Dear Dickie,
AH AH AH! No that is not the "wow" I was talking about, and I am almost sure that is not what you were inferring to in your original post.
Hello Gonners
I'm sorry, but I'm afraid that is the 'wow' I was talking about, and what I was implying in my original post - that is to say, assertions of the 'supernatural' from whichever religious tradition, whether Mohammed flying unaided to Jerusalem, Sadhus materialising palaces in the Himalayas or Sai Baba conjuring up a multitude of golden lingams from his stomach - or Jesus rising from the dead.
Jesus walked on water, did he, very tame.
Jesus fed the 5000, really, so what.
I'm in sympathy with the gist of your post, which is that the important parts of the gospels are not to be found in the 'miracles', and your implication that the real 'miracles' are to be found in ordinary life itself ("Life itself is the miracle of miracles" G.B.S.) However, there are of course a great many Christians in the world who think that Jesus was able to suspend the known laws of physics at will, and, indeed, if I had seen Jesus imitating a helicopter to rise without visible means of support at his Ascension, then I feel I might just have expressed a tentative "wow". Such claims are in fact extraordinary, and anyone making them needs to provide extraordinary evidence for them. However, we know that there are many of the Evangelical camp who insist that the onus is on non-believers to prove them wrong (and most of us know the phrase for that particular fallacy
)
Jesus died for our Sins, now your talking, but thousands of books have been written on the subject, only a few touch the heart of the subject.
There are a myriad of books and a myriad of interpretations - the heart of the subject, I would suggest, is the ability of such a belief to lift a person's sense of guilt to allow them to feel 'accepted'.
Jesus rose from the dead ( literally ) did he, well I am in the Alan Alien camp on this, with God all things are possible, but where's the "wow".
Jesus was God incarnate, was he, not for me, Son of God.
And you sound to me as though you want to have your cake and eat it too
So it seems that you'd quite like to believe this 'wow', but otherwise adopt the rather reductionist view of the world which you've outlined below.
As for 'God Incarnate' or 'Son of God' (or both), both of these depend on how you understand the phrases in the first place (or indeed what you mean by 'God'). I've certainly not much idea what is meant by 'Son of God', though I know it's been used in various ways from the ancient Hebrews onwards. Just for the record - are you some kind of Unitarian?
If you want to find the "wow" in the Gospels look to the Passion and the Crucifixion.
Can't disagree with that - I've always considered Jesus admirably courageous, as I said.
But the "wow" I took from your post was the wonder of nature, God doing what he does best, an acorn growing into a mighty Oak, a baby being born, the sun rising, the things we take for granted but are God, God doing what God does best, the mundane and the miraculous.
Agree with all of that, except that you like to pepper the phrases with 'God'. Old Dickie Dawkins wrote a book about all that (I've got it -still unread - on my shelves) "An Appetite for Wonder".