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Miracles Jar

Stories & evidence, weighed honestly

What really happened — and how likely is it that there's no natural explanation?

Miracles Jar collects reported miracles and pairs each one with a Snopes-style review of the documentation. For every claim we lay out the sources, weigh the evidence, and give a plain verdict on two questions: could nature explain it — and is there real evidence it's true?

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250
Claims reviewed
856
Sources cited
9
Categories
118
Closely-reviewed cases

The Gold standard

Start with the strongest cases

Clearly extraordinary if true — and strongly documented. Of 250 claims examined, only 4 clear both bars.

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From the catalog

The most interesting cases to start with — well-documented and genuinely contested — followed by the newest.

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Unproven

On September 6, 1998, a crowd the temple put at roughly 20,000 gathered at Wat Phra Dhammakaya, a large Buddhist temple north of Bangkok, and reported seeing the sun spin, dim, and change colour, with the image of the movement's revered founder-monk appearing in the sky. The phenomenology closely matches the famous 1917 'miracle of the sun' at Fatima, and has the same proposed natural explanation — the optical after-images of staring at a bright sun, amplified by an expectant, meditation-primed crowd. The documentation is thin, drawn mainly from the movement's own media.

signs·Wat Phra Dhammakaya, Pathum Thani, Thailand

The Dhammakaya 'Sun Miracle'

Unproven

In 2008 the academic neurosurgeon Eben Alexander spent a week in a coma from a rare bacterial meningitis, recovered fully, and in the 2012 bestseller 'Proof of Heaven' described a vivid journey to an afterlife. What set his account apart was the argument he built on his own expertise: that the experience occurred while his cortex was entirely shut down, making it, in his view, evidence of consciousness beyond the brain. A 2013 Esquire investigation placed the experience in the sedated and recovery window rather than true brain death and disputed parts of his account; defenders, including a published rebuttal, argue the investigation distorted the medical facts.

apparition·Lynchburg, Virginia, USA

Eben Alexander: A Neurosurgeon's 'Proof of Heaven'

Explained

A 24-year-old woman in Japan with idiopathic severe aplastic anemia — a dangerous bone-marrow failure usually treated urgently with immunosuppression or a transplant — saw her blood counts start to recover on their own 11 days after diagnosis, with no treatment or transfusions, and stayed in complete remission 30 months later. Genetic analysis of her surviving blood cells showed they had escaped the autoimmune attack, giving the recovery a documented natural explanation. Reported in Frontiers in Immunology (2025).

medical·Japan

Severe Aplastic Anemia Recovers With No Treatment — and the Immune System Explains How

Explained

A 32-year-old man with lupus collapsed in cardiac arrest while jogging. After two weeks in a coma with a grim neurological prognosis, his family agreed to terminal extubation and organ donation. He survived the extubation, recovered, and a year later walked, talked, and consented to the peer-reviewed case report that documents how close the call came. His brain MRI had been normal all along.

medical·United States

Set to Be Taken Off Life Support, He Recovered Instead (2024)

Explained

A first-class relic of St. Gemma Galgani appeared, in a video that spread online in early October 2025, to shift on its own inside a sealed reliquary at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln's Newman Center. Within days the Diocese of Lincoln investigated and concluded the movement was 'not of supernatural origin' — traced to a bent display hook that left the reliquary's weight unevenly balanced.

phenomena·Lincoln, Nebraska, USA

St. Gemma's Relic That Appeared to Move on Its Own (2025)

Explained

A 72-year-old man had a lung nodule that a needle biopsy confirmed was non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. He received no chemotherapy or radiation — and four months later the tumor had completely disappeared on imaging, with no recurrence. The doctors published it not as a miracle but as a case of spontaneous regression, naming the biopsy itself as the most likely trigger.

medical·China

A Lung Lymphoma That Vanished After Only a Biopsy (2025)

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