In fact, for the witch's last sentence, you can also refute her in the same way, so you have such great ability and need to escape? Those people thought it was the witch who saved them, but we know what actually saved them - the swamp. The friar's girlfriend may have been saved by someone from their village, don't you notice that when the friar first saw his girlfriend in their village there was a scar on his forehead? But later on "resurrection" it didn't; that's a lie in itself, the miracle performed by the witch was to make people believe in her, in her authority. And the person who was cut up by horses believed in God. Even if he was cut up, the fate of those people in the village was already doomed at the moment of the cut up, because they never had such great confidence. The poor witch has to perform so-called miracles to convince people. This hormonal confidence is gone, and she wants it again next time. This has to remind me of Dostoevsky's words: "Faith can produce miracles, but miracles cannot produce faith."
What I want to say about faith is that unbelief is better than random belief. It's like having two servants and someone asks them, "Where is your master?" One says "I don't know" and the other says "He's sharpening his knife to kill those who follow him"
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