In the face of a crowd’s hunger: “You give them something to eat.”
In the face of a child suffering from a demon: “I brought him to your disciples, but they could not heal him.”
In the face of the storm: “You of little faith.” I’ve always interpreted that remark as meaning, “You couldn’t let me sleep five minutes longer and deal with a bit of weather yourselves??”
Perhaps my son is more aware of miracles because we’re just past Holy Week, fresh from viewings of our church’s Easter productions, The Thorn and The Crown, complete with miracles. Or perhaps it’s because I’ve been reading my family little stories from Megashift . . . .
“A leper is healed in the marketplace. A paralyzed man leaps from his bed. A small bit of food feeds a large group. Storm clouds turn on a dime. The Gospel is preached in one language, but heard in another. A desperate woman with a flow of blood is healed. A demonized man chained up for years is delivered and set free. The sound of a mighty, rushing wind is heard during a meeting of believers . . . yet there is no wind. Withered limbs are restored. The deaf hear; the blind see. A girl is raised from the dead. And Jesus appears in a vision to one of His chief persecutors. Great historic events by any measure. And all have happened in the last twelve years.”
So begins
The footnotes for the first chapter alone run more than ten pages, mostly to document Rutz’s sources for the miracles he describes. More than ten thousand people healed of AIDS – those who want to give testimony must present medical certificates to document before and after. Resurrections from the dead reported in more than 52 countries. One ministry in Mexico stopped keeping track some time ago once they got past 300. A lowest-caste Indian street sweeper who has personally been involved with 16 resurrections. Author Jim Rutz said he would be happy to give you her e-mail so you can check this out for yourself, but she has no e-mail. She can’t read. Many of the miracles became a prologue to salvation for entire families or villages. Some of my favorites are stories of transformed persecutors. One militant Hindu tore up a tract offered by a Christian on the street, but that night knocked on the Christian’s door asking to be saved. God had rebuked him loudly in the night “I sent you my truth but you tore it up!” and then gave him directions to the Christian’s home.
No matter what you think of the rest of Jim’s book, every Christian should read at least the first chapter.
As my son said, “It’s good to know stuff like this still happens today and not just long ago.”