Miracles examined from a Fortean perspective
Miracles vs. Forteana
If one examines traditional religious miracles, some elements
are particularly interesting. Many of the 'miracles' of the saints, if
their theological or moralizing overlays are removed, are examples of
amazing paranormal phenomena, and parapsychologists such as D. Scott Rogo
and Herbert Thurston approached them as such[1.] Miracles,
contrary to common expectation, are not just a Catholic phenomenon: they
can be found in the traditions of the holy figures of most religions. In
the Western tradition, miracles are supposed to be supernatural
interventions in the natural laws of the world- the interruptions of
history by Providence. They are thus by necessity rare and always have a
moral or theological content (i.e. the burning bush, parting of the Red
Sea, etc.) In those cases where they are connected with holy figures, it
is usually claimed that those figures are mediators of the Divine, not
the source of the transgressions against natural law. But if we set aside
what I call the 'theological hypothesis,' i.e. the religious origin of
miracles, and examine them as any other Fortean-type phenomenon, some
other possibilities might suggest themselves. By looking at several types
of 'miracles,' interesting patterns emerge.
Saintly Healing: Laying of Hands and Healing Shrines
Many of the saints were said to be able to cure blindness,
leprosy, scrofula (the kings' evil), and other ailments merely by touch.
Their model for their ability was derived from the 'theological
hypothesis,' i.e. the source of healing power came from outside
themselves. Many modern 'psychic healers' claim a similar record without
identifying a Divine origin for their ability, and current evidence
suggests that there may be multiple mechanisms involved: manipulation and
transmission of body energy (i.e. chi/bioplasma/orgone), stimulation of
the autoimmune system, and perhaps even a direct cellular
transformation[2.] (The Eastern European healer Estebany was able
to stimulate enzyme production in a flask through his talent.) More
miraculous healings, such as making the paralyzed able to walk (repairing
the nervous system) or stopping major bleeding, are an area of feats that
so far the saints have faced little competition in from modern healers.
But it is possible that these are merely extraordinary psychokinetic
manipulations of tissue which may yet someday be achievable; after all,
the 'psychic surgeons' of the Phillipines have managed to do what the
saints were never reported to (the removal of diseased organs).
If human bioenergy (the so-called 'healing force') is
transferable from healer to patient, there is no reasons why it could not
accumulate in areas where the organism is located or spent frequent
periods of time in. This might explain the healing attributes of saints'
tombs or shrines. Some places of saintly healing, such as holy springs
(Lourdes, etc.), may merely be in an auspicious geomantic location to
accumulate the so-called "Earth force" generated for fertility purposes,
and only associated with a saint inadvertently (they were killed there)
or even erroneously[3] (perhaps they were linked to a pagan
divinity that was later 'christianized' into a saint.) Saints' tombs,
being places of intense meditation and devotion, may be particularly
effective in triggering the autosuggestive or 'placebo' effect in
believers. My suggestion in this area is that the saints may have been
effective in tapping into bionenergetic processes that are accessible
today to very unsaintly acupuncturists, orgone therapists, and radionics
users.
Mind Over Body: The Stigmata, Imitatio Christi, and Miraculous
Fasting
One feat that almost guaranteed inclusion into the Catholic
canon was the stigmata, first manifested (it is said) by Francis
of Assissi. He wanted to be so like Christ that he began to manifest the
five wounds of his Saviour. People who manifest the stigmata (it has
occurred well into the 20th century) often display bleeding and naillike
wounds in the palms, feet, and the left side (where the crucified Jesus
was said to be pierced by a spear.) Occasionally there are also
lacerations on the forehead, corresponding to the wounds from the crown
of thorns. Curiously, these wounds are found precisly where one might see
them in a medieval or Renaissance painting of the crucifixion; but we
know from anatomical, medical, and archaeological evidence that a
crucified person would have to be nailed through their wrists and
ankles . The saints were manifesting the wounds where they sincerely
believed they had occurred - Christ could not possibly have had
wounds where they are commonly depicted to be[4.]
The 'miracle' of the stigmata may be linked to that of
'miraculous fasting,' where the saint does without food and water for a
substantial amount of their life. Saints were often said to subsists on
an impossible diet, i.e. 'locusts and honey' or eating only the
sacramental Host. There is some evidence to suggest that a 20th century
Catholic woman performed this very same miracle for some two decades, but
she was 'caught' eating on very, very rare occasions- certainly more
infrequently than most people need to in order to survive. We know today
that the mind can exert extreme control over the body: this can be seen
in any 'hysterical pregnancy' or person under hypnosis who is told their
skin is burning. It is possible the mind could generate wounds in the
body (just as it makes warts disappear) or even substantially reduce its
appetite and metabolism[5.] Faith may be necessary to summon the
concentration, but it is not the mechanism of the result.
The Shield of Faith: Handling Serpents, Firewalking, Drinking Poison,
and Martyrs' and Flagellants' Imperviousness to Pain
It's all there in the Bible. With faith, you can take up
serpents and not be harmed, drink poison and live, and walk through
flames. Today we know of many non-Christian cultures in Asia and the
Pacific that practice firewalking, and they have their own religious or
theological explanations of the phenomenon. Christian martyrs, pietists,
and flagellants often performed excruciating rituals on themselves in the
Middle Ages feeling little or no pain: but there are many cases of
heretics consigned to the flame who felt the same
imperviousness[6.] Many of these feats could result from bioenergy
manipulation or mind over body as discussed above: perhaps, like a
hynotized patient, the saints could 'turn off' their pain receptors. Once
again, faith may have provided the necessary concentration - Islamic
mystics claim they are so "filled with G-d" that there is no room for
anything else, even pain.
However, even beyond this, like the Eastern fakirs, there have
been Christian saints and enthusiasts that were able to lie on sword
blades and not be cut, or to swallow hot coals and not be burned, or to
be struck by huge hammers and have no bones broken. (All of these feats
were duplicated by the Spiritualist medium Daniel Douglas Home.) These
feats involve more than just mental control over the body: there must be
some psychokinetic control over the external world as well, somehow
directing the force of the blow or the heat of the substance away from
their bodies. The resistance to flames may have been a form of
pyrokinesis, or psychic command of fire.
Saintly Wild Talents: Ascension, Bilocation, and the Rapture of the
Spirit
There are many feats in the saints' repertoire that have
flowery sounding names, but are recognizable to any knowledgable
paranormalist as something else. Saints like Joseph of Cuppertino often
were 'lifted into the sky by angels,' which was called 'ascension -'
something we might today call levitation. Though we are not certain how
psychics are able to negate the influence of gravity on themselves,
levitation was certainly an observed occurence among both Western mediums
and Eastern psychics.[7]
The phenomenon known as 'bilocation'- being seen in two places at one
time- might be an instance of what is known in occult terms as projection
of the "etheric double" or the seeing of the "doppleganger" or
"vardogr"('spiritual forerunner'). Those cases where the double was seen
by only one other person might be a 'telepathic projection' instead.
Those instances of travelling outside the body which were called
"rapture" might today be identified as 'astral projection' or an OBE
(Out-of-Body Experience) or NDE (Near-Death Experience.)
We might begin to note a trend here. Many saintly miracles
appear to be analogous to 'miraculous' events manifested by very
non-saintly psychics. The difference between the psychics and their
predecessors is that the former do consider themselves as being the
source of the manifested phenomena, rather than just their transmitter.
That does not mean that such occurences are still not associated with
external forces: the 19th century mediums insisted the 'spirits' caused
all their associated phenomena ('materialization', table rappings, etc.)
whereras New Agers today might attribute them to some unknown 'higher
consciousness' which is not their own mind or is a hidden level of their
mind. From the Fortean perspective, it is important to understand that
these 'wild talents' are associated with certain individuals ,
regardless of whether we can truly consider them the 'agency' behind them
or not. The saints and psychics might simply be 'magnets' for these
occurences, not their originators...
Postmortem Miracles: Incorruptibility, the Liquefaction of the Blood,
and the Odor of Sancticity
Unless we consider the survival of consciousness beyond death,
we certainly cannot attempt to identify the saints themselves as
originators of these phenomena which take place after their death. In
many cases, it is these postmortem phenomena that often result in the
recognition of and canonization of saints. The most familiar cases
involve 'saintly incorruption,' where it is noted that the body of the
dead saint does not rot, decay, or suffer corruption, regardless of the
state of its burial. Somethimes there is an associated 'odor of
sancticity' - a sickly sweet smell that emanates from the corpse rather
than the rotting smell that normally accompanies the dead[8.]
These occurences are often seized upon by moralizers as symbolizing the
triumph of faith over death. But there is another mysterious postmortem
miracle that points to another possibility.
Annually, the encrusted blood of Saint Januarius in Italy
liquefies on the anniversary of the saints' death. The vial where it it
contained is hermetically sealed, yet each year it changes from a hard,
crusty brown material, into red, liquid blood, as it is displayed before
the anxious believers. Traditionally, those occasions where it has not
done so have been said to be inauspicious years for the local village.
The blood, which quite 'miraculously' becomes liquid once more,
nonetheless seems to return to its solid state shortly thereafter. The
transformation of the blood may be a result of the collective
psychokinetic efforts of the saints' devotees and believers. Many of the
saintly miracles that take place after the saints' death may be similar
PK effects that result from powerful collective belief.
Holy Objects: Weeping/Bleeding Icons, Mysterious Images, and Relics
This category of phenomena is somewhat different in that it
involves transformations of inanimate objects. There are many cases of
statues of Christ or the Virgin or other saints shedding 'tears' or drops
of blood. Most of the time, the 'tears' are merely water, without the
salt content of human tears, though the blood often tends to contain
human hemoglobin. While the shedding of tears is fairly easy to hoax, the
bleeding is much more difficult. Other unusual 'miracles' often involve
the appearance of images of Christ or other figures in walls, clouds,
road signs, tortillas, and so forth. Many Forteans have noted the
similarity of these occurences to the 'simulacra' found in Nature - faces
and animal profiles in rocks, trees, and other formations, plus
connections of these spontaneous images to other images of a more durable
nature, such as the figure on the Shroud of Turin[9] or the
so-called 'Veronica' napkins. D. Scott Rogo has argued that many of these
transformations may be exerted by collective psychokinesis.
Most interesting in this category are the properties of
saints' relics. Such relics are often fragments of their body (locks of
hair, bones, nails, skulls, etc.) and are said to partake of the
'blessedness' of the saint. But often they are objects associated with
their person, such as clothes, hats, jewelry, weapons[10], or
grooming items. These items would in turn often be the agents of
miraculous healings, good fortune, or protection from evil sorcery. The
traditional Islamic explanation for the properties of these items is that
they absorb the baraka or grace of the saint and help to transfer
them to other persons[11.] If we posit the existence of a putative
bioenergy or 'life force' which may absorb thought impressions, it is
certainly possible that artefacts might accumulate that energy, like a
Reichian orgone box.
Heeding the Call: Glossolalia, Prophecy, and Preaching
The term 'prophecy' is taken today to mean a general knowledge
of the future, though in religious terms it is often associated with
'apocalypse,' the granting of knowledge of the Divine plan. St. Malachy,
Joachim of Flora, and other saints often told elaborate prophecies
concerning the future of the Church. Prophecy is said to be a universal
religious phenomenon, but its particular ethical function (as a warning
to change ones' ways) is perhaps most developed in apocalyptic,
eschatological religions. Parapsychologists approach the faculty of
precognition as a natural ability of the mind to transcend the
limitations of temporality, not a gift or revelation from some Divine
source. It is possible that consciousness can transcend simple linear
time, and we could argue that some prophets merely had developed
precognitive faculties, though they may also have been in contact with
entities with similar abilities...
One of the most common "gifts of the Holy Spirit" claimed by
saints was the "speaking in tongues" said to be made possible for the
apostles by the agency of the Spirit at Pentecost. One traditional
interpretation of the glossolalia was that the apostles were
enabled to understand the languages of all nations. The modern
charismatic religious movements claim it to be the ability to speak in a
more spiritual, transcendental way- the 'angelic' language that preceded
the Tower of Babel. This understanding of glossolalia is modern, and the
phenomenon of its occurence in modern pentecostal churches does not have
historical antecedent, unlike other phenomena discussed so far. To most
hearers, glossolalia is simply babble, but others claim it is miraculous
because they feel "filled with the Spirit" when engaging in it. Some
psychologists have noted attributes that suggest that its production may
well involve a genuine ASC (altered state of consciousness) or trance
that might have additional effects on the minds of other hearers- perhaps
their sibilant speaking is at a specific frequency, much like the chants
or drummings of 'primitive' societies[12.]
Visionary Experiences: The Blessed Virgin Mary and Others
Perhaps the most Fortean of Christian miracles have been the
numerous sightings and visions of saints throughout history. Due to the
strength of Catholic Marian devotion, perhaps the Virgin Mary has been
seen more than any other entity or apparition[13.] While such
visions have often been said to be mass hallucinations, the entities in
question have often communicated information to individuals and produced
other evidence of their reality. It is the appearance of these visions
that often result in the declaration of the holiness of a place or the
canonization of a saint. In some cases, these miraculous visions have
inspired holy warriors to great deeds (such as seeing St. James the
Moor-Slayer in the sky) or have inspired other individuals (such as Joan
of Arc.) The question we must ask in all fairness is, is the entity
really who it claims to be, or is it an entity that is assuming a
form consonant to the expectations and desires of those who see it. Many
paranormalists investigating sightings of the BVM have leaned to this
interpretation.
For example, when the BVM has appeared, it has almost always
been of the ethnicity of the region, worn dress of the period, and spoken
in a language known to those present[14.] In many cases, 'it'
never identifies itself as Mary at first, though others may identify it
as such. When the BVM has given messages to the people, they have often
been of general themes pertaining to salvation, the End Times, etc. But
in many cases 'she' has also spoken of very timely political and social
changes with considerable familiarity. There are some cases of BVM
appearances that have many "UFOlike" features including changes in shape,
size, and form. When the Virgin was seen at Fatima, the sun spun in the
sky, and some claim to have seen a sphere in the sky with men climbing
outside.
True Miracles: The Raising of the Dead, the Feeding of the
Multitudes, and Translation to Heaven
This last event category includes occurences that are truly
'miraculous.' Not only are they impossible to describe in any normal
framework; we cannot even come up with a suitable parapsychological or
paranormal framework in which to place them. They are violations of the
laws of physics that are so severe as to almost deny explanation. Cases
of saints raising the dead are a case in point. While some of these cases
may be quite normal instances of rescusitation or revival of unconscious
persons, they often involve the 'raising' of people quite long dead. It
is impossible to come up with mechanisms for this phenomenon, if it ever
actually took place, unless one is prepared to consider the hypothesis of
'souls,' a concept that parapsychology has at least recently tried to
move away from in distancing itself from religion.
Similarly, with the feeding of the multitudes by mutliplying
bread, fishes, cheese, or other foodstuffs. Multiplication of substance
is a simple violation of conservation of matter, mass, and energy; or in
layman's terms the rule that 'there is no free lunch' or 'you can't get
something or nothing.' The case of saints being 'translated' to heaven
into a fiery chariot is equally myserious, although it may simply be a
case of a theological overlay on a very banal instance of Fortean
teleportation. Both of these events are so mysterious as to defy both
so-called 'rational' and 'Fortean' explanations. With other miracles, I
might be accused of substituting one unknown - the paranormal - for
another unknown - miracles; but with these I don't even have an inkling
of what unknown lies behind them. This makes me more likely to feel that
they never took place or involved hoaxes, or even consider the
possibility of the external intervention hypothesis.
The External Intervention Hypothesis
The commonest external intervention theories throughout history
have always pointed to G-d Himself as the source of miracles. However, it
was always the case that medieval theologians saw an alternative
possibility, namely, that His Adversary, the Devil, might be the agent of
unusual phenomena. In our modern, empirical age, we tend to dismiss the
theological hypothesis, not because it is necessarily false in all cases,
but it is by necessity untestable and unprovable, except by arguments by
analogy. So, while most parapsychologists have pointed to the very real
minds of the saints themselves or their followers as the generators of
these phenomena, some Forteans have considered other external agencies.
Some have looked at the possibility of 'ghosts' or the 'Dead' or those in
the 'spiritual world' as being the agents. But a whole cottage industry
has grown around looking at aliens from other planets as being the agents
behind miracles[15.] Since any advanced technology is
indistinguisable from magic, or miracles, claim these paranormalists, we
are looking at advanced technologies at work. A spaceship destroyed Sodom
with an atomic blast, lifted Jesus into the clouds, and projected the
images of the BVM.
As an advocate of the ultraterrestrial hypothesis, I
suggest another possibility. We may very well share this planet with
other forms of life which do not exist in the same way that we do. These
forms of life are disincarnate ('spiritual' only in the sense that they
do not appear to have a fixed physical or material form) and may not even
share the same spacetime framework with us. Though they have frequently
been identified as angels, ghosts, aliens, spirits, devils, jinns,
faeries, or devas in various religious or belief-system frameworks, the
fact is that we probably do not know anything about these beings. Indeed,
they may be entirely reflective, in the sense that they cannot be
perceptible to us in any way that is not merely a reflection of our
beliefs. This is why Buddhists meet the Buddha, and Catholics meet Mary,
and Unarius people meet the Ashtar Command, rather than the other way
around. We further do not know the capabilities of these beings, though
it does seem that they seem to be able to manipulate space and time in
ways that we cannot. Hence it is possible that in some - or even all -
cases they may be the agency behind miracles. As to their motivation in
staging 'miracles,' it may be for the purposes of manipulation of belief
or consciousness on a grand scale - a control system of sorts. The
purposes of that system, if it exists, are beyond the scope of this
missive, though there are paranormalists who hint to its connection to
the evolution of humanity.
Steve Mizrach
- See Thurston, Herbert, The Physical Phenomena of
Mysticism; and Rogo, D. Scott, Miracles: A Parapsychological
Explanation.
- Villoldo, Alberto, and Krippner, Stanley, Healing
States.
- See Bord, Janet, and Bord, Colin, Mysterious Britain.
- See Biblical Archaeology Review, Vol. XVI, No. 24,
"Where was Christ crucified?"
- Green, Elmer, and Green, Alyce, Beyond Biofeedback.
- Gaddis, Vincent, Mysterious Fires and Lights.
- Richards, Steve, Levitation.
- Butler, E., The Lives of the Saints
- See Wilson, Ian, The Shroud of Turin
- Braber, Richard, The Penguin Guide to Medieval Europe
- Shah, Idries, The Sufis
- Harner, Michael, The Way of the Shaman
- Warner, Marina, Alone of all her Sex
- Ashe, Geoffrey, The Virgin
- Bergier, Jacques, Extraterrestrial Intervention in
History
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