I see so you want only people who are Christian are who you want to speak to? Or do you object to me posting on some other grounds? Needless to say, I don't think ask a Christian has any rules about who can ask what and who can reply to anything, I can only assume then that if you would like to phrase your questions in such a way as it states categorically, you only want to hear opinions from Christians and you wont want conversation with anyone else, then it might save a bit of time. Not that anyone will necessarily take any notice unless you're the thread starter or a mod, but you can but ask.
I'd like to engage in a debate involving dissenting opinions, otherwise it's mostly a waste of time, at least for me. Nothing personal. The only reason I called you out on it is on the fear that a Christian might ignore my question(s) simply because in passing it seems like somebody has already answered my question (whereas I specifically want to engage in dialogue with Christians, given the nature of the thread).
Defiant, Christian guy here. I´ve been posed with the challenge of coming up with an example of a limb being regenerated through prayer by El Mac before, on this very forum. God doesn´t throw out miracles on a daily basis, so this would be pretty darn rare. At the same time, nothing is impossible to God, so I´m sure it has happened somtime. The only example I could come up with for El Mac is a saint from (I don´t remember exactly when at the moment) hundreds, or maybe it was over a thousand years ago. A "documented" case of a person whose limb was regenerated. Of course it was a long time ago and so he didn´t believe it. I´ve also heard from a preacher who was in a muslim country praying for people, that he saw a deformed foot grow into a normal foot before his eyes. But I´m sure you want a video, which I don´t have.
As for what someone said, that it might be important for an amputee to remain an amputee - I believe that´s BS.
I´m pretty sure I brought up the saint before, but not the preacher who told of his experience. I don´t blame you for not believing, a have little proof to offer in terms of amputee healings. And yes, I do think it is reasonable for unbelievers to want to see an amputee being healed, because then it cannot possibly be a coincidence, as opposed to cancer victims being cured, and the like.
I still very much so have faith that God can heal, and does heal, even today, amputees being no exception. The frequency of miraculous healings is not so great though, although I am sure the vast majority of them go undocumented, for two reasons:
1. It seems many of them happens to "bushmen" in some remote village. This makes sense, as they have not been exposed to Christendom before, and have not formed preconceived notions about it, prejudices if you will. So they are completely open to the message and its power, and they have great faith in it. This chimes in with what Jesus says about faith being necessary for big things to happen.
2. I am certain that when God does heal, it is not to prove His existence, but rather to answer their prayer. If God healed in order to prove His existence, He would be doing that all the time. So He isn´t going to heal just because the video cameras are all set up and ready.
Then why don't we get together 1000 (Christian if necessary) amputees who are amputees due to reasons that are noble or undeserving of their plight. Let's get a large of group of Christians for a prayer circle (for they have faith and can sincerely talk to God and ask Him for his divine aid), and have them pray sincerely that God restore these amputees' limbs. This shouldn't be a hard task, as I'm sure Christians believe in the power of prayer, and I'm sure that they'll be good and selfless so as to be sincere in their request.
How many amputees will be healed? If 0, statistically showing that this heal rate is most likely less than 0.1%, what does that say about the power of prayer?
But wait! Let's do this again, but with 1000 cancer patients suffering from a cancer with a 10% remission rate (i.e. likelihood person will live).
How many of these patients will be healed? It will probably be somewhere around 100 of them, showing that the heal rate is somewhere around 10%. Does this mean that the power of prayer and the Lord's willingness to lend out His hand and help those in need is directly dependent on what these people suffer from? It is unfortunate that amputees get the "short end of the stick", so to say, since they have a healing rate well below 0.1%, if not 0%.
I'm sure the Lord doesn't intentionally alter the amount of help He is going to give just because the act would be documented... that wouldn't make sense! We certainly have devoted, sincere Christians asking for this; I don't see what more is necessary (unless I've missed something, please point it out)...
So please help me understand these discrepancies I have noticed in prayer.
Would you be willing to do a few things to make sure that it's not all a figment of your imagination? It's hard to believe that you could be wrong about this, but it's always nice to make sure...
On the discussion that began around free will:
I take free will on faith, and I think there's nothing that can be identified as freewillitude by experiment. As ESY puts it, free will is the "game-theoretical unit of moral responsibility"... not an object, but a quantity.
Since I have no well-defined religious, political, philosophical, or epistemological definition or beliefs of free will, I will steer clear of the subject, if you please.