Why are you talking about a literal interpretation of Scripture?
I'm talking about how you claimed in post 154 that even "real" miracles - those requiring divine intervention - could be perfectly logical. Did you not say: "...even miracles could be logical, but rather we consider them miracles due to a lack of familiarity with the rules of logic."
So don't try to put this on me trying to take a literal interpretation of the Bible when I'm talking about your own words.
Are you able to imagine a miracle that doesn't involve materializing fish? How about a miracle in which God divinely intervenes within a thunderstorm and makes a lightening bolt strike a tree. This is purely hypothetical, yet it happens each year and is actually somewhat common. It doesn't involve making any matter come into existence, and operates with use of things already present. The lightening bolt doesn't have to hit the tree, yet in this particular case, it does. We do have a naturalistic explanation [generally speaking] for why lightening strikes where it does, and yet, despite what we think we know about lightening, none of us really has any ability to say one way or another if lightening will or will not hit this hypothetical tree.
I would say that God could operate within our universe, in ways right before our eyes, in ways that we cannot predict or control. Only God would be able to predict and control the precise nature of how such events occur.
And none of this has to involve fish materializing out of thin air.
Let's see if we can make another example.
Radioactive material may decay in ways that we cannot predict and we cannot control. In some sense we can make broad predictions based on probabilities. We think that maybe a particle will be emitted in some general amount of time.
I think another atheist here in these forums worded this in ways that maybe I should have paid more attention to. And I'll see if I can find that discussion, but there was this lingering question of why any individual particle was emitted at any particular time during radioactive decay.
The question challenged me because it's a question that we can't really say when or how or even why any particular particle emits at any particular time.
It is true that a parent material may be energetically instable, thus being what we consider a broad cause of decay. And yet this thought of mine still falls short of explaining why any particular particle emits at any particular time. We can't predict it or control it, we don't know why certain subatomic particles move when they do or even where they do.
And in this case, who's to say that God would not operate in this realm in which we have no control over or can't predict when or why events occur when they do, or how they do.
If God stepped in and there was divine intervention in which a particle was emitted a fraction of a second sooner or later than any other moment than it naturally would have, we wouldn't see any difference in probability, We wouldn't see anything abnormal about the occurrence, it would just be a part of the unpredictable nature of reality and yet this very nature could be manipulated in natural ways.