I saw this on Sunday evening and was struck by the openness of the BBC to the occurrence of miracles performed by Jesus. I guess I was expecting a program’s reasoning them away, but was amazed to see the BBC taking the viewpoint that they could indeed have happened, and tried to investigate what the people of the time would have thought about them.
For the last year or so, I have been fascinated by the whole 1st century Israel stuff. By that I mean, the mindset of the time, how people thought, what their dreams were, their expectations and how they ‘read’ the situations of the day. We read these ancient writings with modern eyes and s we red I guess we misunderstand and miss so much. To understand more we need to try somehow to understand more about the world of the people who wrote the words.
It is obvious that we miss a lot of what the gospels tell us, not just through the interpretations of various translations, but also through a lack of our personal knowledge of the culture and mindset of the time.
This programme was an excellent window into that culture.
Some, such as Steven Carr, who commented on my last miracles post here suggest that the gospel writers made up these miracles and repeated what others had written around th new testament prophets. That is a valid argument, although one I do not agree with.
Rageh Omaar, who presents this programme excellently, offers another view. He suggests that if these miracles happened that Jesus was making statements through them. Statements that we miss due to our lack of Old Testament and 1st century Israel knowledge. Jesus was making clear claims, and it was heard clearly by those around, that he was more than leader, more than messiah, more than saviour. The people were hearing the claim of Jesus that he was indeed the Son God.
I’m looking forward to episode 2.