The sceptics on this forum seem happy to write off Ele Mumford's testimony as a deliberate lie.
Why does it have to be a deliberate lie? It certainly could be, but equally, she could just be a rather gullible woman, led by the burning desire for her beliefs to be true, with no critical thinking skills. In fact I'd say this is a certainty.
It takes a lot of courage to stand up and give a witness in front of 2000 people. It would take an unbelievable amout of courage to tell them a deliberate lie.
It's been done before Al and it'll be done again.
I do not know if any people did question Ele about her story. There was certainly plenty of opportunity for them to ask her, and I am sure there must have been someone in the crowd who did so.
You say "I am sure" but actually you're not, are you? You say "I do not know if any people did question Ele about her story" and then in the next sentence you say "I am sure there must have been someone in the crowd who did so." Which is it? You don't know, or you're sure?
Come on Al, there's a world-shaking medical miracle at stake here. There's a hospital to be traced, there are medical people to be found and quizzed. This story is within reach of being confirmed as a bona fide miracle ... or not. (Which makes me wonder why Mrs Mumford herself didn't alert the media to the presence of this amazing miracle).
Why is it that whenever people airily claim miraculous events (especially so-called incredible healings - claims of which I've encountered umpteen times) they're always hearsay, along the lines of "I heard" or "Somebody said ..." or "Mrs Smith says she saw ..."? Never any hard facts and figures, always handy-wavy vagueness.