DIVINE HEALING
Now when they came to Marah, they
could not drink the waters of Marah, for they were bitter. Therefore the name
of it was called Marah. And the people complained against Moses, saying,
"What shall we drink?" So he cried out to the LORD, and the LORD
showed him a tree. When he cast it into the waters, the waters were made sweet.
There He made a statute and an ordinance for them. And there He tested them,
and said, "If you diligently heed the voice of the LORD your God and do
what is right in His sight, give ear to His commandments and keep all His
statutes, I will put none of the diseases on you which I have brought on the
Egyptians. For I am the LORD who heals you." Exodus 15:26
It’s in the realm of the
Spirit where all our answers are and not in the realm of flesh. What is born of
the intellect remains in the intellect realm. What is born of the spirit is
spirit. It has life. The first man was a spirit, who lived and walked by the spirit.
But sin caused things to change and man because a carnal man. However Jesus
came and reversed all things back to the way they were supposed to be. Now our
spirit comes first and then our soul. Our spirit moves into the depths of God
before our soul can engage in gear. We engage our spirit in God’s realm first.
We lay hold of the realm of God’s Spirit with our spirit, and then engage
our mind. Then our mind is able to tap on all the beautiful things that God
reveals to us through His word. We must get our spirit engaged in the realm of
God's Spirit and live there and not in the realm of our carnal mind. Then we
will know and have true peace, joy, health, victory and prosperity.
Maria Woodworth-Etter (1844-1924)i a
Holiness preachers of the pre-Pentecostal era in her book "Signs and
Wonders" wrote much on the subject of divine healingii including: Divine healing is the act of
God's grace, by the direct power of the Holy Spirit, by which the physical body
is delivered from sickness and disease and restored to soundness and health.
Have we any promise in the Bible
that Divine healing was ever intended to be an attainable blessing to the
people of God?
Yes. There are many such promises.
We find it given to the people of Israel in a special covenant promise. "If
thou wilt diligently hearken to the voice of the Lord thy God, and wilt do that
which is right in His sight, and wilt give ear to His commandments, and keep
all His statutes, I will put none of these diseases upon thee, which I have
brought upon the Egyptians; for I am the Lord that healeth thee." Ex. 15.
26. "And ye shall serve the Lord your God, and He shall bless thy bread
and thy water; and I will take sickness away from the midst of thee." Ex.
23. 25.
Does the Bible prove that any of the
people of God ever enjoyed this blessing?
Yes. We read that even before this
covenant blessing was promised the physical condition of the people was
perfect, which indicates plainly that God had a special interest in their
health. See Ps. 105. 37. There were at least two and one-half million people in
the Exodus from Egypt, "and there was not one feeble person among their
tribes." Moses enjoyed this blessing in a special manner. Deut. 34. 7. So
also did Caleb in an unusual experience of preservation and health to an old
age. Josh. 14. 10, 11. David personally knew of the benefits and blessings of
healing. Ps. 6. 2; 30. 2; 103. 1-4. Whenever Israel lived up to the covenant
conditions; they all had the benefits of healing and health. Ps. 107. 20; 2
Chron. 30.20. Hezekiah had a personal
experience of the same. 2 Kings 20. 1-5.
Was this blessing ever
promised to anyone else than the Jews?
Yes. It is given in prophecy
as a redemption blessing, which, together with all other gospel blessings
through Christ, is offered to both Jew and Gentile. Gal. 3. 27-29.
What does prophesy say about divine
healing?
There is more said about it in
prophecy than we have time at present to read, but I will just quote a few
verses, and the rest can be read at your leisure. " Then the eyes of
the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped. Then
shall the lame leap as an hart, and the tongue of the dumb sing." Isa.
35. 5, 6. This very prophecy is referred to by Jesus Himself in Matt. 11. 5, 6,
where it was daily being fulfilled, "The blind receive their sight, and
the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, and the deaf hear, the dead are raised
up, and the poor have the gospel preached to them." Another very plain
prophecy is found in Isa. 53. 4 "Surely He hath borne our grief's, and
carried our sorrows."
The fulfilment of this wonderful voice of
inspiration is found in Matt. 8. 17 - "Himself took our infirmities and
bore our sicknesses." It is admitted by all reliable translators and
the most eminent Hebrew scholars, such as Barnes, Magee, Young and Leeser, that
Isa. 53. 4 in its literal rendering corresponds exactly with Matt. 8.17. We see, therefore, that the
latter is a direct reference to the former. Then the beautiful prophecy of
salvation and healing is found in the following verse, viz.: Isaiah 53.
5-" But He was wounded for our transgressions, He was bruised for our
iniquities; the chastisement of our peace was upon Him; and with His stripes we
are healed." These prophecies all point to the Redemption work of Jesus, which
finds its centre in the Cross. The apostle Peter refers to this verse just
quoted in the following language: "Who His own self bare our sins in
His own body on the tree, that we, being dead to sins, should live unto
righteousness: by whose stripes ye were healed." 1 Pet. 2. 24. The
following references will enable you to see that more is said in prophecy about
healing: Isaiah 42. 7; Isaiah 61. 1. Fulfilled in Luke 4. 18-21. Prophecy in
Mal. 4. 2. Fulfilled in Matt. 4. 16; Luke 1. 78, 79. These are all fulfilled in
redemption.
Do you believe that the Bible
teaches divine healing as a redemption blessing?
Yes. Do you not see how plain
this is made in the prophecies just quoted and in their fulfilment? Jesus
worked in every respect, in His life, ministry, death and resurrection, just
according to the redemption plan. His words and deeds are the divine expression
of this redemption plan, and we can clearly see that healing for the body is
placed upon equality with healing for the soul. Both are obtained upon the same
grounds, obedience and faith.
Can a person possess salvation
without healing?
Yes, he may. While both are obtained
by faith, yet they may not both be obtained by the same act of faith. Jesus
will be to us just what our faith takes Him for.
Did Jesus heal everybody?
Yes; all who came to Him in faith.
Read Matt. 4. 23, 24 and Matt. 12. 15. But they did not seem to have faith, did
they?
Yes. If you read the references just
mentioned, you will notice the people "came to Him" for healing, and
"followed Him." At Nazareth, His own town, where He had been brought
up, He could do no great work among them, because of their unbelief. At
Capernaum, where some of the most remarkable healings were wrought, the people
were a believing people. Out of nineteen of the most prominent individual cases
of healing in the ministry of Christ and the apostles, there are twelve of
these where their faith is spoken of. The rest are mentioned sufficiently
plainly to show that faith brought the healing in every case.
Did not Jesus heal
arbitrarily, for the sole purpose of establishing His divinity?
No. He healed according to
the law of redemption, and because of His great compassion to suffering
humanity. Matt. 14.14.
Did not healing cease when Jesus
finished His earthly ministry?
No. It was more wonderfully
manifested in the ministry of the apostles after the day of Pentecost. Acts 5.
12,16; 3. 1-16; 14. 8-10; 9. 17, 18; 8. 6-8; 19. 11, 12; 14. 19, 20; 9. 33-35;
9. 36-42; 20. 8-12; 28. 3-6, 8. This proves clearly that divine healing is a
redemption blessing for the entire Holy Spirit dispensation.
But we are taught that it was only
for the beginning of the gospel dispensation. How about that? The Bible does
not teach any such doctrine.
But it does teach that "when
that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done
away." 1 Cor. 13. 10. How about this?
This scripture has no reference to
divine healing or any of the redemption blessings, that they shall be done away
in this dispensation. If there ever has been a time in this dispensation when
it could have been said with reference to the full possession and manifestation
of the gospel blessings, that "that which is perfect is come," it was
when the Holy Spirit came at Pentecost; but we see after this mighty works of
salvation and healing, and they were in no sense "done away" with,
but were greatly increased. So you see the "done away" argument has
no scriptural basis whatever. As long as the dispensation of grace shalllast,
so long shall the benefits of grace be extended to "whomsoever will."
Well, then, when was divine healing done away? In the design of God it was
never done away.
Do you mean to say that it was
perpetuated in the primitive church?
Certainly it was. History
shows that for several centuries there was no other means of healing practised
in the church.
But what after that?
Just what crowded out all
other gospel truths-the superstitions and unbelief of the apostasy. But, thank
God, the darkness is past and the Sun of Righteousness with healing in His
wings is shining salvation and health to all who will forsake all their old
doctrines, creeds and superstitions, and get back upon the old apostolic
foundation, the Word of God.
But how may I know that it is still
God's will to heal?
Just as you may know that it
is His will to save by His Word. His Word is His will. But it may be His will
not to heal me.
You must go outside of God's Word to
find standing ground for such a conclusion; for there is nothing inside of the
Bible about healing but what corresponds with our blessed text: "Himself
took our infirmities and bare our sicknesses." Most people who argue that
it might not be God's will to heal them are at the same time taking medicine
and employing every possible human agency to get well. Why be so inconsistent?
Why fight against God's will. If it is His will for you not to get well, then
die. Stop fighting against God.
But does not sickness come
from God as a blessing?
No. It never comes from God
only in a permissive sense, the same as a temptation comes to us; and sickness
is never a blessing to us only as any other temptation or trial may be
considered a blessing. The blessing is in the deliverance and healing. Every
person who has ever experienced the healing touch of God knows what a blessing
to the soul comes with it. Sickness is an abnormal condition of the body and
cannot be a blessing from God.
If it does not come from
God, then where does it come from?
It comes from the Devil and
was always dealt with by Jesus in His earthly ministry as a work of the Devil.
The Word of God plainly teaches us that the Devil is the author of disease.
Read John 2: 7; Luke 13:16; Acts 10:38.
But are there not some other
scriptures that teach us that sickness comes from God? Only in a permissive
sense
Does the Bible teach us that God
intends to be the Healer of His people without the use of medicine?
Yes. It nowhere commands the use of medicine
with prayer and faith.
But how about Hezekiah's figs, the
blind man's clay, and Timothy's wine?
It is true Isaiah told
Hezekiah to take a lump of figs, but this has nothing to do with the New
Testament means of healing. Also it is very evident that the figs did not heal
him; but God said, "I will heal thee." Jesus did not use the clay on
the eyes of the blind man for any curative power, for He commanded the man at
once to go and wash it off. No one has heard of blindness from birth being
healed by the use of clay as a medicine since then, or ever before. It is evident
that the spittle and clay were used by Jesus as a requirement of submission and
obedience from the blind man. The thought must have been repulsive and
humiliating to him as the clay was applied to his eyes, but, like Naaman, he
submitted and obeyed and received the blessing unspeakable, of healing. Wine
was recommended to Timothy as an article of diet, and would not be
objectionable to day, in its proper use, under similar circumstances.
Are not medicines recognised
in the Word of God?
Yes. Let us read how it
recognises them. "Thou hast no healing medicines." Jer. 30. 13.
"In vain shalt thou use many medicines." Jer. 46. 11. "A
merry heart doeth good (like) medicine" (there is no Hebrew for the word
"like," showing that the merry heart is the medicine). Prov. 17. 22.
"And the fruit thereof shall be for meat, and the leaf thereof for
medicine." Ezek. 47. 12. This latter reference is prophetical of the tree
of life and divine healing. See Rev. 22. 2. Thus we see the Word of God places
no intrinsic value upon medicine.
Is not the ministry of
physicians for the body designed of God, the same as the ministry of the gospel
for the soul?
No. The greater portion of the
physicians of the land are ungodly people, many of them professed infidels, and
were never designed of God to administer drugs and poisons to anyone; much less
to the people of God, whose bodies are the sacred temples of the Holy Spirit.
The true ministers of the gospel are the ministers for soul and body. "And
they departed, and went through the towns, preaching the gospel, and healing
everywhere." Luke 9. 6. "And they went forth, and preached
everywhere, the Lord working with them, and confirming the word with signs
following." Mark 16. 20.
But is not the ministry of
physicians recognised in the Bible?
Yes. Let us read how it
recognises them. "But ye are forgers of lies, ye are all physicians of
no value." Job. 13: 4. " And Asa in the thirty and ninth year
of his reign was diseased in his feet, until his disease was exceeding great;
yet in his disease he sought not to the Lord, but to the physicians." 2
Chron. 16. 12. "And had suffered many things of many physicians, and had
spent all that she had, and was nothing bettered, but rather grew worse."
Mark 5. 26. These scriptures show that the Bible gives no very favourable
recognition of physicians.
Was not anointing with oil the mode
of doctoring in Bible times?
No. While some kinds of oil
may have some medical value for some kinds of diseases, it was not at all
designed for any such use in connection with the prayer of faith in healing the
sick. If anointing was the mode of doctoring, the church would have had no need
of instruction in this respect; for it would have been a common practice everywhere
by the doctors, and had this been the mind of the apostle, then he would have
assigned the work of anointing to the doctors, "Elders are not
Masseurs."
Editor’s note - Maria Woodworth-Etter
ministry began when disease took five of her six children. Maria had a
vision which led her to dedicate her life to the ministry and divine healing.
Maria Woodworth- Etter, is called the grandmother of the Pentecostal Movement
and was born in 1844 in Lisbon, Ohio. "I heard the voice of Jesus calling
me to go out in the highways and hedges and gather in the lost sheep." We
have to remember that when sister Etter was called by God, we as a nation did
not allow women to vote, let alone preach from a pulpit.
Not having any idea of what
she was doing or what to say, Maria would just open her mouth and the Lord
would put His Word in her mouth just as He told her. People would begin to cry
and either run out or run forward to receive Christ. After this she was highly
sought out in her community and soon she expanded her ministry westward and
held nine revivals, preached two hundred sermons and started two churches. God
honored this woman and made up for her lost years.
The power of God began to fall
over her flock as she preached. Many people would come to the altar and
"fall to the floor" the faces would shine as they praised the Lord.
This soon became known as "Pentecost Power". While hundreds flocked
to receive the same, many others came to observe or ridicule. Doctors came from
different cities to investigate the trances. Unlike the "dead" church
order of the late 1800’s, Maria believed in shouting, dancing, singing, and
preaching. She believed that emotional displays were important, as long as they
were in order. She believed that a lack of physical manifestation was a sign of
abandonment of their faith.
Etter continued to study the
Word and began preaching His divine will in healing. Soon thousands were won to
Christ as a result of seeing others healed. Many received gifts, some for
ministry, some for evangelist and some for healing. Etter was the only leading
evangelist of the Holiness Movement who embraced the experience of speaking in
tongues.
Gods Will Is Healing http://goo.gl/bSrmc http://www.scribd.com/doc/12404063/
WALTER KAMBULOW
VICTORY MINISTRIES
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