AMAZING STORY 
		
		Jason Mirikitani: Saved by  Prayer
		
		By Jeremy Callahan
	    The 700 Club
    
		
		
		 
		CBN.com -Army Sgt. Dick Troy:  When  I saw the vehicle go over the concrete median and hit the truck, I didn’t think  anybody was going to live in that car.   Immediately, I tried to pull  over to the right hand side and get out of traffic so I could run back.
        Sergeant Troy Dick was the first to respond  to the horrific accident on I-10 in Beaumont, Texas on January 15, 2002.
        Troy:   The roof was crushed in where  they had hit the semi.  I saw that the  passengers on the right side weren’t as injured as they could have been I  thought, ‘Well, this is a good sign.’
        Jason Mirikitani, a Christian camp director,  was traveling with his family to attend the funeral of a relative.  Seated inside the small suv were Jason, his  wife, Jill and daughter, Abby, along with Jill’s father and brother.  A huge gust of wind pushed the vehicle to the  right side of the highway where it flipped 5 times and rolled over the concrete  barrier into oncoming traffic.  A tractor-trailer  plowed into the vehicle.  Sgt. Dick raced  to help those in critical condition first, and began with Jason’s wife.
        Troy:   She had no pulse.  There wasn’t  anything I could do for her.  That’s  always going to bother me that I couldn’t save her.  When I first looked at Jason, his scalp was  laid open.  You could see the crack in  his skull.  He had grey matter on  his arm and on his leg. It was really horrific.  I kept telling him how he had to  stay with us for his daughter and that she needed him. 
        Jason was airlifted to the hospital and  prepped for brain surgery.  The rest of  the family followed in the ambulance.   Emily Kavanaugh, a physical therapist at Saint Christus Elizabeth Hospital  remembers what she heard about the critically ill patient.
        Emily:  There was quite a bit of damage to the  frontal and parietal lobe.  Once people  suffer traumatic brain injuries, the big overlying question is, ‘How are they  going to function?’  He did have a  significant number of family members and friends consistently there, checking  in on him, praying around his bed.
        Emily began to pray for the critically ill ‘stranger’  too, and called on others to pray.
        Emily:   I had my young life girls that we would gather  every Sunday night and Monday night, and so we would pray together and then they  would tell their friends at school to pray for this guy, Jason. 
        Jason defied the odds.  His neurosurgery was successful, and he was  released from ICU within 72 hours for physical therapy.
        Emily:   He just continued to make good progress, you know, walking around  reading signs.  You know, these were  things that he couldn’t do at first, but he moved very – I think very quickly. 
        Jason:   I just remember ins and outs of going on walks in the hospital and  stuff. I don’t remember it very clearly at all.   It was all very vague and very confusing.
        That’s when his family showed him a video  that brought everything into focus—a video of his wife’s funeral.
        Jason:   I watched it twice. I remember asking my parents and brother, ‘Could I  watch it again?’  And I cried both times  when I watched it.  During all that time,  there was discouragement and sadness and loneliness.  I’d been married 3 years and 3 months.
        With a lot of help from family and friends, Jason’s  recovery took just 10 months.  Today, he  has only minor physical impairments.  
        Emily:   It’s been amazing to watch a success story,  something where someone really does heal all the way, I mean, completely, and  has the ability and the desire to share that.  
        Troy:   His recovery was definitely a miracle.   There’s very few people that could have come back from that. 
          
          Jason:  Psalm 46:1 says, ‘God is our refuge and  strength, ever present help in trouble.’ And it was a horribly troublesome  time, but yet there was a man who had never went that way home before, whose  watch was slow, and who had military medical training to help head injuries.  I am  so thankful Troy was there and willing to do what he did—and unconcerned about  anything but just doing what he needed to do. I meet people on probably a  weekly basis that say, you know Jason, I heard about your story. And I prayed  for you. And I get wet-eyed about that, of course I do. And of course, I say to  them, ‘You know what—thank you! I’m alive because of people like you that  prayed for me.’
        Two years after the accident, Jason met Christie,  now his wife.  And today, Abby has a  younger brother, Josiah.  Jason travels  around the country sharing the story of his incredible recovery.
Jason:  You’ve  seen my family, Abby okay and Jo Jo and my sweet wife and—and we’re all playing  Candy Land. This is the bright hope and future that I get to presently live  out. God just in his undeserved kindness, his undeserved  favor, helps us out.  Because I was laying on the side of a road, a side of the  highway with my skull cracked open and god put the right person there with the  right know how at the right time to save my life and completely spared my  daughter. I do know that prayer and faith makes a sick person well. Cause  scripture tells me that. And I do know that it has nothing to do with the size  of our faith, but the size of the god in whom we have faith. And so I say come  with your mustard seed-sized faith to a very large God and pray.
		
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