Why We Need Miracles More Than Arguments
If God is healing cancer through human hands, every atheist's worldview crumbles overnight.
I'm heading to Liberty, Texas this weekend to investigate Apostle Delmar Coward Jr. because if what people say about him is true—if he's actually healing cancer, making the crippled walk, casting out demons—then we have something more powerful than every philosophical argument ever written.
We need supernatural proof because atheism is destroying us. Not just individual souls, but entire civilizations. When people stop believing in God, they stop believing in objective morality. When they stop fearing divine judgment, they'll take money for anything. When they think this life is all there is, they optimize for pleasure instead of righteousness.
But imagine if tongues were real and interpretable. If the Holy Spirit visibly filled people. If apostolic healing happened consistently through laying on of hands. Every materialist would have to reckon with a reality that transcends their closed system.
This isn't about proving God exists to skeptics for intellectual satisfaction. This is about demonstrating that we live in a supernatural reality where moral choices have eternal consequences. Where childlike faith unlocks divine power. Where communities of believers can access healing that would otherwise bankrupt families.
The calculus changes completely if miracles are accessible. Instead of choosing between death and financial ruin, you choose between pride and healing. Instead of accepting that sickness is just bad luck, you recognize it as tied to spiritual warfare. Instead of building your life around avoiding suffering, you build it around accessing God's power.
I don't know yet if everyone with genuine faith can develop spiritual gifts. I don't know if touching someone with tongues transfers the ability. These are the questions I'm investigating because the implications are massive.
If Apostle Coward's theology is correct, then most Christians are living far below their spiritual inheritance. They've accepted a watered-down faith that expects nothing supernatural. They treat miracles as ancient history instead of present reality.
But what if healing the sick, raising the dead, and casting out demons are normal Christian experiences? What if the reason we don't see them is because we've been taught to expect less than what God offers?
This would mean that Christian communities built around childlike faith aren't just nice ideas—they're strategic necessities. The Holy Spirit operates where it finds genuine belief, not religious performance. Deep faith creates the environment where supernatural power flows freely.
We need miracles to smash through atheistic assumptions. Not because arguments don't work, but because supernatural demonstration bypasses intellectual barriers entirely.
You can debate theology for years. You can't debate someone walking after being paralyzed. Or a blind person suddenly seeing. Or cancer instantly disappearing.
If God is actively healing through human vessels like Apostle Delmar Coward Jr., if spiritual gifts are accessible to anyone with genuine faith, if miracles happen when believers gather in expectation—then everything changes.
Denying Christ becomes unsustainable. And following Him becomes irresistible.
I'm not investigating Pentacostalism to find a church that better fits my preference for passionate, charismatic services. I'm investigating whether the supernatural reality described in Scripture is available today. Because if it is, we have the key to eternally saving not just individual lives but entire cultures.
Christendom doesn't need more arguments. It needs signs and wonders.
So let's see how miraculous Liberty, Texas really is.