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Easter
and Healing
by Francis MacNutt
taken from the
May/June 2002 issue
   
I
was just listening to a cassette made during a discussion period
following a talk I had given way back in 1976 (at the inaugural
conference of the Association of Christian Therapists in
Tampa). What struck me was a question a cautious theologian from
Europe was asking. In my talk I had mentioned five different
levels of healing, the last levels being seemingly
“supernatural”— beyond what we might expect to happen
through the normal healing power we find in the natural order.
The
kind of healing that this theologian could accept was that the
ordinary, natural powers of healing are speeded up when we pray.
He could accept that level. To take one example, a woman is
burned in a fire and is expected to stay in recovery for many
weeks, leaving some visible scar tissue to mark the burn site on
her body forever. Instead, after we pray, she is released from
the hospital in one – third of the expected time and,
surprisingly, there is no scar tissue left.
The
theologian could accept that, because human understanding may be
able to explain the speed and completeness of the cure. We all
know the power of the mind, the “placebo effect” and the
power of suggestion. We also recognize the therapeutic power of
a loving touch (“therapeutic touch”). Then, too, the love of
a caring person or support group also has a curative effect. All
that he could accept: any cure that could be explained on the
human, natural level.
What
the theologian cautioned about was for us to claim that God
worked at a higher or “supernatural” level, beyond the laws
of nature. My favorite example of healing at this level is the
story about the three Indians at Blue Cloud Abbey in South
Dakota in 1972, who testified to Jesus filling teeth (I had
recently written up their story in my book Healing). The
theologian told us that such an attitude towards healing was
highly questionable and was not likely to be accepted in his
circles. (In fact, the word “supernatural” was no longer in
use in many theological circles.)
Listening
to that discussion, dating back more than 25 years, I realized
that this question is still very much with us, a major question
facing the leaders in mainline denominations.
Nor
is it only in the healing ministry that we face this kind of
question, but it touches the basic teachings of Christianity:
the ways these teachings have traditionally been understood are
now being questioned and reinterpreted. If you do not accept a
supernatural dimension to reality you will find it hard to
believe that Jesus was really raised from the dead on that first
Easter. Increasingly, there are scholars who teach that the
Resurrection of Jesus simply means that his memory continued to
live on in the memory of his disciples — so vividly that it
seemed he was still alive and with them. He was spiritually, but
not physically, resurrected. If this is all that we mean by his
Resurrection —if it can all be explained by human reason and
by the ordinary creative processes of nature, then perhaps Jesus
was just a great teacher — like Buddha.
Since
we cannot prove the supernatural, because it is invisible, we
always need the gift of faith to believe the great mysteries of
Christianity. Our experience in the healing ministry, is a
tremendous help, seeing people dramatically healed, being there
when someone has a vision of Jesus, all this is a testimony to
his resurrection and to his being truly alive today — not just
in our memories. I do believe that I have seen truly
supernatural healings even though I may have difficulty in
scientifically proving that only God could cause them. When we
pray for healing and see a broken leg straighten, or watch a
tumor shrink down and disappear, that makes it so much easier
for us to accept the great mysteries of faith.
We
recognize that God, in creating the world we see around us, has
given it marvelous curative properties that cause most of the
healings we see. Medical treatment, pharmaceutical drugs,
together with the healing power of love, the influence of a
positive attitude and joyous laughter, the uplifting support
life–giving force of a loving community — they all go to
produce healing.
But
there is another level beyond that. When we see a sick person
somehow transformed before our very eyes, we find it easy to
believe that Jesus worked that transformation. Through him, with
him, and in him we live and move and have our being.
When
we pray and see a sick person rise up in joy, it makes it so
much easier for us to realize that
Jesus
is truly risen from the grave. |