Those miracles count to the Hindu. However, the Christian will view their good fortune as unrelated to the Hindu’s prayer. You really bring up a point that needs to be illustrated more often.
Christians seldom acknowledge the miraculous claims of other religions. When another religion claims that some prayer or some ritual will bring about a certain result, and that result happens to occur, the Christian will immediately chalk it up to coincidence, or some naturalistic process. In other words the Christian is more than willing to be a rationalist when it comes to evaluating the assertions of other religions. Yet, they refuse to apply the same standards to themselves, or allow anyone else to. Mmmm…I smell hypocrisy.
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Hindus are going to hell. The entire Christian universe knows this. Even the Vatican knows this - the people who invented such nonsense.
Having said that, I heard an elephant can walk over water (okay, grapey water) and turn such liquid into wine.
Mmm... merlot...
Those miracles count to the Hindu. However, the Christian will view their good fortune as unrelated to the Hindu’s prayer. You really bring up a point that needs to be illustrated more often.
Christians seldom acknowledge the miraculous claims of other religions. When another religion claims that some prayer or some ritual will bring about a certain result, and that result happens to occur, the Christian will immediately chalk it up to coincidence, or some naturalistic process. In other words the Christian is more than willing to be a rationalist when it comes to evaluating the assertions of other religions. Yet, they refuse to apply the same standards to themselves, or allow anyone else to. Mmmm…I smell hypocrisy.
Hindus do not call God's actions miracles. Hindu will pray even for an enemy.
Will it not be a miracle if a hard xian prays for a Hindu, except with a view to convert him??
Absolutely.
no the prayer gets disrupted especially if it's in the U.S Senate