Not to you, perhaps.Belinda wrote: ↑Fri Nov 22, 2024 11:38 amAs stated, miracles are not generally credible in 2024.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Nov 21, 2024 4:02 pmAlas, you shall be disappointed. God has radical freedom to do whatever it is He chooses. After all, He's God.
But then, as you've declared, you're one of the people who already has decided that nothing you ever see, or nothing anyone else has ever experienced, is allowed to be a real miracle. And the same happened in Jesus' own day, especially in his home town, as Mark records it: he did many miracles, but they were not allowed by the townspeople to count as miracles. So they learned nothing from all they saw.
That can happen, for sure. There's plenty of precedent for that. It's called "confirmation bias," in psychology: it means that people tend to only see things the way they expect to.
That's certainly true of all the Churches that compromised with Modernity...they call them the "Mainline churches." They tend to be loosely Protestant in some form, but not deeply committed to Scripture or spiritual truth. And they've simply lost their whole reason to exist, because they became like mere social clubs...and people really don't patronize social clubs today.Church congregations are dwindled into non-existence and church buildings are being used as carpet showrooms, or as architectural museum pieces if they merit that.
But you'll find that the churches that kept their basic mandate, like the evangelical conservatives and Pentecostals, are not only not shrinking but are expanding faster than anything -- especially in the Developing World, where they're the fastest growing spiritual phenomenon of all. The problem for us, in the West, is that we look at the closed Anglican or United church down the street, and assume that what's happened to them is a general phenomenon, when it's not.
Evangelical churches are increasing in popularity but they too will fail in line...
I don't think they will. They certainly haven't, so far. And I think they've learned, by watching the "mainliners," important messages about not compromising with Modernism. They're unlikely to go that route because they can now see that Modernism itself is failing, as Postmodernism replaces it, and then further post-Postmodernism patterns of contemporary belief. It's clear now to them that Modernism was a fad, not a permanent fixture. And it's secular, not Christian critiques, that have made that really apparent to everybody.
It's now apparent that by selling out, in the hopes of being "relevant" to Modernity, the mainliners cut their own throats. They didn't believe anything firmly, or take anything to be worth standing on, so they were unable to stand. And their passing is not at all a loss to the Christian community, because they had long ago ceased to be Christian, and became just another modern institution of social self-congratulation, really.