Is Healing for Today?
What Does the Bible Say About Healing?
I would like to speak a little bit today about healing. In
the Pentecostal Church, healing has a very significant place -- praying for the
sick. But the question I want to ask today is, “What exactly does the Bible say
about healing?”
I'll take as my text Isaiah 53, which is often quoted.
Reading verses 4 and 5:
"Surely he has borne our griefs and carried our
sorrows; yet we esteemed him stricken, smitten by God, and afflicted. But he
was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities; the
chastisement for our peace was upon him, and by his stripes we are
healed." -- Isaiah 53:4-5
Now there are many televangelists and others who will take
that last part -- "by his stripes we are healed" -- and say,
"There you are! Because Jesus was scourged, we can receive healing."
But let's look at what the Scriptures actually teach.
"By His Stripes We Are Healed" -- What Does It
Mean?
If you go to 1 Peter 2:24, where that very phrase is quoted
-- "by his stripes we are healed" -- it has nothing to do with
physical healing. It says:
"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 Peter 2:24
There you see that "by his stripes we are healed"
refers to being dead to sin so that we can live unto righteousness.
Jesus became a sin offering upon the cross, and it is through that sacrifice
that we are reconciled to God. The healing it is talking about is being
reconciled to God -- our relationship with God has been healed, not physical
healing.
Isaiah 53:4 and Matthew 8:16-17
Well then you say, "Do any of these two verses refer to
physical healing?" Actually, Isaiah 53:4 is
quoted in Matthew's Gospel. If we turn to Matthew 8:16-17, it says:
"When evening had come, they brought to him many who
were demon-possessed. And he cast out the spirits with a word, and healed all
who were sick, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Isaiah the
prophet, saying, 'He himself took our infirmities and bore our
sicknesses.'" -- Matthew 8:16-17
Although the words are a bit different there, that is a
quote from Isaiah 53:4. So these hyper-faith preachers will come along and say,
"Well, there you are -- everybody can be healed!" But it doesn't actually say that. It only says that they were all
healed at that time.
The Lord Heals, But He Does Not Heal Everybody
Many years ago, I was speaking at a church here in Denmark.
I was having translation, and the person who was translating me believed in the
hyper-faith teaching, prosperity teaching. I happened to say when I was
preaching that the Lord heals, but He doesn't heal everybody. I didn't think I
was saying anything controversial, because it is obvious that many people are
prayed for and many people are not healed. But he was very upset with what I
said.
What was said to me afterward was that the early
Pentecostals taught that if it appears a person is not healed, they should deny
symptoms. That was their idea of faith -- to deny symptoms.
I know that the early Pentecostals did say that, and it
is to their shame that they said it, because that is not just wrong, it
is extremely dangerous. It is not faith to deny symptoms -- it is
stupidity. Symptoms are a blessing given to us by God so that we know something
is wrong. If I start feeling a sore throat coming on, those symptoms tell me:
get warm, drink some hot drinks, do something to prevent it from getting worse.
If I feel pain in my leg, I know something is wrong. Those symptoms are a
blessing.
False Teaching About Confession and Faith
It is the same with the faith preachers who say that it is
unbelief to confess negative things. Listen -- your faith does not depend upon
what you confess. That is totally wrong. Your faith is of the heart. It
is trusting the Lord in everything. If you have a sickness, it is not
unbelief to say, "I have a sickness." It is not unbelief to go to the
doctor. But if you start denying it and pretending you haven't got it, then you
are lying about it. If you're sick, you can speak about it. There's no problem
with that and at the same time, you can trust the Lord.
As for these big-name hyper-faith preachers -- I would suggest: have nothing to do with them. They are covetous.
They will offer you everything, divine favour, blessing, prosperity, healing --
but they are not rightly dividing scripture. Faith is trusting the Lord
Jesus Christ on a daily basis and trusting in His
word.
Jesus Has Conquered Death -- But We Still Die
You say, "But look that scripture in Matthew 8 says He
healed them all." Yes, but healing was not the primary objective, their
need was greater than their sickness, they needed to be saved from sin. Jesus
healed them all at that time so that they would recognise who Jesus is, that He
is the promised Messiah, and put their trust in Him. It is false teaching to suggest that because
Jesus healed them all at that time, then everybody can be healed. Jesus
conquered death on the cross. It says in 2 Timothy 1:10 that He has abolished
death. But I am still going to die. Well, why am I still going to die when
Jesus has abolished death? Because everything has not yet been completed. Death
will be put under His feet when He returns, 1 Corinthians 15:25-26 -- that's
the final enemy.
One day Jesus is going to come again, and all who trust in
Him will be caught up in the clouds to meet Him in the air. If we die before
that day, it's okay, because we are going to be resurrected -- it's a promise
in the Bible. But the point is this: Jesus has conquered death, but we
will still die. And because He has conquered death, He has also conquered
sickness -- but we can still be sick.
So, it's on a day-to-day basis that we trust the Lord. It is
not rushing off to some healing evangelist to get healed. We learn to trust Him
on a day-by-day basis.
Biblical Evidence: Not Everyone Was Healed
Paul himself, in 2 Timothy 4:20, writes to Timothy and says,
"Trophimus I have left sick in Miletus." Well, if everybody can be
healed, why did Paul leave Trophimus sick in Miletus?
And then there's another account in Philippians 2:25-26,
where Epaphroditus was close to death. Paul is just thanking God that God
raised him up, and he said it was grace given to Epaphroditus but also to
himself, because this man was a wonderful man of God serving the Lord. It was
because of the gospel that he became so terribly sick.
Sickness is a part of life. That's how it is. We
trust God at all times -- in sickness or in health, in
poverty or in wealth. We trust Him. We walk with Him. We rely upon His
promises. It's a daily walk. We do not claim this or claim that. Neither can we
declare or decree these things. No, no, no. We trust Him.
James 5:14-15, The Prayer of the Elders
But this is what the Bible says:
"Is anyone among you sick? Let him call for the
elders of the church, and let them pray over him, anointing him with oil in the
name of the Lord. And the prayer of faith will save the sick, and the Lord will
raise him up. And if he has committed sins, he will be forgiven." -- James
5:14-15
The Lord says, "Call for the elders." Who do the
elders represent? They represent the church. So, James is calling for the local
church to pray for the sick, and the Lord will raise him up.
But concerning big healing crusades there is not much
evidence that genuine healings take place. However, God is sovereign and He
knows our heart. He is able to heal at any time and in
any place. Mostly, it is in the local church that healings are likely to take
place, when Christians pray for one another, and this way God gets all the
glory.
It is wonderful when somebody in the church goes to the
doctor or to the hospital, and then the doctor looks and can't believe what
they find. They say, "This is surprising -- why is this?" And the
person can say, "Well, the church was praying for me." It's a
wonderful testimony.
I know of stories of people going to the hospital and
finding that what they went in for is gone. It's a wonderful testimony to the
Lord.
A lot of times big preachers want testimonies of healings to
boost their ministries. My friend was prayed for at a healing crusade a few
months before he died. He was ready to die and loved the Lord with all his
heart. But it was in the paper saying that he was healed, he knew he wasn't
healed, but the preacher obviously had wanted that to happen, this doesn't
glorify the Lord. But when we pray together as part of the body of Christ, and
afterwards someone who was prayed for goes to the hospital, it is a wonderful
testimony when doctors can't understand the change. Nobody gets the
glory except the Lord Jesus Christ. That's how it should be.
The Gifts of Healing Are Still for Today
I believe that the gifts of the Holy Spirit have always been
in the church. It's just that people have not recognized them or not called
them by that name. When we pray for someone in the church and the Lord heals
them, or they go to the hospital and find there's been a fabulous change --
that is the gifts of healing as mentioned in 1 Corinthians 12:9.
Ministries sometimes hold conferences to show the gifts of
the Holy Spirit are not for today, this is the cessationist
view. They rightly condemn much of the false teachings of the charismatic
movement, and they do not deny that God is able to heal. They agree that we can
pray for people and sometimes the Lord heals them. Well, that is the working of
the Holy Spirit, and the person who is healed has received a gift of healing!
The gifts are still evident today. It's just that people are calling these
things by a different name.
Within the Pentecostal and Charismatic world, there is a lot
of manipulation, a lot of false teaching, and a lot of dishonesty. But when we
trust the Lord on a daily basis, when we love the Lord
with all our heart and when we meet together, praying
together, being of one mind, caring for one another, loving one another and
praying for one another -- then the Lord does wonderful things.
But even if God doesn't heal in this life, we know that we
have eternal life. When we go to be with Jesus there will be no more sickness,
no more death. Jesus has conquered death. He has conquered sickness. But when
Jesus comes, that's when we will see this wonderful reality fulfilled. What we
see now is just a partial thing. But when Jesus comes, we're going to see the
fulfilment of the promise that "This corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on
immortality." -- 1 Corinthians 15:53
It's wonderful! But that's the day that's coming. Right now,
we have bodies that get sick. We have bodies that die. And we must trust God on a daily basis.
Sometimes I will quote the scripture from Romans 8:11 that says "But if the Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus
from the dead dwell in you, He that raised up Christ from the dead shall also
quicken your mortal bodies by His Spirit that dwells in you." I know that
when Jesus comes, this body is going to be changed. But I can also say: the
Spirit of God dwells in me now, so I will trust the Lord now, knowing that He
is able to heal, but even if He doesn't -- I still love Him with all of
my heart, and I will trust Him, because I know there is a day coming when
I'm going to be changed, and this mortal body will put on immortality.
So, in conclusion, does the Lord heal? Yes, He does heal.
But it is on a one-to-one basis. Sometimes people die and go to be with the
Lord. Sometimes we go through sickness and it's a testimony because even in the
sickness we trust the Lord knowing that He gives us grace to bear it.
Everything is for His glory. We are being changed into the likeness of Jesus,
and the Lord is able to use sickness so that we become
more like Him.
We trust Him. We walk with Him. Our life is in His hands. We
pray for one another, and the Lord does His work, His way.
God bless you. Amen.