When I was working at a convenience store, this young couple ran in crying and hysterical that a relative of one had just been shot point blank in the head inside his apartment which was behind the store. After establishing that the ambulance and authorities had been contacted a woman that worked with me suggested we join together in prayer for the man that was shot. More to calm the two I participated. It was later that I found out more information, the doctors had said the man was lucky to be alive (naturally of course, though, point blank .375) and lucky if he lived through surgery. They also said he would be lucky if he wasn't a vegetable if he survived surgery. A week or so later he walked into the store and purchased some goods. The only lingering effect he said he still had was a loss of balance at times and sensitivity to loud noise. Additionally, the man that shot him lived too, and he was worked over (until the police arrived) by the other 5 relatives of the man who got shot that were also present (the shooter was unrelated to them).
There's no reason to either believe or, disbelieve such testimonial accounts, (sans police reports, hospital records ... evidence).
Of course those devout adherents to the atheist religion ...
Since atheism isn't a "religion", (except to those misinterpreting _disbelief_ as a religious belief ... illogical as that may be), it has no "devout", (religious), adherents. Nice try slipping that by again though. Presumably, you keep trying that schtick and getting shot-down, however.
... will attempt to dismiss this as coincidence for whatever purpose other than to either comfort themselves or criticize others.
Actually, I'd dismiss it on the basis of a lack of evidence to support a potentially fictional story. If not fictional, I'd attribute the medical procedures preformed on the patient with a lot more credit than speciously attributing such a recovery to any intercessory magical evocation rituals hypocritically prohibited by the religion subscribed to, (e.g., no false credit for 'prayers').
I don't really care about that, and post this here simply as my testimony to these events to share with those of faith.
On the contrary, you did "care" enough to mention what you allegedly don't "care about". That kind of thing used to amuse me; now I just find it to be a non sequitur.