Two stories of resilience through faith and prayer. Two stories that remind us: healing is real, and your testimony can build someone else's legacy.
It’s one thing to believe in miracles. It’s another thing to live through one.
When Pastor Diego Mesa shared his story with me, he mentioned he was a seasoned marathoner, built for endurance and discipline.
But no training could prepare him for the moment he was told he had stage 4 kidney cancer.
It had already spread to his bones. And he was given one year to live—at best.
But Diego didn’t let fear take the driver’s seat.
He leaned in—hard—on prayer, Scripture, and the promises of God.
Every morning, he spoke 175 healing verses over his life. He restructured everything—his lifestyle, his nutrition, his mindset—but above all, he rebuilt his faith.
“The Word is life to those who find it and health to one’s whole body,” Proverbs 4:22 reminds us.
Diego believed it. And it changed everything.
He didn’t just want to run again. He wanted to run his race in Christ, stronger, wiser, and more purpose-filled than ever before.
Ana, the mother of a team member here at Pray, received an even grimmer diagnosis: pancreatic cancer. Fast. Painful. Terminal. Doctors gave her three months to live.
But Ana wasn’t finished—and more importantly, God wasn’t done.
She pursued treatment, yes—but what changed her trajectory wasn’t just in the physical realm. It was in the spiritual.
Ana prayed every day, not out of panic, but out of expectation. She became the center of a prayer circle, where strangers lifted her name before God like a battle cry.
That was over 20 years ago.
Ana is alive. She’s a walking testimony that when God moves, even the most certain endings get rewritten.
“The prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective” (James 5:16). Ana’s life proves it. Diego’s life proves it.
You see, Diego and Ana’s stories don’t just inspire—they instruct.
They remind us that we’re not defined by diagnoses, limitations, or past failures.
Here’s a cool gem in all this: Even if the cancers had spread, it would have all been worth it. The connections. The tears shared. The pressing into God and friendships.
Because two things can be true at once:
1. There’s a purpose and lesson in the suffering, even if nothing changes.
2. Miracles are possible, and we should expect them from a mighty God.
We are defined by the God who heals, the God who restores, the God who still says, “Get up and walk” (John 5:8).
Don’t just survive—testify.
Don’t just recover—lead.
Your thriving isn’t just for you. It’s for the next generation.
Your thriving is for someone who needs to know that yes, God still answers prayer.
Yes, faith still works.
And yes, they can make it through, too.