Back from the dead
Zack Dunlap is nothing short of a miracle. Just before Thanksgiving, the 21-year-old was pronounced brain-dead following an ATV accident. As family members gathered to say good-bye before his organs were harvested, Dunlap’s grandmother, Naomi, began praying for “a miracle”–and that’s just what she got.
Some four hours after doctors declared Zack dead, a nurse began to remove tubes from Dunlap. His cousins, Dan and Christy Coffin, both of whom are nurses, were also in the room. Something about Zack’s appearance made them think that he wasn’t as dead as the doctors said. On a hunch, Dan pulled out his bone-handled pocket knife and ran the blade up the sole of one of Zack’s feet.
The foot yanked away, but the other nurse said it was a reflex action. So Dan Coffin then dug a fingernail under one of Zack’s nails. Zack yanked his arm away and across his body, and that, the other nurse agreed, wasn’t a reflex action. It was a sign of life. …
Doctors warned the family that Zack could have profound brain damage that would prevent his leading anything resembling an active life. But within five days he opened his eyes, and 48 days after the accident, he walked out of a rehab center and returned home, where the entire town gave him a hero’s welcome.
It’s good to be reminded that miracles still happen, and that God continues to move in mysterious ways.














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back to top9 Comments to “Back from the dead”
Praise God!
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Uh huh. The experts are always right. [sarcasm off]
I remain cynical about the “omniscience” of doctors…. and the “right to die” folks who support them.
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How is this a miracle? Because doctors know everything?
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What on earth were they doing using a PET scan to diagnose brain death?
Note to self: Update advance directives to include “GET ME OUT OF TEXAS”!
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And make sure you really trust the person who gets to make the decision, SG!
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God still works little miracles, every day. This is one of the rare big ones.
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Yes this was a miracle and I celebrate for him and his family. I just hope we don’t see organ donation decrease because of this. I am an organ donor and I do want them to be sure I am good and dead but I also don’t want people to point at this case and say no way not me. They might take em while I’m still using em.
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My mother was healed of epileptic seizures. She had brain damage as a result of an accident, and the damage led to brain-wave abnormalities.
One Sunday she was moved to ask a particular person to pray for her, and a few days later an EEG showed that she had normal brain wave patterns. She stopped taking her anti-seizure drug, and no seizure occurred. She has never had another seizure in the years following.
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Erasmus wants to know how this a miracle. No, Erasmus, it’s not because the doctore know everything. It’s a miracle, a special God-ordained event that happens because the doctors DON’T know everything! Miracles happen world-wide every day outside the realm of modern medicine. Yes, alot of them are to bring people to faith in God, or to bring someone’s faith to a higher level. Doctors have the technology and the knowledge to “confirm” said miracles, and often do. However, doctors cannot possibly perform miracles. I can appreciate Mr. Dunlap’s story, as it will more than likely touch or inspire someone’s life, locally or nationally. Zack now has a monsterous opportunity to share his experience and give glory to our Blessed Creator in the form of public testimony. Then you might witness real daily miracles, that of divinely changed lives.
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