No. It wasn't God that removed the British forces from Israel. That was the work of the United Nations.
The United Nations Partition Plan | Middle East Research and Information Project
I'd give this conditional acceptance as a miracle. If someone who has no knowledge of the French language were to minister to a Frenchman in perfect French, then that would give me reason to believe that I may be witnessing a miracle and the situation would need further investigation.
People speaking gibberish doesn't count.
I'd also give this conditional acceptance as a miracle. If it's something that someone can get better from, like the cold, the flu, a headache, cancer (it can go into remission), then that has no need for a divine explanation. If an amputee grows a new foot, or the dead resurrect - then we have something to look into.
Most investigation of divine healings have instead uncovered fraud and abuse.
Knock yourself out; but don't expect to see evidence of a miracle jump out at you under scrutiny.
That's definitely not reassuring.
After all, many miracles, such as the return of Israel as prophesied, are "guided miracles," and "instant miracles" would be hard to prove, since only those in attendance could verify them.
"Guided miracles" don't sound all that miraculous by any definition of the term - including your own.
In fact, some miracles would go unnoticed, if not for the Holy Spirit making it known via the recipient's prayer closet.
If an amputee prayed for a new leg and received a new leg, then that's something that someone is going to notice.
I would like to expound on my buddy's point about the Big Bang being a miracle as well.
As you probably know, I don't believe in the Big Bang model; I believe in the creation events as told in Genesis 1.
BUT, for the record, this universe itself is a miracle of creation; but an unbeliever cannot tell that -- just like a fish doesn't know it's wet.
I didn't ask for miracles from the Bible. I asked for miracles outside of the Bible. We both know that holy books are full of miracles. I want to see a real life example of one - not just mentions of one in the Bible.
The events in Genesis are miraculous, but they aren't supported by evidence. Is this to say that Christians are fish that know they're wet? Sounds like a red
herring to me...
So when the Rapture occurs, and [if] scientists explain it away as UFO abductions -- you'll be satisfied that it wasn't a miracle?
There will not be a rapture.
If you have any miracles that have happened that you'd like to share, then please do so. If it has never happened, like a rapture or a UFO abduction, then you probably shouldn't present it as an example.