The Jungle Was His Lab. The Spirit Was His Guide. (with Dr. Paul Alan Cox) episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 1, 2026 · 43 MIN

The Jungle Was His Lab. The Spirit Was His Guide. (with Dr. Paul Alan Cox)

from Why We Believe · host Nathan Gwilliam

Paul Alan Cox grew up the son of a Grand Teton park ranger and a scientist. He graduated valedictorian from BYU, earned his PhD at Harvard, and was named one of Time magazine's 11 heroes of medicine for searching the world's rainforests for cures that no laboratory had found. President Reagan named him a Presidential Young Investigator. Sweden made him the first King Carl XVI Gustaf Professor of Environmental Biology at Uppsala. The Goldman Prize, sometimes called the Nobel Prize for the environment, came in 1997 for saving the Samoan rainforest. None of those credentials are what shaped his faith. What shaped his faith was a coconut basket on a thatched mat, a mother dying of cancer, and a hurricane in Samoa that nearly took everything.In this episode of Why We Believe, host Nathan Gwilliam sits down with Paul to trace the faith behind those credentials. Paul shares the morning he watched a ranger named Red Rowe slip away to read his New Testament at dawn, and how that one moment sent him into the Sermon on the Mount as a boy. He describes the Samoan branch president who emptied his coconut basket of every coin he had on jars of food for a sick missionary. He talks about losing his mother to cancer and pivoting his life's work toward ethnomedicine, searching jungle healers for drugs that could fight HIV, ALS, and Alzheimer's. He closes with the night a hurricane-driven tsunami nearly took him, his wife Barbara, and their four children, and what saved his peace was a sealing made years before in a temple.Loved this episode? Hit Follow and share it with someone who needs to hear that the same faith that holds a family together in a tsunami can hold theirs together in anything. Leave a review for Why We Believe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or YouTube. Your support helps us bring more inspiring conversations like this to listeners everywhere!Visit WhyWeBelieve.com to download Your FREE guide on 13 Strategies to Increase Faith in Jesus Christ, to support you as you strengthen your own testimony of Jesus Christ.YOUTUBE  Follow the Why We Believe Show:Website: https://www.whywebelieve.com/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@WhyWeBelieveShowSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6T9DjmWBXJZPFyIFXUCdhmApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/why-we-believe/id1751537256LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/why-we-believe-show/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/whywebelievepodcast/Follow Nathan Gwilliam:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nathangwilliam/Follow Dr. Paul Alan Cox:Website: https://brainchemistrylabs.org/paul-alan-cox

Paul Alan Cox grew up the son of a Grand Teton park ranger and a scientist. He graduated valedictorian from BYU, earned his PhD at Harvard, and was named one of Time magazine's 11 heroes of medicine for searching the world's rainforests for cures that no laboratory had found. President Reagan named him a Presidential Young Investigator. Sweden made him the first King Carl XVI Gustaf Professor of Environmental Biology at Uppsala. The Goldman Prize, sometimes called the Nobel Prize for the environment, came in 1997 for saving the Samoan rainforest. None of those credentials are what shaped his faith. What shaped his faith was a coconut basket on a thatched mat, a mother dying of cancer, and a hurricane in Samoa that nearly took everything. In this episode of Why We Believe, host Nathan Gwilliam sits down with Paul to trace the faith behind those credentials. Paul shares the morning he watched a ranger named Red Rowe slip away to read his New Testament at dawn, and how that one moment sent him into the Sermon on the Mount as a boy. He describes the Samoan branch president who emptied his coconut basket of every coin he had on jars of food for a sick missionary. He talks about losing his mother to cancer and pivoting his life's work toward ethnomedicine, searching jungle healers for drugs that could fight HIV, ALS, and Alzheimer's. He closes with the night a hurricane-driven tsunami nearly took him, his wife Barbara, and their four children, and what saved his peace was a sealing made years before in a temple. Loved this episode? Hit Follow and share it with someone who needs to hear that the same faith that holds a family together in a tsunami can hold theirs together in anything. Leave a review for Why We Believe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or YouTube. Your support helps us bring more inspiring conversations like this to listeners everywhere! Visit WhyWeBelieve.com to download Your FREE guide on 13 Strategies to Increase Faith in Jesus Christ, to support you as you strengthen your own testimony of Jesus Christ. Follow the Why We Believe Show: Website: https://www.whywebelieve.com/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@WhyWeBelieveShow Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6T9DjmWBXJZPFyIFXUCdhm Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/why-we-believe/id1751537256 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/why-we-believe-show/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/whywebelievepodcast/ Follow Nathan Gwilliam: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nathangwilliam/ Follow Dr. Paul Alan Cox: Website: https://brainchemistrylabs.org/paul-alan-cox

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The Jungle Was His Lab. The Spirit Was His Guide. (with Dr. Paul Alan Cox)

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This episode was published on June 1, 2026.

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Paul Alan Cox grew up the son of a Grand Teton park ranger and a scientist. He graduated valedictorian from BYU, earned his PhD at Harvard, and was named one of Time magazine's 11 heroes of medicine for searching the world's rainforests for cures...

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