Difference between revisions of "Category:Miracles of Jesus (subject)"

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''' Miracles of Jesus ''' refers to a series of episodes in the life of [[Jesus of Nazareth]], as narrated in the gospels.
''' Miracles of Jesus ''' refers to a series of episodes in the life of [[Jesus of Nazareth]], as narrated in the gospels.


*[[Nativity of Jesus]] -> [[Jesus' Hidden Years]] -> [[Ministry of Jesus]] ([[Parables of Jesus]], ''Miracles of Jesus'') -> [[Passion of Jesus]] -> [[Resurrection of Jesus]]
< ''[[Life of Jesus]]'' : [[Nativity of Jesus]] -- [[Childhood of Jesus]] -- [[Jesus' Hidden Years]] -- '''Ministry of Jesus''' ([[Parables of Jesus]], [[Miracles of Jesus]]) -- [[Passion of Jesus]] -- [[Resurrection of Jesus]] -- [[Relics of Jesus]] >




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Ancient sources consistently present Jesus as a healer and miracle-worker.
Ancient sources consistently present Jesus as a healer and miracle-worker.
   
   
The fight for God's kingdom was against Satan himself, his demons and their works. Jesus was not the only person in antiquity with a reputation for being able to heal people. People were not amazed by the "miracles" he did (others were doing the same), but by the meaning he gave to his healing power. Since illness was understood as the result of the action of evil spirits, the healing power of Jesus was interpreted as evidence of his authority over the evil forces, as signaling the coming of God's kingdom. Furthermore, since sin also was understood as the result of the action of evil spirits, healing was understood as a manifestation of Jesus's power of forgiveness. Jesus was stronger than Satan.
==The Miracles of Jesus in ancient sources==
==The Miracles of Jesus in ancient sources==


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====Luke Tradition====
====Luke Tradition====


*[[Miraculous Catch of Fish]] (Luke 5:1-11 / John 2:1-14)
*[[Miraculous Catch of Fish]] (Luke 5:1-11; cf.  John 21:1-19)


*[[Young Man from Nain]] (Luke 7:11-17)
*[[Young Man from Nain]] (Luke 7:11-17)
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*[[Blind at Birth]] (John 9:1-41)
*[[Blind at Birth]] (John 9:1-41)
*[[Raising of Lazarus]] (John 11:1-44)
*[[Raising of Lazarus]] (John 11:1-44)
*[[Catch of 153 fish]] (John 21:1-24)
*[[Miraculous Catch of Fish]] (John 21:1-19; cf. Luke 5:1-11)


==The Miracles of Jesus in Scholarship==
==The Miracles of Jesus in Scholarship==

Latest revision as of 10:34, 4 October 2022


Miracles of Jesus refers to a series of episodes in the life of Jesus of Nazareth, as narrated in the gospels.

< Life of Jesus : Nativity of Jesus -- Childhood of Jesus -- Jesus' Hidden Years -- Ministry of Jesus (Parables of Jesus, Miracles of Jesus) -- Passion of Jesus -- Resurrection of Jesus -- Relics of Jesus >


Overview

Ancient sources consistently present Jesus as a healer and miracle-worker.

The fight for God's kingdom was against Satan himself, his demons and their works. Jesus was not the only person in antiquity with a reputation for being able to heal people. People were not amazed by the "miracles" he did (others were doing the same), but by the meaning he gave to his healing power. Since illness was understood as the result of the action of evil spirits, the healing power of Jesus was interpreted as evidence of his authority over the evil forces, as signaling the coming of God's kingdom. Furthermore, since sin also was understood as the result of the action of evil spirits, healing was understood as a manifestation of Jesus's power of forgiveness. Jesus was stronger than Satan.

The Miracles of Jesus in ancient sources

The Mark Tradition

The Matthew-Luke Tradition

The Matthew Tradition

Luke Tradition

John Tradition

The Miracles of Jesus in Scholarship

The Miracles of Jesus in Fiction

Related categories

External links

Pages in category "Miracles of Jesus (subject)"

The following 18 pages are in this category, out of 18 total.

Media in category "Miracles of Jesus (subject)"

This category contains only the following file.