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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, May 3, 2017
Why We Haven’t Seen Another Buddha, A Christ, Or A Miracle Since?

By Shyamon Jayasinghe –April 30, 2017
Yes. Its been 2,500 years since we have seen a Buddha and, a little
later, a Jesus Christ. Such considerable and towering personalities
lived in times before recording took place. We know they lived. We are
far less sure about what really they precisely said as we only have
word-of mouth coming down over a 500 years since their departure from
this world. Around such a time after that, faithful followers had, at
last, been able to put it all together in writing. What is on record,
however, is the thread of word-of-mouth and this, we know, can be
hopelessly inauthentic.
Christmas Humphreys, in his classic Penguin on Buddhism said,”We do not
know what the Buddha taught, any more than we know what Jesus taught.”
The important thing for me, however, is not the issues of authenticity. I
am prepared to accept tentatively as authentic what theologists and
scholastics later wrote about the teachings of these great religious
leaders. On the other hand, what arouses my curiosity on a constant
basis is why great personas such as them or even close to them have
never appeared thereafter. We have not had any religions after
Christianity, Jewish, Islam,Hinduism, and Buddhism. We certainly have
had and do have sects of these religions since but sects are subsets.
The era of religion has dissipated; not disappeared. It is also a matter
of curiosity why only these religions erupted and why at that time and
not before or afterwards.Why didn’t anyone emerge to guide man before?
Why not after? In other words, the timing raises a host of questions. I
am aware that there have been other faiths around the same time but the
latter are too minor for consideration. We have the Jehovas Witnesses
knocking at our doors today but they are not a distinct religion.
I also ask myself why we hear less and less of the kinds of miracles
attributed to Jesus and to his early apostles since the latter passed
away. And what of miraculous claims by Buddhists about an ability (Iddi
Balaya) to travel through space unaided by a device? For thousands of
years we haven’t heard of a miracle taken seriously. Turning water into
wine? Multiplying bread, raising the dead back into a state of
living-before our eyes? How wonderful if I can have the lives of some of
my own relatives who were so dear to me resurrected? Tragic -struck
parents would give anything to have a dead child restored to live
again-wouldn’t they, surely? The world would be much free of unfair
suffering. And then, if someone could multiply bread for Somalians dying
of hunger these days-leave alone doing that miracle for our benefit? We
watch in TV and become traumatic when scenes of starving kids are on
display,-dying without food to eat. We shudder thinking of cancer
patients struggling with their lives.
Why oh why cannot someone with divine power perform miracles by
intervening in all such instances? We divide into groups and argue
whether God as a creator and supernatural supervisor does exist.
Arguments and rhetoric flow on both sides of the intellectual divide.In
the Middle Ages we had the Christian scholar, Thomas Aquinas who came
out with “proofs for God’s existence.” Since then, there have been
refinements to such arguments. With the march of science, many
intellectuals took to rebutting Aquinas. The theory of evolution by
Charles Darwin seems to undermine the whole traditional belief that this
world of ours had been an act of vast creation. That was science’s
serious deathblow to the belief of Abrahamic religions-Christianity,
Jewish, and Islam. Findings of genetic science since Darwin only confirm
and elaborate what Darwin had found. Yet, the scientific position is
being denied vehemently by creationists. It is a war with science that
we observe today in many fields of cognitive understanding.
My position is that this war need not go on and that we need not fight
to death over such disputes if only the presumed God can intervene and
show his miracle or muscle for the whole world to see. That would be the
most convincing sure -shot. Wouldn’t that be? But it is not happening.
Perhaps, it is safer to get back to what science says: Miracles cannot
happen in nature as they constitute a violation of the very laws of
nature. Miracle claims are not common today because the the burgeoning
numbers of scientifically thinking, modern, people are on the watch to
ask questions and to pry and question any given claim. There are a
number of stories of miracles but they lack wide enough testimony and
they typically are personal experiences. David Hume famously said if one
were to accept a claim of a miraculous event such a claim must have
testimony that looks more probable than the optional scientific view
that it can be explained in terms of the natural laws of the universe.
Such tall stories are the product of mankind’s sense of wonder. The
sensations of surprise and wonder lead us to irrational beliefs. To make
matters worse for the believers, social media has grown and is growing
in an exponential speed undreamt of before. A simple claim of a divine
apparition can be caught on a tiny mobile phone and disseminated in
lightening speed to the entire world. Be careful, supernaturalists, you
are being watched. People all over the world are getting far too
sophisticated to arrive at supernatural beliefs of any sort. The days of
early religion were pre-scientific days and they were inhabited largely
by barbarous and ignorant populations.
