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| Copyright © 2003 by The Voice of Prophecy |
| David B. Smith |
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P.O.
Box 53055 |
| January 15, 2003 |
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REDEMPTION THROUGH THE ROOF #8
WHY RISK A HEALING? Have you ever seen a healing service on TV that you
thought might be fake? We’ve all heard stories where the evangelist in
the white silk suit has a little earpiece, and he gets signals from someone
in a control booth: “Sister X, sitting in Row 14 with the pink shawl,
has a sore right shoulder.” And he lays hands on her, or blows the “Spirit
of healing” on her, or puts an anointed prayer cloth on her . . . and
sometimes people seem to get well, and sometimes they don’t. “‘But that you may know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins . . .’ He said to the paralyzed man, ‘I tell you, get up, take your mat and go home.’” In the thought-provoking Message paraphrase, it reads: “‘Well, just so it’s clear that I’m the Son of Man and authorized to do either, or both . . .’ He now spoke directly to the paraplegic: ‘Get up. Take your bedroll and go home.’” Which he immediately proceeded to do. “In the realm of the visible Jesus performed a miracle which simultaneously proved that also in the universe of the invisible He had exercised His divine power and love. He had given this man a healthy body but also, and this first of all, a healthy soul (‘Your sins are forgiven’). He had thoroughly refuted the accusations of His enemies. Moreover, as to the charge that it was easy for Him to pronounce absolution, well, He was able indeed to do it and He actually did it, as He here proved; but as to it being easy, was it not exactly this granting of pardon that required all the suffering He endured during His earthly sojourn, climaxed by the bloody sweat of Gethsemane, the scourging of Gabbatha, and the cross of Golgotha?” We tried to make that point yesterday — that it was
actually much easier to heal this sick man than to forgive him. But healing
him certainly helped to demonstrate that Jesus was empowered by heaven
TO forgive anyone He chose. “His dominant thought,” Deere writes, “was that the Lord would be glorified. The Lord honored that desire with many notable miracles, including raising a young girl from the dead.” That’s very interesting, but now how about Deere himself? He had the same fear many Christians do who pray for a healing to happen, especially when it’s a public thing. Will they look foolish if God chooses to say no? Will they look like a failure? “[God] isn’t going to heal someone,” he writes, “to keep US from looking foolish. He WILL, however, heal someone to bring glory to His Son.” Then he adds: “In those early days the Lord ‘made a deal’ with me. It was as though He said, ‘If you won’t take the credit when someone gets healed, then you won’t have to take the blame when they don’t get healed.’” Isn’t that a wonderful attitude to adopt? And here in this wonderful Bible story, told by Matthew, Mark, and Luke, we find that Jesus heals in order to bring glory and honor to the kingdom of heaven. To demonstrate the power of God. To illustrate the eternal truth that healing of the soul, forgiveness of sins, the applying of Calvary to our lives . . . is infinitely more important than whether you and I get out of a bed and walk or stay in that bed and praise God from there. Let’s notice that the Bible itself paints the story as succeeding in exactly this way. Here’s Luke 5:25: “Immediately [the paralytic] stood up in front of them, took what he had been lying on and went home PRAISING GOD.” “Giving glory to God all the way,” says the Message paraphrase. And here’s verse 26: “EVERYONE was amazed and gave praise to God.” Except for the spies from the CIA — that’s the Caiaphas Intelligence Agency. “[The people] were filled with awe,” Luke writes, “and said, ‘We have seen remarkable things today.’” I think the lesson for us is a very special one. Certainly we honor God when we’re wise enough to remember to give heaven the glory for the visible blessings that come to us. When we thank Him for His goodness in giving us food. When we praise Him and give Him the credit for the fact that we are gainfully employed and have God-given talents with which to earn a living. When we meet the person we know is the perfect soul-mate, and we think to acknowledge His leading in our lives, His directing of our paths, as it says in Proverbs 3:6. But how much better it is, how more true to the spirit
of discipleship, when we honor heaven by believing in and living out the
invisible pillars of God’s kingdom. When we believe in and proclaim forgiveness.
When we swim against the tide of lawlessness and gladly live by God’s
eternal, changeless law of love. When the post-modern world around us
embraces evolution, and we still worship our heavenly Father — whom we
can’t see or hear or touch — as our Creator. When terrorists attack and
kidnappers break in and snipers kill, and we still drive to the cemetery
believing in the resurrection of the dead. When the years go by and others
get discouraged and we still believe in the second coming of Jesus. |
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