with Bob Condly
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healing

Pray Again

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Recently I visited a brother in the Lord who’s spent more than two months in the hospital. “That’s way too long!” I told myself. “Enough is enough! This can’t be God’s will!”

When I met him, I expressed my feelings and he felt the same way. Though his body was weak, his faith remained strong.

I’d brought along a communion kit so we could share the Lord’s Supper together, and I turned around to set up the elements. It took less than a minute, but when I turned back, he was out!

“Boy, that was fast! Kind of reminds me of my preaching!”

I prayed for him anyway because I believed that the Lord wanted him well.

Nothing happened; he continued to sleep. Did my prayer not work? Was God uninterested?

A few days later at the Sunday church service, I prayed for a sister in Christ who’d had non-stop back pain for three years. After we prayed, I asked her what the problem had prevented her from doing. “Anything,” she replied. So I asked her to do “anything” that she couldn’t do before. “Try touching your toes!” She complied and got more than halfway down.

“How do you feel?”

“Better!”

So we talked to God again. And she reached down a little lower. Progress!

It was getting late, so we prayed one last time. Greater  improvement; she could touch the top of her feet! Praise the Lord!

Why did I minister this way?

First, during a mission trip to the tiny south African country of Lesotho, our street teams were instructed that after we pray for people, we should ask them to do something that they couldn’t do before. Their behavior would either confirm that they’d been healed or that we needed to intercede again. We didn’t regard the latter as a failure; instead, it motivated us to press in for a breakthrough.

Second, Jesus modeled this behavior. According to Mark 8:22-26, He and His disciples “came to Bethsaida, and some people brought a blind man and begged Jesus to touch him. He took the blind man by the hand and led him outside the village. When He had spit on the man’s eyes and put His hands on him, Jesus asked, ‘Do you see anything?’ He looked up and said, ‘I see people; they look like trees walking around.’ Once more Jesus put His hands on the man’s eyes. Then his eyes were opened, his sight was restored, and he saw everything clearly. Jesus sent him home, saying, ‘Don’t even go into the village.’”

Christ had the power to heal this blind man instantly, but on this occasion, He stretched things out. While speculations abound as to why Jesus chose this method, don’t lose sight of the main point.

Sometimes, God works in processes. Every so often, we have to revisit issues. But let’s not fear repetition. Persist for God’s glory and human need – they’re worth it!

So what about the brother in the hospital? I looked in on him again because I believe in Christ’s will and power to heal. I could speak only briefly before he once again nodded off.

But whether he slumbered or was awake, I was determined to pray for him again. I told him so and that woke him up sufficiently that he joined in the prayer. And I’ll keep at it until the Spirit tells me to quit.

If you see no difference in a situation, pray again. If you witness a partial change, pray again. Keep praying until you see the blessing of the Lord unleashed!

Wishing for the Kingdom

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“If God really existed, He would have healed him!”

That’s what an atheist (we’ll call him “Tom”) concluded when he witnessed a person suffer and die from a heart attack. And this occurred in church! That’s right, the skeptic had visited a church that morning and observed the tragedy.

So was he right? His accusation carries some weight. Christians make much of God’s power and goodness, but neither seemed to be on display in that worship service.

Tom probably didn’t pray for the victim’s recovery, but several congregation members did. But their prayers went unanswered.

Why not? A miraculous healing would have saved the life of a dying man, persuaded an atheist that God exists, and reinforced the faith of concerned Christians. Everyone wins!

What did Tom want God to do? He wanted the Lord to heal the stricken man.

But is that the best that God could do? Does He care about anybody else? How about the person next to the victim, or someone a few seats down? Don’t they have needs? And wouldn’t Tom approve of God taking care of them, too? I would think so.

But go further. Consider everyone in the church that morning. Why confine divine blessings to a single person? Why not shower everyone with miracles?

You can see where this leads. If pressed, the atheist would have to admit that the Lord’s answers to people’s problems shouldn’t be limited at all. Not to a person, nor to a church, or a city, or a state. They ought to be universal.

Though a skeptic, Tom really wanted heaven on earth. Where God’s will is done, people are fulfilled and happy, sickness and pain are but distant memories, and blessings abound.

Jesus called it “the kingdom of God.” It’s what He announced at the beginning of His ministry:  “The kingdom of God has come near. Repent and believe the good news!”

So why don’t we see the kingdom? Why does God allow a person to suffer a heart attack in church? Why do pains persist, trials wear people down, and injustices prevail? What’s keeping Jesus from setting up the kingdom He claimed was at hand?

The answer lies in His commands: repent and believe. It’s easy to believe in God’s power when you see a miracle. Can you believe in His goodness and His ability when you don’t?

It’s easy to trust the Lord when you feel loved and accepted. Can you rest in His love when society turns its back on you?

How can you trust God? By repenting. Sin is the biggest problem people have. It’s what separates human beings from God, and turns their thinking against Him.

Unless He dealt with our sins, the kingdom that Jesus set up would have remained empty. A kingdom of One. No citizens, no residents; just a lone king. Why? Because no one qualifies to enter. Sin keeps people out; repentance and faith bring them in.

Tom longed for a kingdom he couldn’t imagine. His heart wanted more of God than He might care to admit.

How about you? Search yourself and discover how deep is your desire for God’s kingdom. Draw near to God through Jesus Christ; let His peace rule your unsettled soul. Serve Him and one day, when He returns, you’ll enter His beautiful kingdom.

with Bob Condly

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