M
mdgspencer
Guest
see kansas.com/news/special-reports/father-kapaun/article118867753.html
“Her lungs filled with blood. Her kidneys shut down. Her heart nearly stopped beating.” Doctors told her parents she was going to die.
Her parents “prayed at her bedside to Jesus and Kapaun, a priest and U.S. army chaplain from Kansas who had been dead for 50 years” and who the Catholic Church may beatify.
Then she got better, had what two Protestant doctors said “was the most mysterious medical recovery they have ever seen.” She would have to breathe from an oxygen tank the rest of her life, the doctors said, and her kidneys and lungs should have been severely scarred. Neither occurred
This is one of the miracles being investigated for the cause of Emil Kapaun, who may be named a saint at the end. Father Kapaun had disregarded heavy gunfire to tend to the wounded on the Korean War battlefield, then died as a prisoner where, under terrible conditions, he had labored for the lives and souls of the other prisoners with him.
“Her lungs filled with blood. Her kidneys shut down. Her heart nearly stopped beating.” Doctors told her parents she was going to die.
Her parents “prayed at her bedside to Jesus and Kapaun, a priest and U.S. army chaplain from Kansas who had been dead for 50 years” and who the Catholic Church may beatify.
Then she got better, had what two Protestant doctors said “was the most mysterious medical recovery they have ever seen.” She would have to breathe from an oxygen tank the rest of her life, the doctors said, and her kidneys and lungs should have been severely scarred. Neither occurred
This is one of the miracles being investigated for the cause of Emil Kapaun, who may be named a saint at the end. Father Kapaun had disregarded heavy gunfire to tend to the wounded on the Korean War battlefield, then died as a prisoner where, under terrible conditions, he had labored for the lives and souls of the other prisoners with him.