Saved From Severe Injuries To Help Heal Others
Cora Webber’s senior year at Cedarville University doubled as her first year in pharmacy school — until a horrific car accident cut it short.
Cora Webber’s senior year at Cedarville University doubled as her first year in pharmacy school — until a horrific car accident cut it short.
Corawas on her way to a Sunday morning church servicein 2018 when her vehicle hit black ice and spun head-on into another vehicle.While she usually carpooled with friends, that morning,her car contained only herself and one passenger, who sustained a fracturedfemur. Cora’s injuries were far more extensive — and life threatening.
“Things were pitch black for me, but I remember having a weird out-of-body experience — feeling like I was in the presence of the Lord, but like it wasn’t my time to go,” saidCora.
Her parents, who were in Alaska at the time,didn’tlearn what had happened until that evening.In their absence,her Cedarville professors and classmatestook turns sitting with and praying for her in the hospital.
After her monthlong stay in a hospital in Ohio, Cora’s family moved to Texas to access the treatment she needed. She underwent 14 surgeries — some more than once due to complications with healing.
While recovering, Coraremained enrolled as aCedarville pharmacy student, staying in touch with professors through email. Two years after the accident, she returned to campus to finish her degree.
“It was hard coming back between semesters,” Cora said.“I was still in pain, and everyone already had friends. I didn’t know anyone in my classes because all my friends had moved on.”
When the COVID-19 pandemic hit in March 2020, Coraremained on campus. The only other pharmacy student who stayed was Colorado native Mitchell Webber, who now serves as a fellow in the school of pharmacyat Cedarville.
“We started talking and the Lord had plans for us to be married,” Cora said. “It wouldn’t have happened if I hadn’t been in the accident. Mitchell had been away the same two years as me for financial reasons.”
Cora graduated with her Doctor of Pharmacy degree in May 2023 and will graduate with her MBAfrom Cedarvillethis May. She works as a pharmacist at Walgreens in Beavercreek, Ohio.
“I try to care for my patients the way I wish I’d been cared for, specifically spiritually,” Cora said. “I have tosee my patients as people first, learning their lifestyles and goals to make them feel heard. And because of my history with chronic pain, I can relate to them better.”
Though the journey has been difficult, Corasees redemptive elements in her story.
“I’m extremely blessed to have found Mitchell,” she said. “I’ve learned a lot from him showing me what it’s like to be loved — he has carried me up the stairs when I couldn’t make it myself. And even though I’min pain every day, it reminds me that I can still worship on this side of heaven — and that one day our bodies are going to be made new.”
Cedarville University, an evangelical Christian institution in southwest Ohio, offers undergraduate and graduateprograms across arts, sciences, and professional fields. With 6,384 students, it ranks among Ohio’s largest private universities and is recognized by The Wall Street Journal as being among the nation’s top three evangelical universities. Cedarville is also known for its vibrant Christian community, challenging academics, and high graduation and retention rates. Learn more at cedarville.edu.