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One
More Reason to Shout “Alleluiah!”
by Francis MacNutt
taken from the Spring 1999 issue
   
As we celebrate Easter and everything Jesus won for us when
He offered up His life upon the cross, all Christians — no
matter what denomination — recognize that Jesus died to
forgive and take away our sins.
But how many of you know with equal certainty that Jesus died to take
your sickness away? How many Good Friday sermons have you
heard upon the subject of your healing as compared to the
forgiveness of your sins? And not just your spiritual sickness
— sin — but your physical sickness. When you read the
Gospels, it is very clear that Jesus came to earth and died to
free us from all evil, including sickness. Yet, how few
Christians know this joyful news!
Take the eighth chapter of Matthew, for example. First, Jesus heals
three sick people: a leper, the centurion’s servant, and
Peter’s mother-in-law — all physical sicknesses. Then,
Matthew follows with a summary of many healings:
“That evening they brought to Him many who were possessed with demons;
and He cast out the spirits with a word and cured all who were
sick. This was to fulfill what had been spoken through the
prophet Isaiah: ‘He took our infirmities and bore our
diseases’ (Isaiah 53:4).” (Matthew 8:16-17)
Note how the casting out of the evil spirits and the healings go
together: sickness is not a blessing sent by God, but an evil
parallel to demonic oppression. The most famous Old Testament
text we use for Good Friday sermons is Isaiah 53, the powerful,
moving picture of Jesus as the Suffering Servant. The following
verse in this chapter, verse 5, says, “But he was wounded for
our transgressions, crushed for our iniquities; upon him was the
punishment that made us whole, and by his bruises we are
healed.”
Handel’s majestic “Messiah” sings out this text, and we respond
with the glorious “Alleluiah” chorus. And here is Matthew
saying directly that Jesus, the suffering Messiah, took our
sickness to the cross, as well as our sins. Truly, “by His wounds we are healed!”
How did we ever lose this truth? The early Church knew it and taught it
for the first 300 years of Christianity.
And they acted upon it. In those years before Constantine
— years we tend to believe were a golden time, closer to Jesus
and the Apostles — Christians were persecuted, even as they
gradually converted the Roman Empire.
They could hold no mass meetings or evangelistic crusades in their
coliseums, as we do. Sharing the Gospel was one-on-one, neighbor
to neighbor. What convinced these people was healing the sick
and casting out evil spirits. They understood that. When a
neighbor was sick, a Christian might say, “Our God is
all-powerful, and your idols, your gods, are simply demons. Our
God loves you, and we will show you. We’ll pray for your
mother and God will heal her.” Then came baptism. Then
instruction. It was all so simple: a head-to-head confrontation
between paganism and the power of Christianity — a kind of
divine shoot-out between the forces of good and evil.
Dr. Ramsey MacMullen, professor of classics at Yale
University, writes that the main motives for conversion in those
early post-apostolic years were healing and exorcism (Christianizing
the Roman Empire, A.D. 100-400, Yale Univ. Press, 1984).
According to MacMullen, the most highly rated activity of the
early church was probably exorcism, the casting out of evil
spirits.
In the Christian church today, there is often profound skepticism about
exorcism, or even the existence of Satan (although the Catholics
recently revised the rite of exorcism and repeated the
traditional Christian teaching affirming the existence of evil
spirits, and many renewal and fundamental churches acknowledge
their existence). The
famous writer Tertullian (c. 200 A.D.) issued the challenge:
“Let a man be produced right here before your court who, it is
clear, is possessed by a demon, and that spirit commanded by any
Christian at all will be cast out” (MacMullen, p. 27).
We need not totally blame the Emperor Constantine for the spiritual
weakening of the church after he politicized it. A large part of
our lack of spiritual power today simply comes about because we
ourselves have become skeptical about the reality of the
spiritual power that Jesus came to share with us through the
Holy Spirit. We find it easy to believe in the forgiveness of
sins — which we cannot see and requires little risk — but
find it hard to believe that God will heal real physical
infirmities which torment the sick, that which we can
see. Whenever we pray for healing, we take a real risk of faith.
As John Wimber once said, “Faith is spelled R-I-S-K!”
What we celebrate at Easter and Pentecost is a renewal of our belief in
what Jesus accomplished upon the cross: He won a great victory
over evil in all its dimensions — sin, sickness, ignorance,
demonic oppression and hate. He brought us new life, even as He
Himself rose to new life: holiness, health, wisdom and love.
We don’t see it all, of course, in this earthly life, but already we
experience the holiness, the health, the love of Jesus, and we
will see it all in the life to come when we are resurrected with
Jesus!
Happy Easter!
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