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When [[Alistair Gryffen]] found that the [[chess]] room in [[Gryffen Manor]] was [[The Hunger|remarkably]] tidied up, he called it a "minor miracle". ([[TV]]: ''[[Black Hunger (TV story)|Black Hunger]]'')
When [[Alistair Gryffen]] found that the [[chess]] room in [[Gryffen Manor]] was [[The Hunger|remarkably]] tidied up, he called it a "minor miracle". ([[TV]]: ''[[Black Hunger (TV story)|Black Hunger]]'')
[[Category:Religious concepts]]
[[Category:Religious concepts]]

Revision as of 23:28, 3 September 2020

Miracle

Miracles were unusual but beneficial phenomena usually attributed to supernatural intervention. In the words of the Eleventh Doctor:

The universe is big. It's vast and complicated and ridiculous, and sometimes, very rarely, impossible things just happen and we call them miracles, and that's the theory.Eleventh Doctor [The Pandorica Opens (TV story) [src]]

The evacuation of Dunkirk was seen as a miracle by the people of England. (PROSE: Timewyrm: Exodus)

The Latter-Day Pantheon used their reality-warping abilities to perform many miracles in New York City in 1965, leading to many believing them to be gods. (PROSE: Salvation)

Lolem believed that the disappearance of the Second Doctor and Ramo was the miracle of Amdo having eaten them. (TV: The Underwater Menace)

The Eleventh Doctor initially attributed Rory Williams's resurrection to a miracle. (TV: The Pandorica Opens)

The sudden end of death on Earth in 2011 became known as Miracle Day. (TV: The New World) When Oswald Danes saw Jack Harkness come back to life after Miracle Day ended, he thought it was a miracle. (TV: The Blood Line)

The inhabitants of Detrios named their new source of light and heat the Miracle. (PROSE: Head Games)

When Alistair Gryffen found that the chess room in Gryffen Manor was remarkably tidied up, he called it a "minor miracle". (TV: Black Hunger)