Looking For A Miracle
Article by: Brad Burke
This is a modified excerpt taken from the book, “An MD Examines: Does God Still Do Miracles?” (Cook Communications, 2006).
Not long ago, I heard the story of a woman whose teenage daughter was severely disabled with cerebral palsy. For several agonizing years, the mother prayed that God would work a miracle and heal her daughter.
Nothing happened.
Then, a friend and two other Christians approached the mother. “God gave me a vision that your daughter will soon be miraculously healed,” one said. Another said she had a dream that the daughter walked upright.
The mother’s hopes lifted. But the days slipped into weeks…the weeks into months…and still, no miracle.
To date, this woman’s daughter remains terribly crippled with cerebral palsy; I can’t help but wonder whether this woman’s faith has remained resilient despite the false hope given by so-called “friends.”
Perhaps, like me, you’ve had patients who have prayed for a miracle from God, but the miracle floodgates have failed to release even a single drop. Maybe you’ve sat motionless by their bedsides, unsure of what to say, as tears streamed down their cheeks over their disappointment with God. They’ve read book after book heralding the existence of miracles. They’ve sat in church and heard parishioners share incredible stories of divine healings. All the while, your patients’ spirits spiral downward as they wonder why God won’t intervene in a similar miraculous fashion on their behalf.
A Full Examination
As some patients are led to believe that everyone else is receiving a “personal miracle,” we have an important role to play in discerning the validity of miraculous claims. Many Christian physicians, including myself, believe God still performs miracles of physical healing that defy natural explanation. But are the hosts of “miracles” we hear about so often truly miracles? As the apostle Paul writes, “Test everything.” (1 Thessalonians 5:21).
I did just that after reading the account of a 3-year-old girl who suffered a broken leg along with brain and abdominal trauma in a horrendous car accident. The author wrote that the girl had 37 tubes in her body and that the doctors told the parents on the fourth day that the girl would need to remain in intensive care for at least two months, followed by six to eight months in the hospital learning to walk again. When the child was discharged from the hospital 11 days later, the author labeled the healing a genuine miracle. He went on to write of other events in the weeks following the accident, including the miraculous healing of the leg’s curvature and limp.
I called the author and asked him for additional details. He admitted having gathered his information from both parents and doctors, and I found many inconsistencies. (From a doctor’s perspective, it was easy to see which information came from which source.) For example, 37 tubes in a 3-year-old child with blunt trauma, and no abdominal surgery, is an absurd number. After following patients in the surgical intensive care unit as a surgery resident, and on the ward as chief resident of a respected rehabilitation medicine program, I can also tell you that a doctor cannot — and would not — predict on the fourth day exactly how long it would take for a comatose 3-year-old to be discharged from the PICU and begin walking again. (The doctors might have given a worst-case scenario, but the author’s wording never implied this.)
Furthermore, orthopedic surgeons are seldom worried about curvatures and leg length discrepancies in young children who have recently suffered a broken leg. Why? Because children’s bones usually grow out to correct for such deformities.
Unless one was knowledgeable in medicine, the author’s story would appear to be a miracle. But to a trained medical professional with expertise in treating many such patients, this example isn’t so miraculous. The author wasn’t deliberately sensationalizing the story; he just didn’t have the medical knowledge and correct information to fully understand the situation.
The same is true for many others who do not have significant medical training. They cannot begin to grasp how the human body is the most complex piece of molecular machinery known to man. Without having all the facts, lab and pathology reports, X-rays, treatment details, the natural course of the disease, etc. it’s nearly impossible to determine the nature of a healing.
Terminology Turmoil
A significant factor at play in the confusion over miracles is that the words and phrases used by nonmedical laypeople in books and in faith healing services are usually so ambiguous that no competent medical doctor would rely on such information alone.
“Blind,” for example, can mean total blindness, legally blind, tunnel vision or just plain rotten eyesight.
“Paralyzed” can mean anything from 50 percent to 100 percent loss of strength in a limb.
“Confined to a wheelchair,” is a phrase applied to patients who can stand up only to transfer into bed, to patients who can walk 20 feet with a walker, or to patients who can walk unassisted within the home but need a wheelchair in public places.
For a “blind” person to see vague images, a “paralyzed” person to perform deep knee bends, or a person “confined to a wheelchair” to get up and walk is rarely a miracle.
The following situations contribute to confusion over truly supernatural healings as well:
“The doctor said so” Unfortunately, many people, doctors included, tend to throw around the word miracle at will. For example, if a patient narrowly survives a life-threatening sickness when there was only a 5 percent chance or less of living, the doctor will usually agree with the family that it’s a miracle. But if you were to sit down with the doc for a half-hour, he or she could probably supply at least one rational theory of how natural forces contributed to the healing process.
I heard one woman tell how she prayed the demon out of her 3-month-old daughter’s left eye. When the doctor could find no trace of the retinoblastoma, he allegedly labeled it a miracle. (Unfortunately, the infant’s other eye was lost to cancer shortly after diagnosis.)
One day, I happened to turn on the television and I heard this same doctor being interviewed. “Was this a miracle?” he was candidly asked.
The pediatric ophthalmologist replied, “Maybe it was a miracle.” Why was he uncertain? Because the child had been treated with lasers and chemotherapy. The mother attributed the miracle to God, while the doctor had good reason to believe it was standard medical treatment that saved the child’s eye.
The unexplainable. I hear the phrase, “The doctors couldn’t explain it!” used quite a bit. The truth is that doctors can’t fully explain a lot of things. Why someone catches a cold and recovers in six days while someone else catches the same virus from the same person and recovers in only three days is a bit of a mystery. It doesn’t make the case a miracle.
Medical Errors
When boxing champ Evander Holyfield (pictured above) was supposedly healed of a noncompliant left ventricle at a Benny Hinn crusade, Hinn labeled it a miracle. Later, it was discovered that the cardiologist had misdiagnosed the problem because he was not informed of the whopping amounts of morphine and fluid Holyfleld had received post-fight, which made it appear as if his heart were malfunctioning. As reported in The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, Holyfield later admitted, “I don’t think there was anything wrong with my heart to begin with.”
Vanishing Diseases
Fortunately for us, most diseases we acquire are cyclical or self-limiting. The symptoms of diseases such as allergies, arthritis, lupus and multiple sclerosis tend to fluctuate like the stock markets – down one month, up the next. Most episodes of joint pain, nausea, headaches, abdominal cramping and skin rashes often disappear over a period of days or weeks. God has ingeniously hardwired our bodies to heal themselves. While rare, the spontaneous remission of cancer is well documented. In 1999, Scientific Review of Alternative Medicine cited a veteran oncologist who, in treating 6,000 cancer patients, observed twelve cases where the cancer suddenly and mysteriously disappeared for good.
Can these spontaneous remissions be attributed to a biological mechanism? Perhaps, states a 1998 In Vivo article, indicating that this phenomenon is reported most often in certain cancers: neuroblastomas, malignant melanomas, renal cell carcinomas and lymphomas/leukemias.
Hearsay
The Agony of Deceit includes a chapter by retired US Surgeon General C Everett Koop MD, who described a conversation he had with a woman following a church service:
“God can do anything!” [she proclaimed.] “I once knew a woman who went into the hospital to be fitted for a glass eye, and while the surgeon turned his hack to get an instrument, he turned back to find a new eye in the empty socket where there had been nothing before, and the woman could see!” I said, “Did you say you knew this woman?” “No. I knew someone who knows her,” she conceded. “Well,” I said, “could you tell me who he or she is? I would like to have a conversation with that person.” “Well, I don’t really know that person either but I know someone who knows her.” “Even so,” I persisted, “I would like to meet that person.” “I don’t really know that person, but she knows someone who knows someone.” And so it goes.
If the woman’s story actually happened as she insisted, the patient, the patient’s family and the doctor would all be on a major network TV station the next day. Why do we never read in reputable newspapers, or see on reputable news networks, stories of eyeballs instantly appearing in previously empty eye sockets?
Proceed With Caution
When you next hear the word “miracle” I encourage you to keep these points in mind. Could the astonishing healing be hearsay? Could the human body have healed itself – temporarily or permanently – from a cyclical or self-limiting disease? Did the doctor truly believe that natural forces could not explain the healing in any way? Is the layperson’s information surrounding the “miracle” medically accurate?
The amount of medical confusion and misinformation in books, magazines, television, newspapers, the Internet, church services and on the street is staggering. If your patients are eagerly awaiting a healing touch from God, remember that answers to prayer are always wonderful, whether they can be explained by natural forces or solely by divine intervention. Our duty is to respect our patient’s personal beliefs while lovingly conveying the truth.
———————-
This article was originally published in print in Physician Magazine (March/April 2004). The excerpt above was also published with permission on CMF.org.
This article also won an Award of Merit in the 2005 Canadian Christian Writing Awards (Article, Short Story & Poetry Category for Columns, Editorials and First Person Essays.





Danny Fox Said:
on January 13, 2007 at 1:17 am
Dear Sir I agree that everything that glitters isn’t always gold.. I get the impression that it’s as if you don’t believe in miracles at all….They don’t always come as we expect. My grandmother had cancer she prayed for healing, everyone was praying for her. One day she became very ill we rushed her to the hospital. The Doctor told us it’s only a matter of hours now…we stood puzzled like you said wondering why we felt so strong God was going to heal her. Now here we are…….She became commatized not speaking, or opening her eyes. Right before she took her last breath she raised up in the bed and yelled so loud you could hear her down the hall say I’m Healed, I’m healed. See in Glory there is no cancer and I believe my grandmother received her healing that day.. Please write me back God Bless You Daniel Fox