Signs and wonders is a biblical phrase denoting miraculous acts attributed to God, serving as visible demonstrations of divine power, authority, and faithfulness to His covenants.[1] These phenomena, often described using Hebrew terms like ’ot (sign) in the Old Testament, function to warn, judge, deliver, or guide people toward trusting in God alone, as seen in the plagues of Egypt that compelled Pharaoh to release the Israelites (Exodus 7:17; 14:18).[1] In the New Testament, the expression encompasses the miracles performed by Jesus and the apostles, such as healings and exorcisms, which validate the gospel message and fulfill Old Testament promises of redemption.[2]Theologically, signs and wonders are not mere spectacles but purposeful interventions that underscore God's gracious activity in history, bridging the natural and divine without implying a strict supernatural-natural divide in ancient Jewish thought.[3] In the Gospel of John, for instance, Jesus rebukes reliance on signs alone for belief (John 4:48), yet his seven key miracles—termed "signs"—progressively reveal his identity as the Messiah and source of eternal life.[4] Similarly, in Acts, apostolic signs and wonders accompany preaching to confirm the resurrection of Jesus and the spread of the early church, eliciting conversions and communal growth (Acts 2:43; 5:12).[2]Throughout Scripture, these events culminate in Jesus himself as the ultimate sign, embodying God's kingdom and inviting humanity into restored relationship with the divine (Matthew 12:38-42; 28:16-20).[1] While modern interpretations vary—ranging from cessationist views that such miracles ended with the apostolic era to continuationist beliefs in their ongoing relevance— the core biblical motif emphasizes their role in pointing beyond themselves to God's redemptive purposes.[5]
Etymology and Definition
Biblical Terminology
In the Old Testament, the phrase "signs and wonders" translates the Hebrew terms ʾôt (אוֹת), meaning "sign," and môp̄ēṯ (מוֹפֵת), meaning "wonder," which together form a common collocation appearing in 11 instances in the New International Version (NIV) to denote extraordinary divine acts.[6][7]The term ʾôt refers to a visible mark, signal, or token that authenticates a prophetic message or God's intervention, as in Exodus 4:8, where it confirms Moses' authority before the Israelites if initial demonstrations fail to persuade.In contrast, môp̄ēṯ conveys an awe-inspiring portent or miracle that evokes wonder and underscores God's sovereign power, exemplified in Deuteronomy 4:34, which recalls the plagues inflicted on Egypt as terrifying displays amid a nation's deliverance.The New Testament employs the Greek counterparts sēmeion (σημεῖον) for "sign" and teras (τέρας) for "wonder," preserving the paired usage to describe validating supernatural events in the ministry of Jesus and the apostles.While broader biblical miracles may be termed dunamis (δύναμις), denoting raw displays of power, "signs and wonders" specifically emphasize purposeful acts designed to confirm truth, authenticate messengers, or signal divine judgment rather than mere supernatural occurrences.[8][9]
Modern Interpretations
In the 20th century, the interpretation of "signs and wonders" underwent a significant shift within Christian thought, particularly in Pentecostal traditions following the Azusa Street Revival of 1906, where these phenomena transitioned from primarily serving as historical validations of apostolic authority to becoming expected elements of ordinary Christian experience and faith practice. Led by William J. Seymour in Los Angeles, the revival emphasized the Holy Spirit's outpouring through glossolalia, healings, and other supernatural manifestations, fostering a worldview in which miracles were seen as ongoing confirmations of God's active presence rather than exceptional events confined to biblical eras. This evolution popularized the notion that believers could routinely encounter divine interventions, influencing the rapid global spread of Pentecostalism and reshaping expectations around supernatural elements in worship and daily life.[10][11]Key figures and movements in the late 20th century further embedded signs and wonders into contemporary discipleship. John Wimber, founder of the Vineyard Movement in the 1980s, advocated for their integration as essential to Christian formation, arguing that healings, prophecies, and other miracles naturally accompany obedience to Jesus and contribute to church vitality. In his seminal work Power Evangelism (first published 1986), Wimber described these signs as demonstrations of God's kingdom power that empower evangelism and personal transformation, drawing from his experiences teaching at Fuller Theological Seminary where he emphasized practical ministry training in supernatural phenomena. This approach contrasted with more cessationist traditions by normalizing miracles as accessible to all believers, influencing thousands of churches worldwide.[12][13]In the 21st century, global Pentecostal trends, especially in African Independent Churches, have framed healings and wonders as symbols of social justice, addressing systemic issues like poverty, illness, and marginalization through divine intervention. The 2006 Pew Research survey indicated majorities of Pentecostals in sub-Saharan African countries (e.g., 87% in Kenya) affirming experiences of or belief in divine healing through faith, often interpreting these events as God's equitable response to societal inequities. For example, in countries like Nigeria and South Africa, church leaders in these movements promote healings as acts of liberation from oppression, blending spiritualempowerment with community upliftment. Pentecostalism has grown significantly, with estimates of over 250 million Pentecostal and charismatic adherents in Africa as of the 2020s.[14][15][16]Non-theological interpretations in modern scholarship often attribute miracle claims to psychological mechanisms, such as cognitive biases and placebo effects, rather than supernatural causes. Confirmation bias, for instance, leads individuals to selectively recall events aligning with their beliefs in divine activity while discounting alternatives, as explored in studies of religious experiences. Similarly, placebo responses—where expectation of healing triggers physiological improvements like pain reduction—have been linked to religious rituals, with research showing that faith-based contexts amplify these effects through heightened emotional and cognitive engagement. A 2021 study examined placebo effects in religious contexts, such as using water labeled as "Lourdes water," finding changes in brain connectivity associated with positive affective states and bodily sensations.[17]
Biblical References
Old Testament Contexts
In the Old Testament, "signs and wonders" denotes miraculous divine interventions that authenticate God's messengers, affirm His covenant with Israel, and demonstrate sovereignty over oppressive powers, particularly during pivotal moments of national deliverance. The Hebrew terms ʾôt (sign) and môpet (wonder) together describe acts that serve as visible proofs of God's involvement in history, evoking awe and compelling obedience. These phenomena are clustered around key redemptive events, such as the Exodus, where they function as prerequisites for Israel's formation as a covenant nation.[18]A primary example is the plagues of Egypt, explicitly called signs and wonders in Exodus 7:3, where God declares He will multiply them against Pharaoh to force the release of the Israelites. These ten calamities—ranging from the Nile turning to blood to the death of the firstborn—not only targeted Egyptian deities but also authenticated Moses' leadership, as God equipped him and Aaron with initial miracles like the staff becoming a serpent and the healing of leprosy to convince the elders of Israel (Exodus 4:17-30). Performed through human agents, these acts underscored God's active role in Israel's exodus and liberation from slavery.[19]Thematically, signs confirmed prophetic authority and divine promises, as in Isaiah 8:18, where the prophet declares himself and his children as "signs and portents" in Israel to signal God's impending judgments and deliverances. Wonders, in turn, were designed to instill fear and promote faithfulness, vividly recalled in Psalm 105:27 as God's marvelous deeds in Egypt that led to Israel's redemption and praise of Yahweh's enduring faithfulness. Such events highlighted God's power to humble nations and fulfill covenant obligations.The exact English phrase "signs and wonders" occurs 7 times across the Old Testament (ESV), though the underlying Hebrew concepts of signs (ʾôt) and wonders (môpet) appear more frequently in combination. It is frequently paired with expressions like the "hand of God" or "outstretched arm" to emphasize divine might in overcoming enemies and establishing Israel's identity (e.g., Deuteronomy 26:8; Jeremiah 32:20-21). This pattern portrays these miracles not as isolated spectacles but as integral to God's sovereign rule over history and nations, reinforcing themes of judgment, rescue, and worship.[20][19]
New Testament Applications
In the New Testament, the phrase "signs and wonders" appears approximately eleven times, primarily in the Gospels, Acts, and Epistles, referring to miraculous acts that authenticate divine messages and messengers.[20] These events serve to validate Jesus' identity as the Messiah and the apostolic proclamation of the gospel, often functioning as visible confirmations of God's redemptive work.[21] Scholarly analysis emphasizes their role in redemptive history, bridging Old Testament precedents of divine intervention with the fulfillment in Christ, while underscoring that such acts are subordinate to preaching and faith.[21]In the Gospels, Jesus' miracles are frequently designated as signs intended to foster belief, as seen in John's Gospel where the author states that these were recorded "so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God" (John 20:30-31).[22] For instance, the transformation of water into wine at the wedding in Cana is described as the first of Jesus' signs, revealing his glory and prompting initial faith among his disciples (John 2:1-11).[23] Jesus himself critiques over-reliance on such spectacles, telling an official, "Unless you see signs and wonders you will not believe" (John 4:48), highlighting their evidentiary yet insufficient role without deeper faith.[24] Eyewitness accounts of these acts, including healings and exorcisms, build communal testimony to Jesus' authority over nature, illness, and evil spirits.[2]The book of Acts extends this pattern to the apostolic church, portraying signs and wonders as divine endorsements of the early Christian mission. Apostles like Peter and John perform healings, such as the lame man at the temple gate, leading to widespread awe and conversions (Acts 3:1-10; 4:30).[25]Paul and Barnabas, during their missionary journeys, are granted "signs and wonders to be done by their hands" to confirm the word of grace among Gentiles (Acts 14:3).[26] These include exorcisms and healings that demonstrate the gospel's power, with the assembly in Jerusalem later affirming "what signs and wonders God had done through them among the Gentiles" (Acts 15:12).[27] Such events emphasize eyewitness validation, as crowds witness and testify to the apostles' works, strengthening faith and expanding the church (Acts 2:43; 5:12).[28][2]The Epistles further articulate the doctrinal purpose of signs and wonders, portraying them as God's testimony to the gospel's truth. Hebrews declares that salvation was confirmed "by signs and wonders and various miracles and by gifts of the Holy Spirit" distributed according to God's will (Hebrews 2:4).[29] Paul describes his ministry as accomplished "by the power of signs and wonders, by the power of the Spirit of God," marking the signs of a true apostle through patience, miracles, and mighty works (Romans 15:19; 2 Corinthians 12:12).[30] However, the New Testament also issues warnings against deceptive uses, with Jesus cautioning that false prophets "will arise and perform great signs and wonders, so as to lead astray, if possible, even the elect" (Matthew 24:24), and Paul noting the lawless one's arrival "with all power and false signs and wonders" (2 Thessalonians 2:9).[31] This dual emphasis underscores signs and wonders as tools for authenticating faith-building testimony while discerning true from false.[21]
Theological Debates
Cessationist Views
Cessationism is the theological position that certain miraculous gifts of the Holy Spirit, such as tongues, prophecy, and healing, ceased after the apostolic era, particularly upon the completion of the New Testament canon. This view holds that these "signs and wonders" served primarily to authenticate the apostles' message and establish the foundation of the church, rendering their ongoing occurrence unnecessary once the scriptural revelation was finalized. Proponents argue that the Bible itself indicates a temporary role for such gifts, with their purpose tied to the unique foundational period of Christianity rather than perpetual practice.[32]A key scriptural foundation for cessationism is found in 1 Corinthians 13:8-10, where Paul states that prophecies, tongues, and knowledge "will cease" or "pass away" when "the perfect comes," interpreted by cessationists as the completion of the biblical canon, marking the end of partial, revelatory gifts in favor of the complete written Word. Similarly, Hebrews 2:3-4 describes the gospel as confirmed by "signs, wonders and various miracles" through the apostles, suggesting these phenomena were unique to that foundational generation for validating their testimony, with no promise of continuation beyond it. Other passages, such as 2 Corinthians 12:12, reinforce that "signs of a true apostle" were performed among the Corinthians to credential the messengers, implying a limited scope rather than a normative expectation for all believers.[33]Cessationists, such as B.B. Warfield, interpret early church history as supporting a decline of miraculous reports following the apostolic age, viewing accounts by second-century writers like Justin Martyr and Irenaeus as sparse and largely retrospective—aligning with lingering apostolic influences—despite Irenaeus describing some contemporary occurrences in the church. Later figures like Origen noted the relative rarity of such events, while Eusebius observed their scarcity by the third century, with credible sources showing few widespread post-apostolic miracles.[34]Influential cessationist theologian B.B. Warfield articulated this position in his 1918 work Counterfeit Miracles, arguing that miracles were exclusively apostolic credentials that ended with the church's founding, dismissing later claims as superstitious or fabricated imitations lacking biblical warrant. In contemporary Reformed circles, figures like John MacArthur echo this, contending that signs authenticated the Scriptures during their composition but are not essential for the mature church, where faith rests on the sufficient, completed Word rather than experiential validations. MacArthur emphasizes that any modern "miracles" often fail to meet apostolic standards of verifiability and purpose, serving instead as potential distractions from doctrinal purity.[34][35]
Continuationist Perspectives
Continuationists maintain that signs and wonders, including miraculous healings, prophecies, and other supernatural manifestations, persist in the contemporary church as integral to God's ongoing redemptive work. This perspective draws heavily on the prophecy in Joel 2:28-29, which envisions an outpouring of the Holy Spirit on all flesh in the last days, enabling visions, dreams, and prophetic activity among diverse groups such as young and old, men and women, and servants— a fulfillment initiated at Pentecost (Acts 2:17-21) but extending throughout the church age until Christ's return.[36] Similarly, the longer ending of Mark 16:17-18—which many textual scholars consider a second-century addition to the Gospel—promises that signs like speaking in new tongues, protection from harm, and healing the sick will accompany believers, indicating these phenomena as normative for the faith community rather than confined to the apostolic era.[37]Prominent theologians have advanced continuationist arguments through systematic analysis of Scripture and empirical observation. Wayne Grudem, in his Systematic Theology (1994), contends that all spiritual gifts listed in the New Testament, including those involving signs and wonders, remain available today, as no biblical text explicitly states their cessation, and they continue to edify the church and authenticate the gospel message. A variant known as "open but cautious" continuationism, also associated with Grudem, affirms the ongoing possibility of gifts while stressing biblical testing and avoidance of sensationalism.[38] Emphases within global South Christianity further underscore this view, with reports documenting widespread accounts of miracles in missions contexts, such as healings and deliverances that facilitate church growth in regions like Africa, Asia, and Latin America, where such phenomena are reported by hundreds of millions of Pentecostal and charismatic believers. These experiences align with apostolic precedents, where non-apostolic figures like Philip performed signs to advance the gospel (Acts 8:6-7).[36][39]To guard against abuse, continuationists stress the necessity of discernment, evaluating all claimed signs and wonders against Scripture to ensure alignment with God's character and purposes, rather than pursuing sensationalism or unchecked emotionalism. This approach, articulated by thinkers like Sam Storms, promotes orderly use of gifts within the church, testing prophecies and miracles for edification while rejecting excesses that distract from Christ-centered faith.[37]
Historical Developments
Early Church and Patristic Era
In the apostolic period, signs and wonders played a central role in authenticating the gospel message, as depicted in the accounts of healings, exorcisms, and other supernatural acts performed by the apostles and early disciples.[40] These phenomena extended beyond the New Testament era into the early 2nd century, with church leaders affirming their continuation as marks of the Holy Spirit's active presence. For instance, Ignatius of Antioch, writing around 110 AD during his journey to martyrdom, urged believers in his Letter to Polycarp to "ask for invisible things so that you may lack nothing and abound with all spiritual gifts," reflecting an expectation of ongoing charisms including healings within the church communities.[40]By the mid-2nd century, apologists like Justin Martyr integrated testimonies of signs and wonders into their defenses of Christianity against pagan skepticism. In his Dialogue with Trypho (c. 150 AD), Justin described contemporary Christian practices, stating that "some [believers] do certainly cast out devils... Others have knowledge of things to come; they see visions and utter prophetic expressions. Others still heal the sick by laying their hands upon them, and they are made whole," presenting these as evidence of divine power superior to demonic imitations in pagan rituals.[40] Such accounts served not only to edify believers but also to demonstrate the vitality of the faith amid persecution.Irenaeus of Lyons provided one of the most detailed patristic enumerations of ongoing miracles in his Against Heresies (c. 180 AD), emphasizing their role in countering Gnostic heresies. He affirmed that "those who are in truth His disciples, receiving grace from Him, do in His name perform [miracles] for the benefit of other men, such as the expulsion of demons... the cure of the sick, the raising of the dead, and all other kinds of miracles," noting that these occurred freely across the global church without monetary gain or deception.[41] Irenaeus highlighted specific instances, such as exorcisms that led to conversions and resurrections where individuals lived for many years afterward, underscoring the continuity of apostolic power through the invocation of Christ's name.[41][40]As the church entered the 3rd century, historical records indicate a gradual shift in the manifestation of signs and wonders, with Eusebius of Caesarea documenting in his Ecclesiastical History (c. 325 AD) a move toward miracles associated with relics and the tombs of martyrs rather than widespread direct interventions.[42] Figures like Gregory Thaumaturgus (c. 213–270 AD), bishop of Neocaesarea, were renowned for personal miracles such as healings and prophecies, earning his epithet "Wonderworker," yet these often intertwined with emerging practices of venerating physical remnants of the saints.[43] This transition reflected the church's growing institutionalization, where spiritual gifts became less emphasized in favor of sacramental and relic-based piety, though isolated accounts of wonders persisted.[40]
Medieval to Modern Eras
In the medieval period, the Catholic Church fostered miracle cults centered on saints, where relics such as bones, clothing, or personal items were venerated as conduits for divine intervention, often associated with healings and other wonders. Thomas Aquinas, in his Summa Theologica (13th century), defended this practice by arguing that relics honor the saints in heaven and serve as instruments of God's power, enabling miracles without constituting idolatry, as they symbolize the saints' glorified state rather than possessing inherent magic.[44] Pilgrimages to such relics, like those of St. Chiara for promoting chastity or St. Cuthbert for curing illnesses, became widespread, reinforcing institutional devotion and drawing the faithful to seek supernatural aid.[44]To counter potential abuses, the medieval Inquisition implemented rigorous scrutiny of claimed miracles, particularly during canonization processes, evolving from local inquiries to centralized papal investigations under figures like Pope Gregory IX in the 13th century. These proceedings involved interrogating hundreds of witnesses and evaluating evidence judicially to distinguish genuine divine signs from deceptions or natural phenomena, as seen in the canonization of St. Elizabeth of Hungary, where over 800 testimonies were examined for more than 100 alleged healings.[45] Similarly, the posthumous miracles of St. Francis of Assisi, including his stigmata, underwent detailed papal review to affirm authenticity and protect the faithful from false wonders that could undermine ecclesiastical authority.[45] This institutional oversight marked a shift toward evidentiary standards, balancing popular piety with doctrinal control.During the Reformation, Protestant leaders like Martin Luther and John Calvin leaned toward cessationism, asserting that extraordinary signs and wonders, such as apostolic healings, had largely ceased after the early church era, rendering them unnecessary for confirming the gospel in an age of established scripture. Luther viewed the "days of miracles" as past, reinterpreting them as spiritual transformations through preaching, baptism, and sacraments rather than physical manifestations, while criticizing Catholic relic cults as superstitious.[46]Calvin echoed this by describing miracles as temporary aids to authenticate doctrine, now superseded by the "marvelous" preaching of the Word, though he allowed for God's ongoing providence without expecting ongoing supernatural displays.[46] This doctrinal pivot rejected medieval miracle veneration, prioritizing faith over visible signs and influencing Protestant skepticism toward institutional wonders.[47]Yet, 18th-century Methodist revivals under John Wesley revived emphasis on healings, blending cessationist influences with experiential faith amid widespread spiritual awakenings. Wesley documented numerous instances of divine healing during his open-air preachings and societies, such as the 1767 case of Ellen Stanyers, who experienced simultaneous physical recovery from illness, mental restoration, and spiritual conversion, attributing these to God's direct intervention through prayer.[48] He integrated such events into Methodist mission by establishing free clinics in cities like London and Bristol, treating thousands while viewing medicine as complementary to faith healings, as evidenced by his journals recording over 500 patients aided in early months, with many chronic cases resolved.[48] These occurrences fueled the revival's growth, contrasting Reformation cessationism by demonstrating the Holy Spirit's active power in personal and communal transformation.[48]By the 19th century, the Keswick Conventions, emerging in the 1870s as part of the Higher Life movement, emphasized the Holy Spirit's infilling for holy living and spiritual empowerment, indirectly fostering openness to signs and wonders through teachings on immediate divine blessing and victory over sin. Initiated in 1875 by Canon T. D. Harford-Battersby and Robert Wilson, the annual gatherings at Keswick, England, drew thousands for Bible exposition and prayer, building on earlier holiness meetings like the 1874 Broadlands and Oxford conventions led by Robert Pearsall Smith.[49] While not centering on physical healings, Keswick promoted experiential encounters with the Spirit—such as consecration and enduement with power—that echoed early church dynamics, influencing participants to anticipate supernatural vitality in daily life.[49] This focus on Spirit baptism and personal renewal set a foundational stage for Pentecostalism by reviving interest in charismatic gifts and divine interventions beyond mere doctrinal assent.[49]
Contemporary Practices
Charismatic Movements
The Charismatic movements, encompassing Pentecostal and related groups, trace their modern origins to the Azusa Street Revival in Los Angeles, which began on April 14, 1906, under the leadership of William J. Seymour, an African American preacher.[50] This interracial gathering emphasized the baptism of the Holy Spirit, marked by speaking in tongues as an initial sign, and continued intermittently until around 1915, profoundly influencing the development of global Pentecostalism.[10] From its U.S. roots, the movement rapidly expanded internationally, particularly to Latin America and Africa, where it resonated amid social and economic upheavals in the late 20th century.[51]As of 2025, Pentecostals and Charismatics number approximately 664 million worldwide, representing a significant portion of global Christianity and growing at an annual rate of 1.25% from 2020 to 2025.[52] In Latin America, the movement surged from the early 20th century through missionary efforts and local adaptations, drawing tens of millions from Catholicism by the 2010s due to its experiential worship and community support.[53] Africa saw even more explosive growth, with Pentecostalism becoming a dominant force by the late 20th century, fueled by indigenous leaders and responses to urbanization and crisis, contributing to the region's high Christian growth rate of 2.59% annually (2020–2025).[52] These expansions positioned Charismatic Christianity as one of the fastest-growing religious streams, emphasizing signs and wonders such as healings and miracles as normative experiences of faith. The movement continues to expand into 2025, with ongoing adaptations in global contexts.Central to these movements are practices like speaking in tongues, viewed as the primary evidence of Spirit baptism, and prophecy, considered an ongoing gift for edification and guidance within the community.[54] Leaders exemplified these emphases; for instance, Oral Roberts launched an itinerant healing ministry in the late 1940s, conducting large tent crusades where thousands reported physical healings, laying groundwork for televised evangelism and institutional growth like Oral Roberts University.[55] Similarly, Heidi Baker, co-founder of Iris Global, has led humanitarian efforts in Mozambique since 1995, integrating orphan care, education, and reports of miraculous healings and resurrections among communities facing poverty and conflict through the 2020s.[56]A key variation emerged in the 1980s with the "third wave" or neo-charismatic movement, coined by theologian C. Peter Wagner to describe the integration of charismatic gifts into mainstream evangelical and even non-denominational churches without requiring full Pentecostal distinctives like tongues as initial evidence.[57] This wave, associated with figures like John Wimber and the Vineyard movement, focused on power encounters and signs in everyday ministry, broadening the appeal and leading to hybrid expressions in global denominations.[58]
Power Evangelism
Power evangelism refers to a strategy within charismatic Christianity that integrates the proclamation of the gospel with demonstrations of supernatural power, such as healings and miracles, to authenticate the message and facilitate conversions.[59] This approach posits that signs and wonders serve as divine endorsements that soften hearts toward the Christian message, drawing from biblical precedents where miracles accompanied evangelism.[60]The concept originated in the teachings of John Wimber, a key figure in the Vineyard Movement, who developed it during his tenure as an adjunct professor at Fuller Theological Seminary in the early 1980s. Wimber introduced these ideas through his influential course MC510, "Signs, Wonders, and Church Growth," which emphasized the role of the Holy Spirit's power in expanding the church.[61] He formalized the framework in his 1986 book Power Evangelism, co-authored with Kevin Springer, where he argued that contemporary miracles are essential for effective outreach, as they mirror the ministry of Jesus and the apostles by opening unbelievers to the gospel.[62]In practice, power evangelism employs methods like targeted prayer for healing during evangelistic events, often following a structured five-step prayer model that includes interviewing the recipient, diagnosing the need, praying in faith, assessing results, and persisting if necessary. This model, rooted in Wimber's Vineyard teachings, is commonly applied in outreach settings such as conferences and street ministry to invite the Holy Spirit's intervention.[63] For instance, at Vineyard conferences in the 1980s and 1990s, participants reported instances of physical healings during prayer sessions that preceded gospel presentations, leading to immediate faith commitments.[64]Documented cases from the 1990s Toronto Blessing revivals, associated with the Vineyard network, illustrate this strategy's application, where extended worship and prayer meetings resulted in reported healings, emotional restorations, and subsequent conversions among attendees and their networks. These events, beginning in 1994 at the Toronto Airport Vineyard Church, featured manifestations of signs and wonders that proponents credit with drawing thousands to faith, including family members of participants who experienced personal transformations.[65]The impact of power evangelism has contributed to significant growth in global missions, particularly within Pentecostal and charismatic contexts. Studies from the Center for the Study of Global Christianity indicate that Pentecostal movements, which often incorporate signs and wonders in preaching, achieve higher conversion rates worldwide, with estimates of 35,000 daily converts (a figure commonly cited since the mid-2010s), outpacing other Christian traditions.[66] A recent analysis indicates that such Spirit-empowered approaches have driven the movement's expansion to approximately 664 million adherents as of 2025, representing about 26% of global Christians, through evangelistic efforts emphasizing miraculous confirmations.[52][67]
Criticisms and Responses
Skeptical Critiques
Skeptics from scientific communities argue that claims of signs and wonders, such as miraculous healings or supernatural events, lack empirical evidence and fail to meet the standards of reproducibility and falsifiability required in scientific inquiry.[68] These phenomena are often explained through natural processes, cognitive errors, or deliberate deception rather than supernatural intervention, as uniform human experience establishes the consistency of natural laws, making violations improbable without extraordinary proof. Skeptics generally attribute apparent successes to misattribution of natural recoveries.[68]A prominent example of fraud in faith healing comes from the work of magician and skeptic James Randi, who in the 1980s exposed several televangelists using sleight-of-hand, staged demonstrations, and hidden aids like radio receivers to simulate divine knowledge and cures.[69] In his 1987 book The Faith Healers, Randi documented cases involving figures like Peter Popoff, where accomplices relayed audience information via concealed devices, leading to debunkings that revealed no genuine supernatural elements.[70] Such exposures underscore how performers exploit audience expectations to fabricate signs and wonders for financial gain.From a psychological standpoint, belief in signs and wonders is frequently linked to confirmation bias, where individuals selectively interpret ambiguous events as miraculous to align with preexisting expectations, and heightened suggestibility in group settings amplifies these perceptions.[71] Studies show that rituals associated with faith healing can induce the placebo effect, producing subjective improvements in symptoms through expectation rather than objective healing; for example, a 2021 neuroimaging study found that administering inert "Lourdes water" increased brain connectivity in networks related to emotional salience and reduced cognitive control, leading participants to report enhanced pleasant sensations without physiological changes.[72] This suggestibility is compounded by post hoc reasoning, where natural remissions, such as spontaneous wart disappearance (occurring in 50-70% of cases within two years), are erroneously credited to intervention.[69]Historically, skepticism toward signs and wonders dates to medieval ecclesiastical critiques of hagiographies, where accounts of saints' miracles were often embellished or fabricated to promote devotion, with church authorities distinguishing "true" miracles from deceptions by heretics or fraudsters.[73] Scholarly analysis reveals that medieval texts employed "pia fraus" (pious fraud), intentionally crafting narratives of relics or visions to edify the faithful, though clerics warned against lay gullibility toward false claims that undermined doctrinal authority.[73] These doubts persisted as hagiographers balanced inspirational storytelling with efforts to avoid outright fabrication, reflecting broader tensions between transcendence and verifiable truth.In contemporary contexts, skeptical investigations into prosperity gospel movements in the 2020s have revealed patterns of excess, including unsubstantiated miracle claims tied to financial solicitations that exploit vulnerable followers.[74] Reports from organizations like the Center for Inquiry document how televangelists use direct-mail campaigns promising divine signs in exchange for donations, often resulting in no verifiable outcomes and leading to regulatory scrutiny for fraudulent practices.[74] For instance, a 2022 medical critique examined claims in Craig Keener's bookMiracles Today?, arguing that presented healings lack sufficient evidence to support supernatural explanations.[75] Such critiques emphasize the psychological and economic harms, where suggestibility and confirmation bias perpetuate belief despite a lack of empirical support for the proclaimed wonders.[74]
Theological Defenses
Theological defenses of signs and wonders within Christian apologetics emphasize that these phenomena are expressions of God's sovereign initiative rather than empirical proofs subject to human verification or demand. C. Peter Wagner, in his 1987 work Signs and Wonders Today, argues that signs serve to authenticate the gospel message under divine authority, not as manipulative tools or guaranteed responses to faith formulas, thereby countering critiques that portray them as superstitious or coercive. This perspective aligns with biblical precedents where miracles underscore God's kingship, as seen in the Exodus narratives, without serving as on-demand validations.A central element of these defenses is the biblical mandate for discernment, encapsulated in 1 John 4:1, which instructs believers to "test the spirits to see whether they are from God," given the prevalence of false prophets. Theologians interpret this as a call to evaluate purported signs against scriptural orthodoxy, Christological confession, and ethical fruit, preventing uncritical acceptance while preserving openness to the Holy Spirit's work.[76] This testing framework, drawn from apostolic warnings, addresses concerns about deception by distinguishing genuine manifestations—aligned with love and truth—from counterfeit ones that promote division or self-exaltation.[77]Reflective scholarship further bolsters these defenses through communal and academic engagement. The 1988 symposium at Fuller Theological Seminary, convened to integrate signs and wonders into missions education, yielded outcomes that affirmed their role in evangelism while stressing theological accountability and empirical caution, as documented in Wagner's account of the proceedings.[78] More recent contributions, such as Sam Storms' The Beginner's Guide to Spiritual Gifts (revised edition, 2013), explicitly tackle potential abuses like sensationalism or exploitation, advocating for gifts exercised in humility and under church oversight to foster edification rather than spectacle.This balancing act acknowledges the reality of false signs—potentially demonic or psychologically induced—while upholding the legitimacy of authentic ones through collective discernment within the body of Christ. Defenders argue that isolated individualism exacerbates errors, whereas biblically grounded community evaluation, informed by passages like 1 Corinthians 14:29 on weighing prophecies, ensures signs contribute to unity and mission. Such approaches not only respond to cessationist objections but also integrate continuationist convictions by prioritizing God's glory over experiential excess.[79]