The claims
Each entry pairs a reported miracle with the documentary record and an honest, confidence-labeled estimate of how likely it is that no natural explanation accounts for it.
Each entry pairs a reported miracle with the documentary record and an honest, confidence-labeled estimate of how likely it is that no natural explanation accounts for it.
2 claims
A wooden statue of the Virgin Mary at the Institute of the Handmaids of the Eucharist in Akita, Japan wept on 101 documented occasions between 1973 and 1981, with tears and blood analyzed as human biological fluids; Bishop Ito approved veneration in 1984.
A wooden statue of the Virgin Mary at the Institute of the Handmaids of the Eucharist in Akita, Japan wept on 101 documented occasions between 1973 and 1981, with tears and blood analyzed as human biological fluids; Bishop Ito approved veneration in 1984.
A Byzantine Greek Catholic icon of the Virgin Mary in Máriapócs, Hungary wept visibly for eleven days in November–December 1696, witnessed by large crowds and authenticated by a mixed committee of Catholic, Protestant, and Jewish investigators; it wept again in 1715 and 1905.
A Byzantine Greek Catholic icon of the Virgin Mary in Máriapócs, Hungary wept visibly for eleven days in November–December 1696, witnessed by large crowds and authenticated by a mixed committee of Catholic, Protestant, and Jewish investigators; it wept again in 1715 and 1905.