Pope Leo XIV EXPOSES INCORRUPT Saint Bernadette Soubirous MIRACLES
In a groundbreaking declaration that is already being hailed as one of the most significant spiritual moments of the 21st century, Pope Leo XIV has officially confirmed and exposed new miraculous findings related to Saint Bernadette Soubirous, the humble visionary of Lourdes whose incorrupt body continues to defy natural explanation more than 140 years after her death.

Speaking during a special audience at the Vatican this morning, Pope Leo XIV addressed thousands of faithful gathered in St. Peter’s Square—and millions more watching around the world—stating that recent investigations into Saint Bernadette’s body, relics, and legacy have revealed “astonishing signs of divine intervention” that cannot be dismissed.
“The incorrupt body of Saint Bernadette is not a mere preservation of flesh,” the Pope said. “It is a living sign, a prophetic voice from heaven, calling the world back to humility, to prayer, and to truth.”
Saint Bernadette, who died in 1879 at the age of 35, was the young peasant girl who famously experienced 18 apparitions of the Virgin Mary in Lourdes, France in 1858. Her body, discovered incorrupt decades after burial despite no embalming, has remained a source of wonder for both believers and skeptics.
But under Pope Leo XIV’s pontificate, the Vatican quietly reopened the case—conducting new forensic, theological, and spiritual investigations in collaboration with both scientists and mystics. What they discovered, sources say, was nothing short of miraculous.
According to the Pope’s newly released apostolic document “Signum Vivens” (“The Living Sign”), several new phenomena have occurred:
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Slight movements in the saint’s fingers and eyelids, recorded under controlled conditions at her shrine in Nevers, France.
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The unexplained scent of roses—a traditional sign of Marian presence—filling the chapel during specific liturgical hours.
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Healing reports of pilgrims, including two recent cases of medically documented recoveries from terminal illness following silent prayer near Bernadette’s glass reliquary.
The Pope also revealed a previously unshared testimony from a nun who cared for Bernadette’s remains for decades. In it, the nun claims to have seen the saint “smile faintly” during private veneration. Though dismissed at the time as imagination or fatigue, the story has now been re-examined under a new light.
“These signs are not spectacles,” Pope Leo XIV said. “They are God’s whisper to a world grown deaf to wonder.”
The Pope’s declaration has reignited global devotion to Lourdes and to Bernadette herself, with Catholic churches around the world holding special Masses and vigils in response. Pilgrimages to Nevers are already seeing a dramatic increase.
While scientists remain cautious, even secular observers admit the phenomenon of Bernadette’s incorruption defies easy explanation. Vatican theologians, meanwhile, are calling this “a clear confirmation that the age of miracles is not over—it is only beginning again.”
As Pope Leo XIV continues to lead the Church with both bold reform and deep spiritual grounding, the legacy of a poor shepherd girl from Lourdes may now stand as the beating heart of a renewed Catholic revival.