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The Power of a Healing Hug

The storm raged. I turned off the car and leaned back against the seat. The thunder and the pelting rain weren’t enough to silence my thoughts. I was in a dark and empty lot. The only light came from the restaurant sign. I was outside my favorite place, Luby’s, which had just reopened after months of remodeling. It was like a second home, the place where I ate while studying for grad school. A place where I felt like I belonged. They served real comfort food, and the wait staff was friendly—everyone except for Mrs. Franco, who rolled her eyes when I couldn’t decide between the fried okra and the mac ’n’ cheese.

In the light from the Luby’s sign, I studied a photograph. In it, I had scooted my chair close to my husband. I leaned toward him with a beaming smile. My husband leaned away. His arms were crossed, his blue eyes cold. It was a dose of reality, a truth about my marriage. The photo explained his recent outbursts, sharp stares and insults. There was no denying it: My husband no longer loved me. What’s wrong with me, God? The word unlovable echoed in my head.

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I began to pray. A hug, God. I need a hug. Even through my tears, I laughed at the foolishness of it. Asking God for hugs when there were so many bigger problems in the world to solve. Okay, God. Maybe not a hug. But at least let Mrs. Franco be nice this one time.

I wiped my face and made my way to the restaurant door.

“Oh, my goodness!” said the hostess when I walked in. She approached me with open arms. “Where have you been?” She gave me a good hug. “Look who’s here,” she said to the cashier.

“Sweetie, how are you?” The cashier rushed over to hug me. Suddenly, everyone gathered around, giving me hugs left and right. As the group parted, there stood Mrs. Franco. She put her arm around me. “Love, we’ve missed you!” she said.

Today I’m happily remarried. But I’ll never forget how on that night I learned that God loves me so much that I could bring him any need, no matter how insignificant it seemed. You never know when and how God will surprise you.

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The Missing Socks Prayer

Where do my missing socks disappear to? Why do I have all these singles that are missing their mates? Are some things beyond prayer?

This truly seems like one of life's existential mysteries. Socks disappear. I don’t know where they go. Perhaps if we had a washer and dryer in our apartment, the missing socks wouldn’t get out of the house. But everybody loses socks, don’t they?

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Rick's lonely socks.The other day I took all the orphan socks out of my drawer and took a picture of them. Maybe I’d post it in our laundry room with a heartfelt plea: “Help! Lost Socks! All information leading to the discovery of their siblings will be treated with the strictest confidentiality. Please contact…”

My wife suggests I check the washers and dryers more carefully before I remove the laundry. “Sometimes a sock will get lodged on the edge of the door, and you won’t even see it,” she says. As for her socks…well, she washes them herself, never mixing them with my motley crew.

There is one pair of socks I especially treasure, and I wear them this time of year because they’re wooly and warm and make me think of Jesus. That’s because they have the Sea of Galilee on the bottom. My colleague Edward Grinnan bought them for me when he went to Israel a couple years ago. “Is it because I walk on water?” I asked.

No answer. But it made me wonder, “What would Jesus think about a prayer for a missing sock?”

The other day I came back from the laundry room with clean laundry, and I matched up all my socks, only to discover one missing. Another one!  Another orphan to add to the drawer. Maybe this was my prayer moment: “Jesus, help me find that sock!”

I searched through the pile of laundry, thinking it might have hidden itself in the crease of a towel or the corner of a fitted sheep. Alas, no sock. No sock anywhere. And it was one of my favorites. What now, Jesus?

I could imagine what my wife would say: Go back to the laundry room and see if the missing pair was stuck in the washer. Maybe this mystery wasn’t existential at all but only a situation of human error.

I dashed downstairs to the laundry and hurried over to the washer I had used. One of my neighbors had loaded it up, his dirty clothes now tumbling in the porthole of a window.   

“Excuse me, sir,” I said. “I think I was the last one who washed my clothes in that washer, and I lost a sock. When you take your clothes out, could you see if there’s an extra sock. It’s navy blue.” We exchanged phone numbers, and that was that. 

Less than a half hour had gone by when I got a text message: “I’ve found your sock. I put it on the bulletin board. “Oh, joy, oh, rapture, my orphan sock would be reunited with its brother!

It made me think of that old expression “putting shoe leather to prayer.” Not just praying about something but acting too. Isn’t that what I’d done? Not making myself a victim of the mysterious sock-swallowing vacuum in the universe, but stepping forward and seeking help.

“Thank you for rescuing my sock,” I said to my neighbor down in the laundry room. I picked the sock off the bulletin board and waved it in the air. “This is really like putting socks on a prayer.”

“Huh?” he asked.

“Oh,” I said. “It’s a little hard to explain.”

The Message in a Box of Chocolates

My sister Priscilla recently went to California for New Year’s. Before she left, she asked me one very important question: “Do you want me to bring you back a box of See’s Candies?”

She was asking because I love, love, love See’s Candies. Not just because they taste like everything that’s right in this world. But because See’s and I have a bit of a history.

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Allow me to take you back to the year 1997. It was the summer before my first year of high school and also one of the hardest times of my life. I had to undergo brain surgery to remove a benign cyst sitting on my optic nerve. It was pretty scary.  

Luckily, during scary times, people usually send you chocolate. And many a box of candy appeared that summer. One box, though, stood out amidst the sea of Russell Stover and Godiva. A box of See’s lollipops, each square-shaped with a shiny gold wrapper like something out of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. It was a gift from one of my dad’s co-workers. I’d never heard of See’s Candies, but I was delighted to discover the brand was headquartered in far-away San Francisco, which seemed like a very exotic place to my 14-year-old self.

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Ever since then, I’ve had a soft spot (or, you could say, a gooey caramel center) for See’s. The candy isn’t sold everywhere in New York. But it’s a common sight in the airports of California. So, every now and then, whenever one of my sisters travels to California, they bring me back a box of the good stuff.

I wanted to say yes when Priscilla asked if I wanted a box of See’s. But I was in desperate need of a break from sweets. It was the week after Christmas. And my body was about 70% sugar cookie. So I told her no. 

After New Year’s, Priscilla returned home from her trip…minus See’s. The next day, I found myself at work, wishing I’d given Priscilla a different answer. I was having a tough day, working on a story about the mystery of suffering for Mysterious Ways magazine. The topic was fascinating, but required me to really think about all the times I’ve suffered. To be honest, it was kind of putting me in a funk. “If only I had some See’s!” I thought.

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The next morning, I walked into the kitchen at work and found a white box sitting on the counter. I stared at it, mesmerized. My co-worker Kate Norris was standing next to it.

“Is that a box of…See’s Candies?” I asked.

“Yes!” she said. “Every year, my relative sends a box for the holidays. There was too much sugar at home, so I brought it to work.”

It was only later, when I was back at my desk with two of my favorite pieces of See’s, that the significance of it all came to me. Once, during a period of intense suffering, God had reassured me that I wasn’t alone. That He was looking out for me through the love and kindness of those around me. He was sending me that same message now, as I worked on my story about suffering.

And, just like last time, He did it through a box of See’s Candies.

The Man Who Fell From the Sky

Everybody prayed for Mike and for my sister, Diane. People still ask me about Mike. “How’s he doing?” “What’s he doing?” People who’ve never met Mike prayed for him. Total strangers.

Or is someone you prayed for ever a total stranger?

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Over three years ago Mike fell from the sky. He was on a business trip on a small plane that took off from a California airport and dropped from the sky almost as soon as it was airborne. 

Five other guys were on the plane with him, including the pilot. Mike was the only survivor.

For a while there at the hospital it was touch-and-go. Mike is my brother-in-law and family and friends gathered in the hospital waiting room, praying. There were so many of them the hospital staff brought around food.

I was 2000 miles away, in New York. All I could do was pray for him. Pray for his survival, his recovery and pray for strength for Diane and their three girls.

He spent six weeks in a burn unit, burns covering nearly a third of his body. Then rehab. Then home.

He can’t work anymore. But here, you can see from this photo, he’s amazing. He exercises. Plays golf. Goes on long bike rides. Goes to his men’s Bible study at his church. Goes on trips with his family. 

He was around this year to attend his oldest daughter’s graduation from college and his youngest daughter’s graduation from high school. Milestones he might have missed. Milestones he’s been a part of.

He worries about his mind. “It’s not what it used to be,” he says. Yes, I agree. But the kind of trauma he experienced, dropping from the sky in a plane that then burst into flames, takes a long time to recover from.

“You’re better, Mike,” I can tell him. Because I only get to see him every few months, when I’m with him in California, I can see progress, progress that is harder for Mike and Diane to see. There is reason for much gratitude, much hope.

He mourns his buddies who were lost in the crash. He’s looking for a renewed purpose in life. And he gives thanks everyday.

So thanks, strangers and friends who prayed. None of us are really strangers in prayer.

The Hummingbird That Led Her to Pray

My daughter, Amy, and I were getting ready to drive to the supermarket. I’ll put on some Colton Dixon in the car, I thought. Amy liked his songs. I liked the Christian message in them. I was always looking for ways to encourage my daughter to pray, but she was a natural doubter—and a teenager! If I pushed too hard, I knew she’d stop listening for sure.

We stepped down the three stairs that led to the garage and found my husband, Bob, standing by his old Mustang, looking up toward the ceiling.

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“It’s a hummingbird,” he said, pointing to something tiny floating far out of reach. “He flew in, but I don’t think he knows how to get out.”

“Maybe he was attracted by the red car,” I said. “It’s bright like a flower.”

“I don’t think he feels safe in here,” Amy said. “Doesn’t he seem kind of worried to you?”

For 30 minutes, the three of us tried everything we could think of to get the bird out.

I tempted him with some peach juice that I’d poured into a shallow cup. No luck.

Amy ran out to the yard and picked a colorful peony. She followed the hummingbird around the garage, holding the flower high, but the bird kept his distance. Finally her arm dropped in defeat.

The bird perched on the garage door mechanism in the middle of the ceiling. I watched him, standing by a pegboard where our snowsuits hung for the summer. “I give up,” I said. “There’s nothing else we can do.”

“Why don’t we pray for him?” Amy said.

I stared at her in surprise. Had my doubting teenage daughter just suggested praying for the bird? And why hadn’t I thought of that?

“Jesus, please send the bird down so we can help him,” I said. We all turned our eyes back to the hummingbird. The more he flitted, the more we fretted. Thirty seconds. Forty-five. The bird flew up. He swooped down toward the pegboard and slid down a snowsuit—right into Amy’s waiting hands.

She cupped him gently in her palms, walked quickly outside and let him go.

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The House-Sale Prayer

For my thoughts are not your thoughts . . . says the Lord.  Isaiah 55:8 (RSV)

My husband and I had a house-sale prayer that had never gone unanswered. We’d prayed it often for friends: “Father, You know that Jim and Marge need to sell their home. You also know the particular family who needs this particular house. In Your perfect timing, Lord, we ask You to bring these needs together.”

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And soon the friends would call to say they’d found the perfect buyer. So when the time came to put our own home of fifty years on the market, we prayed those words ourselves and made the move to another state without waiting for the sale we were confident would speedily occur.

But a month passed, two months, six months . . . When the Realtor had no success to report after a full year, we panicked. God, it was clear, didn’t know about the bad housing market. It was up to us.We lowered the price. We advertised in newspapers and the Web. We even offered the house to a charity in exchange for an annuity.

Twelve more months passed with no buyer.

Then came a phone call from a young woman who’d just seen a photo of the house on the Realtor’s Web site. “I knew right away that this was our home!” she told me. They had three children the ages of our three when we bought it. We had close friends who, it turned out, were also their close friends. The more we learned, the more we knew that the fit of this family with the house that’s now theirs is something only God could have brought about.

Father, I forgot three little words of the house-sale prayer. Remind me that “Your perfect timing” doesn’t mean "on my schedule."

Download your FREE ebook, A Prayer for Every Need, by Dr. Norman Vincent Peale.

The Heart of Prayer

It was a day of anguish. For months my mother had been ill; for weeks she had been suffering agony from the cancer that was killing her, and today was the day when she was returning to the hospital. I was preparing to leave the office to take her there when my executive editor called me for a conference.

“I’d like you to do an article on the subject of ‘When to Pray’” he said to me. “Why don’t you consider Paul’s exhortation to pray without ceasing? You might even try it for a day and see what it means to you.”

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It was difficult to think of exploring an article while deeply concerned with something else, but this assignment was obviously fitting to the circumstances. If anything, it was too fitting; the events of this day could not be interpreted as proper examples of routine living. Still, the idea was challenging.

As I arranged last-minute details in my office, a fellow editor dropped in, and very casually and skillfully (I realized later) told me something quite funny. I laughed. And when it came to me that I was laughing, I said my first prayer—a prayer of gratitude for good humor, which can keep us all in balance, and for this friend who had come purposely to cheer.

Down on the street, I saw a father bawling out his son, who, in turn, was responding with squealing argument. I said a prayer for them that each should find understanding and respect. A newspaper headline yelled out at me about a teenage killer. I prayed for him, and for the two families. My taxicab driver complained about the summer heat. I prayed for him too.

In my mother’s apartment the nurse moved about silently, now laying out a dress, now gathering together the few essentials for the hospital suitcase.

Briefly, as I watched her, my appreciation for her care and vigilance was translated into prayer, and then my thoughts returned to Mother. It was not easy to present myself as calm and assured, to act as though this journey to the hospital were a good thing, that there the terrible pain would be softened. In my own mind I was not sure.

It had been two weeks since the specialist in charge of her case had gone on vacation; his substitute had not telephoned or visited since then. A faithful general practitioner had come daily, but still I worried for fear Mother was not receiving sufficient attention. She was unable to take any sedative stronger than aspirin, and her pain was constant and excruciating. Finally I had taken it upon myself to call the substituting specialist and suggest hospitalization. The doctor felt the idea had merit and said he would telephone the general practitioner about it, and would come to see Mother. A day later he had done neither, and so I made arrangements without him.

Father, guide me. Help me to have acted wisely.

Father, give my mother the strength for this short but difficult trip.

She had the strength and, in fact, seemed to benefit from the sun and air and change of locale. While the hospital made its inaugural tests and Mother was wheeled away for X rays, I went downstairs to brood over a cup of coffee. There I found myself in conversation with a woman who was obviously under great strain.

“My son,” she said to me, “was operated on two days ago. He’s fine, they say, but I worry so much and I stay here all day. He’s only 21, too young to have a hernia.”

I thought of my mother, who seemed young to me, at 60—at any age—to be riddled with cancer, and I became annoyed by this woman’s monologue. Then I remembered my pledge to pray unceasingly, and I addressed God again, this time for a young man’s return to robust activity, and for the easing of his mother’s deep distress.

By the time I had left the coffee shop, I actually recognized a kind of tranquility within myself, and thereby made a vital discovery about prayer. My sudden peace of mind was, I believe, directly related to being absorbed in the problems of another. “Dwell on your own peril and you may be reduced to gibbering panic,” Fulton Oursler once wrote in an article about finding presence of mind. “Think of others and you may well find yourself doing the precisely correct thing.” This is what prayer offers as well.

For the remainder of the afternoon Mother and I talked cheerfully together—and then, as the emergency painkiller she had taken at home lost its potency, the agony returned, vengefully. It was hours before she was quiet again. By then I had been called into the hall by a new surgeon. The X rays had revealed a desperate condition. The doctors told me that my mother could not live more than 24 hours without an operation, and there was little chance of her surviving that.

I do not know whether they were asking permission to operate or not. I simply looked at them. What other course of action could there be?

In the warmth and murkiness of the night, I sat beside my mother and held her left hand as she drowsed. Her other hand was strapped to a board while liquid strength flowed into her veins. I must pray, I told myself.

But I could not. Pray without ceasing? I couldn’t pray at all. It was simple to pray for cab drivers and ladies with vigorous sons, but pray for my mother’s life? I could not ask that much of him.

The minutes melded into a quarter-hour, then a half, and my mind seemed empty. Slowly, without rationalizing, without focusing my thoughts at all, I began to repeat the same inaudible words to her:

Love and contentment…love and contentment…

I don’t know where the words came from, but they were there to the exclusion of everything else. It was as though I wanted to swath my mother in love, to bring her utter comfort, and that by keeping her hand in mine I could transfuse the power of those silent words.

The night passed and early the next morning surgery was performed. Mother underwent it successfully, as I knew somehow she would.

That afternoon as I returned home to sleep, my prayers diminished in gratitude as a feeling of anger took their place—anger against the doctor who might have come and who might have foreseen the critical situation. I was in a white fury when I telephoned him. I castigated him for what I considered was his dereliction of duty, and when he replied with what I thought were lame excuses, I swore at him.

What had happened to my praying without ceasing? The past 24 hours had been challenging ones and I had failed to pass muster. I could pray in situations that did not touch me near, but I was not prepared for those that struck the raw nerve of emotion.

In retrospect, I recognized the value and importance of formal periods of prayer, be they in church, upon rising or going to bed, in specific quiet moments.

I believe now, however, that just as a man should not be a Sunday Christian only, neither should he restrict himself only to a prayer schedule. When Paul said Pray without ceasing he was, of course, saying that God should be foremost in man’s mind at all times, but more, he was offering man a practical instrument—prayer—for accomplishing this end. He was prescribing a conduct of life that would include all eventualities.

The athlete who does not train cannot expect victory. Similarly, a man who does not practice praying may expect to find his control weakened when he needs to call upon it.

“It is,” Alex Carrel said, “when prayer becomes a habit that it operates on the character.” Prayer and God are not sometime things.

“Love and contentment” was a prayer from deep within me. It came unconsciously when I thought myself empty. The oaths I flung at the doctor, however, represented a collapse of the prayer fabric because I did not care. Had I been prepared by a life of praying, had I learned the value of silence in which prayer is most effective, I believe I would not have sworn at that physician. I most certainly would have taken him to task as I saw the facts, but if I had had the resources from which to form prayers, both for him and for my own equanimity, I would not have allowed my argument with him to be dissipated in frenzy.

On a Sunday morning, after two weeks of numb struggle, Mother died. By then, for me, as I am sure it was already for her, the continuity of life had been affirmed. And one of the insights into living that her death had given me was that we come closest to God, who is with us always, in times of prayer. When we pray without ceasing, difficult as it is to achieve, we are with him always.

Download your FREE ebook, A Prayer for Every Need, by Dr. Norman Vincent Peale

The Five-Dollar Miracle

If  I am ever tempted to think someone is too difficult for God to transform, or if I forget that God can work miracles in people’s lives, all I have to do is think of Robin. It’s a good thing I was praying for her before I saw her for the first time. Otherwise I probably would’ve kept the door bolted and called the police!

I didn’t know whom I was praying for at the time, but looking back, God knew she would be coming to the door long before the pounding came. It started when my husband, who was also my Sunday school teacher, gave us each a five-dollar bill and told us to invest it in God’s kingdom.

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We had been studying Jesus’ parable of the talents in Matthew 25:14-30. No five-dollar bill has probably ever been prayed over as much as I prayed over that one. I wanted to invest it so it would multiply in a huge way for God’s kingdom. Since nothing came to mind yet, I folded it and put it in a special place in my purse so I wouldn’t accidentally spend it.

I continued to pray that God would show me how to invest it. The next weekend my husband and I hosted a 24-hour prayer vigil at our church. We stayed in the lobby of the church to let people in and out through the night as they came to pray.

Somewhere around 5 a.m. I prayed, asking God, “If anyone is walking by the church and needs You, just lead them to the door of the church.”

Half an hour later, the door reverberated with a loud banging. I opened it and a frantic woman, who looked as if she were on the verge of death, fell into my arms screaming, “Thank God, you are here! I was going to kill myself!”

As she held on to me for dear life, sobbing uncontrollably, I quietly responded, “You’ve come to the right place. We’ve been praying for you.” The woman’s name was Robin, and she looked like a skeleton. Her eyes were sunk deep into her face with no life at all–only showing horror.

She had been on crack cocaine for quite some time. It had robbed her of all beauty, dignity and hope. I had never seen anyone so full of fear and void of hope. We prayed with her throughout the night until almost noon the next day. Then she asked for some money for a bus. I told her I was sorry I didn’t have any money. That was when God reminded me that I had that five dollars I’d been praying over. Immediately I argued, No, God! She might spend it on drugs. I don’t want to invest it in her. She’s a mess. Remember, Lord, I want to invest it so that it will multiply in a huge way.

Once again, God spoke quietly to my heart telling me He wanted to invest in her. I humbly obeyed. I tried to explain to her what this five dollars meant–that God was investing in her. She was too messed up at the time to comprehend what she’d been given.

More than a year passed and Robin faced many hard times. She seemed to take a couple of steps forward and then three or four backward. She ended up in jail once, and in the drunk tank a couple of times. At one time she walked the streets homeless for several days with no shoes and ended up with bloody feet.

Another time, it broke my heart to drop her off at the homeless shelter–at that stage, with her addiction, I felt having her in our home would endanger my children. Several times I was tempted to give up on her, but each time I heard God speak to my heart, “Did I ever give up on you?” He also reminded me that He would honor my prayers of investing the five dollars I wanted to invest in such a big way in his kingdom. So I kept at it.

Slowly I began to see drugs and street life lose its grip on Robin. I would get so excited when she called to tell me some new truth she had learned.

She was beginning to grow her faith. Some parts of her old life were harder to give up. She had lived in survival mode for so long that she often came to church asking people for things.

One time I had to ask her a very hard question. Gently, I asked her if she was coming to church to worship and serve her Lord or if she was coming just to see what she could get from people. My heart felt broken because she wouldn’t speak to me for more than two months. Yet apparently God was still speaking to her during that time.

The next time I saw her, she had changed from a “taker” to a “giver.” Since then, she’s given so much that she has dramatically affected many other people. Her 23-year-old daughter gave her life to the Lord after seeing how God transformed her mom’s life.

Robin ended up marrying a man who had been homeless and had experienced the destruction of his life through alcoholism. He is now one of the godliest brothers in Jesus I know. I’ve seen Robin bring all kinds of people to the Lord–people I could never have reached on my own.

She brings those who society avoids; those who walk the streets; those who get locked out because of their looks or their way of life. Robin is no longer someone I am leading. She is my sister in Christ. We pray together. We jointly praise God for the amazing things we see Him do. She ministers to me as much as I do to her. How I praise God for preparing my heart to open the door to her. How I thank Him for the way He saved her from a life of hell and is continuing to use her to reach others.

How wonderful is our God who will go to any lengths to invest in even the most hopeless-looking people. He sees what they can become. He honored my deep prayer for my five-dollar investment in the most surprising, miraculous way.

The Answer to a Prayer on 34th Street

Answers to prayers come in all shapes and sizes, sometimes when you’re not even aware that you’ve said that prayer. Maybe it’s something you wished for, something you held in your mind.

My wife, Carol Wallace, is a dyed-in-the-wool Anglophile and I come pretty close to it. Lately we’ve been watching the British TV series Downton Abbey, all about a British earl, his family and his American heiress wife in pre-World War I England.

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The series is catnip for Carol because years ago she co-authored a book called To Marry an English Lord, an anecdotal history of that turn-of-the-last-century phenomenon when American heiresses trolled English waters for British aristocrats. The lords needed cash to repair ancient roofs while the American ladies were glad of titles to give them patina.

The screenwriter Julian Fellowes has done a capital job of capturing the era, upstairs and downstairs. So far only the first seven episodes have aired in America but Britain is launching new episodes. Because of that, an article appeared last weekend in the Daily Telegraph profiling Fellowes. Turns out To Marry an English Lord was a source of inspiration. Carol was thrilled.

“You should write him,” I said. “Tell him how grateful you are.”

“I would love to,” she said, “but how can I find his address?”

There was the prayer, or at least the unspoken prayer. How would we find Julian Fellowes’ English address? A friend of ours often quotes her mom’s dictum: “What you hold in your mind you meet in the marketplace.” That too could be a description of prayer.

Yesterday on my way home from work, heading across 34th Street, I passed a good friend and her friend who happens to work for a British charity. (She also happens to be a minister’s wife, but that doesn’t figure here.) Thanks to Facebook, both women knew of and mentioned Carol’s six-degrees-of-separation connection to Downton Abbey.

Then out of the blue my friend’s friend said, “You know, I actually have Julian Fellowes’ address.” Bingo. Just what we’d been looking for.

OK, it’s not a big deal, but such little connections always reinforce my desire to keep the big connections going. I rushed home to Carol and said, “You’ll never guess what I have.” The answer to her query.

The Answer to a Daily Prayer

Prayer. I’d always believed in it. I believed that God cared about every aspect of my life, big or small. I talked to him about everything. When I was young I wrote to him in a journal: “Please, help me get an A on my German test,” or “Please help me learn how to roller skate.” I knew that God was watching over me.

Not that all my prayers were small. Some were so big that I didn’t even think they had to be stated. Would I get married someday? Of course. Would I have a brilliant career as a doctor or a lawyer? No question. And yes, I would have lots of children. From the time I cradled my first Madame Alexander doll to the years in my teens when I was the busiest babysitter in Richmond, Virginia, I was always preparing for motherhood. God knew how much I wanted to be a mother.

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Even before I prayed for the perfect husband, God sent someone my way. “Are you Scot McRoberts?” I asked the shy, blond-haired boy in my 10th-grade German class. “My brother knows your brother,” I told him. From that moment we started spending time together—studying, eating lunch, playing tennis. We had Double-R-Bar Burgers at Roy Rogers and went to the movies after school. We even went together to the junior and senior proms. Scot stayed in Virginia for college while I went off to Duke University in North Carolina. During that time we kept close ties but led separate lives. I can’t say that I always knew that I would marry Scot or that I even wished for it, but we developed a close and enduring friendship that held the potential for more.

As we approached our mid-20s, old enough for marriage to be more than a dream or a prayer, we talked of our growing love. I remember once sitting with Scot at his church, Trinity United Methodist, and saying to God, “I can’t possibly get married in this church unless they get rid of that green carpet.” When the carpet was replaced with a majestic red, it was as if our fate were sealed.

One warm fall day in 1986 the two of us were packing for one of our favorite canoe trips from Westview to Maidens on the James River. Scot took out a small box and thrust it toward me. “Look what I’ve got!” he said. Inside was an exquisite diamond ring that had belonged to his grandmother. Later that afternoon as we were lazily paddling down the river, lost in the magic of our still-unspoken decision, we began to talk about how many children we would have—maybe four, maybe six. We even tried out some names.

We married in the summer of 1987. Scot worked for the Boy Scouts of America while I finished law school and started working at a large Richmond law firm. We bought our first house. Scot traveled in his job and I worked long hours, but we became active at church. We attended an adult Sunday school class, helped lead the youth group, played softball, and served on various committees. That first baby? No problem. It would happen when the time was right.

Three years went by without a pregnancy, but we were not troubled. Then, one night in 1990, I glanced at an article in my Duke alumni magazine on in vitro fertilization. One sentence popped out at me: “Infertility is the failure to conceive after one year.”

“Do you think we might be infertile?” I asked Scot. I showed him the article.

“I’m sure we’re fine,” he said. I was sure he was right. God would give us a child when we were ready. I didn’t question it.

Yet month after month, year after year, I failed to conceive. I talked with my doctor about it. In 1992, Scot and I finally began the standard tests for determining the cause of infertility. “You have blocked fallopian tubes,” the doctor explained. “There are two options. We can try to unblock your tubes surgically or go right to in vitro fertilization.”

It’s just a medical problem, I told myself, with a medical solution. We now knew what to do next. In fact, within a few months after the surgery, I got pregnant. The sight of that tiny speck on the ultrasound screen was pure joy. Scot and I talked about which bedroom would be the baby’s room and how to start saving for college.

A month later, Scot was at a meeting and I was at a college alumni dinner when I began to bleed. I excused myself and called my doctor, then Scot. “I lost the baby,” I told Scot. “I’m sorry. . . . ” I didn’t know why I was apologizing. I didn’t know why I felt like I’d done something wrong. Hadn’t we done everything right? Hadn’t we prayed? What more could we do?

We decided to give in vitro fertilization a try. The first step was to give myself injections to control my ovulatory cycle. Then, Scot gave me hormone injections to stimulate my ovaries production of eggs. Later the eggs were harvested, fertilized in the lab and placed in my uterus. All I needed was for one of them to take and I would have my miracle.

Not only did I become pregnant, but the ultrasound showed twins. My hopes mounted with each day. One month, two months. My fears of another miscarriage subsided. Perhaps all of this is for a purpose, I reasoned. God meant us to be the parents of twins.

I miscarried again. This time I faced more than the heartache of the loss itself; I faced the reality that my infertility was not simply a medical problem. Now I began to view the situation in a spiritual light. God knew how much I wanted children, but just in case he needed to be reminded, I would pray harder.

Around this time I became involved in starting a new adult Sunday school class at church—one geared toward younger members, many of them newly married and ready to begin their families. As a teacher, I had to learn more fully from Scripture what it means to rely on God and how to do it. In the class we would explore topics such as “Does God hear and answer prayers?”

One of the challenges for me was how I could be a good example. As I prepared for class, the thought came to me, Ask them to pray for you. In spite of my faith and beliefs, I realized then that I had never asked others to pray with me or for me. That morning I cautiously told my class of my heartache and our struggle. “Scot and I have been praying for some time to have a baby. Please pray for us.” And they did pray—for the in vitro fertilization we tried four more times—with no success. Each time we went back to the class and told them what had happened, asking again for more prayers.

One evening as Scot and I lay in bed pondering our future and planning for the next phase, he said, “You know, we don’t have to have children.” I looked at him and realized that he was growing weary of the ups and downs too. He was tired of seeing me in pain. That night, long after he fell asleep, I closed my eyes. I thought about prayer, how it had flowed through all my life like a current, providing blessings both expected and unexpected. Yet what was this relationship I had with God? Had I truly come to trust him with my life?

Now, instead of asking God for anything, my prayer consisted of opening myself. I had never sought God’s will for my life. Maybe I hadn’t really wanted to know. I think I’m ready now, God. Please show me your way, whatever it is. Give me strength to accept your will. It was the hardest prayer I have ever made, offering everything to God but demanding nothing. I prayed to accept God’s will for my life rather than to have my desires fulfilled. And within my prayer there was victory and surrender all in one.

In 1999 Scot and I adopted our first son, Sam, now almost four, and in 2001, we adopted our second son, Max, now almost two. I have not had a second of doubt that these children are the ones that God intended for us. Along the way, I have learned that God’s ways are not necessarily my ways. In learning to pray for God’s will, I have been transformed. And of all the answers to prayer that he has given me, the gift of acceptance has been the greatest.

The Accident That Didn’t Happen… Thanks to Prayer

Editor’s note: This story has been updated to correct the type of plane involved. It was a 757, not a 747.

My younger siblings and I were in the back seat of the family minivan. I was holding a steaming cardboard box of pizza on my lap. The clock on the dashboard read 5:17 p.m., and we were starving. “Let’s get home while it’s still hot,” we begged. The car smelled of cheese and pepperoni, and every second we delayed was torture. Mom started to turn the key in the ignition–and then stopped.

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“Kids,” she said, suddenly, urgently, “we need to pray.” I heard the concern in her voice. “Let’s pray. Right now. For Dad.”

Normally we didn’t pray like this, but my brothers, sisters and I all bowed our heads and prayed for Dad’s safety. I wasn’t so hungry anymore. Was Dad okay? That same evening, 600 miles away at LaGuardia Airport in New York City, my father was sitting in the cockpit of a commercial airliner, preparing for take-off. The copilot looked over the instrument panel.

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“Check. That’s everything, Captain,” he told Dad. As my father crossed the last item off of his pre-flight checklist, the flight attendant popped her head into the cockpit. “Everyone’s seated, Captain. We’ve got a full plane today: 139 people.”

Dad taxied toward the runway. Once in position, Dad stopped the plane and waited for clearance from air-traffic control. Pretty soon a voice came crackling over the radio: “Flight 232, you are now clear for takeoff.” But instead of barreling down the runway at 150 miles per hour, Dad hesitated.

The copilot stared at him. “Captain?” he said.

“We’re not accepting that clearance for takeoff,” Dad told him.

“What? Why?” the copilot asked.

“We’re not accepting that clearance,” Dad repeated, standing firm.

Later that evening, Mom got a call from Dad.

We all gathered around her as they spoke on the phone, eager to learn if anything had occurred. “See you soon, honey,” she told Dad finally, and hung up. With a trace of tears in her eyes, Mom turned to us kids.

“Mom, is everything okay?” my older brother asked. “Is Dad all right?” I piped up.

Mom told us the story. “This afternoon your father was sitting on the runway when he got the clearance for takeoff. LaGuardia Airport is always busy, so when you get a clearance, you go. But for some reason he sensed that he should wait. Sensed it very clearly.”

“What happened?” my sister asked. My mother put her arm around my youngest brother. “Seconds later he and his copilot heard a rumble. Just then, a 757 broke out of the clouds and landed… on the very same runway that had just been cleared for Dad. If he hadn’t waited those extra seconds, the two planes would have collided.”

We all sat in wonder. Had our prayers really saved our father from an unthinkable disaster? There was only one way to be sure.

“What time was this?” I asked.

My mother wiped her eyes. “5:17 p.m.,” she said.

READ MORE: A PRAYER ON THE ROAD SAVED US