Saturday 31 January 2009

Miracle of the Hudson River

It's not very often that the word miracle is used in the media so much as it has been in the past 24 hours. But what many have termed "the miracle on the Hudson River" has meant that the word has been on many people's lips.
A miracle is generally regarded as the astonishment and amazement created by an unusual or inexplicable event. Albert Einstein argued that "There are two ways to live: you can live as if nothing is a miracle; you can live as if everything is a miracle."
Miracles don't have to be connected to religion nor, as CS Lewis reminds us, do they need to go against the laws of nature. Many things we see on a day to day basis, the birth of a child for instance, have, from our human standpoint, miraculous qualities. They are truly wonderful.
But, from time to time, a combination of circumstances brings about something as astonishing as the survival of everyone on board that aircraft. And something so special, extraordinary - a remarkable sequence of events such as this - touches an emotion and provokes a response - regardless of how cynical we might be the rest of the time.
Even at the level of - how would I have responded if I'd been in that situation - we are faced with challenging questions about what is important to us and the bigger picture of our lives.
The Jewish and Christian faiths are based on a fair few miracles of various types which have provoked debate over the centuries - not just on the grounds of historicity and theology - but also because of the effect they had, and have, on people of faith and no faith.
Astonishment and amazement is also often, in the books of the Bible, accompanied by fear and insecurity because such events - natural or divinely provoked - have a similar knock-on effect. There is the need to reflect and ponder the consequences of what has taken place.
I have always preferred the word "sign" to "miracle". And "this is a sign to us" is common parlance amongst lots of people for whom such miracles have some deeper but unknown meaning. And I personally believe that miracles have always been reminders that we live in a fragile and surprising world, where events simply do not always turn out as we thought that they would.
Whether or not one adopts faith as part of a rationale for dealing with "miracles" - that's a personal decision.
But all of us, this morning, can only reflect and ponder on the miracle of the Hudson River and the extraordinary stories that are now being told.
copyright 2009 BBC

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