In our additional analysis of the existence of God’s immanent justice and its surprising mode of action, we found 63,805 cases where God’s immanent justice intervened immediately and acted through apparent coincidences, which are astonishing and enigmatic to ordinary people (see Appendix 1).
1) An edifying first piece of evidence
This proof is ancient and can be considered extraordinary. It is called trial by ordeal. It was a common judicial test in the Middle Ages that consisted of subjecting people in dispute to a certain manifestly supernatural test. The basis of this trial was the immediate intervention of immanent justice. In this way, the guilt or innocence of a person accused of something was proven. There were three basic types of trials:
a) Trial by fire. The accused placed their hand (up to the elbow) in a powerful fire and if the flames did not burn them, did not affect their skin or hand at all, they were considered innocent. If, however, the flames affected and burned the skin of the hand even slightly, the person was declared guilty.
b) Another trial by ordeal was that of boiling water. The accused placed his hand (up to the elbow) in a container of boiling water. If the boiling water did not affect the skin at all and the person’s hand was not burned at all, the accused was declared not guilty. If the boiling water affected and burned the skin of the person’s hand, they were declared guilty.
c) Another trial by ordeal was that of the red-hot iron, an iron bar that was heated in an intense fire until it turned red from the flame. The accused had to grasp the heated iron bar with their bare hand and hold it in their hand for about a minute. If the red-hot iron bar did not burn or affect the hand or skin, the accused was declared innocent. If the red-hot iron bar burned their skin or hand, they were declared guilty.
Although today, when many human beings no longer believe in the existence of God and declare themselves atheists, these trials called ordeals seem incredible and may be considered impossible by sceptical, obtuse and atheistic human beings, in the Middle Ages ordeals were common and never led to mistakes or, in other words, to miscarriages of justice. Hundreds of historical accounts prove that this or that trial by ordeal worked with astonishing accuracy.
The supernatural trials by ordeal were always based on a rapid paranormal intervention, but essentially divine, of God’s immanent justice. The subtle and sublime energy of God’s Attribute of Justice immediately came into play in each trial. This Attribute of God appears in dictionaries and encyclopaedias under the name of God’s immanent justice, and the existence of this expression (“God’s immanent justice”) shows that it is in fact something that really exists.
The supernatural trial was known and always applied even by the Romans; it was known by the Latin name ordālium.

2) The second proof is now classic and is described in the book entitled “The Accursed Kings”, written by Maurice Druon. In it, he describes the final intervention of the Grand Master of the Knights Templar, Jacques de Molay, a famous figure who evoked God’s immanent justice. This book mentions everything that happened after his evocation, which attracted the hidden, inexorable faction of God’s immanent justice. Here is an excerpt, in French, about this episode that you can read carefully, as it is enlightening.


