Hoops wrote:My point here is not that one ought to believe in miracles because Bede records them. It is, rather, that in evidential terms there is just as good a case for believing in miracles around the 7th century AD as there was in the first century AD, and perhaps better.
[A}Why?
Or, one might say that if one disbelieves the 7th century miracles, one has an even better reason to disbelieve in the 1st century ones.
{B}Why?
Hoops, as I understand it, only feels able to privilege the latter over the former because she thinks there was a special reason for miracles pre AD 350, and that after that date they did not happen any more, because they were no longer necessary. The evidence of Bede - and of those who preceded and followed him - seems to count quite heavily against that.
[c}Except I have a list of early church fathers who agree with me, and that would seem to count quite heavily for it.
I see that you are slipping back to the old monosyllabic mode. Ho well, I tried to dialogue, so don't complain if I point out your disinclination to engage in substantive argument.
First, I assume that the reader has seen the detailed evidence in my earlier post, showing the clear evidence that Bede of Jarrow claimed to have good evidence of miracles in his own day (7th-8th century AD), and that Pope Gregory wrote to his missionary in England in AD 601 about the miracles that the missionary in question (Augustine) was working.
Now I answer Hoops first "Why" (marked [A]":
in evidential terms there is just as good a case for believing in miracles around the 7th century AD as there was in the first century AD, and perhaps better, because the accounts of 7th century miracles come from sources that are at least as well attested as the 1st century sources, and are in some respects better, as well as being closer to us in time period.
Now "Why" [B] if one disbelieves the 7th century miracles, one has an even better reason to disbelieve in the 1st century ones, because the evidence for the 7th century miracles is better than that for the 1st century ones.
Finally, Hoops says: "I have a list of early church fathers who agree with me, and that would seem to count quite heavily for it." Some church fathers thought that miracles of certain kinds may have ceased after the apostles. This does not however eliminate the continuous evidence that Christians after AD 350 (Hoops' cut-off date) continued to state that miracles were occurring. If you don't believe them. why believe anybody who makes such claims at an earlier date?