It’s not often that we hear about faith in the television news business, but we’re hearing about it now, as NBC’s Savannah Guthrie endures her mother’s shocking and still-unsolved disappearance.
From CNN:
Guthrie’s faith – and insistence on the power of prayer – has been central throughout the almost weeklong saga of her mother’s disappearance.
In her 2024 bestseller “Mostly What God Does,” Guthrie credits her parents for her religious upbringing and describes how her faith has helped her navigate some of the most difficult times in her life.
And, she says she’s come to believe “the pains of this world are not (God’s) original plan and will not be how the story ends.”
“This,” she writes, “is faith.”
One of Savannah Guthrie’s earliest memories is of her mother, father and brother being baptized in their church.
“There were five of us Guthries,” she writes, “But my sister used to say that God was the sixth member of our family.”
Guthrie’s father died when she was in high school and she recalls how her mom held the family together.
“My mom was so strong and set aside her own grief in many ways, just to be there and make sure that we could all move forward together,” Guthrie recalled during a 2023 Mother’s Day segment on “Today.”
“The greatest gift my mother gave me was faith and belief in God. It changed my whole life.”
But Guthrie admits throughout her book that she has at times struggled with her faith. And in those moments, Guthrie said her mother would often help her find her way back.
She recalls how her mom gave her the same Christmas gift for nearly a decade: a plastic-wrapped devotional journal.
“This was our tradition, our special thing, our bond,” she writes. “It was how she encouraged/reminded/prodded me to walk with God as I walked into adulthood.”
After college, Guthrie’s mom helped her move from Arizona to Butte, Montana, for her first job in news. The two-day road trip would also mark Guthrie’s first time moving away from home.
But 10 days after the she started, the news station closed. Guthrie explains experiences like this taught her faith is forged, not in moments of ease or happiness, but in the lowest points of adversity.
“I learned to trust God not because the terrible thing never happened, but because it did,” she writes. “We often turn to prayer in desperation, when … our hearts and souls (are) plagued by the struggle.”
“It’s at these times we need prayer the most. And often when we find it hardest to do.”