I just mentioned that I believe that type of "power display" will occur again but he does not display this except for a very particular purpose.
I'm a bit aghast that you somehow took what I said to mean that I think nothing that I quoted from you (above) occurred in the physical sense
Moving mount Everest would be a cataclysmic event. Don't you think that such events (such as large hailstones and so forth) would be best left in the hands of the Lord? I do.
I think when he is talking about moving mountains he is referring to obstacles unseen primarily.
The fig tree also factors in. As well as walking on water. The why of these matter. NOTHING he did was purposeless.
I'm a bit aghast that you somehow took what I said to mean that I think nothing that I quoted from you (above) occurred in the physical sense
Moving mount Everest would be a cataclysmic event. Don't you think that such events (such as large hailstones and so forth) would be best left in the hands of the Lord? I do.
I think when he is talking about moving mountains he is referring to obstacles unseen primarily.
The fig tree also factors in. As well as walking on water. The why of these matter. NOTHING he did was purposeless.
There is an account of a one-eyed Egyptian Christian commanding a mountain in Egypt to move with bishop and the ruler present and it happened. In the story/tradition, if recall correctly, the Calif (or other ruler) said that he would kill all of the Christians if their patriarch did not cause a mountain to move in accordance with the words of Jesus. Simon the Cobbler maybe.
There was an actual literal fig tree that withered in one of the gospel accounts. I don't think of faith as something happening in opposition to God's will, opposed to His word. We do see the apostles and others frequently laying hands on people and commanding healing in the gospels, and a promise of healing through the elders in James.