Monday, April 11, 2016

The law of cause and effort, My Muslim Friend

Some philosophers denied the possibility of miracles on the ground that the creator who established the universe and set its order, would not interfere in it,  and would not permit anyone to disrupt its order. But many Muslim scholars stood up to defend the Christian faith and the teaching of the Gospel on miracles required special circumstances; therefore, their making of miracles required special circumstances; therefore, their making is not by necessity inference in the elements of "cause and effort"; and their happening is not a cause to mess up the universal order. Therefore, they are feasible and are intended to aim to a special object. Furthermore, those scholars insisted that "faith" necessitates the believing in and the accepting of miracles on the ground that they were made in accordance with the will of God which is the sole causality according to which can occur and thus, miracles do not cause any contradictions. Consequently, Muslim scholars concluded that refusing to believe in miracles is a loathsome heresy.

John 5:9

  At once the man was cured; he picked up his mat and walked.

The day on which this took place was a Sabbath,

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