Drifting wrote:consiglieri wrote:I haven't posted yet on this thread, but will do so quickly to add that I believe that God does intervene in the affairs of humankind, but only on very, very rare occasions.
I sometimes think God follows his own version of the Prime Directive.
Beam me up!
--Consiglieri
ETA--And sometimes when God does intervene, it may be over something as insignificant as sparing the life of a kitty cat. It may be God does not place human life on a higher plane when it comes to his choice of interventions.
Hi consig,
Can you point to a specific incidence when you believe God has intervened in this life (during our lifetime)?
I was going to ask the same thing. I suspect many believers point to pivotal events in history, such as George Washington at the Battle of Long Island. They would argue that God created the dense fog to allow Washington to escape. Had the fog not occurred, we would be living in a very different country that we are today.
What believers overlook is that the area where the battle was fought averages 12 foggy days in the month of August. The fog usually starts overnight and lingers into the morning hours. Accordingly, the odds of Washington experiencing the "miracle" of the fog is nearly 2/5. Pretty good odds. Hardly a miracle.
Hoops pointed to the recent story of someone's house surviving as an example of God's Providence. Considering that the average width of a tornado is 375 feet, and the average path length is 1 mile, the averaged destroyed area is .26 sq. miles. The urbanized zone of Oklahoma City, which is in the heart of Tornado Alley, is 244 sq miles, so if a tornado happened to enter Oklahoma City (very low odds given the size of Oklahoma), the odds of it affecting you are less than 1 in 1000. So the fact that your house wasn't destroyed by a tornado is hardly a miracle.
The bottom line is that people ascribe "miracles" to God that are fully explainable by chance.