For many people, Nancy Guthrie is known as a Bible teacher, author, and conference speaker whose words carry unusual weight. But long before the stages, the books, and the national invitations, there was a hospital room — and a diagnosis that would permanently alter the direction of her life.
Her story isn’t one of disappearance or scandal. It’s something more difficult. It’s a story of loss lived in public, faith tested in private, and a voice that emerged from grief rather than comfort.
Nancy and her husband, David, were young parents when their first child, Hope, was diagnosed with Zellweger syndrome — a rare genetic disorder affecting multiple organ systems. It’s a condition with no cure and a short life expectancy.
Most people have never heard of it until it becomes personal.
Hope lived for 199 days.
For Nancy, that season marked the beginning of a reality she hadn’t prepared for. Not just the grief of losing a child, but the disorienting experience of navigating faith under pressure. The kind of faith that isn’t theoretical, but raw and unfiltered.
Years later, the Guthries would face the same diagnosis again with their son, Gabriel. He lived for 183 days.
Two children. Same rare condition. Same devastating outcome.