A Protestant journalist investigates what could be the most significant miracle since the Day of Pentecost...
With refreshing candor and self-deprecating humor, Wayne takes the reader with him on the adventure to Medjugorje that radically and permanently changed his life. You will discover the apparitions of the Blessed Mother along with him, as he chronicles the ways that the Virgin Mary continues to speak to the world today from Medjugorje.
On October 27, 1985, in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, newspaper publisher and columnist, Wayne Weible, first learned of the phenomenon occurring in the little town with the unpronounceable name. Sensing that there might be material for his column, he decided to pursue the story. Already he had a tie-in in mind that would be perfect for the season: "As we prepare to celebrate the miracle of Christmas, a modern-day miracle may be taking place in an obscure village in Yugoslavia. . . "
The following evening, reviewing a videotape documentary of the events at Medjugorje, he realized that there was far more to it that one column. As it turned out, there were eight, and as requests poured in for reprints, to cut down on copying and postage costs he reproduced them in tabloid form.
To date, more than fifteen million copies of the tabloid have been distributed. And Wayne Weible's life has been radically and permanently altered.
With refreshing candor and self-deprecating humor, Wayne takes the reader with him on the adventure to Medjugorje that radically and permanently changed his life. You will discover the apparitions of the Blessed Mother along with him, as he chronicles the ways that the Virgin Mary continues to speak to the world today from Medjugorje.
On October 27, 1985, in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, newspaper publisher and columnist, Wayne Weible, first learned of the phenomenon occurring in the little town with the unpronounceable name. Sensing that there might be material for his column, he decided to pursue the story. Already he had a tie-in in mind that would be perfect for the season: "As we prepare to celebrate the miracle of Christmas, a modern-day miracle may be taking place in an obscure village in Yugoslavia. . . "
The following evening, reviewing a videotape documentary of the events at Medjugorje, he realized that there was far more to it that one column. As it turned out, there were eight, and as requests poured in for reprints, to cut down on copying and postage costs he reproduced them in tabloid form.
To date, more than fifteen million copies of the tabloid have been distributed. And Wayne Weible's life has been radically and permanently altered.