
Richard Roberts has a story to share. Right. In fact, I don’t really think I ever got my eyes opened till I got to the top of the stairs. By that time I was crawling on my hands and knees. I guess I’d fallen down on the stairs going up, you know. I was just that, you know, come out of a dead sleep. And he was laying in the middle of his floor rolling, holding his head. Well, I knew we had a problem. We began to pray and got some, you know, some immediately relief, but then at, what, nine o’clock I think, we were right out here
at the City of Faith.
And the doctors and the technicians, it was tremendous, I can’t say enough about the hospital and the clinic and the doctors and the technicians. And at that time Dr. Pat Lester was involved in the radiology, etc., and … Still is. And he was, he was involved in all of the tests that they were running, etc., and he came out and … And Dr. Woosley was involved too. Oh yeah, Dr. Woosley. I’m going to get to him. He’s the important one. He’s the one that did the operation. Well, let me say this, Craig is fully recovered.
When he left the hospital in the first of, about the third or fourth of February of ’83, he was down below a hundred pounds. He now weighs 170 and is tall as I am and that’s just in that length of time. He completely has been restored to normal and you’d never know anything was the matter with him. We were just in in February for a cat scan with Dr. Woosley and he said everything is perfect. He said he doesn’t even have to come back for three years, is it? Three years. Now what they discovered was that it was a brain tumor.
Right, on the right side of his brain, right back here on the part that controls your coordination. Your motor function, I guess. Yes. And so it was … Helps you to walk and move your arms. He passed every coordination test that they gave him. That’s what was so unusual about it. God was even working with him even with the problem. He shouldn’t have been, as large as the tumor was, etc., he shouldn’t have been able to pass those coordination tests. And he could pass every coordination test they gave him.
That’s one of the reasons they had a little trouble discovering it. And once they discovered it they were able to handle it. But I want to talk about, instead of talking about him, he got his, I want to talk about doctors and nurses and the hospital. I was sitting there listening to Dr. Winslow and the nurse and David talk, and by the way, David was right there praying with us …