The materialization of miracles through stylistic or other means is not a virtue but is often regarded as one in many circles.
Upon seeing a man healed after miraculous act of God to make a cancer disappear. One may say, the blessing was not in that it disappeared but that the machine was discovered to be flawed in the beginning!
Or rather instead of beholding the beauty of a loving reunion of a family as an act of God, one may say that the miracle was not the reunion that would be materially though mistakenly attributed to human intervention, but the love that exists among the family.
This is the materialization of miracles. It is a concession and ought not to be regarded as virtue due to the style and the attribution to humans naturalistically over God.
It is beautiful and life giving for good to occur, but it is not more beautiful and praiseworthy than divine intervention, which this form of stylistic speech and attribution to natural events promotes.
It is not an effort to see God in all things, as culture would have it, but a demeaning of faith and the beautification of that which is lesser over that which is greater: true faith and God’s action in mankind.