God’s protective love and compassion are at the heart of all miracle stories found in the Bible. Impossible situations of danger or death, suffering or oppression, become opportunities to flourish, thanks to the merciful use of God’s power to save.
In the ancient Hebrew Bible, miracles sometimes are used in contests where a prophet pits God’s power against pagan leaders’ boasts about their idols. So Moses’s amazing miracles of God surpass the tricks of Pharaoh’s magicians, and Elijah’s calling on God to bring down fire from heaven outdoes the Philistines, whose god Baal fails to answer. These manifestations of God’s supreme power over all nature are meant to impress the people as to which deity they can trust.
Other miracles show God as a protective warrior against bullies and tyrants, as when God rescues the helpless Israelites to escape from Pharaoh’s army by holding back waters of the Red Sea until the people can cross to the other side before causing the waters to return, covering and drowning the pursuing Egyptians. God’s miracles are also personal, as seen in the story of Tobit, the holy man whose sight was restored when God sent the angel Raphael to show Tobias, the man’s son, how to mix and apply a miraculously healing salve. This story depicts a God who cares about individuals and shows that those empowered by God can be holy messengers.
In the New Testament, Jesus’ miracle stories can be read to reflect the mercy and compassion of God. The Gospels make it plain that the reason Jesus could work such miracles is that he, as the Son of God, was filled with the Holy Spirit. Jesus is distinct from the heroes and prophets of the Hebrew Bible in that, unlike them, he does not pray for miracles to occur but rather is empowered himself to heal people, expel evil spirits, and, most powerfully, to raise the dead. The revelation of Jesus’ authority over the earth as Lord is seen in his miracle of stilling the storm, where the elements—the wind and the sea—recognize Jesus and obey him instantly. Jesus uses this power to calm his frightened disciples, who fear that they will drown.
In all Jesus’ miracles depicted in the Gospels, people from every walk of life step forward as petitioners, and Jesus treats them with respect and understanding. The New Testament authors intended these stories to teach their audiences: even if the would-be Christian is unable to perform miracles, he or she could reach out and show mercy and compassion, like Jesus, to others.
Bibliography
- Cotter, Wendy. The Christ of the Miracles: Portrait Through Encounter. Peabody: Baker Academic, 2010.
- Fuller, Reginald. Interpreting the Miracles. Philadelphia: Westminster, 1963.
- Achtemeier, Paul J. Jesus and the Miracle Tradition. Eugene, Oregon: Cascade Books, 2008.
- Koskenniemi, Erkki. The Old Testament Miracle-Workers in Early Judaism. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck. 2005.