For as long as people have told stories, they have told of wonders that should not be possible. But what is really happening when we call something a miracle?From a child cured against the odds to a saint said to defy gravity, claims of the impossible run through every culture and every age. They inspire devotion in some and suspicion in others, yet they rarely get the patient, clear-eyed attention they deserve. Miracles in a Nutshell: Faith, Reason, and the Question of the Impossible offers exactly that: a calm, balanced guide through one of humanity's most persistent and divisive ideas.
This is not a book that sets out to prove or disprove. Instead, Miracles in a Nutshell: Faith, Reason, and the Question of the Impossible walks the reader along the line where belief meets argument, weighing what the faithful affirm, what the skeptic asks, and what honest reflection can hold open. It draws on philosophy, history, science, and the world's religious traditions to show why these questions still matter and why they refuse to settle.
- A clear account of what people across traditions have actually meant by the impossible made real
- The strongest arguments for belief, and the strongest arguments against, presented fairly side by side
- How natural law, probability, and the limits of evidence shape what we are willing to accept
- The roles of testimony, healing claims, and reported wonders in shaping religious life
- Practical ways to think about extraordinary claims without cynicism or credulity
Written in the warm, accessible style of the In a Nutshell series, Miracles in a Nutshell: Faith, Reason, and the Question of the Impossible respects both the believer and the doubter. It asks better questions rather than handing down easy answers, leaving the reader more thoughtful, more curious, and better equipped to weigh wonder against reason. For anyone who has ever paused at the edge of the impossible and wondered what to make of it, here is a concise companion for the journey.
About the Author
Theo Michael Williams is an independent researcher with a background in the history and philosophy of religion. For many years he has been drawn to the ways religious traditions have understood the extraordinary, reading widely across scripture, philosophy, and the accounts that ordinary people give of events they cannot explain. What holds his attention is not whether such stories can be proven, but how questions about miracles and the limits of the explicable can be approached thoughtfully, with curiosity rather than alarm, in the ordinary course of a thinking life.
His writing aims for clarity above all. He has little patience for jargon and even less for false certainty, preferring instead to set out timeless and contested ideas as fairly as he can and then step back. Where faith and reason pull in different directions, he resists the urge to decide for the reader. He would rather lay the evidence and the arguments side by side, in plain language, and trust the reader to weigh them and reach a considered judgment.