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maintain good condition health and longevity According to Dr. Mark Siegel, sometimes it takes more than medicine.
In his new book, “Our Miracles,” Fox News’ senior medical analyst shares miraculous stories of healing and life-saving moments that exceeded the limits of medical intervention.
“This book is great because it speaks for itself,” he said. “Those stories are not mine. Those stories are real. And what’s interesting about them is that they are a compilation that leads to miracles.”
DR. Mark Siegel: My Personal Miracle: A Doctor’s Lessons on Faith and Healing
Siegel said he was inspired by his father, who lived to be 102, and his mother, who lived to be 100. love for each other.
“They were bonded by love. They didn’t want to leave the other alone,” he said. “This is a true love story.”

Dr. Mark Siegel joined FOX News Digital for an interview about his new book, “The Miracles Among Us.” (St. Petersburg)
“But more than that, because the doctors participated in keeping them alive and putting them on the path to survival, rather than saying they were too old.”
The doctor added: ”God appears in coincidenceshe is found in visions, he is found in dreams, he is found in angels, he is found in unexpected events and unexpected recoveries and people who are not supposed to wake up from comas. ”
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Siegel said that even people who don’t follow a particular religion, including doctors, still share a belief in a “greater reality.”
“More than 70% [of physicians] More than 70% believe in religion believe in miracles“But the real problem, and the reason I wrote this book, is that they don’t always apply that belief to their patients and practices, and I want them to.”

“More than 70% [of physicians] They believe in religion, and over 70% believe in miracles. But the real problem, and the reason I wrote this book, is that they don’t always apply that belief to their patients and practices, and I want them to. ” (FNC)
In his book, The Rebbe, Siegel introduced a story about a carpenter and his wife who have three children. The third child appeared to be in poor health.
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The carpenter rabbi said to him, Check out his mezuzaha small sacred object placed at the front door of a Jewish home. One of the heart-like idols appeared to be broken, so the rabbi told the carpenter to examine the child’s heart.
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A cardiologist later confirmed that the child had a hole in his heart, but at just three months old, he was too young for surgery.
Even though Ravi begged him to have a baby. undergo surgerydoctors refused, but the child went into near-fatal cardiac arrest and had to undergo surgery.
“The rabbi was right,” Siegel recalled, and the boy’s life was saved.
“I want people to understand that you can be deeply committed to your religion while being deeply committed to your religion,” he said. “We want people to understand that we need this now. prayer for healing. ”
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“I want people to be inspired that they will find miracles in their own lives, that miracles happen within us too, and that we all have miracles to share,” he added. “I want people to come forward and tell their miracles, and I want them to experience them in a time of so much division and ridicule. depression and anxiety. ”
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Siegel encouraged readers to learn from these stories, highlighting how people start out with ordinary days and end up in places that are “absolutely magical.”