In 2012, Greg Thomas was diagnosed with cancer. Stage Four. He was sent home to get his affairs in order.
Against medical advice, Greg spent his dwindling energy on renovating a 150-year-old abandoned church. He spent entire days refinishing pews, scraping paint, or sanding floors.
After months of labor, Greg went for a follow-up exam. The tumors had vanished. The doctors called it “spontaneous remission.” Which is medical shorthand for “What the…?”
In 2004, a 60-year-old Japanese man named Shinshū Kōda was diagnosed with malignant lymphoma. The abdominal tumor was the size of a softball.
Kōda refused chemo and retreated into meditation and prayer, sometimes for upwards of 12 hours at a time.
Months later, doctors found no tumors. The mass had liquefied. Doctors theorized this was due to a rise in Kōda’s interleukin-2 levels, immune system protein levels in the body associated with prayer. Nobody knows how these proteins work, or what they are exactly.
So, doctors called it “spontaneous remission.”
In 1986, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson was in his mid-80s. On
a whim, he began a weekly tradition. Each Sunday, he would pass out crisp $1 bills to anyone who came to visit. He would give a blessing, then the dollar. Each recipient was supposed to give his or her dollar away to charity.
One day, a man visited Schneerson. The man was scheduled for high-risk heart surgery to repair a ruined valve. He was actually on his way to the hospital when he stopped to see the Rabbi.
Schneerson gave the man a dollar and told him, “The doctors are looking at the wrong map.”
One hour later, surgeons opened the man up. They found his cardiac valve wholly intact. Medical staffers checked the man’s identity bracelets, certain this was the wrong patient.
But no.
The scans which had been taken only two hours prior showed a destroyed valve. But new echocardiograms showed the valve had corrected…
