When
one thinks of healing in today’s contemporary church culture,
one might think of a meeting held in a church where mostly believers
have gathered to worship God through Jesus Christ. When the worship
is powerful, the “presence of God” may be felt. The “anointing” is
present and miracles may take place. There may be words of prophecy,
wisdom, or knowledge; miraculous healings might take place as the gift
of healing is manifest through the Holy Spirit. Indeed Scripture teaches
in I Corinthians Chapters 12 and 14 that these gifts of the Holy Spirit
are for building up the body of Christ and that they can be manifested
when believers come together to worship the Lord. (Miraculous healings
can also take place in a "Healing Room" where prayer plays
a prominent role---again more of a church-based activity.)
However,
how can such miracles take place outside the context of church
or a gathering of believers? Outside of this context there is usually
no anointed worship and no felt presence of God. Believers on the
average spend only a few hours per week in worship services; the
overwhelming majority of their time is spent outside of “church.” They
spend more time at home than at church. Even more of their time
is spent at work “in the marketplace.” From the point
of view of the proclamation of the Kingdom of God and the Great
Commission, it is even more important for the miracles to happen
in the marketplace than in church.
It is
well and good for believers to be touched physically or otherwise
by God. But it is even more important for the lost to witness or
experience the miracles since they are the proof to the world that
our God is the only true God and that Jesus Christ is the only
way to Him. Believers, whether or not they experience God’s
miraculous touch, are by definition already saved. But the lost
often cannot believe and be saved unless they first witness miracles.
John
4:48 “Unless you people see miraculous signs and wonders,” Jesus
told him, “you will never believe.”
Jesus
did miracles primarily to prove to the lost that He was in fact
the Christ, the Son of God and that He had power to grant eternal
life to those who believe.
John
20:30 Jesus did many other miraculous signs in the presence of
his disciples, which are not recorded in this book. 31 But these
are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the
Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name.
God
in His wisdom has indeed provided a means by which such miraculous
signs can take place “in the marketplace.” It is called
the authority of the believer to heal the sick and cast out demons
as the Kingdom is proclaimed to the lost. Its operation is usually
separate and distinct from the operation of the gift of healing.
The
New Testament abounds with examples of the operation of this authority.
Jesus Himself never prayed for the sick, but usually issued commands
to diseases and demons based upon the authority the Father had
given to Him. He gave a measure of this authority to His followers
and taught them to heal the sick in the same fashion. In Acts,
we often see the disciples (like Peter and Paul) continuing to
exercise this authority over diseases and demons by the giving
of authoritative commands. Obviously there were instances in which
the gift of healing was also in operation, but the exercise of
authority was in fact commonplace. This authority was often used
to do miracles outside the walls of the church, where
in fact the lost are found (pun intended).
When
the Church learns and applies the authority over disease that she
has been given for her witness “in the marketplace”---that
is, anywhere outside of worship gatherings---then the lost will
take the gospel of Jesus Christ seriously; the Great Commission
will be fulfilled. This is the “second gun” that the
Lord is restoring to His body.
The
End Time Model of Evangelism
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