Do you honestly think I don't know that?
Religions know that people will not believe in magic but they can be fooled into believing in miracles.
It's really depends what you mean by magic. If by magic you mean the sort of thing which Duke university tossed out back the 70s i.e. the paranormal; or psychic i.e. Edgar Cayce ; or the David Copperfield tricks; or the old bending spoon routine i.e. Geller ; or Houdini in a barrel over the falls --
instead of say the intense feeling of wonder one gets when trying to contemplate the meaning of everything (you know the wonder of it all : Einstein, Hawking -- who'll be next????) and one's heart just overflows with what it is full of -- and you utter in a silly voice at seeing the Aurora, "Sho, (Nature) ... it's Magic!"
Or, you join Dean Martin and sing an line of 'It's Witchcraft!" (thinking about romance) :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ipMeVKd6eEw
'When a ballad is right, it is like poetry set to music' (Dean Martin)
Religions are not about what is true they about what people want to be true.
Maybe some, but here (on this forum) we are Christians, and our faith in God maybe be inexplicable -- BUT, then our religion isn't just about that -- we have Jesus Christ and well if you know anything at all about historical Christian Apologetic discourse, you will know you just stamped on your tongue. (fortunately out of the scope of this forum)
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Moving on, so to the actual sort of argument Christians use about this: Kalaam Cosmological Argument.* I don't bother with it, but you'd need to debunk that to get out of your barrel and say, "It's not magic?"
*
http://www.philosophyofreligion.inf...cal-argument/the-kalam-cosmological-argument/
The Kalam Cosmological Argument
(1) Everything that has a beginning of its existence has a cause of its existence.
(2) The universe has a beginning of its existence.
Therefore:
(3) The universe has a cause of its existence.
(4) If the universe has a cause of its existence then that cause is God.
Therefore:
(5) God exists.
Good luck.