Jesus went to the city...
Illustration
Jesus went to the city of Nain. There he found a group of persons mourning the untimely death of a widow's young son. How fervently, how desperately, the widow and her friends wished for a miracle. Jesus provided that miracle by ordering the apparently dead youth to arise. He obeyed. He sat up and began to speak. Witnesses were overwhelmed with joy. Reports of the event spread quickly. Could the miracle have happened in an atmosphere of doubt or indifference? Was the atmosphere of expectancy and hunger a necessary prerequisite to the miracle?
Mario Cuomo, a very devout Catholic Christian who is governor of New York state, has written a diary in which he often reveals his innermost spiritual thoughts. In his entry for June 13, 1983, he reports attending, the previous day, a nuclear freeze rally. He observes, "The day confirmed what I have felt from the beginning of the campaign: there is a great yearning for something to believe in." Is that a valid description of society in general? Some keen observers think we are experiencing a resurgence in spiritual seeking and believing. If so, is that not a more conducive environment in which miracles may happen? I mean miracles like nuclear disarmament and a just and peaceful solution to traumatic conflicts like those currently being experienced in Africa.
Mario Cuomo, a very devout Catholic Christian who is governor of New York state, has written a diary in which he often reveals his innermost spiritual thoughts. In his entry for June 13, 1983, he reports attending, the previous day, a nuclear freeze rally. He observes, "The day confirmed what I have felt from the beginning of the campaign: there is a great yearning for something to believe in." Is that a valid description of society in general? Some keen observers think we are experiencing a resurgence in spiritual seeking and believing. If so, is that not a more conducive environment in which miracles may happen? I mean miracles like nuclear disarmament and a just and peaceful solution to traumatic conflicts like those currently being experienced in Africa.
