Hope and a Christmas Miracle

Linda Weaver Clarke
If we can see a bright future for ourselves, we will work hard and not give up. The reason we work so hard is because we have hope for the future. Hope helps us to bear our afflictions. Dieter F. Uchtdorf said, "Hope sustains us through despair. Hope teaches that there is reason to rejoice even when all seems dark around us."

We despair when we lose hope for the future. Without it, doubt sneaks into our lives and we become discouraged. When doubt and despair enter into our lives, then we give up and lose all ambition for the future.

We hope for things not seen but it must accompany faith. They go hand in hand. When we have opposition in our lives, we need to hold onto hope. We hope because we have faith. These virtues help us to achieve our goals and look for a brighter future.

I would like to relate a true story of great faith and hope of a twelve-year-old boy and his mother, and the answer to a prayer. His mother wrote about their experience.

"Please, Donīt Let Him Die"

I first became aware of my twelve year old sonīs illness when the choppy rendition at the piano of "Hark! The Herald Angels sing," had stopped. Glancing at him, his head resting on the piano, I asked, "Whatīs wrong?ī

He replied, "I donīt feel good."

As he looked up I saw his cheeks were flushed; on closer inspection it proved to be a fine rash. He had a temperature. I called our family doctor and described the symptoms. He said it sounded like the measles that were going around and he prescribed a well-known drug.

The next day, George complained of his eyes hurting. Blisters began to appear on his ears and lips, and his temperature rose. After sitting by his side for several hours, I had to leave the room momentarily. As I returned, the sight was so shocking. I rushed from the room, dropped to the floor and cried. George had rubbed all the skin from his blistered lips. His ears, neck and face were a mass of blisters, with one large blister hanging like a sac on one side of his face. George did not sleep. He kept asking us to please turn out the lights. It was frightening to hear him ask this; there was only a small night-light burning and I had a small folded towel over his eyes.

Upon our arrival at the hospital, we were taken to an isolation room. As the ambulance attendant lifted my son onto the bed, the large blister on his face, a hanging sac of sloshing fluid broke.

Now, lying naked on the sterile sheets, coughing and choking, his body a mass of blisters and skinless places, he looked like someone wearing an ugly mask. I wanted to cry out, "No! No!" But I prayed that for my sonīs sake my voice would be calm.

Nothing could have torn me away from my son at this time; so I was given a hospital gown and a mask. The next few days were crucial ones. Large areas of skin that had gone dark and looked as if they were scalded, pushed off from Georgeīs back and he stuck to the sheets. The skin, pushed up on his upper arm, looked like a wrinkled nylon stocking. Georgeīs mouth and throat were blistered, as well as the bronchial tubes, and he was coughing constantly. I covered my face, put my head on the windowsill and fought the tears.

The eye doctor said the eyes were blistered, even on the cornea, and added, "If he comes along—we may not be able to save his eyes." It came to me that my son might be blind!

A new nurse coming in to put drops in Georgeīs eyes, leaned over him and said, "George, I have something to put in your eyes. Can you turn your head this way?"


She leaned over, and as he turned his face with itīs black rimmed hole for a mouth, one side of his face practically skinless, and skinless ears—all this was too much for this nurse. She became nauseous, gagged and hurriedly left the room.

One night, two couples were standing in the hall. One of the men looked in at George and gasped. When his wife stepped over to where he was standing, he led her away, remarking, "You do not want to see that."

Each time the doctor entered the room, he would greet my son with, "How are you George?"

George would answer, "Pretty good." Always pretty good.

At one time the doctor looked at him and said, "You are a game little guy!" There were tears in his eyes.

My son asked me if I was praying. I assured him I was.

One evening, the young doctor gravely told me things were not going well and that he had done all that he could. At that moment I felt desperately alone; what could I do except go to God for help? I returned to the room and knelt beside my sonīs bed and pleaded with God to let him live.

The next day, George asked, "Is everyone still praying for me?"

I said, "Oh, yes. We surely are son."

Then he asked me if Iīd hold his hand. He said, "If you donīt mind holding a scratchy one."

All day I held his hand. By evening I sensed a calmness come over him. I said, "Doctor, I think he is better!"

The doctor examined him, turned to me and with a look of almost disbelief and surprise said, "I think he is!" The crisis had passed.

The miraculous powers of the body to heal took over. New skin began to grow and the old skin sloughed off. All twenty of his fingernails and toenails came off.

Suddenly we were aware that it was Christmas Eve. Kind nurses and Santa himself came to where a brave young boy with a blotched and burned looking body sat in the bed. By tipping his head back, he saw through slits of eyes a Christmas bouquet and said, "I can see! I can see!" At that moment I was humbled beyond words.

The young doctor came into the room and said, "George, you have made medical history." Then he asked if we minded the case being written for the medical journals. I tried to thank our tall young doctor.

He said humbly, "I just stood by." But I knew he had worked valiantly to save my son.

Our family doctor came into the room and said, "George, you are a walking miracle."

The nurses, who came to say good-bye to us, said that no one in the hospital expected to see our son go out of the hospital alive.

The eye doctor said, "I feel so humble about this boy. It certainly has made me a believer."

At this unforgettable Christmas time I realized that, to me, Christmas would forever be a time of rejoicing; rejoicing for the gift of a son." (Opal H. Clarke, "Donīt Let Him Die")

This young man grew to adulthood but his body wasnīt the same. His eyes are constantly red because his tear ducts were destroyed. He coughs frequently and has a raspy sound when he breathes because he has Chronic Bronchitis as a result of the illness. But this faithful man, George Amos Clarke, my husband and sweetheart, was grateful for a miracle.

Written by Linda Weaver Clarke, author of the historical/fiction/romance series: "A Family Saga in Bear Lake, Idaho." To learn more, visit www.lindaweaverclarke.com.
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Linda Weaver Clarke

Linda Weaver Clarke was raised on a farm surrounded by the rolling hills of southern Idaho and has made her home in southern Utah among the beautiful red mountains and desert heat. She is happily married and is the mother of six daughters and several grandchildren. Clarke received her Bachelor of Arts degree at Southern Utah University and travels throughout the United States, teaching a "Family Legacy Workshop," encouraging others to turn their family history and autobiography into a variety of interesting stories.

Clarke is the author of the historical fiction series, "A Family Saga in Bear Lake, Idaho," which includes the following novels: Melinda and the Wild West - a semi-finalist for the "Reviewers Choice Award 2007," Edith and the Mysterious Stranger, Jenny´s Dream, David and the Bear Lake Monster, and Elena, Woman of Courage. A new mystery series, The Adventures of John and Julia Evans, includes the following novels: Anasazi Intrigue, Mayan Intrigue, Montezuma Intrigue, and Desert Intrigue.