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?
Have a story to share? You're in the right place.
How we weigh it
The strongest cases — and the ones we’ve caught
Every claim gets the same two questions: could nature explain it, and did it happen? A few across the range — from the best-evidenced to the confessed hoaxes.

healing · Lourdes, France (patient from Trento, Italy)
Vittorio Micheli: Pelvic Sarcoma Healed — Bone Reconstruction Documented by X-ray
An Italian soldier with an inoperable sarcoma destroying his pelvis and hip socket recovered completely after a 1963 Lourdes pilgrimage; follow-up X-rays showed the destroyed bone had reconstructed — a case published in a peer-reviewed journal.

providence · San Jose mine, near Copiapo, Atacama Desert, Chile
Los 33 — Sixty-Nine Days Under the Atacama and the '34th Miner' (2010)
When the San Jose mine collapsed on August 5, 2010, 33 men were sealed 700 meters underground with three days of food; they survived 17 days before a probe found them and 69 days before all 33 rode a rescue capsule to the surface — an outcome miners and nation alike credited to a '34th miner' who never left them.

signs · New Delhi, India; spread globally to UK, Canada, UAE, Nepal
The 1995 Ganesha Milk Miracle
On September 21, 1995, Hindu devotees worldwide reported that statues of Ganesha and other deities were drinking milk offered by spoon — a mass phenomenon that lasted roughly 24 hours before stopping as abruptly as it began.

signs · Cottingley, West Yorkshire, England
The Cottingley Fairies: A Photographic Hoax Confessed 65 Years Later
Photographs of fairies taken by two Yorkshire cousins in 1917, which convinced Arthur Conan Doyle and leading spiritualists of fairy existence, were confessed by both subjects in 1983 to be cardboard cutouts supported on hatpins.
- Towana Looney — 130 Days Off Dialysis with a Pig Kidney (2024)Explained
- The Dhammakaya 'Sun Miracle'Unproven
- Eben Alexander: A Neurosurgeon's 'Proof of Heaven'Unproven
- The Naga Fireballs of the Mekong RiverUnproven
- Severe Aplastic Anemia Recovers With No Treatment — and the Immune System Explains HowExplained
- Set to Be Taken Off Life Support, He Recovered Instead (2024)Explained
- St. Gemma's Relic That Appeared to Move on Its Own (2025)Explained
- A Lung Lymphoma That Vanished After Only a Biopsy (2025)Explained
- A Holocaust Survivor's Menorah, Pulled Whole From the Ashes of the Eaton FireExplained
- The Angels of MonsDisproven
- Anna Bågenholm: Survival from Extreme Accidental HypothermiaExplained
- A Quran Found Untouched After a North Carolina Condo FireExplained
Find your way in
By what you came here for, not by category.
From the catalog
The most interesting cases to start with — well-documented and genuinely contested — followed by the newest.

healing · Peoria, Illinois, USA
James Fulton Engstrom: Stillborn 61 Minutes, Full Recovery — Fulton Sheen's Miracle
An Illinois newborn with no heartbeat for 61 minutes, given up for dead, suddenly revived with no lasting brain damage — proposed as the miracle for Archbishop Fulton Sheen's beatification.

healing · Calanda, Aragon, Spain
The Calanda Miracle: A Restored Leg
A young man's amputated right leg was, by sworn contemporary testimony, restored overnight in 1640 — two years after it had been cut off and buried.

signs · San Giovanni Rotondo, Italy
Padre Pio's Stigmata
Italian Capuchin friar Francesco Forgione (Padre Pio) bore visible wounds on his hands, feet, and side for approximately fifty years, examined by multiple physicians who reached contradictory conclusions.

relics · Turin, Italy
The Shroud of Turin
A ~14-foot linen cloth in Turin's cathedral bearing the faint front-and-back image of a crucified man. A 1988 radiocarbon test dated a corner to the Middle Ages; that date is now genuinely contested, and nobody has reproduced how the image formed.

apparition · Tepeyac Hill, Mexico City, Mexico
Our Lady of Guadalupe (The Tilma of Juan Diego)
In 1531, a Marian image allegedly appeared miraculously on the cloak of indigenous convert Juan Diego in Mexico City, producing an artifact still venerated nearly 500 years later.
An Alabama woman lived 130 days off dialysis with a gene-edited pig kidney — the longest any pig organ has functioned in a living human — before acute rejection forced its removal. The headlines reached for the word "miracle." The honest description is something rarer: a fully explained triumph of engineering, with limits as documented as the success.
Towana Looney — 130 Days Off Dialysis with a Pig Kidney (2024)
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.
The Dhammakaya 'Sun Miracle'
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.
Eben Alexander: A Neurosurgeon's 'Proof of Heaven'
Every year at the end of Buddhist Lent (Wan Ok Phansa, in late October), crowds along a long stretch of the Mekong River near Phon Phisai in northeastern Thailand report seeing reddish glowing orbs rise silently from the water and climb into the night sky. Devotees attribute them to the Phaya Naga, a revered serpent deity, honoring the Buddha's return from the heavens. The lights are real and recurring; what causes them is disputed, with two natural accounts on the table — igniting riverbed gas, and human-fired tracer rounds, the latter captured in a 2002 Thai television documentary.
The Naga Fireballs of the Mekong River
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).
Severe Aplastic Anemia Recovers With No Treatment — and the Immune System Explains How
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.
Set to Be Taken Off Life Support, He Recovered Instead (2024)
From the community
Submitted stories awaiting review. Upvote what we should research next.
The catalog launched this week — this space is open and yours to start.
No community stories are in yet. A healing you witnessed, a rescue that shouldn’t have worked, timing too perfect to shrug off — share it as good news, or opt in to a full evidence review. Either way it posts here for others to weigh in, and the community decides what we research next.
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