Originally posted by Ghel
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If everyday events are miracles, then you're devaluing the meaning of the word "miracle." Rescuing a cat is a noble thing to do, but it's not incredibly unlikely nor a violation of the laws of physics. Why call it a miracle?
We all choose how to interpret the information gathered by our 5 senses, filtered through our beliefs and experiences. Something that happens even when our thoughts, our experiences, our knowledge tells us it can't happen? That's as suitable a definition for the term "miracle" as I've ever heard. Or you might consider how miracle is used in literary imagry to convey how the writer is feeling. As in "every birth is a miracle" even when we know that it's a rather mundane, everyday occurrance that happens all over the world......with alarming regularity I might add after looking at the recent global population estimates. Or it could be used to attribute a sense of awe and respect when describing any natural occurance.
I find it's advisable at all times to keep in mind that those around me do not necessarily share my thoughts, my beliefs, or experience reality the exact same way I do myself. I choose to see the world as a miraculous place, both because it contributes to my own happiness, and because I find it inspiring. It makes me want to learn as much as I can about the world, about the universe and how things work. Why call common, everyday occurrances miracles? Perhaps a better question is why not? I don't think it "devalues" the word miracle, at least it doesn't for me. I tend to think that it encourages a reverence for the little "miraculous" things that get overlooked and passed by in a culture far to full of itself, to over-confident in it's own infallability, to impressed with it's technological power. I remember that for thousands of years, human beings got along without cell phones, cars, and the internet and found value and beauty in the blooming of a flower, the flight of a bird. They looked at the world and thought it a miraculous place, and expressed reverence and respect for it, each in their own fashion. That sense of wonder at life, is perhaps something we modern humans have lost. Although I think it's very easy to get back with a simple change in perspective, a change in one's point of view.
I think this is less true than is was in the past. Before modern advances in travel and communications, a person was generally stuck with the community he or she was born into. Now, scattered individuals separated by vast distances can communicate quickly and easily, thus forming communities that wouldn't have been possible before the Internet Age.
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