By W. H. Griffith Thomas
The Miracles of ChristFor our present purpose of answering the question "What think ye of Christ?" it is necessary and important to observe the place given to our Lord's miracles in the Gospels. A careful study of them, just as they appear, reveals the undoubted fact that they were not wrought by our Lord primarily for evidential purposes, for convincing those who were not as yet His disciples. At the outset of His ministry we are significantly told of the limited result of His first miracle. "This beginning of miracles did Jesus in Cana of Galilee, and manifested forth His glory; and His disciples believed on him" (Joh 2:11). "His disciples"—that was all; no one else of the company seems to have been impressed. Soon afterwards, when He exercised His authority by cleansing the Temple of the money-changers, He was asked to justify His action by means of a miracle. "What sign shewest thou unto us, seeing that thou doest these things?" Instead of working a miracle, He referred them to the then far-off event of His resurrection. "Destroy this Temple, and in three days I will raise it up." In the same way throughout His ministry He frequently enjoined silence on those on whom He had bestowed physical blessing, a silence which would have been unnecessary, out of place, and inexplicable if the primary idea of miracles had been to spread the knowledge of Himself over the land. Of course it was inevitable that such works should become known and have their effect in calling attention to Him, but this was a consequence rather than the primary purpose. The same secondary place of miracles is seen in our Lord's words to His disciples on the eve of His passion. He puts first, belief in Himself apart from miracles. "Believe me that I am in the Father" (Joh 14:11). And then He introduces miracles only if the disciples could not otherwise rise to faith in Him. "Or else believe me for the very works' sake" (ver. 11). In accordance with this, the summary statement of the purpose of the Fourth Gospel is significant. "Many other signs did Jesus in the presence of His disciples" (Joh 20:30). Another indication in the same direction are the words used to describe these wonderful works. The first in order of thought is wonder, which expresses the feelings of the witnesses in the presence of what had been done. The next is power, which indicates the result of their thought as it began to play on these deeds; some "power" was evidently at work. But the most important of all is sign, which clearly indicates the place of miracles in the Gospels. They were signs of something other and higher than themselves—they were symbolic of Christ's Divine mission. But it should be observed that a "sign" is not necessarily a proof, and it is significant that the miracles are never called by any word meaning "proof." The word "proof" (Act 1:3) is only found in connection with our Lord's manifestation of Himself after His resurrection. In other words, the real proof was Himself rather than His works. A sign cannot compel belief, or enemies would surely have been convinced. It only carries a meaning, or sign, or significance to those who are already impressed. So Westcott rightly says that—
We may observe this true place of miracles still further as we contemplate the almost utter disregard of them on the part of those in whose presence they were wrought. They created interest and stirred curiosity, but apparently they seldom led to conviction unless there had been some other predisposing cause of faith in Christ. The powerlessness of miracles to convince the gainsayer is clearly seen in the words, "When Christ cometh will he do more miracles than this man doeth?" (Joh 7:31). "Though he had done so many miracles before them, yet they believed not on him" (Joh 12:37). Those who were not prepared to receive His message without miracles were not as a rule ready to accept miracles as an attestation of His Divine commission.
In view of this clear indication of the place of miracles and purpose of miracles in the life of Christ, it is obvious that we cannot, and, indeed, for our purpose we have not need to emphasize them as evidence for His Person. Any such evidence that they carried was to contemporaries only, and this necessarily diminishes in force with lapse of time.
For us today the Person of Christ is the great miracle, and the true line of thought is to argue from Christ to miracles rather than from miracles to Christ.
But this is not for an instant to say that the miraculous element in the Gospels is not a fitting and even necessary part of the record of the life of Christ, on the contrary, the place of the miracles in the Gospels is exactly what we should have expected from whose Person was what His was.
It is the most natural and obvious thing in the world that He who was what He was should do what the Gospels record of Him. And it is noteworthy that one of the words very frequently used of these miracles in the Gospels is the ordinary term, works (epya). They were the natural and necessary outcome of His life, the expression in act of what He Himself was.
That His own abundant vitality should have been somehow communicated to other persons is not surprising. That One who was so full of life and compassion should seek to help and bless the needy was surely to be expected.
The miracles were not merely marvels; with two exceptions (which are not sufficient to set aside the general principles) they were restorative and beneficent.
We are therefore not now concerned with the abstract problem of the possibility of the miraculous; such a question would be entirely unnecessary for our present purpose. We are face to face with a supernatural Person, and the question whether He could or did do supernatural works is after all not of the first importance. The supreme question is as to the Person Himself, for "a sinless Christ is as great a miracle as a Christ who can walk on the water."[9] The question of miracles has often been too widely separated from the question of the miraculous Person. Modern thought in its belief in the uniformity of nature has undoubtedly modified our conception of the supernatural, and the "supernatural is not for us the same thing as the arbitrary or unnatural."[10] But the demand for absolute regularity of nature would really exclude Christ Himself as supernatural, and also make His appearance in time nothing more than the outcome of natural evolutionary processes. We therefore really gain nothing by simply insisting on absolute uniformity of nature as the great modern law, unless we are prepared to go further and deny the possibility of any Divine interposition which, while being not "arbitrary or unnatural" should nevertheless be truly supernatural.
If, therefore, we are to allow the scientific doctrine of the uniformity and continuity of nature to bar the way, we shall inevitably come to the conclusion that miracles are impossible, and from this would follow, as it usually does follow, the conclusion that a miraculous Christ is impossible. The question is thus really decided on a priori grounds before the evidence is even looked at. But, how, then, is the modern position to be met? How are we to retain our belief in the uniformity of nature and also in the miracles? In one way only: by predicating a true theistic view of the world. To the materialist miracle is, of course, impossible, but on the assumption that God is, and is at once transcendent and immanent, miracles are not impossible.
The Person of Christ is therefore a great miracle, and the issue cannot be evaded. He represents a definite, Divine intervention on behalf of man at a particular moment of time in the world's history, and on this great miracle of the Person of Christ we take our stand.
When this is clearly seen the question of the number and character of the miracles becomes quite secondary. The inquiry resolves itself simply into this: granted such a supernatural Person, were supernatural deeds congruous with His life? The character of the works attributed to Him, their beneficence, the restraint under which they were worked, the comparatively insignificant place they occupied in His ministry, and the constant stress laid by Him on spiritual kinship as primary—these are all entirely congruous with the manifestation and working of so miraculous and superhuman a Person as Jesus is seen to be. Two things are perfectly clear to all careful readers of the Gospels. (1) The writers do recognize a distinction between natural events and miracles, between occurrences which are ordinary and extraordinary. As Westcott says—
(2) The writers considered that there was an extraordinary element in our Lord's life.
Nor must it be overlooked that this miraculous element is as clear and prominent in the earliest strata of the Gospels as it is in their present form.
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[1] Westcott, The Gospel of Life, p. 76. [2] Westcott, op. cit., p. 76. [3] Bishop Chase, Cambridge Theological Essays, p. 402. See also Illingworth, Divine Immanence, pp. 88-90. [4] Westcott, The Gospel of Life, p. 82. [5] Young, The Christ of History, p. 255. [6] Garvie, Studies in the Inner Life of Jesus, p. 51. [7] Garvie, op. cit., p. 51. [8] Chase, Cambridge Theological Essays, p. 404. [9] Bruce, Humiliation of Christ, p. 208, note I. [10] Sanday, Expository Times, vol. xx, p. 158. [11] Orr, The Resurrection of Jesus, p. 51. [12] Garvie, Studies in the Inner Life of Christ, p. 52. [13] Fairbairn, The Philosophy of the Christian Religion, p. 326. [14] Westcott, The Gospel of Life, p. 83. [15] Chase, Cambridge Theological Essays, p. 405.
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