ruby sparks
Contributor
Or cure leprosy.
If he existed, he surely could not cure leprosy. That said, someone claiming to cure something by mysterious means is extremely common, even today. Back then, faith healing was readily resorted to and people believed in it, there being few if any alternatives. There were supposed cures for lots of things and magic men supposedly able to do them.
When I myself was about 10, in rural Ireland, I was taken to the local faith healer to get cured of warts on my hand. It involved the guy praying over a potato cut in half and the 'special half-potato' being rubbed on the warts, then the half-potato was buried in our garden and I was supposed to walk in a circle around it every day, saying certain words, until the warts went away. That was rural, catholic Ireland in the 1960's. These guys had reputations for curing all sorts of things and lots of believing customers.
What happens in Ireland, or used to happen right up until the 60's at least, was that there was almost a competitive thing going on between villages. If one village had a magic man, the next wanted one. They were everywhere.
As for turning water into wine.....well....every catholic priest in the country was (and still is to a lesser extent) widely believed to be able to actually turn wine into blood and the Pope or a senior-enough bishop can turn ordinary water into holy water.
Even supposedly raising dead people back to life goes on today in the USA.
See also: supposed control over the weather, casting out demons, claims of levitation, etc.
In other words, people with faith-healing and other abilities have often claimed, and still do, all over the world in almost every religion, to have some magic or divine credentials and were/are believed. There was no need to make up reports of miracles or of people doing them. They could just as easily be accurate reports, circulated orally (as things often were in that cultural context of the ancient mediterannean and middle east) and later written down.
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