Can
Pagans Perform Miracles?
by Gary
DeMar
We saw in yesterday’s article that modern-day illusionists are
trying to demonstrate that Jesus could have been a very good magician
and not a worker of miracles sent by God. Of course, the miracles Jesus
performed hardly qualify as parlor or stage magic. But what about “miracles” performed
by those outside the Christian worldview? Are they really miracles or
just tricks performed by well-practiced conjurers?
Commentators often
turn to the story of Moses and Aaron and their encounters with the
magicians of Egypt as evidence that demonic miracles are real and can
rival God’s miraculous works to some extent. If miracles
are a way to demonstrate God’s power and authority over the created
order, then “if something or someone other than God can perform
miracles, then the value of miracles for attesting to Christ’s
divinity is negated.”1 Satan
is not the Yin to God’s Yang when it comes to miracles. The Bible
does not portray some type of cosmic dualism between good and evil.
When Aaron threw
down his rod before Pharaoh (Ex. 7:8–12), it
became a serpent by the power of God. We shouldn’t be surprised
that God can perform a miracle like this since He created man from the
dust of the ground (Gen. 2:7). For God, turning a dead stick into a serpent
is child’s play. Could Pharaoh’s sorcerers and magicians
also perform creation miracles? The Bible describes their “powers” as “secret
arts,” or more accurately, “deceptive arts” (Ex. 7:11).
These were developed skills—conjurors tricks—that were concealed
from Pharaoh and the general public. The livelihood of the magicians
depended on their ability to convince Pharaoh that they had powers and
abilities that others, even Pharaoh, did not possess. Pharaoh’s
tricksters had no more power than the “magicians” who served
in Nebuchadnezzar’s court and could not tell the king the contents
of his dream. Interpretations are easy if you know what you’re
interpreting.
Turning a staff
into a serpent was a simple magician’s trick.
Jannes and Jambres, the names that Paul gives to Pharaoh’s court
magicians (2 Tim. 3:8), probably performed this spectacle quite often.
It was their signature trick. But how did they create the illusion? Dan
Korem, a trained magician, reminds us of similar illusions performed
today. “The most practical method to duplicate the magicians’ feat
is similar to a trick performed today where a magician changes a cane
to a silk handkerchief, rope or a handful of flowers.”2 Modern
magicians regularly work with animals, so we shouldn’t be surprised
if ancient magicians did the same. Here’s how it could have been
done. Susan Schaffer, a reptile curator at the San Diego Zoo,
explained that to
measure the length of a snake, she takes a tightfitting tube and coaxes
the snake into it, as snakes like dark, tight-fitting environs. To
replicate the illusion of changing a rod into a snake, a telescopic
shell must be constructed to house the snake. Given the materials available
during that time period, such as a piece of pliable papyrus, this could
easily be made. With the snake concealed inside the “staff,” the
magician would simply have to pass his hand over the shell, collapsing
it at the same time, leaving the snake in its place. This action could
be covered by the motion of throwing the staff to the ground, creating
the illusion that the staff visibly changes to a snake.3
Lighting would have
been poor indoors, so the sleight of hand would have been easily concealed.
A good magician could come up with several ways to perform this trick
in a way that would convince the casual observer who probably saw what
happened around Pharaoh’s
court from a distance.
But
didn’t Pharaoh’s magicians turn water into blood and produce
frogs on command, replicating the miracles brought about through Moses?
The miracle performed by Moses turned the Nile into blood as well as
the “rivers . . . streams . . . pools . . . reservoirs” as
well as the water in “vessels of wood and in vessels of stone” (Ex.
7:19). Pharaoh’s magicians did the same “with their secret
arts” (7:22). Their trick was to turn a small amount of water into
blood. They must have gone to Pharaoh with a small pot of water and showed
him how they too could turn it into blood. Magicians turn milk into confetti,
a common trick performed by many stage illusionists.4 Turning
clear water into “blood” would be simple. Holding a pouch
of blood in the palm of the hand—there was enough of it around—it
would have been a simple thing to open it into the water. “Presto-changeo”—water
into blood! The real miracle would have been for the magicians to turn
the bloodied water throughout Egypt back into fresh water! This they
could not do.
The plague of frogs,
like the bloodied waters, occurred throughout Egypt. Once again, the
court magicians went to Pharaoh and showed him that they could also
produce frogs. “Magicians today
produce live doves in the middle of a stage from handkerchiefs; and
doves are far more difficult to handle than a docile frog.”5
Like with the bloody water, the real miracle would have been to rid
the land of frogs. Reginald Scot, author of The Discoverie of Witchcraft (1584),
takes an equally skeptical view of miraculous demonic powers being attributed
to Pharaoh’s magicians. “If Pharaoh’s magicians had
suddenly made frogs, why could they not drive them away again? If they
could not hurt the frogs, why should we think that they could make them?
. . . Such things as we are being bewitched to imagine, have no truth
at all either in action or essence, beside the bare imagination.”6 If
someone begins with the assumption that the devil can impart the ability
to perform miracles, then he will see miracles in what is really the
ancient art of stage magic. The replication of frogs was the last trick
performed by Pharaoh’s magicians. They ran out of tricks. By the
third miracle, “the magicians said to Pharaoh, ‘This is the
finger of God’” (8:19). They knew a miracle when they saw
it.
1. André Kole
and Jerry MacGregor, Mind
Games: Exposing Today’s Psychics, Frauds, and False Spiritual
Phenomena (Eugene, OR: Harvest House, 1998), 79.
2. Dan Korem, Powers: Testing
the Psychic and Supernatural (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity
Press, 1988), 174.
3. Korem, Powers, 174.
4. Korem, Powers, 175.
5. Korem, Powers, 175.
6. Reginald Scot, The Discoverie
of Witchcraft (New York: Dover Publications, 1972), 180. Scot’s
work was originally published in 1584, and only 250 copies were reprinted
in 1886. It was reprinted once again in Great Britain in 1930. The
1972 Dover edition is the latest reprint, retaining the spelling of
the original edition.
Gary
DeMar is president of American Vision and the author of more than 20 books. His latest is Myths, Lies, and Half Truths.
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