Is Delia Knox a real miracle?
Assessed by Miracles Jar AI · 2026-06-10
UnprovenClaimed — the record can't carry it
Miracles Jar rates Delia Knox — Claimed Walking Recovery After 22 Years of Paralysis (2010) Unproven. Too thin a record to say either way. Two scales drive that verdict: how extraordinary it would be if it truly happened — naturally explained — and how strong the evidence is — no credible evidence.
How miraculous, if true
Naturally explained
Does it break the laws of nature — if it really happened?
How strong the evidence
No credible evidence
Is there evidence it's true?
Common questions
- Is Delia Knox real or fake?
- Miracles Jar's verdict is Unproven: claimed — the record can't carry it. Too thin a record to say either way. On the evidence, the record is no credible evidence.
- Has Delia Knox been debunked?
- No — but it has not been confirmed either. The record is too thin to carry the claim in either direction. The natural alternative most often raised is misdiagnosis & the overstated prognosis.
- What is the evidence for Delia Knox?
- Miracles Jar weighs 2 sources for this case. Points that support the claim: Video evidence documents Knox in a wheelchair for years prior to 2010 and walking at the August 2010 revival service. Points that cut against it: No pre-healing medical records (diagnosis, injury level, completeness classification) have been publicly released or independently reviewed; and No post-healing neurological examination has been published or independently reviewed.
- What is the natural explanation for Delia Knox?
- The leading natural account is misdiagnosis & the overstated prognosis. A cure is only ever as miraculous as the original diagnosis was certain. The weakest link is often the first record, not the recovery. The full breakdown shows where that explanation holds — and where it stops.
- When and where did Delia Knox happen?
- It is said to have occurred August 2010 in Mobile, Alabama, USA.
More questions like this
Miracles Jar weighs each claim two ways — how extraordinary it would be if it truly happened, and how strong the evidence is — so you can judge it for yourself. See the full case → Or browse every verdict →