PART I: GOD CAN'T--JESUS:(3) An omnipotent God micro-manages the laws of Nature. So all creation chaos (natural disasters, fatal disease, etc.) is a manifestation of His will because there is no true victimization due to chance and accidents. So if a young child dies of a fatal congenital condition or is killed in an accident, that must be God's will. Wrong!
Jesus teaches that the right kind of faith can work miracles.
Jesus praises healing faith when He encounters it (Luke 7:9; Matthew 15:28).
Jesus rebukes His disciples' doubts when they fail to perform miracles (Mark 9:18-19; Matthew 14:31)."
Jesus therefore assumes that His disciples are responsible for developing their own healing faith: e. g.
"Have faith in God... So I tell you, whatever you ask for in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours (Mark 11:22-23
So Bette is correct that God's failure to perform a miracle to save a starving Sudenese child is morally reprehensible. Right? Nope.
"He COULD DO NO deed of power there, (except that He laid His hands on a few sick people and cured them.) And He was amazed at their unbelief (Mark 6:6)."
The except clause in in parentheses because NT scholars rightly consider it a later scribal gloss. Mark could have said that Jesus was only able to heal a few in Nazareth. Instead, the text is self-contradictory, saying "He could do no deed of power there" and then contradicts itself with the except clause--a telltale sign of the gloss intended to minimize Jesus' humiliation in trying and failing to cure Nazareth residents. The result of Jesus' humiliating failure? Nazareth residents are "scandalized" by Him and claims about His miraculous messianic powers. Worse, even His own family is disillusioned:
"A prophet is not without honor,... except among His own kin and in His own house (6:4)."
This failure warrants the inference that faith can be a necessary condition for healing faith without being a sufficient condition. Such limitations imposed on God's will prompt Paul to identify Satan or the forces of Chaos rather than Yahweh as "the God of this world (2 Corinthians 4:4)."
The OT scope of God's limited power in Creation will be explored in greater detail in Part II of my response to point (3). Stay tuned.
Mark's candid willingness to report Jesus' hometown humiliation adds credibility to his miracle stories.