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The
Mystery: Why Some Are Healed and Others Are Not!
by Francis MacNutt
taken from the Nov/Dec 1991 issue
   
You
all know the problem: why is it that you pray for one person who
is not healed, and the very next person gets out of the
wheelchair and walks?
One
woman, for example, has tumors on the side of her neck that you
can actually see and feel. While you pray you see them go down
and, in fifteen minutes, they are gone. You pray for another
woman with the same kind of tumors - and, apparently, with the
same spiritual outlook - and nothing seems to happen (at least,
not on the level of the cancerous tumor).
If
you are a healing evangelist, praying with a crowd of thousands
in a one-night appearance at the Civic Auditorium, you can call
all the healed people up to the stage to give their testimonies,
and you don't have to counsel all the others. But if you are a
pastor, and those cancer patients are in your congregation, you
may have to give them an explanation as to why God doesn't seem
to answer their prayer.
That
perception is not true, of course. At some level we are sure our
prayer is answered, for we do believe that God hears and answers
all our prayers.
Yet,
although that may be true, it may not be satisfactory to the
patient who suffers from the cancer.
The
deeper answers explaining why people don't seem to receive
physical healing are, however, very helpful and I would like to
share several of them that have guided me in that spiritual
direction that does lead to physical healing, for I do believe
that, ordinarily, God wants us to be physically whole and
healthy.
1)
The first, of course, is our real need for faith,
an ardent belief in Jesus' desire to heal us. Sometimes healing
is blocked by our lack of faith -sometimes in the sick person,
sometimes in the minister of healing. Much has been written, as
well as spoken, about the key importance of faith, and I need
not comment further, except to say that lack-of-faith is not the
only reason the sick are not healed. When people get that idea
about lack-of-faith then sick people who are not immediately
healed take on a burden of guilt which only intensifies their
physical sickness with the added sorrow of spiritual darkness. I
have known
some patients dying in hospitals devastated by well-meaning
Christians (who have usually disappeared at the end) who keep
telling them that they will be healed if only they have faith.
But
here are some of the other reasons we have discovered that help
us break through to total healing.
2)
Sometimes a deeper spiritual healing is needed; the
physical sickness is a surface sickness calling our attention to
a deeper spiritual problem that needs ministry. Most of us know
by experience that refusal to forgive enemies can result in an
abiding tension and anger that can cause sickness. Some (but not
all) arthritis is caused by unforgiveness. Or, if disaster
strikes us in the form of rejection or the death of a loved one,
this may lessen (perhaps unconsciously) our love of life which,
in turn, weakens our immune system. Some doctors believe that
cancer often follows upon a significant loss. If this is true,
we need to help the person grieve and pray through the
bereavement or rejection, leading to a spiritual healing that
finally results in the cancer's disappearing. One orthopedic surgeon I know told
me that when she had a chance to pray with her cancer patients
for a profound healing of their losses, their cancers almost
always went into remission!
The
account of Jesus' healing the lame man let down through the roof
(Mark 2:1-12) implies that the forgiveness of the man's sins had
some connection with his ability to pick up his stretcher and
walk.
3)
The minister of healing simply doesn't have the
giftedness or power needed to act as a channel for healing
at a given moment. St. Paul (in 1 Cor. 12:8-10) talks about
gifts of healing which are given to some and not to others, and
he also rebukes his disciples (Mark 9:14-29) for not having
prayed and fasted enough to free the demoniac boy from his
epilepsy. From Scripture then, as well as from experience, it
seems that we can lack power, either from our own lack of
preparation, or from our lack of giftedness, to heal or deliver
someone. In one case it's our own fault (Jesus rebuked the
disciples) or it can be, at other times, that more severe cases
simply are beyond our present level of spiritual growth or
giftedness. For a paraplegic in a wheelchair to be healed, it
ordinarily requires, I believe, the special gift of healing (or
miracles) that Paul is talking about in Corinthians 12. The
important consequence of all this is that if we are going to
blame anyone when healing does not take place, we should
hesitate before blaming the sick person. I think it just as
likely that the ministering person is not sufficiently prepared
by prayer, or else, does not have the spiritual authority
required to bring Jesus' healing to this person. I admire John
Wimber's refusal to pray for someone unless he gets the Spirit's
guidance to "go for it". In the famous passage
encouraging us to call the elders of the church when we are
sick, the passage seems to imply that it is the elders' faith
that will help raise up the sick man: "The prayer of faith
will save the sick man..." (James 5:15).
At
any rate, let's not blame anyone when a person we pray for
doesn't seem to get well, unless the Spirit convicts us of not
preparing ourselves sufficiently, or unless, by a word of
knowledge, we find that the sick person needs faith or needs to
forgive someone.
4)
Lastly, the reason many people are not healed is that people
don't weigh in and really pray over a period of time
(we call this "soaking prayer"). Even Jesus sometimes
needed to pray more than once: "Then he laid his hands on
the man's eyes again and he saw clearly" (Mark
8:25). Nor did the demons (Legion) leave immediately when Jesus
commanded them to go. The demoniac shouted "What do you
want with me, Jesus, son of the Most High God? Swear by God you
will not torture me!' - For Jesus had been saying to him, 'Come
out of the man, unclean spirit"' (Mark 5:7-8). Then, even
after he had commanded the spirit(s) to depart, Jesus asked
their name, before giving them permission to go into the pigs.
In other words, that particular exorcism took time.
If
Jesus occasionally took time to heal or exorcise people, we
certainly can expect that we also, upon occasion, must take
time. When some sick people are not healed through prayer, it
may simply be because we haven't prayed long enough to bring the
healing to completion. "Now will not God see justice done
to his chosen who cry to him day and night even when he delays
to help them?" (Luke 18:7) JB translation
For
all these reasons, when people are not healed through our
prayer, we should not immediately assume that it is not God's
will to heal, nor should we automatically assume that the
patients lack faith. The good news is that many more sick people
can be healed if only we pray:
-
for the deeper, spiritual roots of sickness;
-
if we ourselves are better prepared by prayer (and by
fasting)
-
if we are willing to spend more time praying for the sick
person
P.S
If you haven't already read it, I encourage
you to get Jamie Buckingham's moving
new book, Summer of Miracles (Creation
House). It is a powerful testimony
showing all the above principles
in action in Jamie's own struggle
against cancer.
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