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A
Fresh Insight Into Healing
by Francis MacNutt
taken from the Summer 2001 issue
   
Several years ago Rev. Don Williams gave one of
those life-changing talks you hope to hear every so often to
keep you growing. He said we are now living in a new cultural
era, the age of “post-modernism.” He stated that our entire
culture has moved in that direction since the 1960s, that this
culture shift is not going away, and that it is deeply affecting
our churches, even if they don’t even know it. The mainline
churches (Episcopalians, Presbyterians, Lutherans, Methodists,
etc.) are graying year by year and losing members steadily.
Perhaps you are wondering why we should talk about
post-modernism: “What in the world is this newfound label, and
who cares? I know what I believe and that’s good enough for
me!” But we need to understand what’s happening because
it’s affecting all of us, whether we know it or not –
especially the younger generation. And it’s deeply affecting
the disputes agitating most churches.
The reason I’m writing about this new world view is
because I believe that our own experience of Jesus’ healing is
the bridge we need to bring Christianity to this generation when
older methods fail. Let me explain in as simple a way as
possible.
One of the signs of holding a post-modernistic
outlook is that the person no longer believes in “objective
truth.” Instead, truth is subjective: “One person’s truth
is as good as anybody else’s.” If you ever loved Frank
Sinatra’s song, “I Did It My Way,” you were singing the
new theme song of our age. For example, the churches used to
teach that same-sex sexual activity was objectively wrong, but
today a homosexual may say simply, “I challenge that because
of my own personal experience.” Personal, subjective
experience becomes the criterion of truth rather than some
commandment proposed by Scripture or the authority of the
church. I think all of us can recognize that an extraordinary
shift has taken place in the past 30 years. Being
“inclusive” is a main value in the post-modern church.
One major aspect of this shift that is taking place
– and we really need to be aware of it – is much more
fundamental than the issues that are dividing many churches
(e.g. should women be ordained?). It has to do with the very
center of our Christian belief, set forth in the Creed we all
recite. That is, simply, our belief in the physical Resurrection
of Jesus – the empty tomb and Jesus’ physical body risen
from the dead and still alive. I’m writing this article during
the Easter season when we celebrate that Resurrection in the
most important feast of the Christian year: “Christ has died.
Christ is risen. Christ will come again!”
But now some prominent Scripture scholars and
theologians are openly challenging the traditional belief in the
Resurrection. They even are interviewed on some well-advertised
TV specials. Some are members of the Jesus Seminar where they
vote on Jesus’ sayings in the Gospels. They have four choices:
Jesus said it; he probably said it; he probably didn’t say it;
or he didn’t say it all. These scholars are very bright and
articulate. Although you may have never personally heard them,
they are changing the way Scripture is being taught in some
seminaries.
To give you an example of how the ancient belief in
the bodily Resurrection is being questioned, I’ve been reading
a book by a brilliant author in which he states that the
Resurrection was simply a powerful memory of Jesus’ living on
in his friends’ memories. Jesus was a great leader, so loved
by His followers that after He died, his presence in memory was
so strong that it was as if He were still alive. By the time the
Gospels were written, 40 years after the Crucifixion, the next
generation of followers (such as Luke) spoke and wrote as if
Jesus were still alive. They had come to believe it, and
that’s the new understanding of His Resurrection.
In the first place, this decline in some scholars’
belief in the Gospels goes back several hundred years, when some
theologians, especially in Germany, started to question whether
Jesus’ healings and exorcisms had actually occurred. These
scholars’ need to verify all truth scientifically and
rationally led to the denial of the “supernatural” which
cannot be measured (this was the era of “modernism”). The
technical term for the abandoning of belief in Jesus’ miracles
is “demythologizing the Gospels.” This process has gone on
for many years and has affected almost all the Christian
churches to some degree or another – except the Pentecostals.
How else can we explain how the evangelicals, including Baptists
who believe so strongly in the Bible’s truth, also believe
that healing and exorcism have largely ceased?
To be consistent, once one questions the actions of
Jesus – his “works” in healing the sick – what is to
prevent questioning his sayings in the Gospels when they
challenge the prevailing beliefs of our society? It is amazing,
for example, to read the popular commentaries on Scripture by
William Barclay. You will find his books in almost every
Christian bookstore and you will notice that every time he
comments on a healing or exorcism, he states that Jesus lived in
a superstitious world where the people believed in such things
as evil spirits. Jesus’ power to heal was simply the
people’s primitive belief in Him, which led to the power of
suggestion healing these simple people.
The best way our post-modern society can return to a
belief in Jesus’ Resurrection lies in a personal encounter
with God. In an era when personal, subjective experience is what
counts, the best way to return to a belief in the risen Christ
is to meet him — like the disciples on the Emmaus Road. This
is the way it happened 2,000 years ago, and this is the way it
will again happen today. Thus, the restoration of the healing
ministry is even more important than it was 30 years ago when I
first started praying for the sick.
Our experience at CHM is that the person who receives
a healing or deliverance no longer has a problem believing Jesus
is alive. Often it goes beyond a believing – it’s a knowing.
Jesus is not just a memory, not just a great leader who lived
2,000 years ago. He
lives!
When people experience the Baptism of the Spirit and
the gifts of the Spirit (such as healing) they no longer
question the Resurrection. If we need to know by experience and
not just because someone with authority has told us what to
believe, then this marvelous renewal of the Spirit is just the
kind of evangelization we need in our day. It’s the same kind
of evangelization they practiced in the early Church. Read again
chapters three and four of Acts where Peter and John use the
healing of the lame man as a powerful motive to meet the One who
healed him – Jesus Christ.
“All I want is to know Christ and the power of his
resurrection …” (Philippians 3:10a).
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