From the time our parents gave us children’s Bible story books, through Sunday school and Confirmation classes, to the regular readings in worship services, we hear about the many miracles that Jesus performed. He healed the sick, raised the dead, fed a crowd of five thousand — and a crowd of four thousand — with a few loaves of bread and several fish. It is easy to get the idea that he spent all of his time doing wonders. Yet he wasn’t always stilling storms, turning water into wine and healing people. In fact, for the first thirty years of his life, we do not hear of him doing even one So, why did Jesus do miracles?
First of all, Jesus did his miracles for the same reason he did everything else — to fulfill the promises of the Messiah proclaimed throughout the Old Testament. Unlike us, God keeps his Word. (see Luke 24:44) Second, miracles demonstrate that Jesus is the Messiah and God Himself. (Matthew 11:4-6, John 14:11)
The miracles also do two other important things. One is they tell us something about Jesus and so about God. He has compassion on us and in our sufferings. (Matthew 14:14, Matthew 15:32, Luke 7:13-16) Unlike everyday miracle workers, who make a big show of their work, he spoke very few word when he worked miracle. The other thing they do is strengthen faith. The Evangelist John sums it up well: “Now Jesus did many other signs in the presence of the disciples, which are not written in this book; but these are written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name.” (John 20:30-31)
As great as these signs were, they were temporary. The wine at Cana was drunk, the calm waters became wild again, the five thousand would be hungry again, those healed, even raised from the dead, would die. But one miracle would last forever. Jesus died for the sins of the world, shattering the power of sin, death and the devil. He died and rested in the tomb and then rose from the dead breaking the seal of the grave forever. That was the greatest miracle of them all.
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