yea sure, although I should give this disclaimer first that these stories alone are not what I hang my faith in God upon. I have other much more airtight reasons for believing that God exists. But these stories are still very strange and make me think and I guess they help to build up a sense of something supernatural. Also summing up a story in a few sentences is very different from actually living the story out, feeling what I was feeling at the time and seeing what I was seeing at the time, so there'll probably be a LOT lost in translation. With that said, here's a few stories,
1. A couple in my church were told by their doctors that it was a medical impossibility for them to concieve a child and any further attempts to do so would be futile. Nevertheless, every couple of weeks the couple would share their stories with the church of how they believed God wanted them to keep trying for a baby because he had promised them that one day they would have a child. Several years went by until one day the couple stood at the front of the church and announced that they were pregnant! It was an incredible day! 9 months later and I saw the kid with my own eyes!
2. On holiday a couple of years ago we went to this massive adventure park where they had drop slides. My little sister had a fear of them but was determined to face her fear and go down one of these slides. Perched at the top, legs dangled over the edge, she was trying to pluck up the courage to go down but couldn't do it. I was watching her from the side so I started to say a little prayer to God in my head to help her. Suddenly she went for it and dropped down the slide and I congratulated her at the bottom. Later in the car I asked her what made her decide to go, and she said she wouldn't have done it if I hadn't pushed her down, but I told her that I didn't push her, I wasn't anywhere near her, and she said, well somebody did, cause she could feel hands gently pushing her from behind. But I was watching her the whole time and there was definitly nobody behind her.
3. At uni, I had a phase where I began questioning all religions. I wanted to find the truth and I had been praying to God to reveal which is the true religion to me. Also at the same time I was studying cyberculture. Part of my course was to make a blog and view the blogs of my classmates. Now there was a girl in my class called Sara Larabi who I had a crush on, but I didn't know her blog address. So, at home, I thought I'd just try guessing a few addresses. I tried saralarabi.blogspot.com, and saral.blogspot.com, and then I tried "slarabi.blogspot.com" and to my surprise suddenly a "MEGA-SITE of bible and christian information" popped up. When I checked the url I discovered that I had accidentily missed an 's' out and had written "slarabi.blogpot.com". When I reinserted the 's' it turns out that was also the correct address for sara's blog. It wasn't til I had really reflected on all the small coincidences that had to occur for this to have happened; my crush on sara larabi, both url's differing by just one letter, and for me to have mistyped that one letter, that it really made my head spin. Both urls are still active today if you'd like to check -
slarabi.blogpot.com and
slarabi.blogspot.com
I have tons of other stories I'd love to tell but I'll leave it there for now.
Now I know what most people are probably thinking, that these can all be explained away with natural explanations, and of course thats a valid possibility but I think there's something deeper and more interesting going on with supernatural stories, in particular the way different people respond to them. Almost everybody has had some kind of experience with the supernatural, whether directly or through stories of others, and we're always left with two choices. To believe or not to believe. But choosing the latter also means that you are choosing to believe something else, which is that the person making the claim is either a liar or a madman. If I chose not to believe the pregnant couple from my church I'd have to justify that choice by insinuating that they were misguided somehow. That they don't questions the facts as well as I do. That they've manipulated the truth, or any other discrediting assumption about their character. Of course sometimes this may very well be the case, people do sometimes lie and people are sometimes misguided, but given the vast number of supernatural claims across the world can I really discredit all of them? That's the question that gets me thinking!