I am certain that the man knows what his word means, and has used it in a proportion to his need. I am certain because no educated Catholic uses the word "miracle" unless he, at the very least, first thought the occurrence was improbable. If you, gladius, doubt what is ordinarily certain, you can contact the man about it yourself.
What I see is that Fr. C thought deportation was probable and desired it to happen, while Fr. R thought it was likewise probable but feared it happening. When the outcome happened against the odds, the use of "miracle" was used to advertise the appearance of divine approval for Fr. R's apostolate, and divine disapproval for Fr. C's. But, no such divine implications can be given to such either way, yet some in the Fr. R faction are gearing it that way anyway. Even terrorists, however improbable, are allowed through by the same US bureaucracy, so it is certainly not some divine stamp. And, even though Fr. C believed it was probable (with professional advice) as did Fr. R believe it probable, some in the faction on Fr. R's side actually had the gall and disrespect to laugh at Fr. C for believing in the same sort of probability as Fr. R believed in. This is really sophomoric and inconsistent. Had Fr. R not made the untraditional mistake of mixing a secular term of "miracle" with a religious answer to prayer (perhaps due to English not being his native tongue), most likely this nonsense would not have to be exposed, as I have done here.