Dr. Marc Siegel, Fox News senior medical analyst and a practicing physician, is out with a new book that should make every patriotic American sit up and pay attention. The Miracles Among Us: How God’s Grace Plays a Role in Healing is being published by Fox News Books and arrives this November, and it unapologetically puts faith back into the conversation about health and healing. This is not fluff — it’s a seasoned doctor pushing back against a sterile, secular medical narrative that pretends faith doesn’t matter.
Siegel’s collection of true-life accounts reminds readers that modern medicine and religious belief are not enemies but partners in saving lives, a point the mainstream media all too often refuses to acknowledge. He chronicles jaw-dropping recoveries — from improbable comebacks in the ICU to prophetic warnings that led to lifesaving surgeries — and argues that these “soft miracles” emerge from the messy intersection of prayer, intuition, and clinical skill. That blend is exactly what hardworking families have always known: faith comforts, and sometimes it heals where technology alone falls short.
The stories inside are heartbreaking and heroic, featuring familiar names and ordinary people whose lives were touched by divine intervention. Among them are episodes involving Fox anchor Bret Baier’s son, NFL player Damar Hamlin’s survival, and tales of missionaries and doctors responding to visions and dreams that saved lives in Sudan and Ethiopia. These are the kinds of accounts that make it impossible to keep faith locked in the chapel while pretending hospitals operate in a vacuum of meaning.
What’s especially refreshing is Siegel’s insistence that physicians can be rigorous scientists and devout believers at the same time — a rebuke to the medical bureaucrats who act as if religion is bad medicine. He points out that a large majority of doctors privately acknowledge belief and miracles, yet too often they’re discouraged from expressing compassion that includes spiritual care. That’s a culture we should reject; competent medical care must include respect for a patient’s beliefs, not disdain for them.
This book’s release under the Fox News Books imprint is fitting — an outlet that has consistently given a platform to voices the left’s gatekeepers ignore. Fox News Books has built a roster of titles that appeal to Americans who still value faith, country, and common sense, and Siegel’s project continues that important work. Conservatives should take pride when our media institutions back stories that restore spiritual courage to public life.
If you’re tired of the hollow assurances from institutions that insist only data matters, Siegel’s work is a clarifying corrective. He doesn’t ask readers to abandon reason; he asks only that we stop pretending miracles never happen and that we allow the full humanity of patients — body and soul — to inform care. That’s an argument for humility in science and for freedom in practice, values every American who loves liberty can get behind.
Hardworking Americans know there’s more to life than charts and algorithms, and The Miracles Among Us is a patriotic reminder of that truth. Buy the book, read the stories, and bring faith back into the conversation about health in your family and community — because when government and elites try to narrow what’s acceptable, ordinary people must insist on the freedom to believe. The country was built on that brave freedom; Dr. Siegel’s book is a wake-up call to reclaim it.
