British Museum Illustrations to Young's Night Thoughts |
Blake and Paine agreed that there was no such thing as a miracle in Watson's sense - of God giving an arbitrary command to prove his superior power to unbelieving subjects. Miracles were discernible to those whose spiritual consciousness had been awakened. Blake saw that Paine himself had been the vehicle for the working of miracles by writing pamphlets which gave men the courage to release themselves from their 'mind forged manacles', and thereby forge free societies.
Thomas Paine wrote in Age of Reason:
"To an almighty power, it is no more difficult to make the one than the
other, and no more difficult to make millions of worlds than to make
one. Everything, therefore, is a miracle, in one sense, whilst in the
other sense, there is no such thing as a miracle. It is a miracle when
compared to our power and to our comprehension, if not a miracle
compared to the power that performs it; but as nothing in this
description conveys the idea that is affixed to the word miracle, it is
necessary to carry the inquiry further.
Mankind have conceived to themselves certain laws, by which what they
call nature is supposed to act; and that miracle is something contrary
to the operation and effect of those laws; but unless we know the whole
extent of those laws, and of what are commonly called the powers of
nature, we are not able to judge whether anything that may appear to us
wonderful or miraculous be within, or be beyond, or be contrary to, her
natural power of acting."
William Blake wrote this in his annotations to Watson's Apology for the Bible which was his reply to Age of Reason.
"Jesus could not do miracles where unbelief hinderd hence we
must conclude that the man who holds miracles to be ceased puts
it out of his own power to ever witness one The manner of a
miracle being performd is in modern times considerd as an
arbitrary command of the
agent upon the patient but this is an impossibility not a miracle
neither did Jesus ever do such a miracle. Is it a greater
miracle to feed five thousand men with five loaves than to
overthrow all the armies of Europe with a small pamphlet.
look over the events of your own life & if you do not find that
you have both done such miracles & lived by such you do not see
as I do True I cannot do a miracle thro experiment & to
domineer over & prove to others my superior power as neither
could Christ But I can & do work such as both astonish &
comfort me & mine How can Paine the worker of miracles ever
doubt Christs in the above sense of the word miracle But how
can Watson ever believe the above sense of a miracle who
considers it as an arbitrary act of the agent upon an unbelieving
patient. whereas the Gospel says that Christ could not do a
miracle because of Unbelief
If Christ could not do miracles because of Unbelief
the reason alledged by Priests for miracles is false for those
who believe, want not to be confounded by miracles. Christ & his
Prophets & Apostles were not ambitious miracle mongers"
(E 616)
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