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English Dictionary: miracle' by the DICT Development Group
3 results for miracle'
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Miracle \Mir"a*cle\, v. t.
      To make wonderful. [Obs.] --Shak.

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Miracle \Mir"a*cle\, n. [F., fr. L. miraculum, fr. mirari to
      wonder. See {Marvel}, and cf. {Mirror}.]
      1. A wonder or wonderful thing.
  
                     That miracle and queen of genus.         --Shak.
  
      2. Specifically: An event or effect contrary to the
            established constitution and course of things, or a
            deviation from the known laws of nature; a supernatural
            event, or one transcending the ordinary laws by which the
            universe is governed.
  
                     They considered not the miracle of the loaves.
                                                                              --Mark vi. 52.
  
      3. A miracle play.
  
      4. A story or legend abounding in miracles. [Obs.]
  
                     When said was all this miracle.         --Chaucer.
  
      {Miracle monger}, an impostor who pretends to work miracles.
           
  
      {Miracle play}, one of the old dramatic entertainments
            founded on legends of saints and martyrs or (see 2d
            {Mystery}, 2) on events related in the Bible.

From Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary [easton]:
   Miracle
      an event in the external world brought about by the immediate
      agency or the simple volition of God, operating without the use
      of means capable of being discerned by the senses, and designed
      to authenticate the divine commission of a religious teacher and
      the truth of his message (John 2:18; Matt. 12:38). It is an
      occurrence at once above nature and above man. It shows the
      intervention of a power that is not limited by the laws either
      of matter or of mind, a power interrupting the fixed laws which
      govern their movements, a supernatural power.
     
         "The suspension or violation of the laws of nature involved in
      miracles is nothing more than is constantly taking place around
      us. One force counteracts another: vital force keeps the
      chemical laws of matter in abeyance; and muscular force can
      control the action of physical force. When a man raises a weight
      from the ground, the law of gravity is neither suspended nor
      violated, but counteracted by a stronger force. The same is true
      as to the walking of Christ on the water and the swimming of
      iron at the command of the prophet. The simple and grand truth
      that the universe is not under the exclusive control of physical
      forces, but that everywhere and always there is above, separate
      from and superior to all else, an infinite personal will, not
      superseding, but directing and controlling all physical causes,
      acting with or without them." God ordinarily effects his purpose
      through the agency of second causes; but he has the power also
      of effecting his purpose immediately and without the
      intervention of second causes, i.e., of invading the fixed
      order, and thus of working miracles. Thus we affirm the
      possibility of miracles, the possibility of a higher hand
      intervening to control or reverse nature's ordinary movements.
     
         In the New Testament these four Greek words are principally
      used to designate miracles: (1.) Semeion, a "sign", i.e., an
      evidence of a divine commission; an attestation of a divine
      message (Matt. 12:38, 39; 16:1, 4; Mark 8:11; Luke 11:16; 23:8;
      John 2:11, 18, 23; Acts 6:8, etc.); a token of the presence and
      working of God; the seal of a higher power.
     
         (2.) Terata, "wonders;" wonder-causing events; portents;
      producing astonishment in the beholder (Acts 2:19).
     
         (3.) Dunameis, "might works;" works of superhuman power (Acts
      2:22; Rom. 15:19; 2 Thess. 2:9); of a new and higher power.
     
         (4.) Erga, "works;" the works of Him who is "wonderful in
      working" (John 5:20, 36).
     
         Miracles are seals of a divine mission. The sacred writers
      appealed to them as proofs that they were messengers of God. Our
      Lord also appealed to miracles as a conclusive proof of his
      divine mission (John 5:20, 36; 10:25, 38). Thus, being out of
      the common course of nature and beyond the power of man, they
      are fitted to convey the impression of the presence and power of
      God. Where miracles are there certainly God is. The man,
      therefore, who works a miracle affords thereby clear proof that
      he comes with the authority of God; they are his credentials
      that he is God's messenger. The teacher points to these
      credentials, and they are a proof that he speaks with the
      authority of God. He boldly says, "God bears me witness, both
      with signs and wonders, and with divers miracles."
     
         The credibility of miracles is established by the evidence of
      the senses on the part of those who are witnesses of them, and
      to all others by the testimony of such witnesses. The witnesses
      were competent, and their testimony is trustworthy. Unbelievers,
      following Hume, deny that any testimony can prove a miracle,
      because they say miracles are impossible. We have shown that
      miracles are possible, and surely they can be borne witness to.
      Surely they are credible when we have abundant and trustworthy
      evidence of their occurrence. They are credible just as any
      facts of history well authenticated are credible. Miracles, it
      is said, are contrary to experience. Of course they are contrary
      to our experience, but that does not prove that they were
      contrary to the experience of those who witnessed them. We
      believe a thousand facts, both of history and of science, that
      are contrary to our experience, but we believe them on the
      ground of competent testimony. An atheist or a pantheist must,
      as a matter of course, deny the possibility of miracles; but to
      one who believes in a personal God, who in his wisdom may see
      fit to interfere with the ordinary processes of nature, miracles
      are not impossible, nor are they incredible. (See LIST OF
      MIRACLES, Appendix.)
     
No guarantee of accuracy or completeness!
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