Free shipping
Free Shipping
On orders over €50 in the Republic of Ireland

Books

My Miracle Cure

On her day of amazing grace in 1989, Marion, from Athlone, Co Westmeath, was in her late 30s and facing a bleak future. A wheelchair user, she was incontinent, blind in one eye, partially sighted in the other – and mother to two young children. She describes herself as an ‘invalid’ with ‘wasted’ muscles and ‘severely affected’ speech caused by a long-standing, debilitating illness diagnosed as MS. But after attending the Anointing of the Sick and receiving a blessing, Marion was able to step, pain-free, from her stretcher and walk again – a life-changing, ‘beautiful, magnificent feeling’ which conventional medical wisdom is unable to account for. When Marion went to Knock as a pilgrim, she was praying not for recovery, but that God would look after her husband and children when she died. Now she has five grandchildren of her own. Her first instincts after she found herself able to walk, talk and see perfectly at Knock was to ‘laugh it off’, so incredible was the transformation. And in the years that followed, she waited until September 2019 for the Catholic Church to officially recognise her cure. Here for the first time, with humour and grace, Marion tells the incredible, moving story of her life and that of her family before and after the miracle at Knock.   

12.60

In stock

Description

On her day of amazing grace in 1989, Marion, from Athlone, Co Westmeath, was in her late 30s and facing a bleak future. A wheelchair user, she was incontinent, blind in one eye, partially sighted in the other – and mother to two young children. She describes herself as an ‘invalid’ with ‘wasted’ muscles and ‘severely affected’ speech caused by a long-standing, debilitating illness diagnosed as MS. But after attending the Anointing of the Sick and receiving a blessing, Marion was able to step, pain-free, from her stretcher and walk again – a life-changing, ‘beautiful, magnificent feeling’ which conventional medical wisdom is unable to account for. When Marion went to Knock as a pilgrim, she was praying not for recovery, but that God would look after her husband and children when she died. Now she has five grandchildren of her own. Her first instincts after she found herself able to walk, talk and see perfectly at Knock was to ‘laugh it off’, so incredible was the transformation. And in the years that followed, she waited until September 2019 for the Catholic Church to officially recognise her cure. Here for the first time, with humour and grace, Marion tells the incredible, moving story of her life and that of her family before and after the miracle at Knock.   

Additional information

Weight 0.250 kg

You may also like…