The Banned said:
I think the biggest issue here is both sides unwilling to be open minded (or at least stay highly skeptical). Here is a case that was heavily investigated. Scientists are named, the facility where research was conducted is named and it was a big deal in Poland at the time. As far as I can find, no atheist scientists are jumping to try and disprove it as they do with many other false miracles. On the other hand, would the Church be willing to hand over materials when they believe it will not be given a fair shot? Idk who's to blame in this not being more studied, but you'd think skeptics would be lined up around the block to disprove it and be very loud when they were denied access to simple documents. Idk.
http://www.miracolieucaristici.org/en/download/sokolka.pdf
ETA: When science disproves a miracle, it seems to be a big deal. When science seems to prove a miracle, it's always crickets.
Your basic premise here is false. It's news when science disproves a miracle because that happens from time to time. The opposite never actually happens. This isn't an example of science proving a miracle. If the church really believed they had something here they would themselves make a big deal of it, they have not. In fact many of the places I see this discussed online have Catholics asking why the church hasn't pushed this more.
At a very basic level the initial claim is totally unextraordinary. Bread that fell on the ground, was put in water and slowly turned red. This has an obvious and repeatable natural explanation. This is an effect known to be caused by bacteria, and the bread fell on the ground which is a great place to have bacteria added. So far nothing.
The extraordinary claim is that two catholic scientists claim that it's heart muscle.
But let's follow up on that a bit, the university officially distanced itself from the claims:
"The Medical University officially dissociates itself from the results of these studies and emphasizes that the university does not endorse them. This is the position of the Rector of the University, which Prof. Chyczewski, as a spokesman, presents in the latest issue of the "Medyk Biaostocki" magazine published at the university. On Thursday, the statement was made available to PAP.
We didn't do it as a university" - Chyczewski told PAP and added that the research was carried out illegally, "quietly", outside the official way. It took place in the Academic Department of Pathomorphological Diagnostics. Chyczewski emphasizes that the university did not have any commission to carry out this research, the study was not registered anywhere. "Please do not attribute the diagnosis to any particular institution operating in an institution called the Medical University," Chyczewski wrote in his statement."
This is google translated from polish.
The Medical University dissociates itself from the research on the "miracle" in Sokka | Studying in Poland (naukawpolsce.pl)As to scientist being willing to examine it:
The Department of Forensic Medicine in Bydgoszcz reported its readiness to perform them. "Out of scientific curiosity," says its head, Prof. Karol liwka.
A DNA test would accurately indicate whether the tissue that has been tested is human or animal, and whether it is male or female material. "With a high degree of probability, we would determine which region of the world it comes from. We would dispel all doubts," assures Prof. liwka.
Prof. Chyczewski: - The Archbishop was not interested in conducting such research. I was told that if there was a circumstance of the miraculous origin of this material, it should not be bothered any more.
What really happened in Sokka - rp.plAgain google translate from polish
This was not heavily investigated, the church didn't want it to be, it wasn't investigated with ANY peer reviewed science. It seems even a little bit of skepticism and investigation proves your initial characterization pretty far off.