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<< You mean they don't happen because you've never seen it happen? Religious people believe that they did happen, not that they do everyday. >>
Miracles like those metioned in the Bible never happened IMO because it defies everything the way stuff works. People get pregnant for a reason, not because some deity wished it upon her or however a Christian's god did it. Water does not turn into wine now does it? It doesn't today and it didn't back then. >>
Miracles by definition defy the way stuff works. And religious people believe that God created nature, nature runs according to his will. If his will is for something to go against nature (a miracle), then nature gotta back away for a few moments, because nature only is a creation of God. I don't know about the miracles you mention above, because I am not Christian, but the miracle of the splitting sea was witnessed by hundreds of thousands of people. How dumb would it sound, if in the next generation there was a claim the the sea split and no one heard anything about it? >>
What happened was not immediately written down, so we can't even be sure it wasn't just changed over centuries of retelling the story. The only 'evidence' in existance is the Bible, of which there is no real proof beyond plain believe in unprovable stories, there is only faith. No other scriptures have been found telling that story which haven't been written long after the OT was created, and no physical evidence has ever been found for this claim. (If thousands of Egyptian soldiers and their equipment were lying on the bottom of a piece of water there should be some proof under the sands, even after this time) The same goes for many of the stories from the Bible. One might argue that you shouldn't take everything literally, but then the danger of human interpretation remains: What should be used in what way.
Did Jesus bring back the dead? Ignoring the fact that the body starts its decay soon after death sets in, and therefor is already damaged at that point? Maybe he performed the Heimlich Maneuver on a choking kid, was that later told as 'the kid was almost dead, and later written down as bringing him back from the dead. No way we can prove it, and therefor the only importance remains in whether you want it to be the truth. For some it will be the literal truth, some people believe in Jesus but do not take the Bible literally, and some do not believe in the truth of the Bible and therefor refuse to believe in Christianity.
Jews believe in the OT, but not in Jesus as Messiah or prophet, Christians believe in OT and NT, and therefor also in Jesus as being the Messiah, and Muslims believe in the OT and NT containing errors, still containing the truth partially, but mostly being replaced by the Quran, and in Jesus as a prophet. They don't believe he performed the miracles though. All do believe in miracles in some way or another though, often without being able to put down any proof besides the religious book itself. Religion is about faith, not science.
P.S. Whee! In the religious flamefest before Elledan! 😉