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Two adopted children find faith as turmoil in their lives lead them to a deeper commitment to Christ.
Simpson offers a biography of her mother, one of the first female journalists in New Mexico who was known for her informative, influential, and inspiring writing.
Medical science has determined that the human body was meant to live 120 years--the exact number of years God stated in Genesis 6:3: ." . . his days shall be an hundred and twenty years." We can maintain continued health and youth to the end of life, even if that might be 120 years or more. We can be elderly without being senile, weak, sick, disabled or infirm. Being old in years does not mean one must be infirm in body and mind. The Blood of Christ paid the price for our sins on the cross; and He also paid for our diseases when he endured the cruel lashes of the whip. There is a Fountain provided by Jesus Christ for the cleansing of our sins and for our healing. It is God's desire that we be well until the day He calls us home. Illness and infirmity come from the enemy, not from God. Trusting that Christ paid it all, we can maintain good health all of our lives, no matter how many years we accumulate. Miracles still happen today. Sometimes they occur under a doctor's care, sometimes at a Christian evangelistic meeting, and sometimes they occur quietly in your home. Believe God for your miracle and you may receive it according to His will.
Carl H. Gellenthien was a senior medical student at the University of Illinois when he discovered that he had an advanced case of tuberculosis. At that time, the 1920s, the only known treatment was rest and fresh air. The climate of the American Southwest was thought to be one of the best because of the dry air and sunshine. Young Carl, although given only two years to live, went to Valmora, New Mexico where a tuberculosis sanatorium had been established in 1904 by Fr. William T. Brown. He was not only cured but went back to school and completed his medical studies. He then returned to Valmora, married Brown's daughter and later became the medical director of Valmora Sanatorium. * * * * Doro...
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