Miracles

As far as we know, humans have always been big on miracles. Always big on believing that more is possible that what we were taught. More than what we have experienced. More than we logically assume. We humans have consistently at least wanted to believe that sometimes things happen which are outside the laws of nature. (Assuming, of course, that anyone understands all the laws of nature.) Some folks call these miraculous happenings, “acts of God.” Some refer to them as, “unexplained phenomena.” Asheville La-la’s or those who spent too much time in the 60’s might call them, “alien-induced,” “cosmic-mind-controlled,” or “vortex spin-offs.”

The truth, of course, is that we understand very little of life that goes on around and within us each and every moment. We say that we’re alive because our heart pumps blood and our lungs pump air. But, anyone who has been through 7th-grade science knows that millions of other processes have to be constantly happening to even keep us upright. Much less, conversant, cognitive, cool and cocky. A case could be easily made that each of us and each part of us from goatee to gonad to goober is pure miracle. Each of us, a walking, talking miraculous goofball.

During the winter holidays, lots of folks in Western Culture celebrate miracles:

  • Jews celebrate the miracle of an oil lamp that burned 8 days on less oil than it takes to sauté an anchovy. They call this celebration, “Hanukah.”
  • Christians celebrate the miracle birth of a baby god who was conceived without benefit of man or sperm. They call this, “Christmas.”
  • Wiccans celebrate the miraculous return of the sun to the higher sky on the Solstice.
  • Folks of African heritage celebrate the miracle of home, love and community and call it, “Kwanza.”
  • Almost everybody celebrates the miracle of a new calendar year and the miraculous possibilities which lie in store.
  • And Christians, with “Epiphany” celebrate three pagan astrologers who followed a star to find what they thought would be “King of the Jews,” but, was actually a very humble baby named Jesus.

So many miracles to celebrate. So little time.

Maybe – just maybe – all of these miracles (human/religious, ancient/contemporary) point to something beyond themselves. Maybe each of these holy and human phenomenon holds up a wise, ancient finger pointing to the stars, to the galaxies, to the oceans and rivers, to the mountains, to the jet stream and Gulf Stream, to our hearts, to our DNA, to love.

Perhaps each of these ancient – and not so ancient – stories are there to be celebrated as a reminder that we are all part of a miracle story. A grand and gory, glorious and ghastly story. A story of crushing pathos and irrepressible joy. A story of blunder and wonder, each and all miraculous. A marvelous story. A mystical story. A wonder-full story.

These human/holy miracles just might be celebrated each year, to remind us that we are all acts of God. We are all unexplained phenomenon. We are oily, home-loving, star-following, light-shining, beer-guzzling, street-dancing miraculous goofballs who were conceived, gestated and born in a most mind-blowing way. We are walking, talking miracles living in a world that no-one – not even science – can explain.

“There are two ways to live your life,” quoth Albert Einstein. “One is as though nothing is a miracle; the other, as though everything is a miracle.” Happy Holy Days!