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Miracle - Contemporary miracles |  | Miracle - Contemporary miracles: Encyclopedia II - Miracle - Contemporary miracles |  | Contemporary persons who perform many acts that they claim are miracles include the Indian gurus Sathya Sai Baba and Swami Premananda. However some of the miracles are alleged to range from sleight of hand to elaborate magic tricks.
Some modern religious groups claim ongoing occurrence of miraculous events. While some miracles have been proven to be fraudulent (see Peter Popoff for an example) others (as the Paschal Fire in Jerusalem) have not proven susceptible to analysis. Some groups are far more cautious about proclaiming apparent miracles genuine than others, although official sanction, or the lack t ...
See also:Miracle, Miracle - Miracles as supernatural acts, Miracle - Aristotelian and Neo-Aristotelian views of miracles, Miracle - Non-literal reinterpretations of miracles, Miracle - Transcendent and nontranscendent miracles, Miracle - Miracles as a product of creative art and social acceptance, Miracle - Miracles as commonplace events, Miracle - Miracles as viewed by different religions, Miracle - Miracles as described by the Bible, Miracle - Christian views of miracles, Miracle - Catholic views of miracles, Miracle - Islamic view of miracles, Miracle - Hindu views of miracles, Miracle - Jewish views of miracles, Miracle - Contemporary miracles, Miracle - Notes and References |  | | Miracle, Miracle - Aristotelian and Neo-Aristotelian views of miracles, Miracle - Catholic views of miracles, Miracle - Christian views of miracles, Miracle - Contemporary miracles, Miracle - Hindu views of miracles, Miracle - Islamic view of miracles, Miracle - Jewish views of miracles, Miracle - Miracles as a product of creative art and social acceptance, Miracle - Miracles as commonplace events, Miracle - Miracles as described by the Bible, Miracle - Miracles as supernatural acts, Miracle - Miracles as viewed by different religions, Miracle - Non-literal reinterpretations of miracles, Miracle - Notes and References, Miracle - Transcendent and nontranscendent miracles, A Course In Miracles says that a miracle is "shift in perception"., Miracles of Jesus, Divine Providence In Jewish thought |  | |
|  |  | Miracle: Encyclopedia II - Miracle - Contemporary miracles
Miracle - Contemporary miracles
Contemporary persons who perform many acts that they claim are miracles include the Indian gurus Sathya Sai Baba and Swami Premananda. However some of the miracles are alleged to range from sleight of hand to elaborate magic tricks.
Some modern religious groups claim ongoing occurrence of miraculous events. While some miracles have been proven to be fraudulent (see Peter Popoff for an example) others (as the Paschal Fire in Jerusalem) have not proven susceptible to analysis. Some groups are far more cautious about proclaiming apparent miracles genuine than others, although official sanction, or the lack thereof, rarely has much effect on popular belief.
Other related archivesA Course In Miracles, Abednego, Abraham, Allah, Andal, Andrew Dickson White, Aristotelian, Aristotle, Arjuna, Balaam, Bible, C.S. Lewis, Christian apologetics, David Hume, Divine Providence In Jewish thought, Dvaita, Egypt, Exodus, Francis of Assisi, Gersonides, God, Guide for the Perplexed, Hagar, Hebrew Bible, Herod Agrippa, Hindus, Ishmael, Islamic, Israelites, Jericho, Jesus, Jewish, Jewish biblical commentator, Joseph H. Hertz, Judaism, Krishna, Latin, Littlewood's law, Mahabharata, Maimonides, Meshach, Midrash, Mirabai, Miracles of Jesus, Moses, Muslim, Muslims, Nature, New Testament, Norman Geisler, Numbers, Old Testament, Orthodox Jews, Paschal Fire in Jerusalem, Peter Popoff, Pirkei Avot 5:6., Polycarp, Prahlada, Qur'an, Raghavendra Swami, Rama, Ramayana, Red Sea, Roman Catholic, Saadiah Gaon, Saint Francis Xavier, Samuel ben Judah ibn Tibbon, Sathya Sai Baba, Shadrach, Smyrna, Swami Premananda, Talmud, Tanakh, Unitarian Universalists, Vaishnavism, Vishnu, William Lane Craig, Zam Zam, army, bondage, creation, donkey, dreams, earthquake, evil, faith, fire walking, gurus, healing, laws of Nature, laws of nature, logical, martyrs, monotheistic religions, omnipotent, omniscient, philosophers, physics, prime mover, prophet, prophetic, prophets of Islam, rabbis, raising from the dead, religions, staff, story, supernatural, universe, visions, wind, worms, worship
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Contemporary miracles", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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