Digital Logos Edition
Miracles are not confined to the stories of Scripture; these signs of God’s presence and power in creation are experienced throughout our daily existence. Yet cultural challenges and modernity’s skepticism have marginalized belief in them as unreasonable and irrational, says Luke Timothy Johnson.
In this excellent resource for church professionals, Johnson reclaims Christian belief in miracles as integral to recovering a proper and strong sense of creation, recognizing the validity of personal experience and narrative and asserting the truth-telling quality of myth.
“They are a rehabilitation of imagination as the essential organ of cognition, a renewed sense of creation as the continuous self-disclosure of God in the world, a recognition of the revelatory capacity of human somatic experience, and an appreciation of the particular way mythic narratives communicate truth.” (Page 46)
“seriously the witness of human experience through the ages” (Page 12)
“Nothing about this imagined world is empirically verifiable. Yet by imagining the empirical world we all inhabit in this fashion, the Bible also reveals a world, and by revealing it, opens as well the possibility of humans living in it as though real.” (Page 51)
“construct worlds on the basis of shared imagination, and we engage in shared practices that serve to make what we” (Page 50)
“Problems lie outside the human person and are potentially soluble:” (Page 48)
In his characteristically robust and thorough way, biblical theologian Luke Timothy Johnson tackles head-on what is the most challenging affirmation of Christian faith—the reality of miracles in a secular world. Drawing on his own sure grasp of the Bible, including the miracle accounts of both the Old and New Testaments, he invites his readers to imagine the world as the Scriptures imagine it—recognizing God’s dynamic presence in creation, incarnation and resurrection. This is not only a work of sure scholarship but also a manifesto of faith.
—Donald Senior, C.P., President Emeritus and Professor of New Testament at Catholic Theological Union in Chicago.
Rejecting an atomistic approach to miracle stories in terms of "what really happened," Johnson invites us to imagine biblical miracle discourse as a testament to God's presence and power in Israel, in the early church, and in our own experience.
—Greg Carey, Professor of New Testament, Lancaster Theological Seminary
In Miracles, Johnson invites us to re-read Scripture as a means of re-imagining the world and cultivating both a renewed sense of wonder and an enlivened capacity to perceive the ongoing power and presence of God in creation.
—Mary F. Foskett, Wake Forest Kahle Professor and Albritton Fellow, Department for the Study of Religions
Luke Timothy Johnson is the Robert W. Woodruff Professor Emeritus of New Testament and Early Christian Origins at the Candler School of Theology at Emory University. A New Testament scholar and historian of early Christianity, he is the author of more than two dozen books. He is also the 2011 Grawemeyer Award in Religion for Among the Gentiles: Greco-Roman Religion and Christianity.