@boagie,
Regarding Jesus and miracles, and the Biblical record thereof, and the notion that these things are fraud, or a test, I must ask: why?
If the Bible is talking about people touching the hem of His robe and being healed what should we take from this?
Which of the following is more likely:
1. The Biblical authors were boldface liars
2. God uses deception to seperate his followers, for some reason or another
3. Jesus and his following were using alot of drugs
or, finally, and I think the most likely:
4. The Bible is literature
If the Bible is literature, we would be silly to think that miraculous events literally happened. We would understand that such recorded events are supposed to convey a message. In the example of Jesus healing, the message seems pretty clear: the Word of God, the Holy Spirit, the wisdom of Christ, whatever you want to call it, can heal your soul.
The blind who Jesus cures - they are not literally blind, cured by some miraculous stroke. The teachings of Jesus will open your eyes to the truth.
We should not run around thinking any possible explaination is a good explaination. We need to ask ourselves: what makes the most sense? Which theory best solves the problem. Removing fundamentalism from the way we approach Biblical literature, realizing that these books were never supposed to be an historical account of the life of Jesus seems to be the best solution.