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Why
Should I Take a Course in Healing Prayer?
by
Francis MacNutt
taken
from the May/June 2002 issue
   
Sometimes good people ask us
why they should need to take a course in healing. They believe in it; they pray for it. Why study it?
It’s
a good question, so I’ll try to answer.
First,
healing prayer should be basically simple.
Everyone should be encouraged to pray.
We know, too, that the prayers of little children (for
instance, when they pray for a sick parent) are often answered.
The prayers of the poor and uneducated in underdeveloped
countries seem to be answered more frequently than in our
wealthy First World. The
basic form of prayer is simple, “Ask and you shall receive.”
And so, why get complicated?
Pray for the sick and let it go at that.
At
one level, that’s enough.
It would truly be a great step forward if all
Christians learned to believe that Jesus still heals today when
we pray simple prayers. And
that may be enough for most people.
But
there is also a desperate need for something more, because if
you actually get into a healing ministry, you need some answers.
The most obvious question is, “Why are some people
healed when we pray, but at other times, nothing much seems to
happen – at least on the physical order?”
Many people give up on prayer, because they do not seem
to see results, and they feel they are setting up false
expectations if they offer to pray for the sick.
And, if you have ever prayed for a seriously ill person,
and they experience no relief, how do you answer their question,
“Doesn’t God love me?”
I believe that one reason healing prayer largely died out
in the fourth century was because Christian leaders didn’t
know how to answer that question.
So they stopped praying rather than be embarrassed when
their prayer seemed to fail.
And
that’s only one out of a multitude of questions that any
thinking person would ask.
If you get seriously involved in praying for the sick,
you are bound to need more teaching.
There
are two basic reasons to learn about healing prayer:
1. The first is to avoid mistakes – to avoid
hurting the very people you are trying to help.
And this happens often.
Some fine Christians developed a theory and taught it
widely. It goes
like this: “If you really believe in healing, because it is a
promise made by Jesus, healing will always take place when you
pray in faith.” If
healing, then, does not take place, it’s the fault of the sick
person who didn’t have enough faith.
What do you yourself think about that theory?
I personally have known terminally-ill patients who
belonged to prayer groups that believed in “claiming your
healing.” The
only reason they knew for a person not being healed was that the
patient lacked faith; when a given patient was not healed,
he/she then died feeling abandoned by God and filled with guilt.
I have seen it happen.
I
have known men in the healing ministry who believed that all
depression is caused by demons and proceeded to pray to cast out
a demon of depression from every depressed person.
Were they right? Others
who have ministered to persons who suffer from split
personalities have tried to cast out all the various
“alters” as if they were demons, and have ended up nearly
destroying an already fractured personality.
These simplistic procedures have resulted in harming
people rather than helping them.
The sad result is that many counselors and psychiatrists
advise their patients not to go to a Christian group in search
of healing prayer.
2. The most important reason for learning more about healing
prayer is a positive one: so that you might be better able to
help people.
To
take a common example: how do you tell if a person who seems
mentally disturbed needs deliverance from evil spirits or
whether the problem is on a purely human, psychological level?
If Andrea Yates had come to you, how would you have
proceeded to pray? Or
should you have tried to get her hospitalized first of all?
How
long do you pray with someone?
Just once? For
hours? And how do
you decide about how long to pray? If you pray for someone’s physical healing and nothing
seems to happen, what do you say or do then?
Is there any advantage in praying in tongues?
How do you proceed if you are praying with someone who
seems to be severely infested with evil spirits?
How long should you expect to allow for a deliverance
session? Ten
minutes? Two hours? An
open-ended day?
We
can go on and list a thousand (at least) questions we need to
answer if we are going to minister healing prayer in any kind of
depth.
I
think that anyone who has actually prayed with a number of sick
people realizes a great need to seek advice from others more
experienced in the healing ministry.
I know that I turn to others when I am trying to help
someone who is troubled in an area where I have very little
experience. To take
just one example, we are encountering a number of people who are
victims of Satanic Ritual Abuse (SRA) and most of them have
developed an intricate network of what used to be called
“multiple personalities.”
How do we attempt to help this sufferer from
“Dissociative Identity Disorder” (DID)?
To
learn from those who have experience in the areas where we have
no experience or knowledge is simply common sense; we need to
become more humble, to avoid presumption and to grow in holiness and wisdom.
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