143 documented Eucharistic miracles, one map. From an 8th-century Host in Lanciano to a blood-stained corporal found in Honduras in 2022 — the places, the lab reports, and the sources behind each case. Built on St. Carlo Acutis's exhibition.
https://t.co/KQ1QFeoJVS
June 9, 2022: a blood-stained corporal is discovered in a tabernacle in San Juan, Honduras. Laboratory testing identified human blood, type AB+. The local bishop recognized it as a Eucharistic miracle, and the case has been forwarded to the Vatican.
https://t.co/jKzJ4jZnj5
The site now translates into 7+ languages — Português, Español, Français, Deutsch, Italiano, Polski, and more. One tap from the menu on any page.
https://t.co/KQ1QFeoJVS
The Skeptic's Trail: a guided route through 7 laboratory-examined cases — named pathologists, named labs, named reports, and what remains unresolved. Stop by stop, on the map.
https://t.co/Fgq0UiWXsW
Christmas 2013, Legnica, Poland: a dropped Host placed in water developed a red stain. Forensic teams at two Polish universities found tissue most similar to human heart muscle. In 2016 the bishop declared it bears the signs of a Eucharistic miracle.
https://t.co/DaZwIOhvXx
Rome Has Spoken: a guided trail through 8 of the miracles carrying the Church's strongest formal recognition. Follow it stop by stop on the map.
https://t.co/szrn8S2MdF
Around 375 AD, St. Satyrus survived a shipwreck carrying the Eucharist around his neck — his brother, St. Ambrose, recorded it. In 2022, a blood-stained corporal was found in a Honduras tabernacle. 1,600+ years of documented miracles, one timeline.
https://t.co/t9NVcdcYm0
This account shares one documented Eucharistic miracle at a time — the history, the science, the sources. From a non-profit, lay-run project: no ads, nothing for sale. All 143 cases:
https://t.co/3tBbHTPlU6