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Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life by Eric Metaxas
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Miracles Quotes Showing 1-30 of 53
“Just ten years ago, probably the most prominent atheist of the twentieth century, Antony Flew, concluded that a God must have designed the universe. It was shocking news and made international headlines. Flew came to believe that the extraordinarily complex genetic code in DNA simply could not be accounted for naturalistically. It didn’t make logical sense to him that it had happened merely by chance, via random mutations. It is a remarkable thing that Flew had the humility and intellectual honesty to do a public about-face on all he had stood for and taught for five decades.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“True faith is not a leap in the dark; it’s a leap into the light.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“During my first few years as a believer I not only couldn’t shut up about my faith, I was sometimes judgmental toward some of those who didn’t share it. But on the other side of that equation, I remember having powerful feelings of love and empathy toward total strangers, a sense of God’s love for them, and a desire to do anything I could to show them his love, to bless them, to help them. It was all somewhat overwhelming, but I’m happy to say that most of it was on the positive side of this equation. I was often hardest on those who were already in the Christian world but whom I felt were not as zealous as they could be in reaching those who didn’t know God. As is typical, I was hardest on my own—my family and my childhood church, the Greek Orthodox Church.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“what we desperately do want to avoid is not merely suffering but suffering without meaning.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“Another version of the “Prosperity Gospel” or “Name It and Claim It” teaching has to do with finding a verse in the Bible and then “claiming” that verse. Proponents of this thinking believe that God must fulfill his promise to us in whatever verse we are “claiming” because what God says in his Word, the Bible, is true, and we can trust it to be true.

So someone might pray: God, your Word says in Isaiah that by your stripes we are healed and I know you are not a liar and that your Word is true and I claim that Scripture in Jesus’s name and therefore I will be healed of this stomachache!

We need to have faith in what the Bible says, but we have to be careful that we aren’t trying to force God to do what we want. That is arrogance rather than humility.God loves us, but we cannot demand things of him as though our faith is in charge rather than God.

If someone believes it is our faith that heals us and forgets that it is God who does it, we should ask that person how much faith Lazarus had.

Remember, he was decomposing in a tomb when Jesus raised him from death. His faith obviously didn’t matter. It was all God. It is God and God’s grace that heals, not our prayers and not our “faith.” Though we are exhorted by God to pray to him, we cannot compel him to do what we wish.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“That’s the point of miracles—to point us beyond our world to another world. They are clues that that other world is not in our imaginations but is actually out there, wherever “out there” actually is. Peggy Noonan once wrote that she thought miracles existed “in part as gifts and in part as clues that there is something beyond the flat world we see.” If miracles exist at all, they exist not for their own sake but for us, to point us toward something beyond. To someone beyond.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“Part of the miracle of the resurrection is that it so empowered a ragtag band of fishermen and tax collectors that they were emboldened to stand against all earthly authority and power, and ultimately would upend the once inviolable order of the mighty Roman Empire. History tells us that this happened. So what better explanation can be offered for how it happened? Unless we have missed something, there exists none. And if there exists none, we are invited to submit to the logic of what we now know: that this most celebrated and most scorned miracle of miracles actually happened—and, perhaps most miraculously of all, can even be understood to have happened.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“Einstein himself said, “You can speak of the ethical foundations of science, but you cannot speak of the scientific foundations of ethics.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“What if all the myths and fairy tales were pointing to something that was not only true but also truer than anything we knew in this world, to a realm that was truer and more real?”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“If the whole universe has no meaning, we should never have found out that it has no meaning: just as, if there were no light in the universe and therefore no creatures with eyes, we should never know it was dark. Dark would be without meaning. —C. S. LEWIS”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“What matters is the idea that some things are so sacred, that they cannot bear unveiling. Because we live in a culture where mystery has lost its value, where to hide something is often thought of as merely repressive, we don’t understand this idea of “the sacred.” We seem to have accepted the fashionable idea that all things once thought sacred and mysterious—sexuality most notably—must be freed from their mystery and “sanctity.” But in most cultures throughout history the opposite has been true. Most cultures have a pronounced reverence for the sacred, which they veil out of deepest reverence and respect.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“One study calculated that people spend 3,680 hours in their lifetime looking for lost items, which works out to 150 twenty-four-hour days.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“We need to be brave enough to dissect a frog now and then, to see what’s inside.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“Science without religion is lame; religion without science is blind.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“the idea that the God of the universe would humble himself to touch the lives of any of us is, in the end, far beyond our full comprehension.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“True faith is not a leap in the dark; it’s a leap into the light.* We shouldn’t be afraid of the facts. If God is God, he is the God of reality and facts and science and history.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“If someone believes it is our faith that heals us and forgets that it is God who does it, we should ask that person how much faith Lazarus had. Remember, he was decomposing in a tomb when Jesus raised him from death. His faith obviously didn’t matter. It was all God. It is God and God’s grace that heals, not our prayers and not our “faith.” Though we are exhorted by God to pray to him, we cannot compel him to do what we wish. DO”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“Even though prayers are not offered only to get a desired result, there is little doubt that most miracles are the result of prayer. God wants us to pray to him and ask him for things, just as any loving father and mother want their children to come to them with whatever is on their minds. But if our focus is solely on getting the outcome we want, the prayer will fail, precisely because our belief is placed in the wrong place. It’s a great irony. If all we care about is the result, then we are effectively making that result our God, rather than God himself. So if we are praying to our “God”—the God of results—rather than to God himself, then we are praying to a “God” who is not God, and who is therefore powerless to help us.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“If we remove the idea of a supernatural God who is free to act in miraculous ways, we fall into the slough of despond inhabited by the scientistic naturalists. We essentially remove God himself from the Bible.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“The Greek word for miracle is “simaios,” which means “sign.” Miracles are signs, and like all signs, they are never about themselves; they’re about whatever they are pointing toward”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“God wants more than anything to let us know he is with us. He sees what we are going through and he cares. Furthermore, he is such a big God that he can afford to deal with us on an intimate level, to encourage us and to wink at us and to hold our hands when we need him to do that.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“the burning desire to tell the story of my dream was such that an hour seemed like an eternity.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“In his famous Letters and Papers from Prison, the German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote: . . . how wrong it is to use God as a stop-gap for the incompleteness of our knowledge. If in fact the frontiers of knowledge are being pushed further and further back (and that is bound to be the case), then God is being pushed back with them, and is therefore continually in retreat. We are to find God in what we know, not in what we don’t know.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“Miracles are not in contradiction to nature. They are only in contradiction with what we know of nature.—SAINT AUGUSTINE”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“It’s only logical that if God always answered our prayers as we wanted him to, those answers to our prayers could hardly be considered miraculous. They would only be part of a predictable system that we could manipulate, if only we knew how. It really makes God not God, but a “God” or a god whom we are ultimately able to control through our efforts, whether via prayer or via our “moral” actions designed to elicit a favorable response.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“To postulate a trillion-trillion other universes, rather than one God, in order to explain the orderliness of our universe, seems the height of irrationality.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“If we can accept a single singularity of the Big Bang, on what basis can we reasonably claim no other such singularities are possible?”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“...many atheistic scientists insist there is never any reason to speculate beyond the universe of matter and energy, because there is nothing beyond that. They insist that the universe is all that is. The problem is that they cannot by any means prove this scientifically, so for them to make this claim at all is itself "unscientific." Ironically, in doing so, such scientists are themselves reaching beyond the world of science.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“Every culture and era flatters itself that we are finally seeing what previous eras and cultures could not see because of their own blinders and ideological lenses.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life
“Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, who suffered for twenty years in the hellish prison camps he describes in that book, wrote: “Bless you prison, bless you for being in my life. For there, lying upon the rotting prison straw, I came to realize that the object of life is not prosperity as we are made to believe, but the maturity of the human soul.”
Eric Metaxas, Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can Change Your Life

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