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Pete Greig, October 11th, 2010
I recently heard a preacher say this: ‘If it’s possible, it’s not God’. He was talking about miracles and we all like miracles. It was a great sound bite too, and we all like sound-bites. Hey, we’re the sound-bite generation - we’ll believe anything that can be said in less than 140 characters. I mean if Mein Kampf was reissued in 140 characters, the Neo-Nazis could probably re-launch the Hitler Youth Movement by the middle of next week. (I’m not advocating this, just saying it, OK?)
So this well-meaning, gifted, likeable preacher said the thing about impossibility and we all grinned and nodded and muttered our hallelujahs and arty folk made notes in their Moleskine journals, while connected people with iPhones immediately tweeted his words out to half the world, who then no doubt happily nodded and muttered their hallelujahs and re-tweeted the slogan to the other half of the world: ‘If it’s possible,’ we all concurred, ‘it’s not God’. 32 characters. Couldn’t be better. Must be true.
But of course it isn’t true at all. In just 32 characters that preacher had effectively eliminated God from everything possible; everything explicable. I’m sure that wasn’t his heart or intent – he just wanted us to have faith for more miracles. But if we start believing slogans like this we will be left with a peripheral, shrink-wrapped deity, steadily retreating with every new scientific discovery.
Just this week clever scientists at the University of Arizona have worked out how to make malaria-proof mosquitoes. If these parasite-free pests can now be introduced into the wild, this discovery will save thousands of lives every year. When lives get saved like that, I see God at work. Also this week, ingenuous bionic legs have been fitted to a crippled man in New Zealand. When the lame walk, I see God at work. When a man (who may not even be a believer in God) writes a book that helps parents raise their kids better, I see a man doing God’s work. My own wife would probably be dead if it wasn’t for the ministrations of an atheist, Irish brain surgeon named Liam Gray. We thanked him with all our hearts. But every day I still thank God.
My favourite writers and thinkers are those that live with wonder because they blur the lines between possible and impossible, natural and supernatural, science and faith, good and God. St Francis of Assisi could be deeply moved to worship by the mere sight of familiar animals. G.K Chesterton talked about ‘the ecstasy of the ordinary’. Mother Teresa saw God in the dying. 'We may ignore, but we can't evade the presence of God,' wrote C.S. Lewis. 'The world is crowded with Him. He walks everywhere incognito.' The poet R.S. Thomas described God working mysteriously through clinical hospital apparatus. Such views are rooted in a Hebrew spirituality which grounds spiritual worship in music, food, community, the spending of money, hospitality and even a delicate little medical procedure involving a flint and a foreskin. You don’t get much earthier than that. Our faith is materialistic – to do with matter; to do with stuff you can touch and taste, things you can slap on a plate or on a microscope slide.
Before he started doing miracles Jesus learned and practiced a trade when he really should (according to some mindsets) have been out and about saving the world. Presumably, when he did eventually kick in with the miracle-working business he didn’t suddenly start being God at that point. And what about his first actual, bona fide, recorded miracle? Well, it involved turning something utterly ordinary into something else utterly ordinary. The process may have been scientifically inexplicable but the end-product was nothing more unusual than rather a large amount of decent wine at a party soon imbibed and processed by various livers. Initially everyone was impressed by the miracle itself. But ultimately they saw the deeper wonder – that he himself was ‘in’ the wine as well as the miracle. Three years later Jesus threw a feast and used the bread and the wine on the table to do something remarkable. To this day we believe that Christ imparted the energy of his supernatural presence into the sharing of these elements (some would say into the elements themselves), even though they scientifically-speaking remain bread and wine. On Good Friday the world was changed by the ultimate non-miracle: death on a cross. It turned out to be possible (and this is WEIRD) to nail the hands and feet of God to a plank. For created beings to kill their own Life-giver. This grim fact led some people to conclude that Jesus wasn’t God after all. He hadn’t overthrown the Romans. He hadn’t even healed himself. He hadn’t done the impossible, so he couldn’t possibly be God.
Einstein said that you can either live as if nothing in life is a miracle or as if everything is a miracle. When we become Christians and enter into the Jewish tradition of thought, something wonderful happens: our eyes are opened to see the whole of life as a wonderful impossibility. Not just some things. Everything. Life itself is the greatest miracle of all. Cynics may require signs from the heavens, but believers see them everywhere on earth too, and not just in those answered prayers which defy rational explanation. In fact, like a science-fiction fantasist suddenly swapping his paperbacks for a real, live girlfriend, we conclude that there is something on earth even greater than impossibility.
I’m told that the chances of the big bang creating the perfect conditions for the evolution of life by fluke are about 1 in 1 x 10 to the power of 40,000. That’s a lot of zeros. The whole of life turns out to be an impossibility, a miracle to which we have become accustomed. But when we remember the wonder of it all, something wonderful happens to the way we pray:
Of course God does miracles. We see them regularly when we pray. But he’s also intricately involved in the un-miracles of ordinary life too. It’s great news that He is God of the impossible, but he’s God of the possible too. This being so we would do well to participate in every aspect of life – not just the miracle-moments - humbly, reverently, inquisitively, prayerfully and with unquenchable gratitude.
Way more than 140 characters, I’m afraid.

Pete Greig is a founding champion of the 24-7 movement and Director of Prayer for Holy Trinity Brompton, in London. He and his family live in Guildford, England, where they are actively engaged with establishing a new missional (‘Boiler Room’) community. Pete’s books include 'Red Moon Rising', 'The Vision and The Vow' and 'God on Mute'.
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23rd Oct
Truly inspirational. I felt humbled before God to never moan or take anything forgranted. Indeed life is full of the miraculous each and every day and as God is always in the equation we should be in awe of Him always.
21st Oct
Brilliant piece, Pete.
Is it terrible that I twitter that C.S. Lewis quote?
;)
18th Oct
So totally agree with that about with God all things are possible. I always love reading or listening to you, Pete, because you can put so succinctly into words what I’ve been pondering
18th Oct
My life goal is to walk with people in love, discovering the tangible, transforming presence of God in daily life. Yesterday, God’s presence did the “possible” by equipping my husband to take over with two small grandchildren at the zoo while I was sidelined by a sudden illness. God was with us in the “possibility” of not rushing home but allowing the children to enjoy the time with their grandpa, and vice versa!
18th Oct
Great to remember God is there in ordinary everyday life as well as in church events and special times for prayer and crying out for a miracle.
I love wholesome (especially home-made) fresh bread and that always reminds me Jesus is the bread of life and we’re meant to feast on Him and not just the stuff our stomachs groan for!
One miracle that amazes me is how people discovered how to turn wheat into flour and into bread unless God came to show them!
18th Oct
Love this, Pete. Love it.
18th Oct
This is beautiful, thankyou.
It’s such a nice reminder; I have heard many (well meaning) sermons which push you to ‘believe for the impossible’ and strive for greatness…but since dealing with a severe chronic illness in my family this year, I have really been challenged to let go of the idea that if I don’t see huge miracles and achieve great things, then I have failed.
I have learnt to really value all the little things and realise it’s ok to just “do justly, love mercy, and walk humbly with your God”...
Each day truly is a miracle.
17th Oct
Really good stuff!
17th Oct
Thanks Pete. I am preaching today on the subject of miracles from Acts 3 and this was a timely comment.
14th Oct
THANK YOU for writing this….oh so helpful to keep things in perspectives. He is Emmanuel, God is with us. That will never change. When He is amidst us, we can expect nothing less than Him to show up in each experience we live. In the mundane and in the extraordinary. Thanks again!
14th Oct
Legend.. :)
14th Oct
Something I love about God is His interest in the ordinary as well as the extraordinary. It speaks to me about His character that He notices the unimportant details as well as the important big picture.
It gels with Jesus’ insistence that the last will be first, that the inappropriate people are worthwhile, that we must be as little children…
His ways are upside-down. It is the small, faithful lives of most of His people as well as the famous, noticeable lives of the few that achieve His work.
The possible was His idea in the first place. The impossible is done when necessary according to His purpose. The possible and the ordinary? That stuff is the point.
13th Oct
Thank you Pete. This is An inspired more than 140 words!
13th Oct
God of the gaps is a heresy. Good science deepens our understanding of creation and thus the Creator. 100 characters :)