For example, Ohm's law forbade such a miracle: to touch a high-voltage
wire (or receive a lightning strike) and stay alive. But the great inventor
Nikola Tesla often played with voltages and even passed a million volts
through himself! Therefore, Ohm's law must contain the function X = X(t)
in this form: I = X * U / R. In situations where a miracle does not happen
the electric current kills a person (e.g., at time moment t=3), and
therefore then X(3) = 1.
If you're going to talk about Ohm's law, please make sure that you understand it before claiming miracle. Ohm's law only applies to ohmic materials. It doesn't apply to nonohmic materials.
Of course it's only an assertion if there's no evidence and/or proof of this. So the proof we have are; diodes, resistors, wires, and lamps, just to name a few. Which is what in regards to the materials? You tell me, since you're the expert in Ohm's law.
Your miracle is nothing more than materials and their attributes. So through peer review, your hypothesis is rejected, therefore fails to make it to the next step.
If it fails here already, what makes you think it has any chance of getting into a scientific journal? If it can be easily dismissed on a public religion forum, peer reviewers of scientific journals need only look at it once and dismiss it due to the ignorance in the subject matter.