Author, By  Faith, Not by Sight (2012)
				  CD, Heartstrings
				  Graduate,  Arizona State University
				  Summa  cum laude
				  MA, Royal  College of Music and Royal Holloway, University of London
				  Accepted  to Oxford and Cambridge for further grad study
				  Married, Christina
                  				 			
			 
			
			
					 
		
		
		GUEST BIO
		
		Scott MacIntyre: By Faith,  Not By Sight
		
		By 
  The 700 Club
        
		
		
		
  CBN.com -OVERCOMING  OBSTACLES
Scott  is the oldest of three children.  (Todd, Scott's brother, was born  when he was three. His sister, Katelyn, was born three years later when Scott  was six in 1991.  Doctors discovered Katelyn was also born blind.)  They lived in southern California and Toronto  before the family settled in Arizona. When Scott was a year and a half, doctors  confirmed what his mother already knew: Scott was blind.  Scott's  parents knew he would have obstacles growing up, but blindness wasn't a life  threatening illness so they encouraged him to do everything.  “They  chose to move forward and not look back,” says Scott.  He describes his field of vision as a  pinhole.  If a sighted person looks  through a pinhole in a piece of paper, they can see but they can’t see much.
  Scott,  26, grew up listening to music all of his life.   Scott’s mom played classical music while he was in the womb.  She played Disney tunes, praise songs and  music from Phantom of the Opera.  She showed him how to play the piano when  he was one.  By the time he was eighteen months, Scott was playing  “Mary Had a Little Lamb” and other one-fingered songs.  When he was three, he was climbing up to the  piano himself.  “I would be lost in my own little world,” says  Scott.  His first paying gig was a  wedding when he was six.  (CNN reported the story of him as a child  piano prodigy.)  Over the years Scott  learned to express his feelings whenever he would play.   
  Scott  never allowed his physical impairment to get in the way of his  success.  He learned to ride a bicycle, swim, boogie board and even  ski. Academically Scott excelled and was homeschooled  and then at the age of 14, he was admitted to Arizona State University.  He was admitted into Arizona State  University’s Barret Honors College and Herberger College of the Arts.   Scott graduated from Arizona State  University summa cum laude at 19.  Shortly before graduating Scott went  for routine blood tests as part of Fulbright scholarship requirements.  On graduation  day, as soon as Scott finished his speech, doctors called his dad to tell them Scott  had stage 4 renal failure.  "It went from the best day of my  life to the worst," says Scott, who was devastated at the news that he  would need an organ transplant.  His dreams of attending graduate  school in England were crushed. There was no way he could be on dialysis while  waiting for a kidney transplant and live in another country. The family prayed  for his healing and for guidance and direction as to Scott’s educational plan  in England.  God answered in that the  doctors finally gave Scott a medical release, but wanted to monitor his  creatine levels while he was at school.  
  GOD’S  PROMISES
    Scott  got accepted at the Royal College of Music and Royal Holloway.  He learned his way around London, memorizing  several routes and navigating the subway system so he could become comfortable  on his own.  Scott attended Bible study  and found godly Christian men that challenged his faith.  “Spiritually, I grew more while I was in  London than I ever had,” says Scott.  He  was committed to living life fully.   Scott travelled back to the states on breaks and holidays to visit his  doctor. As his first school year came to an end, Scott decided to meet with  Cambridge and Oxford Universities and got accepted to both.  He chose Cambridge.  During the summer, Scott’s health  deteriorated and he could not return to London. At 21, Scott underwent months of dialysis,  putting all his dreams on hold.  “I  prayed that God would intervene soon,” says Scott.  Then the wife of a former piano teacher  donated a kidney in 2007.  “She saved my life,”  he says. Scott learned that God’s promises are true even when His answers  aren’t always the answers we are looking for.   “I knew without a doubt that it was He who had used doctors and medical  science to heal me.  In my mind, that  didn’t make it any less miraculous,” says Scott. 
  IDOL  FEVER
    The  following year, American Idol was  holding auditions in Arizona and Scott tried out. As Scott approached the finals, Katelyn’s kidneys failed.  “I  was so sad to see my sister having to go through this horror,” says Scott.  “I also grieved for what Mom and Dad would  have to endure again.” Katelyn received a kidney transplant and is attending  Biola University.  God gave their family  a second miracle.
  Scott  and Christina were childhood friends.   When Scott made it to the top 36 finalists, Christina encouraged her  friends to vote for him.  They were  married on August 18, 2011.
  
  He  will sing “I Am Hope” from his new CD, Heartstrings.
      
		
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