Seung Ai Yang
Seung Ai Yang is an associate professor of sacred Scripture at St. Paul Seminary School of Divinity, the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minn. She wrote the entry on miracles for the Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible.
Seung Ai Yang is an associate professor of sacred Scripture at St. Paul Seminary School of Divinity, the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minn. She wrote the entry on miracles for the Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible.
Read the entry on miracles in the 1911 edition of The Catholic Encyclopedia. (The 1911 edition has since been superseded in some respects, but this entry is a good historical overview.)
Read the essay on miracles in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, which includes David Hume’s well-known argument against the likelihood of miracles and a discussion of the religious significance of miracles.
ChristusRex lists Marian apparitions in the United States.
Read a May 21, 2001, Christianity Today essay about how to identify a real miracle from God.
Read the transcript of a Feb. 23, 2010, article from NPR. It discusses the results of a survey from the Pew Forum on Religion that showed that almost 80 percent of Americans believe in miracles.
Read an April 24, 2000, Washington Post story that discusses a number of poll findings on miracles.
See a November 2007 Harris Poll that found that 79 percent of Americans believe in miracles.