Pedro Cumba’s first brush with
death came in 1995 when a rival drug gang robbed him.
   “They pushed me down the basement steps and
made me lay face down on the floor,” Cumba said.
  “He went to shoot me in the back of the head
but the gun didn’t go off.”


    Pedro managed to get away,
unharmed, but was not yet frightened away from the drug habit that would
consume twenty of his forty-eight years of life.  His second brush with death would come soon
after, when his home was broken into one night. 
Cumba was doing drugs in the living room with his friends.  “I was whacked over the back of the head with
a gun, tied up and thrown in a closet.” 
One of the assailants put a pillow up to the closet door and started shooting
but Cumba was able to wriggle himself into the corner of the closet and escaped
all five bullets.

     “When I got out of that one, I was
telling everyone how lucky I was, but I knew in my gut it wasn’t luck.
  It was God.” He also knew exactly who was pleading
with God for his life—his mother.
  “I’m
sure that it was her prayers to God that saved my life.
  I think she spent every day on her knees
praying for me.”
    Cruz Maria Cumba came to the U.S.
from Puerto Rico.  With her husband,
Pedro Juan, they raised three sons. 
Pedro, the oldest, was five when the family moved from New York City to
Philadelphia.  He graduated from a
Catholic high school, married at nineteen, fathered two children and was
divorced seven years later.  Pedro became
involved in the drug culture that would hold him captive for the next twenty
years.  During the worst of those years,
he lost touch with his mother even though she never stopped praying for
him.  She often tried to call and came to
his door but Cumba would not answer. 
    Sometimes, his mother would leave a
plate of food outside his door.  “It
would really hurt to watch her walk away,” Cumba said, “But I just could not
face her the way I was.”  One day his
mother left a letter at his door.  “She
said how much she loved me and that she knew I wasn’t well.  No matter what I was doing, I would always be
her son and she would always be my mother. 
She said, ‘my address is still the same and my phone number is the
same.  You’ll always have a home here.’”
 
    Cruz Maria’s unconditional love had
a powerful effect on her son.  Even seven
years later, just talking about it chokes him up with emotion.  “I hung the letter up on the wall and I would
look at it every day,” he said.  It wore
on him until finally, one day, he picked up the phone and called her.
    They reconciled and started going
to church together and even to prayer meetings. 
By now, Cumba realized everything that had happened to him was an
opportunity from God to turn his life around. 
“But I still had one foot in the world,” he said.  “I’d leave church and several days later, I’d
go back to doing drugs.  This happened
for about a year.  I was going to the
prayer group but I was still messing up.” 
    Then one night, the leader of the
prayer group, Nancy Martinez, prayed over him. Toward the end of the prayer,
she said that the Lord had just revealed to her that Cumba had twice confronted
death.  “That really freaked me out,”
Cumba said.  “How could she know
this?  Nobody knew that except the people
who were with me when it happened.”
    Martinez warned him that he was
about to face death a third time and told him to give his heart to the Lord
without delay.  The very next weekend, after a
night of drugs, Cumba woke up with a splitting headache.
  “I looked in the mirror and one eye was
completely shut and my mouth was turned funny.
 
I thought it was from the air conditioning.”
    He walked around for a week in this
condition before collapsing in someone’s car. 
The emergency room doctor told him that he had suffered a brain
aneurism.  One vessel had exploded and
another vessel had a bubble on it the size of a dime.  “If that one explodes,” the doctor told
Cumba, “I can’t save you.”  The only hope
was an emergency surgery but Cumba wanted no part of it.  He attempted to leave the hospital but the
doctor told him, “If you walk out of here, you’re going to die.”
    “I burst into tears and went into
the bathroom of the emergency room.  I
had seven rocks of crack cocaine in my pocket and instead of throwing them down
the toilet like I should have done, I decided to end my life right there by
smoking all seven rocks back-to-back.”
    He smoked them, but he did not
die.  “There I was trying to kill myself
and I still could not die.”  At some
point, he realized that maybe God did not want him to die because He had
something for him to do.  Maybe it was
something worth living for.
    “Okay,” he told the Lord, “I’m
going to put my life in Your hands.  If
it’s Your will that I make it through the operation, if You give me a second
chance, I promise I’ll turn my life around.”
    The surgery took almost ten
hours.  When he awoke, the first sound he
heard was that of his mother praying with friends from the prayer group who had
gathered around his bed.  The left side
of his face was paralyzed and he was blind and deaf on that side.  “I was so thankful to be alive, that I did
not care what I looked like.  He endured
months of therapy, both physical and spiritual. He became more and more
convinced that God had work for him to do. 

    “I knew God had spared my life and
I wanted to do something for Him. I just couldn’t sit and warm the pews in
church.  I had to get out there and touch
lives the way He touched mine.”
    That’s exactly what he did.  After regaining his sight and hearing, which
doctors never expected to happen, he started singing in the choir at the prayer
group.  Then, he learned how to play bass
guitar.  From there, he joined the
“Spirit of the Lord” street ministry that reaches out to the very people Cumba
knew best—troubled souls on drugs. 
Headed by Nestali Montes, the ministry sets up their band on
drug-infested corners, plays gospel music and preaches the word of God.  Prostitutes and drug addicts have fallen on
their knees right in the street and given their hearts to Jesus Christ.  Cumba tell them, “If you just open your heart
to Jesus, there’s nothing He can’t forgive.”
    Cumba has also conducts a
one-a-month prayer service with music for boys. 
At the end of the meetings, anyone who wants to accept Christ can come
forward and turns his life over to the Lord. 
Cumba offers himself as a witness to the unconditional love of God that
came to him through the heart of his mother. 
It is the grace that saved his life.  
_______________________________________________________________
This story written by best-selling author Susan Brinkmann is part of a collection in Amazing Grace for Survivors
For more inspiration check out:  Big Hearted: Inspiring Stories From Everyday Families , a collection of  22 stories, that share a glimpse inside the triumphs, struggles, joys, and sorrows of ordinary families with generous hearts. 

Dear God, I Don’t Get It  blends drama, humor, and inspiration in a fictionalized story to address questions faced when prayers seem not to be  answered―most importantly, “Is God even listening?”  

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