Option 1: You accidentally printed more copies that you intended.
Option 2: The printer didn’t jam until your printing had finished.
Option 3: Some-one else also sent copies to the printer.
Option 4: The people receiving the printouts realised there weren’t enough, so shared copies, and you didn’t notice.
Option 5: There were less people than you had anticipated, so you didn’t run out of copies.
Option 6: God realised that the printer jam was causing you an issue, decided sorting out your printing was more important than preventing anyone from dying horrifically from cancer, car crash or cholera, then decided that unjamming the printer was the wrong approach, so magically duplicated some of the copies you had already printed in such a way that no-one saw it happening.
Some of these are obviously more likely than others, but claiming that a surplus of printouts cannot be accounted for naturally so the last option must be what happened is clearly unjustified.
I can certainly dismiss some Christians as being too prone to flights of fancy.
This was in the era of dot matrix printers, a colour one at that. Do you remember them?
If you had seen the state of the printout, you might be more sympathetic, but, you were not there. I was.
I did not ask for it. I did not pray over it. I quite expected it to run out and people have to share. Do not ask me why God should bother. I have no idea! Only my wife and I know it happened at all. I did not make a fuss at the meeting.
You can be as cynical or disbelieving as you like. I know what happened.
Bottom line for this post: The perception that the spirit of Jesus/the Holy Ghost dwells within you and answers your prayer requests is not objective evidence. It is subjective evidence. The problem with subjective evidence is that it is culturally dependent. Millions of Muslims subjectively experience their god and millions of Hindus their gods. If we want to discover which if any god is the one true God we need objective evidence.