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914 lines
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The following message was delivered at Grace Community Church in Panorama
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City, California, By John MacArthur Jr. It was transcribed from the tape,
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GC 90-60, titled "Charismatic Chaos" Part 9. A copy of the tape can be
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obtained by writing, Word of Grace, P.O. Box 4000, Panorama City, CA 91412.
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I have made every effort to ensure that an accurate transcription of the
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original tape was made. Please note that at times sentence structure may
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appear to vary from accepted English conventions. This is due primarily to
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the techniques involved in preaching and the obvious choices I had to make in
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placing the correct punctuation in the article.
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It is my intent and prayer that the Holy Spirit will use this transcription
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of the sermon, "Charismatic Chaos" Part 9, to strengthen and encourage the
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true Church of Jesus Christ.
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Charismatic Chaos - Part 9
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"Does God Still Heal?"
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by
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John MacArthur
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Well, as you know, we are involved in a study of the Charismatic movement,
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the contemporary movement, and tonight we come to a section entitled, "Does
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God Still Heal?" Now, in the messages that I have been giving we have
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intersected with the thoughts about healing, and we have said some things
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about that in some of our prior studies and we are not going to repeat those
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things. But there is much more that needs to be said tonight as we evaluate
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a movement that advocates healing. In fact, if there is anything that would
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be typically Charismatic or typically characteristic of the modern
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Pentecostal movement, Third Wave movement, or Charismatic movement, it would
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be a major emphasis on healing, and we need to understand that.
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Let me begin with some illustrations that set the scene for us. A familiar
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name to anybody who studies the Charismatic movement and delves into the
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issues of healing is the name of a man, Hobart Freeman, a very interesting
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man, at one time a professor of Old Testament at Grace Theological Seminary,
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from which our own Dick Mayhue graduated. And when he was a professor there
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in Old Testament, he was considered to be the finest communicator, the finest
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teacher there. In fact, Hobart Freeman wrote a very significant book
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entitled, "An Introduction to the Old Testament Prophets" which, in 1969, was
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published and printed by the Moody Bible Institute. So he was considered by
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everybody to be a mainline evangelical professor, one who not only understood
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but could adroitly teach the truth of Scripture.
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Somewhere along the line he changed. Hobart Freeman believed that God had
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healed him from Polio. Nonetheless, one of Freeman's legs was so much
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shorter than the other that he had to wear corrective shoes and walked with
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great difficulty. Freeman became a pastor. He began his ministry as a
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Baptist and after he had written and taught for some years, in the mid 60's
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he became very fascinated with "faith healing," and it moved him into the
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Charismatic movement, and then it moved him further and further towards the
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fringes of that movement. He started his own church in Claypool, Indiana; it
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was known as Faith Assembly and it grew to more than 2,000 members. Meetings
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were held in a building which he called the "Glory Barn" and Church services
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were closed to non-members.
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So it was kind of a secretive and cultic association. Freeman and the Faith
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Assembly congregation utterly disdained all medical treatment. He believed
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that modern medicine was an extension of ancient witchcraft and black magic.
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To submit to a doctor's remedies, Freeman believed, was to expose oneself to
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demonic influence. Expectant mothers in Freeman's congregation were told
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that they must give birth at home with the help only of a church sponsored
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midwife rather than go to a hospital delivery room or to be treated by a
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doctor. By the way, obedience to that teaching, cost a number of mothers and
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infants their lives. In fact, over the years, at least 90 church members
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died as a result of ailments that would have been easily treatable. No one
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really knows what the actual death toll would be if nationwide figures could
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be compiled on all the other people who followed Hobart Freeman's teaching.
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After a 15 year old girl whose parents belong to Faith Assembly, died of a
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medically treatable malady, the parents were convicted of negligent homicide
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and sentenced to ten years in prison. Freeman himself was charged with
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aiding and inducing reckless homicide in the case. Shortly afterward, on
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December 8, 1984, Freeman himself died, interestingly enough of pneumonia and
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heart failure complicated by a severely ulcerated leg.
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Hobart Freeman's theology did not allow him to acknowledge that Polio had
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left one of his legs disfigured and lame. Quote, he said, "I have my
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healing." And that is all he would say when anyone pointed out the rather
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conspicuous inconsistency between his physical disabilities and his theology.
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Ultimately, his refusal to acknowledge his infirmities cost him his life. He
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had dutifully, according to his own theology, refused all medical treatment
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for the maladies that were killing him, and medical science could easily have
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prolonged his life, but in the end he was a victim of his own teaching.
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Now, Hobart Freeman is a very familiar name to those involved in Faith
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Healing, but he is not the only one. There is another one who succumbed to
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ailments and that is a man by the name of William Brannom (sp.), and if you
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study anything about the healing movement you are going to come across the
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name of William Brannom (sp.). He would be the father of the post World War
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II healing revival. He was a man reputed to have been instrumental in some
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of the most spectacular healings that the Pentecostals have ever seen. He
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died, however, in 1965 at age 56, after suffering for six days from injuries
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received in an automobile accident. His theology was unbiblical and
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heretical, and of course when applied to himself his theology of healing had
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no effect whatsoever, though his followers right to the end, were confident
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God was going to raise him up. And even after he died they believed that God
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would raise him from the dead.
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As a boy, I was brought to become aware of another Faith Healer who became
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very, very famous, a man by the name of A. A. Allen. And A. A. Allen, about
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whom I read and whom I followed with curiosity, was a famed "Tent
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Evangelist." He took his healing meeting from place to place in a tent.
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Interestingly enough, A. A. Allen claimed thousands upon thousands of
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healings, and himself died of sclerosis of the liver in 1967, having secretly
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been involved with alcohol for many years while supposedly being able to heal
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everybody else.
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Perhaps a more familiar name in the healing movement would be the name of one
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who is elevated almost to the status of the Roman Catholic elevation of Mary,
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and that's a woman by the name of Kathryn Kuhlman. Kathryn Kuhlman died of
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heart failure in 1976, curiously enough. She had battled heart disease for
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nearly twenty years, and that statement is made by Jamie Buckingham who would
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have been one of her disciples.
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Another one that comes to mind, Ruth Carter Stapleton, was the Faith Healing
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sister of former United States President Jimmie Carter. [She] refused
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medical treatment for cancer because of her belief in faith healing. She
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died of the disease in 1983. And even John Wimber, who would be probably the
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most prominent modern contemporary Third Wave healer, struggles with chronic
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angina and heart problems. He begins his book on Power Healing with a
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personal note. This is what it says; quoting John Wimber, he says,
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I had what doctors later suspected were a series of coronary
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attacks. When we returned home a series of medical tests
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confirmed my worst fears, I had a damaged heart, possibly
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seriously damaged. Tests indicated that my heart was not
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functioning properly, a condition complicated and possibly
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caused by high blood pressure. These problems combined with my
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being overweight and overworked meant that I could die at any
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time.
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Wimber writes that he sought God and he says that God told him that in the
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same way Abraham waited for his child, I was to wait for my healing. In the
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meantime, he says, "He told me to follow my doctor's orders." Wimber writes,
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"I wish I could write that at this time I am completely healed, that I no
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longer have physical problems, but if I did it would not be true." Now, it
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seems obvious, at least a curiosity to all of us, that so many leading
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advocates of faith healing are sick!
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Annette Capps (sp.), the daughter of Faith Healer Charles Capps (sp.), and
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herself a Faith Healer, raised that question in her book; her book is
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entitled "Reverse the Curse in Your Body and Emotions." This is what she
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writes,
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People have stumbled over the fact that the so-called "Healing
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Minister" later became ill or died. They say, "I don't
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understand this. If the Power of God came into operation and
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all those people were healed, why did the evangelist get sick?
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Why did he or she die?" The reason is because healings that
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take place in meetings like that are a special manifestation of
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the Holy Spirit. This is different from using your own faith.
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The evangelist who is being used by God in the gifts of
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healings, is still required to use his own faith in the Word of
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God to receive divine health and divine healing for his own
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body. Why? Because the gifts of healings are not manifested
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for the individual who is ministering, they are for the benefit
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of the people.
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Now that double-talk basically means that somebody could have faith for
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somebody else's healing but not enough faith for their own healing. And so,
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sometimes without faith for their own healing they die, while they have
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enough faith for other people's healings who live. She goes on to say,
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Over the years I have seen various manifestations of the gifts
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of healing in my own ministry, but I have always had to use my
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own faith in God's word for my healing. There have been times
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that I have been attacked with illness in my body but as I
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ministered many were healed even though I did not feel well. I
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had to receive my healing through faith and acting on God's
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word.
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Thus, she astonishingly concludes that if a Faith Healer gets sick, it is
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because his or her personal faith is somehow deficient when applied to his or
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herself. Now, to take that a step further, you must understand that these
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people go so far as to say, "That even Jesus Himself sometimes did not have
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the faith required for people to be healed."
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Perspectives on Faith Healing often seem as varied as the number of Faith
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Healers around. Some say that God wants to heal all sickness, others come
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close to conceding that God's purposes may sometimes be fulfilled in our
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illness and infirmity. Some equate sickness with sin; others stop short of
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that, but still find it hard to explain why spiritually strong people get
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sick. Some people just "flat out" blame the devil, and they think if they
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can tie the devil up in a knot and send him off to Tibet or something [then]
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everybody will get well.
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Some claim to have the "Gifts of Healing;" others say they have no unusual
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healing ability, they simply are used of God to show people the way of faith.
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A lot of people used to say they had the "Gift of Healing" but the chicanery
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they were using has for so many years been exposed that nobody today can get
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away with that stuff anymore. So now they just claim they don't have the
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"Gift of Healing," they just sort of pray and have faith and God does what He
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wants. Some will say they heal with a physical touch; some will say you heal
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through anointing with oil; others say they can speak forth a healing, that
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they can speak it into existence; some people say they can only pray for a
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healing, and so forth and so on. And there are healers who just keep
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changing from one approach to another as the chicanery and the charlatanism
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of the healing movement becomes exposed and they have to change their
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methodology.
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Always a Faith Healer, the well known Oral Roberts used to claim that he
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could heal. He claimed great powers of healing; he no longer claims that.
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Oral Roberts claimed God had called him, in fact, to build a massive
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hospital. And He said this massive hospital would blend conventional
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medicine with Faith Healing. If you visit the city of Tulsa, as I did this
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summer, you are absolutely astonished at this facility. It is mind boggling
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to see a sixty story building rising out of a weed patch outside Tulsa,
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Oklahoma, and next to it a thirty story building rising as well, now
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completely vacant and most of it unfinished on the inside. In the face of
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huge financial losses apparently God changed His mind and declared that the
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whole thing should be closed down. It is a monument to the unfulfilled
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promises of Faith Healing. Nonetheless, in spite of these bizarre claims
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that never come to pass, Faith Healing and the Charismatic movement keep
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growing.
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Charles Fox Pharham (sp.) who is the father of the contemporary Pentecostal
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movement, came to the conviction originally (this is way back at the turn of
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the century when the Charismatic movement was then known as Pentecostalism
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and just starting) he claimed that God desired all believers to have complete
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healing and he developed that into an entire Pentecostal system, and then it
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began to flow through the leaders. Amy Simple McPherson (who founded the
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Foursquare Church), Angelus Temple (sp.), E. W. Kenyon, William Brannom
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(sp.), Kathryn Kuhlman, Oral Roberts, Kenneth Hagan, Kenneth Copeland,
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Fredrick Price, Jerry Seville (sp.), Charles Capps (sp.), Norval Hayes,
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Robert Tilton, Benny Hinn, Larry Lee, and on and on it goes. They have all
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headlined their public meetings with healing.
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There are even Catholic Charismatics such as Father John Bertilucci (sp.),
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and Francis McNutt (sp.) who have followed suit seeing that the Charismatic
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healing emphasis is a natural extension of Roman Catholic tradition. And
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then in the last phase of this so called "The Third Wave" in which we talked
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about leaders like John Wimber and others, Paul Cane (sp.) and the Kansas
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City Prophets, et al., have made healing a central element in their
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repertoire. The claims and methods of these Faith Healers range frankly from
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the eccentric to the grotesque. A few years ago I received--I receive
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everything in the mail; if they don't send it to me, somebody who wants me to
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see it does. And I have received bottles of healing oil and healing water and
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all kinds of things--but I received a miracle prayer cloth, and in it the
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message said, and I am quoting,
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Take this special miracle prayer cloth and put it under your
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pillow and sleep on it tonight. Or you may want to place it on
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your body or on a loved one. Use it as a release point wherever
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you hurt. First thing in the morning send it back to me in the
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"green" envelope. Do not keep this prayer cloth, return it to
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me. I will take it, pray over it all night. Miracle power will
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flow like a river. God has something better for you, a special
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miracle to meet your needs.
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Now, these are the kinds of things that go on all the time. And of course in
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the "green" envelope you not only send the cloth but you send some "green"
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money as well. Green being a good reminder of what color they would like to
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see. Interestingly enough, the sender of the prayer cloth feels he has
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biblical support for doing this. While Paul was in Ephesus, you remember God
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performed extraordinary miracles through him, and according to Acts 19, it
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says, "Handkerchiefs or aprons were carried from his body to the sick and the
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diseases left them and the evil spirits went out of them." And as we have
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been seeing in the series, however, Paul and the other apostles had been
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given unique power, and we talked about Apostolic Power as unique power;
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certainly nothing in the New Testament suggests that anybody could send out
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handkerchiefs and they are going to produce miracles.
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Kenneth Hagan (sp.) tells of one Faith Healer he heard of who used a method
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that I have never personally witnessed. Kenneth Hagen (sp.) writes,
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He'd always spit on them, every single one of them. He'd spit
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in his hand and rub it on them. That's the way he ministered.
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If there was something wrong with your head, he'd spit in his
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hand and rub it on your forehead. If you had stomach trouble,
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he'd spit in his hand and rub it on your clothes and on your
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stomach. If you had something wrong with your knee, he'd spit
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in his hand and rub it on your knee. And all the people would
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get healed.
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Other gimmicks, not quite that uncouth, but every bit as outlandish, also can
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be visualized everyday as you watch your television set. Some ask for "Seed
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Faith" money. Oral Roberts often says that if you donate money to him, that
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is in effect a down payment on your own personal healing. Robert Tilton
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regularly devises simple ploys; [he] pledges special healings and financial
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miracles to people who send him money; the larger the gift, the better the
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miracle. "It's in direct proportion to how much money you send," he says.
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Pat Robertson will peer into the camera and as if he can see into people's
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living rooms describe people who are being healed that very moment. Benny
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Hinn recently healed fellow Faith Healer and Talk Show Host Paul Crouch
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(sp.). He healed him on the live broadcast of the Trinity Network. After
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Hinn had released his anointing to a roomful of people, Crouch step forward
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to testify that he had been miraculously cured of a persistent ringing in the
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ears he had been suffering from for years. And on and on it goes, this list
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of fantastic claims, incredible stories of healings grow at a frantic pace,
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but real evidence of genuine miracles is conspicuously absent.
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And everywhere you go people are asking questions about this. From all sides
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comes confusion, questions, contradictions. Now as we study the Scripture,
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we find there are three categories of spiritual gifts, if we want to call
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them that. First would be the category we could say are gifted men like
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apostles, prophets, evangelists, and teaching pastors. These are the men
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themselves given as gifts from Christ to the Church. And then we could say
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there are the permanent edifying gifts and the temporary sign gifts (the
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other two categories). Permanent edifying gifts would be gifts related to
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knowledge, and wisdom, and preaching, and teaching, and exhortation, and
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faith, and discernment, and showing mercy, and giving, and administration,
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and helps, and those things that have an ongoing ministry in the Church.
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And then there are those temporary sign gifts, in other words, divine
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enablements given by the Holy Spirit for a temporary period of time as a sign
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for a very special purpose. These are listed for us in Scripture; they are
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miracles, healings, tongues (or languages), and the interpretation or
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translation of those languages.
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Now, we have noted in our study that such sign gifts had a unique purpose:
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very simple--they were to identify the authentic spokesman for God. First of
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all, Jesus did miracles. Jesus cast out demons. He did miracles that fall
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into three categories: Miracles of Physical Healing; Miracles of Demonic
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Deliverance; and Miracles of Natural Phenomena, like walking on water, or
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stilling the sea, feeding the people by multiplying bread and fish. And
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those miracles were to demonstrate to people that Jesus was not a mere man,
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but that He was the Messiah of God. It should be very clear to everyone who
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saw Him that this was not a man, because no man could do what He did.
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And so Christ had unique capability to do supernatural things in order to
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draw attention to the fact that He was unique. In fact, you need to remember
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that up until the time of Jesus Christ, there was nobody who could just go
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around healing people. There were some healings in the Old Testament, and
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there were some miracles of nature, and there were some powerful exhibitions
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of God's supernatural work: in creation, and the flood, and many other
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supernatural powerful things; but as far as a miracle, which is a subcategory
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of the supernatural. . .sometimes people say, "Well, you people always say
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there are only three eras of miracles," (and that would be: the Time of
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Moses; and then Elijah and Elisha; and then Christ and the Apostles, and
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those are the only three periods of miracles). And then they will say,
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"Well, that's not true, because creation was miracle, and the flood was a
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miracle," and they will go right on through, "Jacob wrestled with an angel
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and that was a miracle, and God was always doing supernatural things." But
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they fail to make the clear distinction that "miracle" is a technical term:
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it is a subcategory for the supernatural.
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God is always acting in a supernatural way, even today. Every time someone
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is saved that is a supernatural work. But "miracle" is a technical term to
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describe an act of God which He does through a human agency, and they are
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very rare. And even when you go back into the Old Testament and you find
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miracles where God acts through a human instrumentation to authenticate his
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messenger and the message, they are rare and nothing like the healing
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ministry of Jesus. No one ever just roamed everywhere, healing everybody.
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So what you have in the case of Jesus [is something] you have never seen
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before. Nothing like this has ever happened before in the history of the
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world. And so this is a very unique thing. And to assume that it never
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happened before (to know that by Old Testament revelation) and it happened at
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the time of Christ, uniquely, and then it faded out in the end of the New
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Testament era, and now for some strange reason it has all come back at the
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same level as once it did and we are supposed to have this massive kind of
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healing going on as it did in the day of Christ, is to demonstrate an
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imbalanced and an unsound perspective of the purpose of the miracle ministry
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of Jesus. It was to authenticate His Messiahship, and it is therefore
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irreproducible and unrepeatable.
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And so Jesus did unique things which were unique to His own ministry. Now,
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it is true that Jesus passed on to the Apostles power in two of the three
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categories. Remember now, He healed diseases, He had power over demons, and
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He did miracles of nature (natural phenomenon). The first two he gave the
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Apostles. They never did any miracles of nature. But "Peter," you say,
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"Walked on water!" Yes, but that was a miracle Christ was performing and
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that occurred only in His presence. They never did anything like "Feed the
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5,000" or "Walk on water" after that, or "Still a storm" or anything like
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that. The only two things they were given power to do were "cast out demons
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and heal the sick (including raising the dead)."
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But in their case, again, these were to point to them as the messengers of
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God. There was no printed New Testament and it was very essential that among
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all of the people who were saying that they spoke for God somebody be able to
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tell who was real, and you could tell because they had power over demons and
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power over disease. And so they were given that ability to do those things.
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And the Apostles could do them, and those closely associated with the
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Apostles could do them.
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Go back into Matthew 10:1, "Having summoned His twelve disciples, He gave
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them authority over unclean spirits, to cast them out," (and that by the way
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is the Gift of Miracles: miracle is "dunamis (Greek)" power, power over the
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forces of demons) "and He gave them the power to heal every kind of disease
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and every kind of sickness." And that was granted to the Twelve. Later on
|
||
you find out that that group was expanded and it included the Seventy.
|
||
Remember when He sent the Seventy, two-by-two and gave them the same power?
|
||
So it was a very small group. "These were the signs," says Paul, of a true
|
||
Apostle. "Signs and wonders and miracles," 2 Corinthians 12:12. They were
|
||
limited in scope--only casting out demons and healing diseases, and they were
|
||
limited in terms of who received them--only the Apostles and the Seventy
|
||
commissioned directly by Jesus, those who worked alongside the Apostles. It
|
||
never went beyond that.
|
||
|
||
It never became common for anybody and everybody in the Church to do this.
|
||
There is no indication that the evangelists, that the prophets (with a few
|
||
exceptions: Barnabas, Philip, Stephen, and those very early men), never an
|
||
indication that teaching pastors could do this, and certainly no indication
|
||
that members of the Church, the Body of Christ, could do this. These were
|
||
unique apostolic gifts. When you study the epistles of Paul--and Paul is
|
||
very clear about the fact that if you have problems with Satan and demons you
|
||
don't find somebody who can chase them away: you put on your armor. Right?
|
||
"We have spiritual weapons to battle against those forces," he said.
|
||
|
||
Now if false teachers want credibility it is very obvious that they can sure
|
||
draw a crowd and gain creditability if they can heal. And so that is always
|
||
a kind of ploy that is used by false teachers--it has been so in history,
|
||
whether you are talking about tribal witch doctors in Shamanism, in Animism,
|
||
and in Paganism, or whether you are talking about Occultic kinds of healings,
|
||
or New Age kind of mind healings, or whether you are talking about the
|
||
charlatans and the frauds who parade themselves even as Christian healers.
|
||
It is a great way to draw a crowd. Why? Because the number one human
|
||
anxiety is illness and death.
|
||
|
||
Since the fall of man in the Garden of Eden disease has been a terrible
|
||
reality, and for millennia the search for cures to alleviate illness and
|
||
suffering has consumed mankind. And I will tell you that if I could choose
|
||
one gift, if God would give me one gift that I don't have and I could ask Him
|
||
for it and get it, I would ask Him for the gift of healing. I mean, if it
|
||
was available to me. Can you imagine what you could accomplish with it?
|
||
There are many occasions when I have wished that I could heal. I have stood
|
||
in a room in a hospital watching a precious child die of Leukemia while the
|
||
parents wept. I prayed with a dear friend as inoperable cancer ate at his
|
||
insides. I have stood by helplessly as a young person fought for life in an
|
||
intensive care unit, the result of a motorcycle or an automobile accident. I
|
||
have seen teenagers crushed through those kinds of things. I have watched
|
||
their parents in agony.
|
||
|
||
I have seen people in the hospital on the edge of death with a gunshot wound.
|
||
I have watched people lie comatose while machines try to keep their vital
|
||
signs alive, at least on a screen, if not in reality. I watched a close
|
||
friend weaken and die after an unsuccessful heart transplant. I have seen
|
||
friends in terrible pain from surgery. I know people who are permanently
|
||
disabled with sickness and injury. I see babies born with heart breaking
|
||
deformities. I have helped people learn to cope with amputations and other
|
||
tragic losses. I have been there when a mother was holding to her arms, in
|
||
the bedroom, a dead baby who had died of "crib death."
|
||
|
||
If I could wish for anything, I could certainly wish that I could do
|
||
that--heal all those people. Think how thrilling it would be. Think how
|
||
rewarding it would be to have that gift. Think of what it would be like to
|
||
go into a hospital among the sick and the dying, walk up and down the hall
|
||
and touch people and heal them like Jesus did. Wouldn't it be wonderful to
|
||
go into the Cancer Ward and the Heart Disease Ward and the Aids Ward, and all
|
||
the other places and just heal everybody. And somewhere along the line you
|
||
want to ask these Charismatic healers why they don't assemble all of
|
||
themselves and go down to that place and let's see if they have the power to
|
||
heal! Opportunities to heal the sick are unlimited. And if, as Charismatics
|
||
claim, such miracles are "Signs and Wonders," (listen carefully, they say
|
||
this) if they are "Signs and Wonders" designed to convince unbelievers that
|
||
the gospel is true, then wouldn't that be the way to really convince them?
|
||
|
||
But strangely, the healers rarely, if ever, come out of their tents, rarely
|
||
ever come out of their buildings, rarely ever come out of their television
|
||
studios. I have never seen them in a hospital. I have never seen them
|
||
walking down a ward with a camera following them. They always seem to
|
||
exercise their gift in an environment in which they totally control, staged
|
||
their way, run according to their schedule. Why don't we see them moving
|
||
out?
|
||
|
||
Paul Kane (sp.) with whom I met recently, personally, who is sort of the main
|
||
prophet in this new movement, has prophetically seen this, and I quote one
|
||
writing about him,
|
||
|
||
Kane describes his vision of an army of children that will
|
||
parade down the streets healing whole hospital wards. He
|
||
foresees news broadcasts where the "Anchors" report no bad news
|
||
because everyone is in sports arenas hearing the gospel. Over a
|
||
billion will be saved, the dead will be raised, limbs will be
|
||
restored, those with handicaps will jump from their wheelchairs
|
||
and crutches will be cast aside, and those in the stadiums will
|
||
go for days without food or water and never notice.
|
||
|
||
Now I don't know what kind of a world that is or how they are going to make
|
||
it happen but I think it is time to start if they have that ability. Is this
|
||
happening? No, because those who claim to have the gift of healing and the
|
||
power of healing, and claim to be able to tap into that power really don't
|
||
have it. The gift of healing was a temporary sign gift for the
|
||
authenticating of those who wrote the Scripture and those who preached the
|
||
message in that first century. And once the Scripture was completed and that
|
||
authenticity was established, the gift of healing ceased. It is not anything
|
||
new to claim it. The original claimants were the Roman Catholics.
|
||
|
||
If you read some of Roman Catholic history you will be amazed probably. They
|
||
boasted of healing people with the bones of John the Baptist, healing people
|
||
with the bones of Peter, healing people with pieces of the cross (and
|
||
somebody said, "There are enough pieces of the cross around to build a two-
|
||
story building!"). They have said that they, "Have healed people with the
|
||
vials of Mary's breast milk." There is a place that you know about in France
|
||
called Lourdes, a Catholic shrine that has supposedly been the sight of
|
||
countless miraculous healings. I have been to the largest Catholic cathedral
|
||
in the Western Hemisphere in Montreal, San Joseph, where people climb 450
|
||
stairs on their knees and they go in and they kiss a little box that has the
|
||
heart of a little friar in it, and all along the walls and everywhere are
|
||
crutches, all over the place. Supposedly countless tens of thousands have
|
||
been healed there. And now in Metajorie (sp.) in Yugoslavia (you have been
|
||
reading about it) more than 50,000,000 people have gone in less than a
|
||
decade. Why? They are in search of a miracle from the virgin Mary who
|
||
appeared in 1981 to six little children. If you read carefully about that it
|
||
is bizarre.
|
||
|
||
It is very much like the occultic kind of healings you hear about in pagan
|
||
parts of the world. You have the oriental psychic healers who say they can
|
||
do bloodless surgery. They way their hands over afflicted organs and say
|
||
incantations and claim people are cured. Witch Doctors, Shamans, claim to
|
||
raise the dead. Occultist use Black Magic and Lying Wonders to do their
|
||
thing. Mary Baker Eddy, [who] you remember founded Christian Science,
|
||
claimed to have healed people through telepathy. And she had buried with her
|
||
in her casket a telephone because she was going to come to life and call
|
||
somebody and tell them to come and get her. You see Satan has always
|
||
captivated people's hearts through the promise of healing. Even today the
|
||
people who promised that "Health, Wealth, Prosperity Gospel" are hooking
|
||
people on this tremendous human desire for physical healing and the fear of
|
||
disease and death.
|
||
|
||
This goes on and on and on. One pastor on a popular Charismatic television
|
||
show explained that his gift of healing works this way, quote,
|
||
|
||
In the morning services the Lord tells me what healings are
|
||
available. The Lord will say, "I have got three cancers
|
||
available, I have got one bad back, I have got two headache
|
||
healings." I announce that to the congregation and tell them
|
||
that anyone who comes at night, with faith, can claim those that
|
||
are available for that evening.
|
||
|
||
Now if you take a closer look at these healings you will find some very
|
||
interesting things. The only documented cases that you can find, the only
|
||
actually documented cases you can find, are cases of people who didn't get
|
||
healed. The cases of supposed people who do get healed, you can't find any
|
||
documentation. One of the most telling studies of this was done by a medical
|
||
doctor by the name of William Nolan who decided that he would look into the
|
||
healing ministry of really the prototype of all of it, Kathryn Kuhlman (sp.)
|
||
when she was still going strong before her death. And he wrote a book after
|
||
studying her, called "Healing, a doctor in search of a miracle." And he went
|
||
beyond Kathryn Kuhlman, but the major section of interest to me was the
|
||
section on Kathryn Kuhlman. And he made the point in his book that Miss
|
||
Kuhlman did not understand psychogenic disease. She did not understand, that
|
||
is, disease related to the mind. In simple terms a functional disease might
|
||
be a sore arm. An organic disease would be a withered arm or no arm at all.
|
||
|
||
Now Katherine would heal a sore arm but not give somebody one who didn't have
|
||
one. A psychogenic disease would be thinking your arm was sore and Kathryn
|
||
could make you think that your arm wasn't sore. Nolan wrote,
|
||
|
||
Search the literature as I have and you will find no documented
|
||
cures, by healers, of gall stones, heart disease, cancer, or any
|
||
other serious organic disease. Certainly you will find patients
|
||
temporarily relieved of their upset stomach, their chest pain,
|
||
their breathing problems. You will find healers and believers
|
||
who will interpret this interruption of symptoms as evidence
|
||
that the disease is cured. But when you track the patient down
|
||
and find out what happened later you will always find the cure
|
||
to have been purely symptomatic and transient. The underlying
|
||
disease remains.
|
||
|
||
I remember one of A. A. Allen's cures; a man threw away his crutches and a
|
||
horrible result came from it, and he was sued by a family for the severe
|
||
injury that occurred to that man, when under the emotion of the moment, he
|
||
was sort of able to prop himself momentarily and brought great harm to
|
||
himself. When faith healers try to treat serious organic diseases they are
|
||
very often responsible for very serious anguish and unhappiness, and
|
||
sometimes even life threatening things. Dr. Nolan had Miss Kuhlman herself
|
||
send him a list of the cancer victims she had seen cured, and this is what
|
||
the doctor discovered,
|
||
|
||
I wrote to all the cancer victims on her list and the only one
|
||
who offered cooperation was a man who claimed that he had been
|
||
cured of cancer by Miss Kuhlman. He sent me a complete report
|
||
of his case. He had prostatitis cancer which is frequently
|
||
responsive to hormone therapy, if it spreads it is also highly
|
||
responsive to radiation therapy. This man had had that and he
|
||
had also had extensive treatment with surgery, radiation, and
|
||
hormones. He had also dealt with Kathryn Kuhlman. He chose to
|
||
attribute his cure or remission, as the case may be, to Miss
|
||
Kuhlman. But anyone who read his report, layman or doctor,
|
||
would see immediately that it is impossible to tell which kind
|
||
of treatment had actually done most to prolong his life. If
|
||
Miss Kuhlman had to rely on this case to prove the Holy Spirit
|
||
cured cancer through her, she would be in very desperate
|
||
straits.
|
||
|
||
Dr. Nolan did further work on 82 cases of Kathryn Kuhlman's healings using
|
||
names that she herself supplied. His conclusion at the end of the entire
|
||
investigation was that not one of the so called healings was legitimate--not
|
||
one!
|
||
|
||
More recently, a very interesting man by the name of James Randy--Have you
|
||
heard that? He's called the "Amazing Randy" (he gave himself that name). He
|
||
is a professional magician. As a professional magician he has written a book
|
||
in which he examines the claims of "faith healers." Why? Because he knows
|
||
all the gimmicks. He is the man who exposed television evangelist Peter
|
||
Poppoff's (sp.) fakery in 1986, on the "Tonight Show." You remember that
|
||
Peter Poppoff (sp.) was one of the healers that claimed to get "words of
|
||
knowledge." He would stand there and he would say, "Jesus is telling me this
|
||
about you." And the truth was he had a little earphone and his wife was
|
||
giving him all this information because everybody who came to the meeting had
|
||
to fill out a card. And I don't know if you know about how that works but
|
||
healers throughout the years have always had the "preservice" meeting, when
|
||
everybody who wants to be cured and get in the "healing line" fills out a
|
||
very full card. And there is a very simple way, by staggering the cards,
|
||
that the guy can be holding up a card to his head and telling you all you
|
||
need to know about yourself, to convince you that this man speaks for God.
|
||
In the case of Peter Poppoff (sp.) he was repeating information his wife was
|
||
putting in his ear, from the "crib sheets" assembled in the "pre-meeting."
|
||
|
||
Now the "Amazing Randy" is really not so amazing, he's just a magician. But
|
||
he is openly antagonistic to Christianity. His antagonism is fed, I think,
|
||
continually by what he finds out. But, nevertheless, he seems to have done
|
||
his investigation thoroughly. He asks scores of "faith healers" to supply
|
||
him with direct, examinable evidence of true healings. Quote, he said,
|
||
|
||
I have been willing to accept just one case of a miracle cure,
|
||
so that I might say in this book that at least on one occasion a
|
||
miracle occurred. But not one "faith healer" anywhere has given
|
||
him a single case of medically confirmed healing that couldn't
|
||
be explained as natural convalescence, psychosomatic improvement
|
||
or outright fakery.
|
||
|
||
What is Randy's conclusion? I quote,
|
||
|
||
Reduced to its basics, "faith healing" today (as it always has
|
||
been) is simply magic! Though the preachers vehemently deny any
|
||
connection with the practice, their activities meet all the
|
||
requirements for the definition; all of the elements are present
|
||
and the intent is identical.
|
||
|
||
Well, I don't want to just be ungracious, that's not my intention; but it is
|
||
very important that you know the truth and that you be warned. And if the
|
||
Apostle John would even speak the name of Diotrephes just because he loved to
|
||
have the preeminence in the Church, and that posed a threat, then how
|
||
important it is for us to identify these people who pose an even more severe
|
||
threat, as they say they represent the very voice of God and can prove it by
|
||
the fact they can do miracles.
|
||
|
||
I had a meeting with a man who is a very bright, a very intelligent, a very
|
||
academically trained, a very intellectual man who understands the Bible, and
|
||
he said to me,
|
||
|
||
The reason that I am in this movement is because one of these
|
||
prophets stood up in a meeting and looked at me and told me the
|
||
name of my mother--my mother's maiden name! And not only that
|
||
he was able to tell me my father's real name, and my father goes
|
||
by a nickname and I knew that he could only know that by direct
|
||
revelation.
|
||
|
||
Now, how utterly gullible can a man be? If I could find a full-fledged,
|
||
bonifide theologian, first-ranked, teaching in one of the most respected
|
||
seminaries in the world, and if I could convince him of my being a prophet of
|
||
God by just finding out the name of his mother and his father's real name,
|
||
that wouldn't be too tough if that's all it took, especially if I had been
|
||
plying that kind of trade for years. It's amazing how gullible people are.
|
||
We hear about these healings, but there is never any evidence. Not one of
|
||
today's self-styled healers has produced irrefutable proof of the miracles
|
||
they claimed to have wrought. Many of them are transparently fraudulent, and
|
||
the healings in many cases aren't healings at all. Many things can occur by
|
||
the power of suggestion, like people falling over backwards and so forth.
|
||
But that can do the opposite of healing you as we noted a few weeks ago when
|
||
we reminded you that one lady fell over in a Benny Hinn meeting and killed
|
||
the lady she fell on. And now he is being sued.
|
||
|
||
Now we all know that desperation accompanies disease. Sickness drives
|
||
people to do frantic, extreme things they normally wouldn't do. People who
|
||
are clear-minded and balanced become irrational. Remember, Satan knows this.
|
||
That's why he said in Job 2:4, "Skin for skin, yes, all that a man has will
|
||
he give for his life." The most desperate, heart-breaking cases involve
|
||
people who are incurably organically ill. Others aren't really sick at all.
|
||
You know, if I may be very personal, one of the real joys of our church is
|
||
the dear precious people that come here every Sunday in wheelchairs. I can't
|
||
tell you how many of those people have told me that people have said to them,
|
||
"If you had enough faith, or if you went to another church, other than Grace
|
||
Church, you could get out of that wheelchair."
|
||
|
||
Somebody asked me recently if we get a lot of people here coming out of
|
||
healing churches? I say, "Yes, we get the people who go and don't get
|
||
healed--no question about it." What a tragic thing; multitudes go away
|
||
shattered, disconsolate, feeling they have either failed God or God has
|
||
failed them. Now, let me say this, people are going to say, "Well, are you
|
||
saying God doesn't heal?" No, I'm not saying that, if God wants to heal, He
|
||
can heal. That's completely, obviously within His power, and if it is in his
|
||
purpose [then] He can heal. He may heal as a result of prayer. He may heal
|
||
through simple processes, through medical assistance, or he may heal in a way
|
||
that we can't explain medically. God may speedup the recovery mechanism and
|
||
restore a person to health in a way that medicine can't even explain.
|
||
Sometimes He may overrule a medical prognosis and allow someone to recover
|
||
from a normally debilitating disease. Healings like that may come, He may do
|
||
them; He may do them in response to prayer, He may do them just because He
|
||
wants to do them. But the gift of healing, and the ability to heal, and
|
||
special anointings for healing, and healings that can be claimed and
|
||
therefore realized, and all the typical "faith healing" technique billed on
|
||
the idea that God wants everybody well all the time, has no Biblical sanction
|
||
whatsoever in the Post-Apostolic era.
|
||
|
||
Now, backing off a minute, if we just said, "Let's look at Jesus, and if
|
||
anybody is healing today, and if Jesus' healings are the pattern, and if the
|
||
apostles is the pattern, how did they heal?" And I will simply remind you of
|
||
it. We will make a comparison and see if today it works like that.
|
||
|
||
1. Jesus healed with a word or a touch.
|
||
|
||
That's all it took. He touched, He spoke, they were healed.
|
||
|
||
2. Jesus healed instantaneously.
|
||
|
||
Never in all His healings does the Bible say He healed somebody and they
|
||
started getting better. No, there was never a process, because if there
|
||
was a process the point wasn't made. Right? Because if there was a
|
||
process then it could be explained in another way. It was instantaneous.
|
||
"The Centurion's servant was healed" (I love it), Matthew 8:13, "that
|
||
very hour." The woman with the bleeding problem--it went away
|
||
immediately. Jesus healed ten lepers instantaneously. The crippled man
|
||
at the Pool of Bethesda, immediately became well.
|
||
|
||
3. Jesus healed totally.
|
||
|
||
When someone was healed they were totally and completely healed--the only
|
||
kind of healing Jesus ever did. He didn't partially heal. He healed
|
||
totally.
|
||
|
||
4. He healed anybody.
|
||
|
||
You didn't have to have a long line of people filling out cards. And He
|
||
certainly didn't have a whole group of people who came into the meeting
|
||
in wheelchairs and left in wheelchairs (if they had wheelchairs, or
|
||
crutches, or whatever). Luke 4:40 says, "While the Sun was setting, all
|
||
who had any sick with various diseases brought them to Him; and laying
|
||
His hands on everyone of them, He was healing them." It's an incredible
|
||
thing. He healed everybody. He healed everybody instantaneously. He
|
||
healed everybody totally and He healed everybody with a word. There
|
||
wasn't some falderal there was just a word!
|
||
|
||
5. He healed organic disease.
|
||
|
||
He didn't just go around Palestine healing lower back pain, heart
|
||
palpitations, headaches, and other things like that. He healed the most
|
||
obvious organic disease; crippled bent legs, withered hands, blind eyes,
|
||
paralysis.
|
||
|
||
6. He raised the dead.
|
||
|
||
He raised the dead. He came up on a funeral and he raised the dead! You
|
||
remember that? Here comes the funeral procession; the widow is going to
|
||
bury her son and Jesus stops the procession, touches the casket and says,
|
||
"Young man, arise!" and the dead man sat up and began to speak. Now, I
|
||
will tell you something, people who tout the gift of healing today don't
|
||
spend a lot of time in funeral processions; the reason is obvious. And
|
||
you need to note, by the way, that Jesus did virtually all His healings
|
||
and raising the dead in public before vast crowds of people. Why?
|
||
Because the gift of healing was real and it was an authenticating gift.
|
||
He used it to confirm the claim that He was the Son of God in a way that
|
||
displayed His power and compassion.
|
||
|
||
Then we ask the question, "How did the disciples or apostles heal? How did
|
||
they heal? How did the Twelve, and the Seventy, and others who worked with
|
||
them, like Barnabas, and Philip, and Stephen?" And those are the only ones;
|
||
it didn't just run rampant through everybody in the Church. But those people
|
||
who had that gift; how did they heal? How did they do it? Well, the same
|
||
way; they healed with a word or a touch. We see that in the Book of Acts:
|
||
they healed instantaneously, immediately. Remember the temple gate with
|
||
Peter and John? The man immediately went to his feet, started leaping,
|
||
walking, and praising God. They healed totally, not partial, total. They
|
||
healed everybody. In fact, people who got under Peter's shadow got healed!
|
||
They healed organic disease, not just functional, psychosomatic, symptomatic
|
||
problems, and the apostles even raised the dead. Now, nobody is exhibiting
|
||
those six traits in a healing ministry today. So if this is supposed to be
|
||
the recapturing of the Apostolic era it is really "out of sync" with that.
|
||
|
||
And a final note; according to Scripture, those who possess those abilities
|
||
to heal could use their gift at will. That's not true of the contemporary
|
||
healers because they don't have that gift. They play games with people's
|
||
minds--the power of suggestion. They prey upon people, making them believe
|
||
things that aren't really true and they use deception. Look at the Apostle
|
||
Paul, in Philippians 2, he mentions that his good friend Epaphroditus was
|
||
very sick. Now, Paul had previously displayed the ability to heal, but he
|
||
doesn't heal Epaphroditus. It's fair to say that, maybe, that gift was
|
||
passing out of operation, but it is sure fair to say that the gift of healing
|
||
was never (listen carefully) intended to keep Christians happy and healthy!
|
||
In fact, you look through the New Testament and find out how many healings
|
||
occurred to believers--absolutely rare--Peter's wife mother, Dorcas. [But
|
||
there were] masses of unbelievers; masses of people who may or may not have
|
||
believed anything about Christ or the Apostles. But it surely wasn't given
|
||
to keep everybody in the Church healthy; and yet today it is being portrayed
|
||
as something that is supposed to be done for believers to keep them healthy,
|
||
to show them that in the atonement is their healing: totally foreign to
|
||
Scripture.
|
||
|
||
Second Timothy 4:20, Paul mentioned he that he left Trophimus sick at
|
||
Miletus; now, why leave a good friend sick? Why did he leave his Christian
|
||
friend sick? Why didn't he heal him? Well, maybe he didn't have that
|
||
ability as the time passed on out of the Apostolic era, but for sure he
|
||
recognized that healing was not something you run around doing for your
|
||
Christian friends. It was never intended as a permanent way to keep the
|
||
Church healthy; yet today Charismatics teach that God wants every Christian
|
||
well all the time. If that is true, then why did He let them get sick to
|
||
start with? It seems a basic question. God didn't give you an HMO in your
|
||
salvation, a sort of supernatural HMO that works automatically. God heals
|
||
when He wants and when He wishes, but that's up to Him.
|
||
|
||
Has God promised to heal everybody who has faith? He doesn't promise that He
|
||
will always heal, but I think the Christian can look to heaven for healing.
|
||
Now, I want to turn the table a little bit as I close in the next couple of
|
||
minutes. I think that we can go to the Lord for healing. I think that we
|
||
can pray to Him for deliverance from disease, and I do believe that there are
|
||
times when God touches us. Sometimes He heals through medicine, sometimes He
|
||
heals through surgery, sometimes He heals through natural process working in
|
||
the body. The body is an amazing self-healing thing. And sometimes He may
|
||
just heal supernaturally because it is His will, and we can look to heaven
|
||
for that. We can cry out to God in our sickness and ask for His healing. I
|
||
would suggest that there are three reasons why we could expect that God might
|
||
heal:
|
||
|
||
1. He might heal because of His person.
|
||
|
||
You remember his Old Testament name, that wonderful name: it's really
|
||
Yahweh Rapecca (sp.)--The Lord that Heals. God heals because of His
|
||
person. "I the Lord am your healer," He told the Israelites. And the
|
||
very fact that when Jesus came into the world He could have done a lot of
|
||
different miracles. I mean if He wanted to convince people about His
|
||
Messiahship He could have just flown around, and He could have said,
|
||
"See, I can do this, and who else can do this?" Or He could have jumped
|
||
a building at a single bound, or flown faster than a speeding bullet, or
|
||
He could have put on a "Superman Show" and everybody would have been in
|
||
awe of that. But why did he choose to heal people? Because He was
|
||
demonstrating His compassion, and a compassionate God has a heart to
|
||
heal. And I think that we have experienced that at times in our life;
|
||
God raises up someone from sickness.
|
||
|
||
2. God heals because of His promise.
|
||
|
||
He says, "Whatever we ask in His name, believing and according to His
|
||
will, He will do it." And there must be times when He will do that.
|
||
There is certainly a description in James 5 of a broken, shattered,
|
||
devastated person, who goes in for prayer. The elders gather around that
|
||
individual and while the pain of that situation is spiritual it has
|
||
tremendous physical ramifications, and through prayer that person is
|
||
restored. "The effectual fervent prayer avails much." If in God's will
|
||
He has designed that [then] He will do that because of His promise.
|
||
|
||
3. God heals because that is His pattern.
|
||
|
||
It is true that in the atonement God bore our diseases, Matthew 8 says
|
||
it. Matthew 8 says, "He Himself took our infirmities, and carried away
|
||
our diseases." Now, we have already discussed 1 Peter 2:24 and I won't
|
||
do it again; it doesn't mean that healing for every sickness is in the
|
||
atonement for now! But healing for every sickness is in the atonement
|
||
for someday--isn't it? And someday He will remove all of those diseases.
|
||
Ultimately, eternally we will be delivered from sickness and infirmity.
|
||
And it may just be that He would chose because of that pattern of
|
||
providing a salvation that ultimately delivers us from bodily infirmity
|
||
when we get a glorified body, that maybe He will give us a taste of
|
||
"Glory Divine."
|
||
|
||
God may heal. That poses the final question, "Should a Christian go to the
|
||
doctor?" And we come all the way back to Hobart Freeman again. We would
|
||
never advocate such idiocy. You say, "Well, does the Bible say anything
|
||
about this?" Sure, read Isaiah 38. Not now. I knew that you would do that;
|
||
your heads just go right down--that's good. Pavlov's dogs! Just instant
|
||
response. That's not derogatory, by the way, that's trained response. In
|
||
Isaiah 38, King Hezekiah was deathly ill, and you remember the king was
|
||
crying, and he was crying tears, and then he was crying to the Lord, and God
|
||
answered his request. And he says this, "Let them take a cake of figs and
|
||
apply it to the boil, that he may recover." Isn't that good? That's what we
|
||
used to call a poultice. Right? Now, God is saying, "Do the medical thing."
|
||
In Matthew 9:12, Jesus confirmed the same idea when He said this, "It is not
|
||
those who are healthy who need a physician, but those who are sick." And so
|
||
the Lord has given us that instruction also.
|
||
|
||
Now, in closing, I simply say, I want to reiterate that I believe that God
|
||
can heal. God can do anything He wants to do. I do not believe the gift of
|
||
healing is for today because it was to authenticate the Biblical message and
|
||
messenger. That is in place; it needs no more authentication then the
|
||
authentication given to it by the Spirit of God to the heart of the reader.
|
||
But I do believe that God may in His grace chose to heal, and we have every
|
||
right to pray for that, and at the same time seek the finest medical help
|
||
that we can because to Lord desires us to do that as well.
|
||
|
||
Let's pray. Father, thank you for letting us cover all of this tonight. Our
|
||
minds are full of these considerations. Lord, we would not at all be
|
||
ungracious to the many people who are victims of these kinds of things. And
|
||
even Lord, there may be some in these movements who are well meaning and well
|
||
intentioned, who for some reason or other believe that these things really
|
||
are happening.
|
||
|
||
Lord, we would pray for those who have a true and a pure intention, and who
|
||
are genuinely believing that this is true, that You would show them the truth
|
||
of Your word and help them to see the light. And then Lord, for those who
|
||
are just playing with the hearts and minds and the wallets of people, that
|
||
you would cause them to be struck with the truth of what they are doing. To
|
||
be literally stopped in their tracks by the fear of God, as they would
|
||
misrepresent You.
|
||
|
||
Lord, we pray for Your Church to be discerning, clear minded. And then Lord,
|
||
even as we close tonight, we would remember to pray for those in our
|
||
congregation who have physical illness, disability, physical pain and
|
||
suffering, some with even the diagnosis of a fatal disease, that Lord, You
|
||
would be gracious to them. We know that You are going to heal them someday,
|
||
and if it would suit Your glorious purpose and bring honor to the name of
|
||
Jesus Christ, we would ask that you heal them now; that You might receive
|
||
glory for that. But if not, that You might give them the grace to
|
||
acknowledge Your perfect will. And help us to know Lord that it is not
|
||
through these kinds of miraculous things that people are going to believe the
|
||
truth. It is through hearing about Jesus Christ and reading the Scripture
|
||
and having it presented to them, not only on the page but through the work of
|
||
the Holy Spirit in their hearts, that they shall come to the truth. And so
|
||
may we faithfully proclaim this word, which can authenticate itself by the
|
||
Holy Spirit to the heart of one who hears.
|
||
|
||
Thank You again Father for the clear word that You do care and that there is
|
||
a day of healing coming for us all. We rejoice in anticipation of it, in
|
||
Christ's name. Amen.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BIBLE BULLETIN BOARD MODEM (318)-949-1456
|
||
BOX 130 300/1200/2400/9600/19200/38400 DS HST
|
||
SHREVEPORT, LA 71110
|
||
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