Mistaken Identity: Two Families, One Survivor, Unwavering Hope | Don & Susie Van Ryn, Newell, Colleen & Whitney Cerak | Inspiration
books:
Mistaken Identity:...
Mistaken Identity: Two Families, One Survivor, Unwavering Hope
Don & Susie Van Ryn
,
Newell, Colleen & Whitney Cerak
Howard Books
, 2008 - 288 pages
average customer review:
based on 127 reviews
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highly recommended
Not a bedtime story!
Very interesting book - don't know how any
one
could get through this. Too intense to read when you are trying to go to sleep! The
families
' faith in God got them through - what a testimony!
Inspiration
I opened this book yesterday at 4:30PM, and finished it today at about 6PM. I literally could not put it down. The Ceraks and Van Ryns have been a part of a truly incredible story that they so graciously have shared through this book. I spent most of my time reading it in tears, often sobbing at the thought of such an unimaginable tragedy. But through it I've been blessed, as I know thousands have. What was and is so heartbreaking, these
families
have used to glorify God and help others to see the joy and comfort that a relationship with Jesus Christ can bring. God is using the lives of these
two
girls and their families to bring so many into His kingdom. What a gift to be chosen to serve Him in such a huge way! I don't imagine I'll meet any of these people during my life on earth, but I can't wait to hug Laura in heaven and tell her what an inspiration her story was to me. The same is true of the others of course, I just
hope
my moment to meet them is much, much later! I highly recommend this book! It's a wonderful story of heartbreak, and the hope we all have in God's grace. Thank you Cerak and Van Ryn family for being exactly who you are.
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awesome and heartbreaking too
This book was uplifting and heartbreaking at the same time.The faith and love for the Lord from both
families
was amazing.
A Remarkable Story
Well, I am
two
minds about this book. First, it is simply an amazing story that manages to be both distressing and uplifting at the same time. Two girls who resembled--but didn't know--each other were in a horrific accident together when their Taylor University van was struck by a truck that crossed over the center divider. Laura Van Ryn died and Whitney Cerak lived, but they were misidentified as each other . . . and neither family detected the error. So the Ceraks buried Laura and grieved for her as their own, while the Van Ryns spent five weeks at Whitney's hospital bedside, willing her back to life. It was only as she was emerging from her coma and the effects of a traumatic brain injury, that Whitney was able to print her name and the truth finally emerged. While it seems impossible that this mistake could endure for so long under such close scrutiny, it obviously did happen and the book helps to make some sense of this. But in the end, the two
families
traded places, and the Ceraks literally had their daughter "back from the dead" while the poor Van Ryns who had been heroic throughout this ordeal suddenly had to come to grips with the loss of theirs. Whitney, in the end, recovers much of her former self, but not all; she remains a changed person. Although her comments in this book are relatively few, they are certainly thought-provoking.
Second, however, the reader should be forewarned that ALL of the principals in this story are evangelical Christians, with Taylor University (a religious school) being the common link. So the two girls and both their families, all the other victims, all their friends and significant others, etc. are of this persuasion. Accordingly, on almost every page there is some mention of God, Jesus Christ, prayer, scriptures, Bible study, Bible camp, and so forth. While you appreciate deeply that it was their faith that sustained them through this terrible trial, if you are not of the same ilk, you may be put off. Indeed, the families explain the crash as "God's will," noting that as their incredible tale was spread worldwide many people following the news and the Van Ryns' (and later Cernaks') blog converted to Christianity. And they say that all the victims would have happily chosen to die to promote this spread and strengthening of faith. While that may be going a bit too far, it is undoubtedly true that these two families' belief in a heavenly afterlife gives them solace in the face of the unthinkable and that their strong religious community gave them the support to get through it all. All in all, I enjoyed the book, but I could have d
one
with a little less of the creed.
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