A new documentary from CBN Films takes a bold look at modern miracles, challenging skeptics and offering hope to believers. “Investigating the Supernatural: Miracles” follows journalist Billy Hallowell as he digs into real-life stories of healing that doctors can’t explain. The film mixes science and faith to show God’s power still works today in a world that often doubts anything beyond what we can see.
Many today dismiss miracles as old stories or lucky breaks. But this documentary pushes back, showing hard evidence that some events defy human logic. It’s a refreshing reminder that faith and facts aren’t enemies. In an age where some want to erase God from public life, these stories prove He’s still active—if we’re willing to look.
One story features Dr. Joshua Brown, a scientist who survived a deadly brain tumor after prayer. Doctors gave him two years to live, but twenty years later, he’s healthy with no signs of sickness. His recovery wasn’t just luck—it was a clear answer to faithful prayer. Skeptics might call it a fluke, but how do you explain decades of health after a death sentence?
Then there’s Brian Lapoo, paralyzed for ten years after a neck injury. Doctors said he’d never walk again. At a prayer conference, he felt God’s touch—and suddenly stood up, healed. His medical records before and after tell the story. Stories like this remind us that no situation is too hopeless for God’s intervention, even when modern medicine has no answers.
The film also shares Dr. Chauncey Crandall’s experience with a patient declared dead from a heart attack. Feeling God’s nudge, Dr. Crandall prayed over the man—and watched his heart restart. Three days later, the man walked out with no brain damage. It’s a powerful lesson: listening to God can change lives, even in a secular field like medicine.
Experts in the film, like Lee Strobel, argue that science and faith work together. Real miracles don’t ignore facts—they rise above them. Too often, our culture acts like believing in the supernatural is childish. But this documentary asks: What’s more closed-minded—believing in miracles or refusing to consider evidence because it doesn’t fit your worldview?
Some will still dismiss these stories, clinging to rigid skepticism. But the film challenges that attitude head-on. If we accept only what fits in a lab, we miss the bigger picture. God isn’t limited by human understanding. These miracles aren’t just about healing bodies—they’re about opening hearts to truth in a society that’s lost its way.
For Christians feeling pressured to downplay their beliefs, this documentary is a rallying cry. It shows God’s power is real and relevant today. In a time of confusion and doubt, these stories remind us to stand firm. Share this film—not just with believers, but with skeptics needing proof that faith isn’t blind. Miracles aren’t confined to the past. They’re happening now, if we have eyes to see.