Mark 11:24 Therefore I tell you, whatever you ask
for in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be
yours.
Based upon this verse, it has been taught in some
circles that when praying for the sick we should pray just once
and after that believe
that the person has been healed, whether or not the healing has occurred.
Moreover, the person receiving the healing prayer should likewise
henceforth believe that he or she has been healed regardless of whether
or not the healing has taken place. This is known in some churches
as “claiming one’s healing by faith.”
While there appears to be some scriptural basis for
this practice and undoubtedly some have received their healing
in this way, there
may be another way which also has scriptural backing. Often the practice
of simply “claiming by faith” does not result in actual
healing.
In the gospels and Acts, Jesus and His disciples
most often ministered to the sick by commanding them to be healed
using the authority God
had given them over disease and demons in the context of proclaiming
the gospel of His kingdom. The healing was not necessarily always
instant, but may at times have been a process in which the sick person’s
condition improved by stages as they continued to minister. Mark
8:22-25 records an incident in which Jesus healed a blind man. After
His first attempt He asked if the man could see anything. Instead
of claiming his healing by faith the man simply told Jesus that he
had begun to see but not very clearly. Jesus did not rebuke the man
for his “negative confession” based on a possible lack
of faith but simply laid hands on the man a second time. After that
the man’s vision was completely restored.
If we combine these two elements---commanding in the name of Jesus
with perseverance until the healing is complete---we see an alternative
or additional way to receive healing from the Lord. Instead of merely
praying and asking the Lord to heal our disease, we can after prayer
command the pain or disease in our own body to leave in the name
of Jesus. While this authority is generally to be exercised over
disease when ministering to the sick in the context of proclaiming
the Kingdom of God, it can also apply to disease or pain in our own
bodies as well.
We have seen believers apply this to infirmities
in their own bodies. After prayer, they might lay their own hand
on the location of the
infirmity and command it to go or be healed in the name of Jesus.
A brother in Christ whose chronic lower back pain and developing
arthritis in his hips were totally healed by the Lord in one of our
meetings decided to minister to himself the next day regarding an
ear infection. While driving on the road he inserted his finger into
the infected ear and commanded it to be healed in Jesus’ name.
He felt his ear popping, and his hearing was completely restored.
The infected ear dried up and was healed by the Lord as he ministered
to himself. Through this gracious touch of the Lord this brother
has returned to his original calling as a preacher of the gospel.
If you are a believer with a physical infirmity,
don’t just
claim your healing by faith. Command it to be healed and rebuke the
condition as well in the name of Jesus with the laying on of your
hands. Claiming and commanding need not conflict with one another,
just as there is no conflict between the fact that we are already
perfect in Christ while yet continuing to be perfected in Him. Persevere
in exercising this authority, and you may see God’s grace of
healing in your body. As you experience this, remember the primary
purpose for which the Lord has given you this authority: to witness
for Christ and to confirm His saving power to the lost.
For related teaching on this subject, please go to
Is there a strong Scriptural basis for "claiming one's healing
by faith?"
The
End Time Model of Evangelism
Other teachings