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Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Steven Curtis Chapman on Good Morning America - More on His Story

Steven Curtis Chapman, a Grammy-winning and successful Christian musician, had his world shaken when he discovered his 5-year-old daughter Maria Sue was killed.




























Steven Curtis Chapman and his family were forced to endure a horrifying tragedy when their daughter Maria Sue's 17-year-old brother accidentally hit and fatally injured Maria while backing his SUV out of the family's driveway.


Steven Curtis Chapman and his wife appeared on 'Good Morning America' Wednesday morning, August 6. He revealed what got his family through the tragic accident: "We have talked a lot, and you will hear all of us talk about the process of grieving with hope."

"That's what has kept us breathing, kept us alive, is that while we are grieving this process, there is a hope that we have that we're anchored to in the midst of just what sometimes seems unbearable."  


Steven Curtis Chapman and his wife appeared on 'Good Morning America' Wednesday morning, August 6. He revealed what got his family through the tragic accident: "We have talked a lot, and you will hear all of us talk about the process of grieving with hope."

"That's what has kept us breathing, kept us alive, is that while we are grieving this process, there is a hope that we have that we're anchored to in the midst of just what sometimes seems unbearable."




Grammy-winning Christian music star Steven Curtis Chapman and his family suffered a tragic blow in May when his 5-year-old daughter Maria Sue was accidentally hit by her 17-year-old brother while he was backing his SUV out of the driveway. Maria later died at a Nashville hospital.

In an exclusive interview with "Good Morning America" Wednesday, Chapman will talk for the first time about how the family has coped with the devastating loss.

"We have talked a lot, and you will hear all of us talk about the process of grieving with hope," Chapman told "GMA" anchor Robin Roberts.



"That's what has kept us breathing, kept us alive, is that while we are grieving this process, there is a hope that we have that we're anchored to in the midst of just what sometimes seems unbearable."

Maria, who was adopted from China, was the Chapmans' youngest daughter. The 45-year-old Kentucky native and his wife, Mary Beth, adopted three daughters from China and also have three biological children.

Chapman said that grieving for Maria and maintaining the strength to comfort their other five children has been extremely difficult for him and his wife.


"Well, that's probably been one of the greatest challenges about walking through this, and one of the things we've prayed most for in terms of needing strength and needing wisdom as parents," Chapman told Roberts.

Just months before the accident, Chapman's book about fatherhood, "Cinderella: The Love of a Daddy and His Princess," was published.

Chapman said that the accident made the family question their strong faith in God. 






"We're a family with a lot of questions," he said. "But that's what faith is. It's living with the questions. That doesn't mean you have the answers. That's exactly what faith is."

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