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2013 A.D.: Do all but 1 U.S. President descend from King John of England?
2013 A.D.: Strange Signs In Our Troubled Times?
2012 A.D.: God Bless the Queen!
2010 A.D.: God Shows France His Power To Save!
2010 A.D.: Soldier Glenn Hockton Drops His Rosary
2009 A.D.: The Spirit Has Descended and China Burns
2008 A.D. : A Fake Purim Gift Explodes In Hands of Israeli Boy Ami Ortiz
2008 A.D. - The Evolution Bus
2007 A.D. - Famous Jewish Rabbi Decodes Messiah's Name
2007 A.D.: God Moderates An American Presidential Candidates Debate?
2003 A.D.: Creation Testifies: Bush Signs Law, Yahweh's Sun Rejoices?
2000 A.D.: A Bhuddist Monk Comes Back To Life After Three Days...Proclaiming Christ?
1999 A.D.: Israeli Savings Time
1999 A.D.: February 28 A Roaring Wind In A Baffin Island Church
1994 A.D.: Bill Gates Buys the Codex Leicester For $30.8 Million Dollars
1981 A.D.: Ronald Reagan Is Spared By God?
1973 A.D.: Zivka Force - An Israeli Tank Battles Syria
1973 A.D.: A Nation's Peril, A Father's Love, A Mother's Voice, and A President's Moment To Shine
1969 A.D.: Man Walks On God's Moon!
1960's: The Peace Child Concept Helps Missionaries Teach Christ
1954: A.A.Allen, An Evangelist, Has A Vision
1951 A.D. Ronnie Coyne's Plastic Eye / 1950 A.D. - Everyone's Late For Choir
1948 A.D. - Restored Israel
1945 A.D. Aug 16: Japan Surrenders (Numbers and Nagasaki)
1945 A.D. Aug 6th: Hiroshima Jesuits 'Passed Over' By Radiation!
1945 A.D. - King Cyrus Is Reborn As Harry Truman?
1944 A.D. - General Patton's Prayer
1942 A.D. - Malta: Catholics At the Mosta Dome Have A Blessed Day
Sept 18, 1941 - A Blood Red American Sky
1940 A.D. : God's Weather: The Evacuation of Dunkirk
1935 A.D.: God's Weather: Not Early. Not Late. Dust In Time!
1918 A.D.: The White Cavalry of Bethune
1916 A.D.: The Battle of Verdon and the Arc de' Triomphe!
1914 A.D.: The Christmas Truce of World War I
1904 A.D.: God's Great Welsh Revival
1889 A.D.: To Live and Die On Molokai
1878 A.D.: Nine Days of Prayer At Loretto Chapel
1876 A.D.: Ira Sankey Sings On Christmas Eve
1865 A.D.: God's Weather: Lincoln's 2nd Inaugeral Speech.
1864 A.D.: Andersonville Prison - God's Seen Enough
1862 A.D.: Abraham Lincoln Makes A Deal With God
1857 A.D.: The Great New York City Prayer Revival Begins
1857 A.D.: A Bird Rescues S.S. Central America Passengers
1856 A.D.: God Reveals A Secret Place In the Pennsylvania Woods
1850 A.D. - The early Mormon Church
1847 A.D.: Semmelweis is 'crucified' by his peers, as thousands of mothers die!
1835 A.D. : The First Attempted U.S. Presidential Assassination Fails
1828 A.D. - Ko Thay-Byu Is Chosen
1826 A.D. July 4th: Adams and Jefferson Depart
1820 A.D. - Missionaries Find That Circumstance, and A Little Known Prophesy, Has Prepared Hawaiians
1814 A.D.: God's Weather: The British Burn Washington D.C., and God Drenches the British!
1813 A.D.: A Living Stone Is Born In Scotland!
1803 A.D. : Australia Sentences Joseph Samuel To Hang For Murder
1790: God Sifts Through The Bounty's Mutineers
1789 A.D.: A Mutiny On the Bounty
1780 A.D.: No Greater Love: Hannah Handy Takes On 300 Raiders!
1778 A.D.: God's Ironies: Voltaire Dies
1774 A.D.: The American Continental Congress's First Prayed Commencement
1773 A.D.: No Greater Love: Wolraad Woltemade and Horse Love Their Neighbor!
1767 A.D. - Junipero Serra Helps Found the California Missions
1755 A.D.: American Indians Claim They Battled A Bullet Proof White Man!
1746 A.D.: God Shields New England From French Naval Vengeance!
1742 A.D.: The "Ale Preacher" Is Chosen As Host
1732 A.D. - Moravian's Receive the Holy Spirit and Take To the Field
1694 A.D.: Paul of the Cross Begins His Amazing Walk On Earth!
1630 A.D.: Giuseppe (Joseph) of Cupertino Flies Before Large Crowds...Repeatedly!
1620 A.D. - The Pilgrims Land On A Ravaged Coast
1588 A.D. - God's Weather: The Spanish Armada Invades England
1569 A.D.: No Greater Love: Dirk Willems Loves His Enemy
1542 A.D.: Go Kansas! The First Martyr In the USA?
1528 A.D. - Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca
1509 A.D. - Signs the Aztecs Saw of Their Coming Destruction
1517 A.D.: 95 Theses and Acts 9:5?
1505 A.D. - The Luder's Boy, Martin, Wastes His Law School Education
1492 A.D.: God's Eerie Guidance of Christopher Columbus!
1415 A.D. - John Huss: A Cooked Goose Predicts An Uncookable Swan
1382 A.D. - John Wycliff Translates First English Bible
1280's A.D.: Marco Polo Discusses the Catching and Eating of Very Large Reptiles!!
1244 A.D.: Saracens Meet Their Match - the Prayer of Clare!
1226 A.D. - Francis of Assissi - First Stigmata Recipient - Dies
1195 A.D.: Portugal's Anthony of Paddua is Born!
1180 A.D.- The Waldensians Take To The Alps
1170 A.D.: Spain's Humble But Powerful Saint Dominic Guzman!
1054 A.D., July 4th: The Chinese Record A Guest Star! Rome Soon Declares Independence!
1040's A.D.: The Cavemen of the Ukraine
Approx. 1020 A.D.: Iceland's Bjorn Asbrandsson (the 4th Quetzalcoatle?)
1009 A.D. - Bruno of Querfurt's Happy Valentine
969 A.D.: The prophetic founding of Cairo?
968 A.D. - Viking King Olaf Trygvasson of Norway
Approx 960 A.D. - Danish King Harald Blue Tooth Sees and Believes
871 A.D. - England's King Alfred the Great / 563 A.D. - Columba Comes To Scotland
793 A.D.: The Gospel Returned By the Sea!
723 A.D. : The Thor's Oak Incident
707 A.D. - John Maron, The Maronites' Patriarch, Dies
679 A.D.: Enter in, these Holy bones!
Approx 620 A.D.: Bishop Mellitus of Canterbury Prays Out A Runaway Blaze
616 A.D. - Ethelbert Overcomes Wimbledon Loss With A Big Bertha Assist
550's A.D. - Petrock Meets Dinosaur
500's A.D. - Gwen of the British Celts
496 A.D.: The Baptism Ceremony of King Clovis the King of the Franks
496 A.D. - King Clovis Believes.....His Wife!
484 A.D. - No Tongue? No Problem! Arians Can't Silence Trinity Believers
440 A.D.?: An alleged description of Paul's vision of the 3rd heaven!
432 A.D. - St. Patrick (Maewn Succat) of Ireland
430 A.D.: Britons Battle Germanic Invaders With Only A Holy Shout...And Win!!
429 A.D.: Miracle Working Heresy Fighters Travel To England, According To Venerable Bede!
300's A.D.: 4th Century Algerian Bishop Augustine Recounts Miracles of His Time!
363 A.D. - Emperor Julian Perturbs God
351 A.D. - A Giant Cross of Light Appears Over Jerusalem
320 A.D.: The 40 Frozen Martyrs of Sebaste
320 A.D. - Georgian Iberians Led To Christ By Slave Girl
312 A.D. - Emperor Constantine of Rome and Constantinople
301 A.D. - Armenia: About As Amazing As True Stories Get
286 A.D. - The Thebian Legion Stands Firm
259 A.D. : Polyeuctus of the Thundering Legion
209 A.D.: Britain's First Known Martyr - St. Alban - Meets A Spectacular Death
192 A.D. - Haralambos Becomes 'The Man They Could Not Kill'
172 A.D. - The 'Thundering Legion' Incident
95 A.D.: the Apostle John Is Forced To Bathe In Boiling Oil In Rome!
90 A.D.: Josephus Tells the World Where They Are From
2013 A.D.: "This is going to change everything that we thought we knew about....."
80 A.D,: Monumental Knowledge
Apostle's Ends - A Tough Job With An Unbeatable Retirement Package
The Mary Mystery: Just Who Was Who?
71 A.D.: Roman General Titus Sees the Sabbatic River
70 A.D.: Aug 5th...There it burns!!! Again!!!
70 A.D. - The Bizarre Signs Jerusalem Saw Portending It's Destruction
68 A.D.: The Odd Call of the Watchmen On the Wall
66 A.D. - The Christians Flee the Wrath To Come
47 A.D.: Lazarus Becomes A Bishop?
44 A.D.: The First Martyred Apostle, Though Far From the First Martyr!!
39 A.D.?: Pontius Pilate Is Buried Where?
Approx 32 A.D. - Saul
30 A.D.: The Actual Physical Appearance of Jesus
The Apostles
Jesus Teaches More
Jesus Teaches on the Sabbath
Jesus Teaches the People
Why Is Jesus Called 'The Son of Man'?
26 A.D. - Deeds of Jesus Ministry Begin
5 B.C. - Jesus Comes As Man Child, Messiah, and Savior
approx 1 A.D.: John the Baptist and Jesus the Savior Live Together For Three Months
15 B.C. - Herodian Empire Learns To Fear God / 175 B.C. - Angels Publically Whip A King's Minister
160's B.C.: The Secret Sin of a Few Maccabee Soldiers Is Exposed by God
332 B.C - Alexander The Great Meets the God of Israel
530's B.C.: Daniel and the Dinosaur
535 B.C. - Persia Feels God's Hand and Releases the Jews To Rebuild
535 B.C. - The Empire of the Meads Learns God's Power
539 B.C. - Mighty Babylon Feels God's Hand - and Watches It Write
Approx. 600 B.C. - The Unknown God is Appeased
700's B.C.: 'Isaiah' Prefigures Protestant Bible's Structure
726 B.C. - God Battles For Jerusalem
Elisha
Mighty Assyria feels God's hand
980 BC: Solomon Speaks of the Very First Idols
1030 B.C. David Kills Goliath
approx 1100 B.C. - The Captured Ark: One of the Bible's Most Beautiful Stories
Samson: How Strong Can God Make A Man?
1200 B.C.'s : The Etruscans (Philistines?) Find Italy
1400's B.C. : I Will Be Honored
1400's B.C.: Joshua's Prophecy
1460's B.C. - Israelites Build the Tabernacle Per the Strange Design Specifications God Gives Them
The Parting of the Red Sea
ThePlagues: Egypt Gets KO'd In The 10th
Moses - The Humble Servant of God
Approx 1890 B.C..: The Mandrake Swap!!
Ishmael and Isaac
God Tests Abraham
Sodom and Gomorrah
Abraham and Sarah
Division of Language
Approx. 2200 B.C.: Cush, Nimrod, and Semiramis Reintroduce False Worship
Approx 2350 B.C.: The 'Great Birthday Present'!
Approx 2350 B.C.: The Great Flood
Approx. 3000 B.C.: One of the Earliest Prophecies About Jesus?
Approx 3900 B.C.: Creation
2012 A.D.: Lordy, Lordy, Look Who's 40!!
The Seed of Adam and the Egg of Eve
The Fly's Place
God's Numbers
2013 A.D.: A Deep Mystery Concerning Women!?!
2013 A.D.: Alzheimers incidence increasing in the USA
2013 A.D.: See how a traditional Jewish wedding ceremony acts out the events and promises of Christ
2013 A.D.: Jesus of Nazareth, A Light That Shines Into the Minds of Men!
2013 A.D.: God's Humor?: Our DNA chemicals
2009 A.D.: Name It and Claim It
2012 A.D.: Letting the Government Love Our Neighbor!
2012 A.D.: The Number 23 On A Biblical Note
2012 A.D.: A Land of Chariots and Idols
2012 A.D.: Do Clothes Make the Man? God May Be Saying 'Yes!'
2012 A.D.: The Deadly Deception of Wealth!!
2009 A.D.: The Butterfly
2009 A.D.: Gay Clergy?
2009 A.D.: June 1, The State of the Union
2020 A.D. : A Year To Look Out For?
2009 A.D.: The 'John, Then Jesus' Pattern
2012 A.D.: 6th Say Series: A Bride From The Side?
2012 A.D.: Don't Population Growth Rates Prove A Young Earth?
2009 A.D.: The Pro-Evil Christian Vote
2009 A.D.: Christian Pay-triots?
2008 A.D. : Consider Rummel's Law
2012 A.D.: Women's Healthcare...Let's Give Our Virgins Some Financial Oil For Their Lamps!
2010 A.D.: A Bear In The Bedroom
2013 A.D.: Evolution Theory Cannot Begin To Survive Scientific Method of Investigation!
2013 A.D.: The U.S. flag and God's promise to Abraham?
2010 A.D.: The Two State Solution
2012 A.D.: The 30th Olympic Games....Not So Lucky Of A Number In The Year 2012 A.D.!
2010 A.D.: A Platform Comparison
2010 A.D.: Global Take Over!. oops Warming! oops! Climate Disruption! There, that might sell.
2010 A.D.: 777 Beats 666 Any Day
1300's B.C.: Gideon's 300 - Like Christians Praying?
1400's B.C.: The Cities of Refuge Are Established
2010: Car v.s. Cell
2010 A.D.: Hey Millionaires and Billionaires! Read This!!
2010 A.D.: Blood Defies All Notion of Accidental Developement
2012 A.D.: Could Voting Democrat In the USA Cost Your Salvation?
2012 A.D.: Jacob's dying son's last words to their children?
2011 A.D.: Real Hate Speech Is Bad, But........
2011 A.D.: Antioch....A Very Big Deal!
2012 A.D.: Green!?! What's it mean?
2012 A.D.: Cows, Barns, and Stolen Dust!
2012 A.D.: Our 'Soul Phones'
2011 A.D.: American Exceptionalism?
2012 A.D.: Name by name from you to Adam? No problem!!
2011 A.D.: Satan Is Losing His Grip On Teachers' Cooperation
2011 A.D.: The Kids' Artwork On the Refrigerator
2011 A.D.: Warning - In the Bible, Demons Scream A Lot When Evicted!!
2011 A.D.: The Unlikely Helper
2011 A.D.: President Obama Instructs Israel On Where Their Borders Ought To Lay? Yep!!
2012 A.D.: The 52est Biblical Passage?
2011 A.D.: A Cell NEEDS A Designer...Doesn't It?
2012 A.D.: A Bible Nugget: Vengeance v.s. Forgiveness - The Rule of 7's
2012 A.D.: Symbolically Important Animals Have Symbolically Important Numbers Of Chromosome Pairs!
2011 A.D.: A Small Bit of Bible Trivia To Ponder!
2011 A.D.: A Bible Nugget To Ponder
2012 A.D.: A Bible Nugget: The Son of Man is 'Bread' from heaven. And Manna is also!
2011 A.D.: Why Won't Democratic Candidates Appear In Impacting Commercials?
2011 A.D.: How Jesus Relates To Actual Light!
2011 A.D.: God Creates the First Marriage!
2011 A.D.: California Christians Will Now Pay For 'Homosexual Appreciation' Curriculum In Schools
2011 A.D.: The Financial Duping Of Our Elderly By Our Government
2011 A.D.: So,....you say you want to go back for Pharoah food?
2011 A.D.: A Truly Intrigueing Pattern!
2011 A.D.: Jesus' Relationship To God...Scripture That Every Christian Should Know?
2011 A.D.: Hey Chemists! The Periodic Table and the Lord?
2011 A.D.: The Church's Greatest Present Day Failure?
2012 A.D.: There are multiple 'Cities of the Seven Hills'!
2012 A.D.: Bible - a word that speaks of it's meaning?
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Faith, Hearing, and the Human Ear
2012 A.D.: 6th Day Series: The Dove of the Holy Spirit In the Human Ear?
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: The Face of Man - Does It Display Christ Crucified?
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Human Teeth 2
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Extra Faces On Our Skull?
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Brain Scan Images
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Brain and Reproductive Images
2010 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Did God Make the Head of Man To Reflect His Throne Area?
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Correlating Numbers In the Head of Man and the Throne Room of God
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: A Way To See Three Crosses On the Face
2010 A.D.: 6th Day Series: 24 Elders Before the Throne
2012 A.D.: 6th Day Series: The Elements of Communion Built Into Our Countenances?
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: The Figure On the Bottom of the Brain
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: The Human Skull
2010 A.D.: 6th Day Series: The Crown-Like Larynx Cartilage!
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Jesus, Our Breastplate of Righteousness
2010 A.D.: 6th Day Series: The Wicked Human Heart
2010 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Imprinting the Lord's Image Upon Man
2011 A.D.: Children Are Being Kidnapped For Their Blood?
2010 A.D.: 6th Day Series: The Lord's Plan In the Design of Our Ribs?
2010 A.D.: 6th Day Series: The Lord's Plan and Our Ribs
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: The Tree of Life Depicted Inside of Us?
2010 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Do Ribs Tell Part of God's Plan?
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: The 'Worshiped' Human Aorta?
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: The Roman Empire and the Human Pelvis?
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Praying Hands....Pretty Biblical
2012 A.D.: 6th Day Series: A Dove In the Human Ear?
2010 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Feet, Pretty Biblical
2012 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Lower Legs and End Times Witnesses?
2010 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Imprinting the Image of the Lord Upon Us
2010 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Arc and Final Sacrifice?
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Esther and Reproduction
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Milk, Mountains, Mothers and Brides
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Human Pro-Creation...A Sacred Re-Enactment?
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: The Large Intestine...Curiously Snake-Like!
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: The Human Skin!
2011 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Is Man's Body A Chronometer of Sorts?
2012 A.D.: 6th Day Series: The Horse and Rider of the Heart!
2012 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Liver, Gall Bladder, Pancreas, Spleen...commemorating the covenants?
2012 A.D.: 6th Day Series: the Thymus...Like a Seminary School!
2012 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Men and Women's Roles Towards God?
2012 A.D.: 6th Day Series: A Bride From The Side!
2012 A.D.: 6th Day Series: Design of Man, of the Americas, and of Heaven, Church, and Chosen.
2012 A.D.: 6th Day Series: The Number of Our Adult Bones....206!!
2012 A.D.: The Creation Testifies: The Cobra Shows the Signs?
2013 A.D.: The Creation Testifies: The Lion Shows the Signs?
2010 A.D.: GeoProphecy: The Shape of Africa - A Skull?
2012 A.D.: GeoProphecy?: Sulewasi and the Komodo Dragon, Vanuatu and the Jerusalem Law!
2012 A.D.: GeoProphecy?: Does Cyprus point at Antioch?
2012 A.D.: GeoProphecy?: Is Michigan State the TURTLE and the HARE?
2013 A.D.: GeoProphecy?: Lake Huron and the Wolverine?
2012 A.D.: GeoProphecy?: Denmark and the Snapping Dragon!
2013 A.D.: GeoProphecy?: Is the Jutland Peninsula Like A Kneeling Praying Knight?
2012 A.D.: GeoProphecy? Is Israel Shaped Like An Ancient Ceremonial Knife?
2012 A.D.: GeoProphecy? Is Africa A Staring Skull?
2012 A.D.: GeoProphecy?: Spiritual Battleground Indonesia?
2012 A.D.: GeoProphecy?: Do the Americas Resemble An Aztec Legend?
2012 A.D.: GeoProphecy?: Is China Shaped Like A Chicken?
2012 A.D.: GeoProphecy?: Is Long Island New York Shaped Like A Fish?
2012 A.D.: GeoProphecy?: Does the Delmarva Peninsula Point?
2012 A.D.: GeoProphecy?: The UK...A Dragon Protects A Parrot?
2012A.D.: GeoProphecy?: The Russian Bear?
2012 A.D.: GeoProphecy?: Every U.S. Capitol Is In Line With At Least Two Others? Every one??
2013 A.D.: GeoProphecy?: Canada Lakes' Fitting Shapes!
7 Pillars of Wisdom?: First Pillar: The Book of Job
7 Pillars of Wisdom?: Third Pillar: The Book of Proverbs
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4th Century A.D.: North African Bishop Augustine of Hippo Recounts Miracles Known To Him PDF Print E-mail
Written by Dan Curry   
Tuesday, 24 April 2012

African Bishop Augustine Recounts Christian Miracles Known To Him From His Era

   It is a great thing to hear the accounts of wonderous miracles done through Jesus and by Jesus' followers as told by early Christian notables that lived only shorly after the Apostles.  They confirm that miracles continued after Jesus' time.  They give witness that many great miracles continued after the 12 Apostles had died.  Such attestations by many such reputable men and women from the centuries assist in making a clear and relatively bullet proof case that miracles have continually been seen around and through Christians in every decade of every century, up to and including our own.  The Holy Father, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit have never stopped working among sinful mankind, through Christians.  It is the startling heritage from the Creator that Christians have undeservedly been granted....we are surrounded by miracles, large and small, whenever and wherever we live life as Christ taught us that we should.  We Christians should take note of that! 

  Below are excerpts from the writing called 'the City of God', Book 22, Chapter 8.  It was written by Augustine of Hippo, a church bishop (now considered a Church Father) from an area of northern Africa, today in Algeria, in the 4th century.  Below is a purported likeness of Augustine of Hippo: 

   A Picture of Augustine of Hippo

 You can read the entire book online at several different sites, if you wish.  I'll just post Book 22, Chapter 8, but you might find it enjoyable and rewarding to read other parts of Augustine's work, "The City of God". 

From Augustine's City of God, Book 22, Chapter 8:

 "Why, they say, are those miracles, which you affirm were wrought formerly, wrought no longer? I might, indeed, reply that miracles were necessary before the world believed, in order that it might believe. And whoever now-a-days demands to see prodigies that he may believe, is himself a great prodigy, because he does not believe, though the whole world does. But they make these objections for the sole purpose of insinuating that even those former miracles were never wrought. How, then, is it that everywhere Christ is celebrated with such firm belief in His resurrection and ascension? How is it that in enlightened times, in which every impossibility is rejected, the world has, without any miracles, believed things marvellously incredible? Or will they say that these things were credible, and therefore were credited? Why then do they themselves not believe? Our argument, therefore, is a summary one—either incredible things which were not witnessed have caused the world to believe other incredible things which both occurred and were witnessed, or this matter was so credible that it needed no miracles in proof of it, and therefore convicts these unbelievers of unpardonable scepticism. This I might say for the sake of refuting these most frivolous objectors. But we cannot deny that many miracles were wrought to confirm that one grand and health-giving miracle of Christ’s ascension to heaven with the flesh in which He rose. For these most trustworthy books of ours contain in one narrative both the miracles that were wrought and the creed which they were wrought to confirm. The miracles were published that they might produce faith, and the faith which they produced brought them into greater prominence. For they are read in congregations that they may be believed, and yet they would not be so read unless they were believed. For even now miracles are wrought in the name of Christ, whether by His sacraments or by the prayers or relics of His saints; but they are not so brilliant and conspicuous as to cause them to be published with such glory as accompanied the former miracles. For the canon of the sacred writings, which behoved to be closed,[1] causes those to be everywhere recited, and to sink into the memory of all the congregations; but these modern miracles are scarcely known even to the whole population in the midst of which they are wrought, and at the best are confined to one spot. For frequently they are known only to a very few persons, while all the rest are ignorant of them, especially if the state is a large one; and when they are reported to other persons in other localities, there is no sufficient authority to give them prompt and unwavering credence, although they are reported to the faithful by the faithful.

The miracle which was wrought at Milan when I was there, and by which a blind man was restored to sight, could come to the knowledge of many; for not only is the city a large one, but also the emperor was there at the time, and the occurrence was witnessed by an immense concourse of people that had gathered to the bodies of the martyrs Protasius and Gervasius, which had long lain concealed and unknown, but were now made known to the bishop Ambrose in a dream, and discovered by him. By virtue of these remains the darkness of that blind man was scattered, and he saw the light of day.[2]

But who but a very small number are aware of the cure which was wrought upon Innocentius, ex-advocate of the deputy prefecture, a cure wrought at Carthage, in my presence, and under my own eyes? For when I and my brother Alypius,[3] who were not yet clergymen,[4] though already servants of God, came from abroad, this man received us, and made us live with him, for he and all his household were devotedly pious. He was being treated by medical men for fistulæ, of which he had a large number intricately seated in the rectum. He had already undergone an operation, and the surgeons were using every means at their command for his relief. In that operation he had suffered long-continued and acute pain; yet, among the many folds of the gut, one had escaped the operators so entirely, that, though they ought to have laid it open with the knife, they never touched it. And thus, though all those that had been opened were cured, this one remained as it was, and frustrated all their labor. The patient, having his suspicions awakened by the delay thus occasioned, and fearing greatly a second operation, which another medical man—one of his own domestics—had told him he must undergo, though this man had not even been allowed to witness the first operation, and had been banished from the house, and with difficulty allowed to come back to his enraged master’s presence,—the patient, I say, broke out to the surgeons, saying, “Are you going to cut me again? Are you, after all, to fulfill the prediction of that man whom you would not allow even to be present?” The surgeons laughed at the unskillful doctor, and soothed their patient’s fears with fair words and promises. So several days passed, and yet nothing they tried did him good. Still they persisted in promising that they would cure that fistula by drugs, without the knife. They called in also another old practitioner of great repute in that department, Ammonius (for he was still alive at that time); and he, after examining the part, promised the same result as themselves from their care and skill. On this great authority, the patient became confident, and, as if already well, vented his good spirits in facetious remarks at the expense of his domestic physician, who had predicted a second operation. To make a long story short, after a number of days had thus uselessly elapsed, the surgeons, wearied and confused, had at last to confess that he could only be cured by the knife. Agitated with excessive fear, he was terrified, and grew pale with dread; and when he collected himself and was able to speak, he ordered them to go away and never to return. Worn out with weeping, and driven by necessity, it occurred to him to call in an Alexandrian, who was at that time esteemed a wonderfully skillful operator, that he might perform the operation his rage would not suffer them to do. But when he had come, and examined with a professional eye the traces of their careful work, he acted the part of a good man, and persuaded his patient to allow those same hands the satisfaction of finishing his cure which had begun it with a skill that excited his admiration, adding that there was no doubt his only hope of a cure was by an operation, but that it was thoroughly inconsistent with his nature to win the credit of the cure by doing the little that remained to be done, and rob of their reward men whose consummate skill, care, and diligence he could not but admire when be saw the traces of their work. They were therefore again received to favor; and it was agreed that, in the presence of the Alexandrian, they should operate on the fistula, which, by the consent of all, could now only be cured by the knife. The operation was deferred till the following day. But when they had left, there arose in the house such a wailing, in sympathy with the excessive despondency of the master, that it seemed to us like the mourning at a funeral, and we could scarcely repress it. Holy men were in the habit of visiting him daily; Saturninus of blessed memory, at that time bishop of Uzali, and the presbyter Gelosus, and the deacons of the church of Carthage; and among these was the bishop Aurelius, who alone of them all survives,—a man to be named by us with due reverence,—and with him I have often spoken of this affair, as we conversed together about the wonderful works of God, and I have found that he distinctly remembers what I am now relating. When these persons visited him that evening according to their custom, he besought them, with pitiable tears, that they would do him the honor of being present next day at what he judged his funeral rather than his suffering. For such was the terror his former pains had produced, that he made no doubt he would die in the hands of the surgeons. They comforted him, and exhorted him to put his trust in God, and nerve his will like a man. Then we went to prayer; but while we, in the usual way, were kneeling and bending to the ground, he cast himself down, as if some one were hurling him violently to the earth, and began to pray; but in what a manner, with what earnestness and emotion, with what a flood of tears, with what groans and sobs, that shook his whole body, and almost prevented him speaking, who can describe! Whether the others prayed, and had not their attention wholly diverted by this conduct, I do not know. For myself, I could not pray at all. This only I briefly said in my heart: “O Lord, what prayers of Thy people dost Thou hear if Thou hearest not these?” For it seemed to me that nothing could be added to this prayer, unless he expired in praying. We rose from our knees, and, receiving the blessing of the bishop, departed, the patient beseeching his visitors to be present next morning, they exhorting him to keep up his heart. The dreaded day dawned. The servants of God were present, as they had promised to be; the surgeons arrived; all that the circumstances required was ready; the frightful instruments are produced; all look on in wonder and suspense. While those who have most influence with the patient are cheering his fainting spirit, his limbs are arranged on the couch so as to suit the hand of the operator; the knots of the bandages are untied; the part is bared; the surgeon examines it, and, with knife in hand, eagerly looks for the sinus that is to be cut. He searches for it with his eyes; he feels for it with his finger; he applies every kind of scrutiny: he finds a perfectly firm cicatrix! No words of mine can describe the joy, and praise, and thanksgiving to the merciful and almighty God which was poured from the lips of all, with tears of gladness. Let the scene be imagined rather than described!

In the same city of Carthage lived Innocentia, a very devout woman of the highest rank in the state. She had cancer in one of her breasts, a disease which, as physicians say, is incurable. Ordinarily, therefore, they either amputate, and so separate from the body the member on which the disease has seized, or, that the patient’s life may be prolonged a little, though death is inevitable even if somewhat delayed, they abandon all remedies, following, as they say, the advice of Hippocrates. This the lady we speak of had been advised to by a skillful physician, who was intimate with her family; and she betook herself to God alone by prayer. On the approach of Easter, she was instructed in a dream to wait for the first woman that came out from the baptistery[5] after being baptized, and to ask her to make the sign of Christ upon her sore. She did so, and was immediately cured. The physician who had advised her to apply no remedy if she wished to live a little longer, when he had examined her after this, and found that she who, on his former examination, was afflicted with that disease was now perfectly cured, eagerly asked her what remedy she had used, anxious, as we may well believe, to discover the drug which should defeat the decision of Hippocrates. But when she told him what had happened, he is said to have replied, with religious politeness, though with a contemptuous tone, and an expression which made her fear he would utter some blasphemy against Christ, “I thought you would make some great discovery to me.” She, shuddering at his indifference, quickly replied, “What great thing was it for Christ to heal a cancer, who raised one who had been four days dead?” When, therefore, I had heard this, I was extremely indignant that so great a miracle wrought in that well-known city, and on a person who was certainly not obscure, should not be divulged, and I considered that she should be spoken to, if not reprimanded on this score. And when she replied to me that she had not kept silence on the subject, I asked the women with whom she was best acquainted whether they had ever heard of this before. They told me they knew nothing of it. “See,” I said, “what your not keeping silence amounts to, since not even those who are so familiar with you know of it.” And as I had only briefly heard the story, I made her tell how the whole thing happened, from beginning to end, while the other women listened in great astonishment, and glorified God.

A gouty doctor of the same city, when he had given in his name for baptism, and had been prohibited the day before his baptism from being baptized that year, by black woolly-haired boys who appeared to him in his dreams, and whom he understood to be devils, and when, though they trod on his feet, and inflicted the acutest pain he had ever yet experienced, he refused to obey them, but overcame them, and would not defer being washed in the laver of regeneration, was relieved in the very act of baptism, not only of the extraordinary pain he was tortured with, but also of the disease itself, so that, though he lived a long time afterwards, he never suffered from gout; and yet who knows of this miracle? We, however, do know it, and so, too, do the small number of brethren who were in the neighborhood, and to whose ears it might come.

An old comedian of Curubis[6] was cured at baptism not only of paralysis, but also of hernia, and, being delivered from both afflictions, came up out of the font of regeneration as if he had had nothing wrong with his body. Who outside of Curubis knows of this, or who but a very few who might hear it elsewhere? But we, when we heard of it, made the man come to Carthage, by order of the holy bishop Aurelius, although we had already ascertained the fact on the information of persons whose word we could not doubt.

Hesperius, of a tribunitian family, and a neighbor of our own,[7] has a farm called Zubedi in the Fussalian district;[8] and, finding that his family, his cattle, and his servants were suffering from the malice of evil spirits, he asked our presbyters, during my absence, that one of them would go with him and banish the spirits by his prayers. One went, offered there the sacrifice of the body of Christ, praying with all his might that that vexation might cease. It did cease forthwith, through God’s mercy. Now he had received from a friend of his own some holy earth brought from Jerusalem, where Christ, having been buried, rose again the third day. This earth he had hung up in his bedroom to preserve himself from harm. But when his house was purged of that demoniacal invasion, he began to consider what should be done with the earth; for his reverence for it made him unwilling to have it any longer in his bedroom. It so happened that I and Maximinus bishop of Synita, and then my colleague, were in the neighborhood. Hesperius asked us to visit him, and we did so. When he had related all the circumstances, he begged that the earth might be buried somewhere, and that the spot should be made a place of prayer where Christians might assemble for the worship of God. We made no objection: it was done as he desired. There was in that neighborhood a young countryman who was paralytic, who, when he heard of this, begged his parents to take him without delay to that holy place. When he had been brought there, he prayed, and forthwith went away on his own feet perfectly cured.

There is a country-seat called Victoriana, less than thirty miles from Hippo-regius. At it there is a monument to the Milanese martyrs, Protasius and Gervasius. Thither a young man was carried, who, when he was watering his horse one summer day at noon in a pool of a river, had been taken possession of by a devil. As he lay at the monument, near death, or even quite like a dead person, the lady of the manor, with her maids and religious attendants, entered the place for evening prayer and praise, as her custom was, and they began to sing hymns. At this sound the young man, as if electrified, was thoroughly aroused, and with frightful screaming seized the altar, and held it as if he did not dare or were not able to let it go, and as if he were fixed or tied to it; and the devil in him, with loud lamentation, besought that he might be spared, and confessed where and when and how he took possession of the youth. At last, declaring that he would go out of him, he named one by one the parts of his body which he threatened to mutilate as he went out and with these words he departed from the man. But his eye, falling out on his cheek, hung by a slender vein as by a root, and the whole of the pupil which had been black became white. When this was witnessed by those present (others too had now gathered to his cries, and had all joined in prayer for him), although they were delighted that he had recovered his sanity of mind, yet, on the other hand, they were grieved about his eye, and said he should seek medical advice. But his sister’s husband, who had brought him there, said, “God, who has banished the devil, is able to restore his eye at the prayers of His saints.” Therewith he replaced the eye that was fallen out and hanging, and bound it in its place with his handkerchief as well as he could, and advised him not to loose the bandage for seven days. When he did so, he found it quite healthy. Others also were cured there, but of them it were tedious to speak.

I know that a young woman of Hippo was immediately dispossessed of a devil, on anointing herself with oil, mixed with the tears of the prebsyter who had been praying for her. I know also that a bishop once prayed for a demoniac young man whom he never saw, and that he was cured on the spot.

There was a fellow-townsman of ours at Hippo, Florentius, an old man, religious and poor, who supported himself as a tailor. Having lost his coat, and not having means to buy another, he prayed to the Twenty Martyrs,[9] who have a very celebrated memorial shrine in our town, begging in a distinct voice that he might be clothed. Some scoffing young men, who happened to be present, heard him, and followed him with their sarcasm as he went away, as if he had asked the martyrs for fifty pence to buy a coat. But he, walking on in silence, saw on the shore a great fish, gasping as if just cast up, and having secured it with the good-natured assistance of the youths, he sold it for curing to a cook of the name of Catosus, a good Christian man, telling him how he had come by it, and receiving for it three hundred pence, which he laid out in wool, that his wife might exercise her skill upon, and make into a coat for him. But, on cutting up the fish, the cook found a gold ring in its belly; and forthwith, moved with compassion, and influenced, too, by religious fear, gave it up to the man, saying, “See how the Twenty Martyrs have clothed you.”

When the bishop Projectus was bringing the relics of the most glorious martyr Stephen to the waters of Tibilis, a great concourse of people came to meet him at the shrine. There a blind woman entreated that she might be led to the bishop who was carrying the relics. He gave her the flowers he was carrying. She took them, applied them to her eyes, and forthwith saw. Those who were present were astounded, while she, with every expression of joy, preceded them, pursuing her way without further need of a guide.

Lucillus bishop of Sinita, in the neighborhood of the colonial town of Hippo, was carrying in procession some relics of the same martyr, which had been deposited in the castle of Sinita. A fistula under which he had long labored, and which his private physician was watching an opportunity to cut, was suddenly cured by the mere carrying of that sacred fardel,[10] —at least, afterwards there was no trace of it in his body.

Eucharius, a Spanish priest, residing at Calama, was for a long time a sufferer from stone. By the relics of the same martyr, which the bishop Possidius brought him, he was cured. Afterwards the same priest, sinking under another disease, was lying dead, and already they were binding his hands. By the succor of the same martyr he was raised to life, the priest’s cloak having been brought from the oratory and laid upon the corpse.

There was there an old nobleman named Martial, who had a great aversion to the Christian religion, but whose daughter was a Christian, while her husband had been baptized that same year. When he was ill, they besought him with tears and prayers to become a Christian, but he positively refused, and dismissed them from his presence in a storm of indignation. It occurred to the son-in-law to go to the oratory of St. Stephen, and there pray for him with all earnestness that God might give him a right mind, so that he should not delay believing in Christ. This he did with great groaning and tears, and the burning fervor of sincere piety; then, as he left the place, he took some of the flowers that were lying there, and, as it was already night, laid them by his father’s head, who so slept. And lo! before dawn, he cries out for some one to run for the bishop; but he happened at that time to be with me at Hippo. So when he had heard that he was from home, he asked the presbyters to come. They came. To the joy and amazement of all, he declared that he believed, and he was baptized. As long as he remained in life, these words were ever on his lips: “Christ, receive my spirit,” though he was not aware that these were the last words of the most blessed Stephen when he was stoned by the Jews. They were his last words also, for not long after he himself also gave up the ghost.

There, too, by the same martyr, two men, one a citizen, the other a stranger, were cured of gout; but while the citizen was absolutely cured, the stranger was only informed what he should apply when the pain returned; and when he followed this advice, the pain was at once relieved.

Audurus is the name of an estate, where there is a church that contains a memorial shrine of the martyr Stephen. It happened that, as a little boy was playing in the court, the oxen drawing a wagon went out of the track and crushed him with the wheel, so that immediately he seemed at his last gasp. His mother snatched him up, and laid him at the shrine, and not only did he revive, but also appeared uninjured.

A religious female, who lived at Caspalium, a neighboring estate, when she was so ill as to be despaired of, had her dress brought to this shrine, but before it was brought back she was gone. However, her parents wrapped her corpse in the dress, and, her breath returning, she became quite well.

At Hippo a Syrian called Bassus was praying at the relics of the same martyr for his daughter, who was dangerously ill. He too had brought her dress with him to the shrine. But as he prayed, behold, his servants ran from the house to tell him she was dead. His friends, however, intercepted them, and forbade them to tell him, lest he should bewail her in public. And when he had returned to his house, which was already ringing with the lamentations of his family, and had thrown on his daughter’s body the dress he was carrying, she was restored to life.

There, too, the son of a man, Irenæus, one of our tax-gatherers, took ill and died. And while his body was lying lifeless, and the last rites were being prepared, amidst the weeping and mourning of all, one of the friends who were consoling the father suggested that the body should be anointed with the oil of the same martyr. It was done, and he revived.

Likewise Eleusinus, a man of tribunitian rank among us, laid his infant son, who had died, on the shrine of the martyr, which is in the suburb where he lived, and, after prayer, which he poured out there with many tears, he took up his child alive.

What am I to do? I am so pressed by the promise of finishing this work, that I cannot record all the miracles I know; and doubtless several of our adherents, when they read what I have narrated, will regret that I have omitted so many which they, as well as I, certainly know. Even now I beg these persons to excuse me, and to consider how long it would take me to relate all those miracles, which the necessity of finishing the work I have undertaken forces me to omit. For were I to be silent of all others, and to record exclusively the miracles of healing which were wrought in the district of Calama and of Hippo by means of this martyr—I mean the most glorious Stephen—they would fill many volumes; and yet all even of these could not be collected, but only those of which narratives have been written for public recital. For when I saw, in our own times, frequent signs of the presence of divine powers similar to those which had been given of old, I desired that narratives might be written, judging that the multitude should not remain ignorant of these things. It is not yet two years since these relics were first brought to Hippo-regius, and though many of the miracles which have been wrought by it have not, as I have the most certain means of knowing, been recorded, those which have been published amount to almost seventy at the hour at which I write. But at Calama, where these relics have been for a longer time, and where more of the miracles were narrated for public information, there are incomparably more.

At Uzali, too, a colony near Utica, many signal miracles were, to my knowledge, wrought by the same martyr, whose relics had found a place there by direction of the bishop Evodius, long before we had them at Hippo. But there the custom of publishing narratives does not obtain, or, I should say, did not obtain, for possibly it may now have been begun. For, when I was there recently, a woman of rank, Petronia, had been miraculously cured of a serious illness of long standing, in which all medical appliances had failed, and, with the consent of the above-named bishop of the place, I exhorted her to publish an account of it that might be read to the people. She most promptly obeyed, and inserted in her narrative a circumstance which I cannot omit to mention, though I am compelled to hasten on to the subjects which this work requires me to treat. She said that she had been persuaded by a Jew to wear next her skin, under all her clothes, a hair girdle, and on this girdle a ring, which, instead of a gem, had a stone which had been found in the kidneys of an ox. Girt with this charm, she was making her way to the threshold of the holy martyr. But, after leaving Carthage, and when she had been lodging in her own demesne on the river Bagrada, and was now rising to continue her journey, she saw her ring lying before her feet. In great surprise she examined the hair girdle, and when she found it bound, as it had been, quite firmly with knots, she conjectured that the ring had been worn through and dropped off; but when she found that the ring was itself also perfectly whole, she presumed that by this great miracle she had received somehow a pledge of her cure, whereupon she untied the girdle, and cast it into the river, and the ring along with it. This is not credited by those who do not believe either that the Lord Jesus Christ came forth from His mother’s womb without destroying her virginity, and entered among His disciples when the doors were shut; but let them make strict inquiry into this miracle, and if they find it true, let them believe those others. The lady is of distinction, nobly born, married to a nobleman. She resides at Carthage. The city is distinguished, the person is distinguished, so that they who make inquiries cannot fail to find satisfaction. Certainly the martyr himself, by whose prayers she was healed, believed on the Son of her who remained a virgin; on Him who came in among the disciples when the doors were shut; in fine,—and to this tends all that we have been retailing,—on Him who ascended into heaven with the flesh in which He had risen; and it is because he laid down his life for this faith that such miracles were done by his means.

Even now, therefore, many miracles are wrought, the same God who wrought those we read of still performing them, by whom He will and as He will; but they are not as well known, nor are they beaten into the memory, like gravel, by frequent reading, so that they cannot fall out of mind. For even where, as is now done among ourselves, care is taken that the pamphlets of those who receive benefit be read publicly, yet those who are present hear the narrative but once, and many are absent; and so it comes to pass that even those who are present forget in a few days what they heard, and scarcely one of them can be found who will tell what he heard to one who he knows was not present.

One miracle was wrought among ourselves, which, though no greater than those I have mentioned, was yet so signal and conspicuous, that I suppose there is no inhabitant of Hippo who did not either see or hear of it, none who could possibly forget it. There were seven brothers and three sisters of a noble family of the Cappadocian Cæsarea, who were cursed by their mother, a new-made widow, on account of some wrong they had done her, and which she bitterly resented, and who were visited with so severe a punishment from Heaven, that all of them were seized with a hideous shaking in all their limbs. Unable, while presenting this loathsome appearance, to endure the eyes of their fellow-citizens, they wandered over almost the whole Roman world, each following his own direction. Two of them came to Hippo, a brother and a sister, Paulus and Palladia, already known in many other places by the fame of their wretched lot. Now it was about fifteen days before Easter when they came, and they came daily to church, and specially to the relics of the most glorious Stephen, praying that God might now be appeased, and restore their former health. There, and wherever they went, they attracted the attention of every one. Some who had seen them elsewhere, and knew the cause of their trembling, told others as occasion offered. Easter arrived, and on the Lord’s day, in the morning, when there was now a large crowd present, and the young man was holding the bars of the holy place where the relics were, and praying, suddenly he fell down, and lay precisely as if asleep, but not trembling as he was wont to do even in sleep. All present were astonished. Some were alarmed, some were moved with pity; and while some were for lifting him up, others prevented them, and said they should rather wait and see what would result. And behold! he rose up, and trembled no more, for he was healed, and stood quite well, scanning those who were scanning him. Who then refrained himself from praising God? The whole church was filled with the voices of those who were shouting and congratulating him. Then they came running to me, where I was sitting ready to come into the church. One after another they throng in, the last comer telling me as news what the first had told me already; and while I rejoiced and inwardly gave God thanks, the young man himself also enters, with a number of others, falls at my knees, is raised up to receive my kiss. We go in to the congregation: the church was full, and ringing with the shouts of joy, “Thanks to God! Praised be God!” every one joining and shouting on all sides, “I have healed the people,” and then with still louder voice shouting again. Silence being at last obtained, the customary lessons of the divine Scriptures were read. And when I came to my sermon, I made a few remarks suitable to the occasion and the happy and joyful feeling, not desiring them to listen to me, but rather to consider the eloquence of God in this divine work. The man dined with us, and gave us a careful account of his own, his mother’s, and his family’s calamity. Accordingly, on the following day, after delivering my sermon, I promised that next day I would read his narrative to the people.[11] And when I did so, the third day after Easter Sunday, I made the brother and sister both stand on the steps of the raised place from which I used to speak; and while they stood there their pamphlet was read.[12] The whole congregation, men and women alike, saw the one standing without any unnatural movement, the other trembling in all her limbs; so that those who had not before seen the man himself saw in his sister what the divine compassion had removed from him. In him they saw matter of congratulation, in her subject for prayer. Meanwhile, their pamphlet being finished, I instructed them to withdraw from the gaze of the people; and I had begun to discuss the whole matter somewhat more carefully, when lo! as I was proceeding, other voices are heard from the tomb of the martyr, shouting new congratulations. My audience turned round, and began to run to the tomb. The young woman, when she had come down from the steps where she had been standing, went to pray at the holy relics, and no sooner had she touched the bars than she, in the same way as her brother, collapsed, as if falling asleep, and rose up cured. While, then, we were asking what had happened, and what occasioned this noise of joy, they came into the basilica where we were, leading her from the martyr’s tomb in perfect health. Then, indeed, such a shout of wonder rose from men and women together, that the exclamations and the tears seemed like never to come to an end. She was led to the place where she had a little before stood trembling. They now rejoiced that she was like her brother, as before they had mourned that she remained unlike him; and as they had not yet uttered their prayers in her behalf, they perceived that their intention of doing so had been speedily heard. They shouted God’s praises without words, but with such a noise that our ears could scarcely bear it. What was there in the hearts of these exultant people but the faith of Christ, for which Stephen had shed his blood?

The End of chapter 8.  End of quoting City of God

  May God bless Augustine for preserving these miraculous events for future Christians to read of.  The Saint Stephen, whose relics had been brought to their area, was the first Christian martyr of all time, the Stephen who was stoned to death by angry Jews in the Book of Acts.  

  I don't know too much about Augustine's philosophies or views, and do not mean to recommend or disrecommend them, though I can tell you that he was and is highly regarded among the early Christian Church's notable writers and leaders.  I merely wanted to offer the miracles that he wrote about for consideration by the people of our current time.

  I personally feel a desire to avoid shrines, statues, etc.  To me it seems better to praise God and pray to God without a man-made article or statue being the point of visual focus while you pray.  But praying at shrines has been practiced widely in various denominations of Christianity, even a cross is a shrine of sorts, and Jesus has allowed miracles to be accomplished through this type of prayer at various times.  

  Stephen, allowed to be the first ever martyr, might well have a special place in God's family picture.  I personally have heard of more modern miracles being accomplished just through the prayer of gathered Christians.  But it's a matter for men to consider and choose their way as far as how they will beseech God to help them with a miracle, but a matter for God to be the judge of, since He has done great things for those calling on His name though they called out to Him in many differing manners.

   Perhaps a king of demons could produce the appearance of a Godly healing by ordering a subordinate demon to leave the body of an afflicted person.  But, when flesh is healed and restored as well?  That, I think, must certainly be from God, because if demons could create flesh, if they could restore flesh, then they could enter a human and make themselves immortal in the body that they had commandeered.  We do not see that occuring, and have never read of it from previous generations, and therefore since these relics of Stephen produced both miracles of restored wellness, and miracles of restored flesh - even an eye - we could logically deduce that a Holy Spirit of God was involved in the restoring of flesh at the very least.  Since I sincerely doubt that a Holy Spirit would dwell in the same saintly relics as dwelt evil spirits, I personally believe that God Almighty, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit worked these miracles for the faith of Christ's followers, and for their joy in Him.

  But everybody has their own opinions and sees with their own discernment.  I believe these miracles Augustine recorded are wholly real, through the power of belief in Jesus.  

   

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