• Charismatic Chaos - Part 9

    From Ricky Sutphin@TIME to All on Sunday, January 25, 2026 03:50:24
    The following message was delivered at Grace Community Church in Panorama
    City, California, By John MacArthur Jr. It was transcribed from the tape,
    GC
    90-60, titled "Charismatic Chaos" Part 9. A copy of the tape can be
    obtained
    by writing, Word of Grace, P.O. Box 4000, Panorama City, CA 91412.

    I have made
    every effort to ensure that an accurate transcription of the
    original tape was
    made. Please note that at times sentence structure may
    appear to vary from
    accepted English conventions. This is due primarily to
    the techniques
    involved in preaching and the obvious choices I had to make in
    placing the
    correct punctuation in the article.

    It is my intent and prayer that the Holy
    Spirit will use this transcription
    of the sermon, "Charismatic Chaos" Part 9,
    to strengthen and encourage the
    true Church of Jesus Christ.



    Charismatic Chaos - Part 9

    "Does God Still Heal?"
    by
    John
    MacArthur


    Well, as you know, we are involved in a study of the Charismatic
    movement,
    the contemporary movement, and tonight we come to a section
    entitled, "Does
    God Still Heal?" Now, in the messages that I have been giving
    we have
    intersected with the thoughts about healing, and we have said some
    things
    about that in some of our prior studies and we are not going to repeat
    those
    things. But there is much more that needs to be said tonight as we
    evaluate
    a movement that advocates healing. In fact, if there is anything
    that would
    be typically Charismatic or typically characteristic of the
    modern
    Pentecostal movement, Third Wave movement, or Charismatic movement, it
    would
    be a major emphasis on healing, and we need to understand that.

    Let
    me begin with some illustrations that set the scene for us. A familiar
    name
    to anybody who studies the Charismatic movement and delves into the
    issues of
    healing is the name of a man, Hobart Freeman, a very interesting
    man, at one
    time a professor of Old Testament at Grace Theological Seminary,
    from which
    our own Dick Mayhue graduated. And when he was a professor there
    in Old
    Testament, he was considered to be the finest communicator, the finest
    teacher
    there. In fact, Hobart Freeman wrote a very significant book
    entitled, "An
    Introduction to the Old Testament Prophets" which, in 1969, was
    published and
    printed by the Moody Bible Institute. So he was considered by
    everybody to be
    a mainline evangelical professor, one who not only understood
    but could
    adroitly teach the truth of Scripture.

    Somewhere along the line he changed.
    Hobart Freeman believed that God had
    healed him from Polio. Nonetheless, one
    of Freeman's legs was so much
    shorter than the other that he had to wear
    corrective shoes and walked with
    great difficulty. Freeman became a pastor.
    He began his ministry as a
    Baptist and after he had written and taught for
    some years, in the mid 60's
    he became very fascinated with "faith healing,"
    and it moved him into the
    Charismatic movement, and then it moved him further
    and further towards the
    fringes of that movement. He started his own church
    in Claypool, Indiana; it
    was known as Faith Assembly and it grew to more than
    2,000 members. Meetings
    were held in a building which he called the "Glory
    Barn" and Church services
    were closed to non-members.

    So it was kind of a
    secretive and cultic association. Freeman and the Faith
    Assembly congregation
    utterly disdained all medical treatment. He believed
    that modern medicine was
    an extension of ancient witchcraft and black magic.
    To submit to a doctor's
    remedies, Freeman believed, was to expose oneself to
    demonic influence.
    Expectant mothers in Freeman's congregation were told
    that they must give
    birth at home with the help only of a church sponsored
    midwife rather than go
    to a hospital delivery room or to be treated by a
    doctor. By the way,
    obedience to that teaching, cost a number of mothers and
    infants their lives.
    In fact, over the years, at least 90 church members
    died as a result of
    ailments that would have been easily treatable. No one
    really knows what the
    actual death toll would be if nationwide figures could
    be compiled on all the
    other people who followed Hobart Freeman's teaching.

    After a 15 year old girl
    whose parents belong to Faith Assembly, died of a
    medically treatable malady,
    the parents were convicted of negligent homicide
    and sentenced to ten years in
    prison. Freeman himself was charged with
    aiding and inducing reckless
    homicide in the case. Shortly afterward, on
    December 8, 1984, Freeman himself
    died, interestingly enough of pneumonia and
    heart failure complicated by a
    severely ulcerated leg.

    Hobart Freeman's theology did not allow him to
    acknowledge that Polio had
    left one of his legs disfigured and lame. Quote,
    he said, "I have my
    healing." And that is all he would say when anyone
    pointed out the rather
    conspicuous inconsistency between his physical
    disabilities and his theology.
    Ultimately, his refusal to acknowledge his
    infirmities cost him his life. He
    had dutifully, according to his own
    theology, refused all medical treatment
    for the maladies that were killing
    him, and medical science could easily have
    prolonged his life, but in the end
    he was a victim of his own teaching.

    Now, Hobart Freeman is a very familiar
    name to those involved in Faith
    Healing, but he is not the only one. There is
    another one who succumbed to
    ailments and that is a man by the name of William
    Brannom (sp.), and if you
    study anything about the healing movement you are
    going to come across the
    name of William Brannom (sp.). He would be the
    father of the post World War
    II healing revival. He was a man reputed to have
    been instrumental in some
    of the most spectacular healings that the
    Pentecostals have ever seen. He
    died, however, in 1965 at age 56, after
    suffering for six days from injuries
    received in an automobile accident. His
    theology was unbiblical and
    heretical, and of course when applied to himself
    his theology of healing had
    no effect whatsoever, though his followers right
    to the end, were confident
    God was going to raise him up. And even after he
    died they believed that God
    would raise him from the dead.

    As a boy, I was
    brought to become aware of another Faith Healer who became
    very, very famous,
    a man by the name of A. A. Allen. And A. A. Allen, about
    whom I read and whom
    I followed with curiosity, was a famed "Tent
    Evangelist." He took his healing
    meeting from place to place in a tent.
    Interestingly enough, A. A. Allen
    claimed thousands upon thousands of
    healings, and himself died of sclerosis of
    the liver in 1967, having secretly
    been involved with alcohol for many years
    while supposedly being able to heal
    everybody else.

    Perhaps a more familiar
    name in the healing movement would be the name of one
    who is elevated almost
    to the status of the Roman Catholic elevation of Mary,
    and that's a woman by
    the name of Kathryn Kuhlman. Kathryn Kuhlman died of
    heart failure in 1976,
    curiously enough. She had battled heart disease for
    nearly twenty years, and
    that statement is made by Jamie Buckingham who would
    have been one of her
    disciples.

    Another one that comes to mind, Ruth Carter Stapleton, was the
    Faith Healing
    sister of former United States President Jimmie Carter. [She]
    refused
    medical treatment for cancer because of her belief in faith healing.
    She
    died of the disease in 1983. And even John Wimber, who would be probably
    the
    most prominent modern contemporary Third Wave healer, struggles with
    chronic
    angina and heart problems. He begins his book on Power Healing with
    a
    personal note. This is what it says; quoting John Wimber, he says,

    I had what doctors later suspected were a series of coronary
    attacks. When we returned home a series of medical tests
    confirmed
    my worst fears, I had a damaged heart, possibly
    seriously damaged.
    Tests indicated that my heart was not
    functioning properly, a condition
    complicated and possibly
    caused by high blood pressure. These problems
    combined with my
    being overweight and overworked meant that I could die
    at any
    time.

    Wimber writes that he sought God and he says that God told
    him that in the
    same way Abraham waited for his child, I was to wait for my
    healing. In the
    meantime, he says, "He told me to follow my doctor's orders."
    Wimber writes,
    "I wish I could write that at this time I am completely
    healed, that I no
    longer have physical problems, but if I did it would not be
    true." Now, it
    seems obvious, at least a curiosity to all of us, that so many
    leading
    advocates of faith healing are sick!

    Annette Capps (sp.), the
    daughter of Faith Healer Charles Capps (sp.), and
    herself a Faith Healer,
    raised that question in her book; her book is
    entitled "Reverse the Curse in
    Your Body and Emotions." This is what she
    writes,

    People have
    stumbled over the fact that the so-called "Healing
    Minister" later
    became ill or died. They say, "I don't
    understand this. If the Power
    of God came into operation and
    all those people were healed, why did the
    evangelist get sick?
    Why did he or she die?" The reason is because
    healings that
    take place in meetings like that are a special
    manifestation of
    the Holy Spirit. This is different from using your own
    faith.
    The evangelist who is being used by God in the gifts of
    healings, is still required to use his own faith in the Word of
    God
    to receive divine health and divine healing for his own
    body. Why?
    Because the gifts of healings are not manifested
    for the individual who
    is ministering, they are for the benefit
    of the people.

    Now that
    double-talk basically means that somebody could have faith for
    somebody else's
    healing but not enough faith for their own healing. And so,
    sometimes without
    faith for their own healing they die, while they have
    enough faith for other
    people's healings who live. She goes on to say,

    Over the years I have
    seen various manifestations of the gifts
    of healing in my own ministry,
    but I have always had to use my
    own faith in God's word for my healing.
    There have been times
    that I have been attacked with illness in my body
    but as I
    ministered many were healed even though I did not feel well.
    I
    had to receive my healing through faith and acting on God's
    word.

    Thus, she astonishingly concludes that if a Faith Healer gets sick,
    it is
    because his or her personal faith is somehow deficient when applied to
    his or
    herself. Now, to take that a step further, you must understand that
    these
    people go so far as to say, "That even Jesus Himself sometimes did not
    have
    the faith required for people to be healed."

    Perspectives on Faith
    Healing often seem as varied as the number of Faith
    Healers around. Some say
    that God wants to heal all sickness, others come
    close to conceding that God's
    purposes may sometimes be fulfilled in our
    illness and infirmity. Some equate
    sickness with sin; others stop short of
    that, but still find it hard to
    explain why spiritually strong people get
    sick. Some people just "flat out"
    blame the devil, and they think if they
    can tie the devil up in a knot and
    send him off to Tibet or something [then]
    everybody will get well.

    Some claim
    to have the "Gifts of Healing;" others say they have no unusual
    healing
    ability, they simply are used of God to show people the way of faith.
    A lot
    of people used to say they had the "Gift of Healing" but the chicanery
    they
    were using has for so many years been exposed that nobody today can get
    away
    with that stuff anymore. So now they just claim they don't have the
    "Gift of
    Healing," they just sort of pray and have faith and God does what He
    wants.
    Some will say they heal with a physical touch; some will say you heal
    through
    anointing with oil; others say they can speak forth a healing, that
    they can
    speak it into existence; some people say they can only pray for a
    healing, and
    so forth and so on. And there are healers who just keep
    changing from one
    approach to another as the chicanery and the charlatanism
    of the healing
    movement becomes exposed and they have to change their
    methodology.

    Always
    a Faith Healer, the well known Oral Roberts used to claim that he
    could heal.
    He claimed great powers of healing; he no longer claims that.
    Oral Roberts
    claimed God had called him, in fact, to build a massive
    hospital. And He said
    this massive hospital would blend conventional
    medicine with Faith Healing.
    If you visit the city of Tulsa, as I did this
    summer, you are absolutely
    astonished at this facility. It is mind boggling
    to see a sixty story
    building rising out of a weed patch outside Tulsa,
    Oklahoma, and next to it a
    thirty story building rising as well, now
    completely vacant and most of it
    unfinished on the inside. In the face of
    huge financial losses apparently God
    changed His mind and declared that the
    whole thing should be closed down. It
    is a monument to the unfulfilled
    promises of Faith Healing. Nonetheless, in
    spite of these bizarre claims
    that never come to pass, Faith Healing and the
    Charismatic movement keep
    growing.

    Charles Fox Pharham (sp.) who is the
    father of the contemporary Pentecostal
    movement, came to the conviction
    originally (this is way back at the turn of
    the century when the Charismatic
    movement was then known as Pentecostalism
    and just starting) he claimed that
    God desired all believers to have complete
    healing and he developed that into
    an entire Pentecostal system, and then it
    began to flow through the leaders.
    Amy Simple McPherson (who founded the
    Foursquare Church), Angelus Temple
    (sp.), E. W. Kenyon, William Brannom
    (sp.), Kathryn Kuhlman, Oral Roberts,
    Kenneth Hagan, Kenneth Copeland,
    Fredrick Price, Jerry Seville (sp.), Charles
    Capps (sp.), Norval Hayes,
    Robert Tilton, Benny Hinn, Larry Lee, and on and on
    it goes. They have all
    headlined their public meetings with healing.

    There
    are even Catholic Charismatics such as Father John Bertilucci (sp.),
    and
    Francis McNutt (sp.) who have followed suit seeing that the Charismatic
    healing emphasis is a natural extension of Roman Catholic tradition. And
    then
    in the last phase of this so called "The Third Wave" in which we talked
    about
    leaders like John Wimber and others, Paul Cane (sp.) and the Kansas
    City
    Prophets, et al., have made healing a central element in their
    repertoire.
    The claims and methods of these Faith Healers range frankly from
    the
    eccentric to the grotesque. A few years ago I received--I receive
    everything
    in the mail; if they don't send it to me, somebody who wants me to
    see it
    does. And I have received bottles of healing oil and healing water and
    all
    kinds of things--but I received a miracle prayer cloth, and in it the
    message
    said, and I am quoting,

    Take this special miracle prayer cloth and put
    it under your
    pillow and sleep on it tonight. Or you may want to place
    it on
    your body or on a loved one. Use it as a release point wherever
    you hurt. First thing in the morning send it back to me in the
    "green" envelope. Do not keep this prayer cloth, return it to
    me.
    I will take it, pray over it all night. Miracle power will
    flow like a
    river. God has something better for you, a special
    miracle to meet your
    needs.

    Now, these are the kinds of things that go on all the time. And of
    course in
    the "green" envelope you not only send the cloth but you send some
    "green"
    money as well. Green being a good reminder of what color they would
    like to
    see. Interestingly enough, the sender of the prayer cloth feels he
    has
    biblical support for doing this. While Paul was in Ephesus, you remember
    God
    performed extraordinary miracles through him, and according to Acts 19,
    it
    says, "Handkerchiefs or aprons were carried from his body to the sick and
    the
    diseases left them and the evil spirits went out of them." And as we
    have
    been seeing in the series, however, Paul and the other apostles had
    been
    given unique power, and we talked about Apostolic Power as unique
    power;
    certainly nothing in the New Testament suggests that anybody could send
    out
    handkerchiefs and they are going to produce miracles.

    Kenneth Hagan (sp.)
    tells of one Faith Healer he heard of who used a method
    that I have never
    personally witnessed. Kenneth Hagen (sp.) writes,

    He'd always spit on
    them, every single one of them. He'd spit
    in his hand and rub it on
    them. That's the way he ministered.
    If there was something wrong with
    your head, he'd spit in his
    hand and rub it on your forehead. If you
    had stomach trouble,
    he'd spit in his hand and rub it on your clothes
    and on your
    stomach. If you had something wrong with your knee, he'd
    spit
    in his hand and rub it on your knee. And all the people would
    get healed.

    Other gimmicks, not quite that uncouth, but every bit as
    outlandish, also can
    be visualized everyday as you watch your television set.
    Some ask for "Seed
    Faith" money. Oral Roberts often says that if you donate
    money to him, that
    is in effect a down payment on your own personal healing.
    Robert Tilton
    regularly devises simple ploys; [he] pledges special healings
    and financial
    miracles to people who send him money; the larger the gift, the
    better the
    miracle. "It's in direct proportion to how much money you send,"
    he says.
    Pat Robertson will peer into the camera and as if he can see into
    people's
    living rooms describe people who are being healed that very moment.
    Benny
    Hinn recently healed fellow Faith Healer and Talk Show Host Paul
    Crouch
    (sp.). He healed him on the live broadcast of the Trinity Network.
    After
    Hinn had released his anointing to a roomful of people, Crouch step
    forward
    to testify that he had been miraculously cured of a persistent ringing
    in the
    ears he had been suffering from for years. And on and on it goes, this
    list
    of fantastic claims, incredible stories of healings grow at a frantic
    pace,
    but real evidence of genuine miracles is conspicuously absent.

    And
    everywhere you go people are asking questions about this. From all sides
    comes confusion, questions, contradictions. Now as we study the Scripture,
    we
    find there are three categories of spiritual gifts, if we want to call
    them
    that. First would be the category we could say are gifted men like
    apostles,
    prophets, evangelists, and teaching pastors. These are the men
    themselves
    given as gifts from Christ to the Church. And then we could say
    there are the
    permanent edifying gifts and the temporary sign gifts (the
    other two
    categories). Permanent edifying gifts would be gifts related to
    knowledge,
    and wisdom, and preaching, and teaching, and exhortation, and
    faith, and
    discernment, and showing mercy, and giving, and administration,
    and helps, and
    those things that have an ongoing ministry in the Church.

    And then there are
    those temporary sign gifts, in other words, divine
    enablements given by the
    Holy Spirit for a temporary period of time as a sign
    for a very special
    purpose. These are listed for us in Scripture; they are
    miracles, healings,
    tongues (or languages), and the interpretation or
    translation of those
    languages.

    Now, we have noted in our study that such sign gifts had a unique
    purpose:
    very simple--they were to identify the authentic spokesman for God.
    First of
    all, Jesus did miracles. Jesus cast out demons. He did miracles
    that fall
    into three categories: Miracles of Physical Healing; Miracles of
    Demonic
    Deliverance; and Miracles of Natural Phenomena, like walking on water,
    or
    stilling the sea, feeding the people by multiplying bread and fish. And
    those miracles were to demonstrate to people that Jesus was not a mere man,
    but that He was the Messiah of God. It should be very clear to everyone who saw Him that this was not a man, because no man could do what He did.

    And so
    Christ had unique capability to do supernatural things in order to
    draw
    attention to the fact that He was unique. In fact, you need to remember
    that
    up until the time of Jesus Christ, there was nobody who could just go
    around
    healing people. There were some healings in the Old Testament, and
    there were
    some miracles of nature, and there were some powerful exhibitions
    of God's
    supernatural work: in creation, and the flood, and many other
    supernatural
    powerful things; but as far as a miracle, which is a subcategory
    of the
    supernatural. . .sometimes people say, "Well, you people always say
    there are
    only three eras of miracles," (and that would be: the Time of
    Moses; and then
    Elijah and Elisha; and then Christ and the Apostles, and
    those are the only
    three periods of miracles). And then they will say,
    "Well, that's not true,
    because creation was miracle, and the flood was a
    miracle," and they will go
    right on through, "Jacob wrestled with an angel
    and that was a miracle, and
    God was always doing supernatural things." But
    they fail to make the clear
    distinction that "miracle" is a technical term:
    it is a subcategory for the
    supernatural.

    God is always acting in a supernatural way, even today. Every
    time someone
    is saved that is a supernatural work. But "miracle" is a
    technical term to
    describe an act of God which He does through a human agency,
    and they are
    very rare. And even when you go back into the Old Testament and
    you find
    miracles where God acts through a human instrumentation to
    authenticate his
    messenger and the message, they are rare and nothing like the
    healing
    ministry of Jesus. No one ever just roamed everywhere, healing
    everybody.

    So what you have in the case of Jesus [is something] you have never
    seen
    before. Nothing like this has ever happened before in the history of
    the
    world. And so this is a very unique thing. And to assume that it never happened before (to know that by Old Testament revelation) and it happened at the time of Christ, uniquely, and then it faded out in the end of the New Testament era, and now for some strange reason it has all come back at the
    same level as once it did and we are supposed to have this massive kind of healing going on as it did in the day of Christ, is to demonstrate an imbalanced and an unsound perspective of the purpose of the miracle ministry
    of Jesus. It was to authenticate His Messiahship, and it is therefore irreproducible and unrepeatable.

    And so Jesus did unique things which were
    unique to His own ministry. Now,
    it is true that Jesus passed on to the
    Apostles power in two of the three
    categories. Remember now, He healed
    diseases, He had power over demons, and
    He did miracles of nature (natural
    phenomenon). The first two he gave the
    Apostles. They never did any miracles
    of nature. But "Peter," you say,
    "Walked on water!" Yes, but that was a
    miracle Christ was performing and
    that occurred only in His presence. They
    never did anything like "Feed the
    5,000" or "Walk on water" after that, or
    "Still a storm" or anything like
    that. The only two things they were given
    power to do were "cast out demons
    and heal the sick (including raising the
    dead)."

    But in their case, again, these were to point to them as the
    messengers of
    God. There was no printed New Testament and it was very
    essential that among
    all of the people who were saying that they spoke for God
    somebody be able to
    tell who was real, and you could tell because they had
    power over demons and
    power over disease. And so they were given that ability
    to do those things.
    And the Apostles could do them, and those closely
    associated with the
    Apostles could do them.

    Go back into Matthew 10:1,
    "Having summoned His twelve disciples, He gave
    them authority over unclean
    spirits, to cast them out," (and that by the way
    is the Gift of Miracles:
    miracle is "dunamis (Greek)" power, power over the
    forces of demons) "and He
    gave them the power to heal every kind of disease
    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.


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