CAPG's Blog 

MIRACLES.

by VP


Posted on Saturday January 13, 2024 at 11:00PM in Sermons


File:Brooklyn Museum - The Marriage at Cana (Les noces de Cana) - James Tissot - overall.jpg

James Tissot: Les noces de Cana (The Marriage at Cana)

"As the Gospel of to-day relates one of the miracles our Lord performed, I am led to say a few words about miracles as used in evidence of the truth of the Divine doctrine of Jesus Christ. Certainly our Lord appealed to miracles sometimes as proof that He had Divine power, but that was by no means the rule. The miracle of changing water into wine was performed for no such purpose. On other occasions He bade those whom He healed to say nothing about it. And St. Matthew expressly said that the reason why He wrought not many miracles among those who knew Him best was because of their unbelief: the very reason we would think why He ought to have worked miracles before their eyes so as to oblige them to believe in Him. And St. John also intimates that our Lord did not place much reliance upon belief that only depended upon miracles; for he says, "Many believed, seeing the signs that He did. But Jesus did not trust Himself to them, for He knew what was in man." If we read the Gospels attentively we shall see that it was true then, as it has been all through the history of Christianity, that the triumph of His Divine truth has not been due to miracles, but rather in spite of them. If there was then, or has been since, anything which the world hates to learn of, and obstinately refuses to credit, it is a miracle.

"The idea of God or any messenger from God pretending to do things a man cannot understand! Don't I know nature well enough to know that even if God made it He cannot change it? To believe in miracles I would have to acknowledge God knows what I cannot know." That is the way men think, if they do not speak out their thoughts quite so plainly. There have always been miracles, plenty of them, enough to convert the whole world to Christianity if that were the means intended by Almighty God to bring about conviction and conversion. A man convinced against his will is of the same opinion still; and miracles convince men against their will - the will of their proud, self-conceited, rebellious heart. They see them plainly as you and I do, but they won't believe them. The triumph of our Lord's holy religion, therefore, has not been due to miracles of healing. These are the things unbelievers hate, as they do every other sign of Christ that demands their submission. But what conquers the world despite itself is Love and the sacrifices that it makes. They cannot stand out against the sight of our Lord's love, even unto death, nor gaze upon the love of those who through all generations have taken His place, and spoken, prayed, preached, suffered, and died in His name, without being won to belief.

So, my brethren, if you are anxious to convert anybody to our holy faith, never mind about miracles; and do not be astonished if they poohpooh arguments as strong as the reasoning of St. Thomas. Go and show them a little of the unselfish, charitable, self-denying, suffering love of Christ. Let them see how sweet-spoken and kind you are to the poor, how patient you are in affliction, how nobly you conquer your passions for God's love, and resist temptations to drink and steal and gratify desires of the flesh. Did I say never mind about miracles? I made a mistake. For if you do what I have just told you, I am inclined to think some of you will be doing as great a miracle as there is on record. You that are stingy, give freely. You that dislike the poor, go and serve them. You that are complaining of God's providence, submit to your lot like a man and a Christian. You that are a drunkard, take the pledge and keep it. You that are living like a beast, get honorably married and live chaste. You that have hands getting hot for hell with ill-gotten money, make full restitution. These will be miracles - miracles of grace; and against such miracles unbelief never will have any argument, or power to resist either conviction or conversion. And then you can say to the unbeliever: If you will not believe in the Catholic religion for its truth's sake, look at me, and believe it for the work it can do. It can bring a sinner back to God, and that is a greater miracle than raising a dead man to life."

Source: Five-minute Sermons for Low Mass, All Sundays of the Year, by Priests of the Congregation of St. Paul. 1893