world, for his own glory–which leads me to Do We Still Need Miracles Today To Believe? by Lisa Robinson’s post over at Parchment & Pen. […]
Miracles were never performed to cause someone to believe… miracles were performed because God so loved the world, he knew there was need for his intervention. The more need for intervention, the greater need for a miracle.
We see that when Jesus healed the 10 lepers, only one came back to worship him, but all 10 were healed. Clearly, the foundation of the miracles in this incident was not to cause belief!