Guthrie, Nancy
In today's modern world, few parents have to face the
bitter task of burying a child that they love. But Nancy Guthrie has faced the
grave twice now, burying two children who lived only six months.
When Nancy gave birth to a daughter, Hope, in 1998,
club feet, extreme lethargy, an inability to suck, and a number of other small
problems hinted at something more significant. On her second day of life, Hope
was diagnosed with Zellweger Syndrome, a rare metabolic disorder that is
characterized by the reduction or absence of peroxisomes (cell structures that
rid the body of toxic substances) in the cells of the liver, kidneys, and
brain. There is no treatment and no cure for Zellweger Syndrome and most
children with the syndrome live less than six months.
For Nancy, her husband David, and their son, Matt,
the diagnosis was devastating and disappointing. Hope’s brief life—a life of
only 199 days— made a significant impact on them and those around them, causing
them to dig deep into their faith to make sense of such significant suffering.
To have a child with Zellweger Syndrome requires that
both parents be carriers of the recessive gene trait for the syndrome. So,
after Hope was born, David and Nancy took surgical steps to prevent a future
pregnancy. Evidently it didn’t work. Just a year and a half after Hope died,
Nancy discovered she was pregnant. And a few months later, pre-natal testing
revealed that this child also had the fatal syndrome. The Guthrie’s second son,
Gabriel, was born on July 16, 2001, the same day a story on the Guthries
appeared on the pages of TIME Magazine. Gabe’s life was also very short,
a mere 183 days.
Those who have watched Nancy and David walk through
such loss, and the millions who have read their story worldwide in TIME
Magazine and USA Today have wondered at their ability to emerge from
such sorrow with joy for life and passion for God. Nancy offered many of the
lessons she learned from this sorrowful experience in her 2002 book, Holding
On to Hope: A Pathway of Suffering to the Heart of God which has helped
thousands of people pursue God in the midst of their suffering. She regularly
hears from readers who have been touched by the book from all around the world
as the book has been translated into German, Danish, Norwegian, Korean and
Chinese. Her newest release, The One-Year Book of Hope, provides
hurting people with a daily dose of truth from Scripture to guide them toward
healing. Publishers Weekly wrote: "Where other devotionals offer tiny and
undemanding snippets from Scripture, Guthrie's approach is meatier, and we see
her genuinely wrestling with some of the more difficult passages of the Bible.
Throughout, Guthrie's soul-searching honesty and personal anecdotes make her a
perfect companion in times of deep sorrow."
In addition to teaching a weekly Bible class at her
church, Nancy speaks regularly at women's retreats and evangelistic events
nationally and internationally including recent events at The Brooklyn Tabernacle,
Second Baptist Church of Houston and a women's conference in Scotland. Nancy
has worked in the Christian publishing industry for twenty years and currently
handles media relations for clients such as the international association for
Christian retail, and the ministry of Anne Graham Lotz. Nancy and her husband,
David and son, Matt, make their home in Nashville, Tennessee where, according
to Nancy, life is less about professional pursuits than about the ordinary
aspects of being a wife, mother, friend, and follower of Jesus, with clothes to
wash, a car-pool line to wait in, e-mails to answer and a friend to listen to.
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