About

This site is a centralized collection of significant miracles of the Catholic and Apostolic Church—Marian apparitions, Eucharistic miracles, and miraculous healings—presented in a format that is easy to read and understand. This includes miracles recognized by the Roman Catholic Church as well as those recognized by the Orthodox Churches, which share valid apostolic succession and sacraments. The goal is to make documented evidence accessible without requiring prior familiarity with Church history or theology.

The Questions This Site Aims to Answer

Where is God? Why doesn't He reveal Himself more clearly? How am I supposed to know which religion is the right one?

It does so by demonstrating that there are mountains of hard evidence showing that God continues to reveal Himself even after the Resurrection of Christ—and that He reveals Himself in miracles that point to the Catholic and Apostolic Church as His Church.

Inform, Not Preach

The goal is not to preach, but to inform. The site relies on hard, documented data that cannot be simply hand-waved away. It is intended to supplement the public revelations of the Gospels and the deep, well-established philosophical and theological traditions of the Church with extraordinary examples of God continuing to intervene in modern times.

When these elements are combined—Scripture, tradition, reason, and the ongoing witness of miracles—they create a compelling case that puts the Catholic Apostolic Church above all other alternatives.

Sources

Entries are drawn from Vatican-approved causes, diocesan archives, the Lourdes International Medical Committee, peer-reviewed medical literature (e.g., PubMed, Linacre Quarterly), and established reference works. Each miracle entry includes source links where available. The site prioritizes cases with strong documentation: sworn testimony, medical records, scientific analysis, and ecclesiastical investigation.

How This Site Was Built

The site is built with Next.js and TypeScript. Miracle data is stored in a structured database (Prisma, SQLite) and populated via ingest scripts that pull from curated sources: Vatican canonization causes, Lourdes Medical Bureau records, Eucharistic miracle catalogs, and scholarly publications. Each entry is tagged by type, century, country, and approval status. The site exposes a machine-readable JSON manifest for AI agents and researchers. Search and filtering allow users to browse by category, location, or time period.

About Me

I'm a lay Catholic husband and father inspired by the example of St. Carlo Acutis, striving to use modern tools like AI to spread the Gospel as far as possible. This project is entirely self-funded and seeks no donations or ad revenue. My only request is that you share this site far and wide.

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