Robert C Hopkins
Some might read this as a workbook on how to make miracles. Others may see it as atestimonial by one person quite close to his family members who lacked in objectivity. Itsclaim to have witnessed miracles may be disputed by many and found to be an outrageousexaggeration by others. However, true believers in the accessibility of miracles in everydaylife will find validation in this record of several miracles that occurred in just one family. Someof its members were quite religious and others were not so much compelled to religiouspractices in their day-to-day existence. All were raised in the faith of the Roman Catholicchurch to which some of them adhered closely and others would readily admit to havingfallen away from the institution. Yet, this is not a book about religious practice and none of these members of theHopkins family would readily lay claim to producing miracles in the course of their lifetime.In fact, the more intensely Catholic among them would strongly object to the events describedas being portrayed as miracles at all. Yet all of these Hopkins family members are deceased, sothey are not alive to challenge the claim. The eldest of them was born in the beginning of 1924.The youngest of them and the last to die passed from this plane of existence at the end of 2014. In this span, they were witnessed by the eldest of the sons of Bob and Betty Hopkins.Dr. Hopkins is a PhD in Social Welfare obtained in 1983 and has been a practicing counselor,primarily in the field of Substance Abuse Treatment. To wit, he has seen his share of miraclesand disappointments in his day. He knows the difference and can attest to the veracity of theevents described in the book. Are you curious yet about what he saw and the principles he observed in production ofthese miracles? Do you wish to learn how the youngest of these four people embodied andmade use of the principles identified and exemplified in the lives of his elders? Buy this bookand find out for yourself.