There is a certain logic to your argument that sounds agreeable. But there is also a flaw in this reasoning. If people saw something beyond the laws of nature, they might be stunned at the moment, but then in order to process what they just witnessed, all manner of filters of the mind would kick in. It would have to in order to make sense of it. People would not be stunned into silence forever. They would have to try to explain and understand it - in ways that they could accept.Actually what I am saying is based in Baha'u'llah's Writing:
"Were the prophecies recorded in the Gospel to be literally fulfilled; were Jesus, Son of Mary, accompanied by angels, to descend from the visible heaven upon the clouds; who would dare to disbelieve, who would dare to reject the truth, and wax disdainful?
Nay, such consternation would immediately seize all the dwellers of the earth that no soul would feel able to utter a word, much less to reject or accept the truth. "
Book of Certitude
What's your understanding of this paragraph?
I think the last part of it make it clear:
"...such consternation would immediately seize all the dwellers of the earth that no soul would feel able to utter a word, much less to reject or accept the truth."
It means, if God was to perform miracles, strange things, such as showing angels then no one could even say a word, much less reject or accept the truth.
Someone would claim it was the fulfillment of their religion's prophecies. Others would claim it had a naturalistic explanation. Others would call it the devil. Others would call it a mass hallucination. And so on and so forth. So this argument that the reason you don't see miracles is because God doesn't want to take free will away is flawed. People rationalize away overwhelming evidence all the time! "January 6 was just a peaceful tourist visit", is but one example. "Evolution can't be true because the Bible says there earth was made is 6 days", is another.
If you were to remove this assumed premise that the lack of spectacular miracles is motivated by God not wanting to take away free will, which I've shown is a flawed argument, then the rest has some kernel of truth to it in this way:
Everything that exists is that miracle. From atoms to Everest. From particles to people. All of it is evidence of the Divine as it is all a miracle. The miracles are there in every nanosecond of every single day, and we either filter it out and see nothing but ordinary rocks and trees, or our eyes are opened and we see that brilliant miracle that is the entirety of creation and existence itself, around us, within us, through us, and from us to everything that is, as an active participant in this living miracle.
Some see it. And others don't. Others are looking for a sign from God, when the sign is right there the whole time. Others are wrapped up in their own worlds inside their minds and fail to see the Obvious in every moment. And the list goes on and on to as many reasons as there are people why we don't see it, and either deny it's possible, or keep looking for it in some "miracle" beyond what already is there in plain sight.
So it's not a matter of protecting free will. We are already exercising that within the heart of the living miracle right now. No need for something else we'd blind ourselves to in addition to this already.
Last edited: