Healing Marks. Bruce G Epperly
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Название: Healing Marks

Автор: Bruce G Epperly

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Религия: прочее

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isbn: 9781938434617

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СКАЧАТЬ I entered graduate school and prepared for the ministerial and teaching professions, I no longer viewed the healings of Jesus from the perspective of televangelists like Oral Roberts and Kathryn Kuhlman or their successors Benny Hinn and Richard Roberts. While I began to doubt the integrity and veracity of many of the televangelists and their accounts of miraculous cures, I knew that some of the vulnerable and simple people in their healing lines experienced temporary, if not long term changes, in their overall well-being. In contrast to the spectacular claims and gaudy sets of the televangelists, I rediscovered the importance of Jesus’ healing ministry in simple acts of compassion, prayer, and healing touch. The healing stories of Jesus’ ministry came alive to me not as supernatural violations of the cause and effect processes of nature or as magical changes we could instantly call upon by our prayers or force of will, but as images of hope that inspired me day after day to seek wholeness and healing for myself, those whom I loved, strangers, and world events. I saw – and still see – most healing as gradual and subtle in nature. I discovered that love was the key to healing, even when a physical cure is unlikely.

      I’ve experienced Jesus’ healing touch in hospital rooms, healing services, energy work, spiritual conversations, and simple heart-felt prayer. Healing will always remain essential to my faith, but the quest for healing will always be challenging to me, personally, theologically, and spiritually. I suspect that healing is mysterious and challenging to you as well even if you consider yourself a person of faith who believes in the power of prayer to change bodies, minds, spirits, and relationships.

      It is just a small step from deism to the belief, widely held among more liberal theologians and clergy for last two centuries, that the healings of Jesus were entirely metaphorical or moral in nature. The healing stories were intended to be invitations to spiritual transformation and acts of hospitality, changing people’s status from unclean and unwanted to clean and accepted in the social order. In either case, God’s business was primarily with spiritual lives and ethical conduct of persons and not the physical world of sickness and health. Whereas liberals exorcised the healings of Jesus from their understandings of faith, believing that issues of health and illness should be left to medicine and not the church, many fundamentalist Christians saw healing as essential to the spread of the first century gospel but no longer relevant to the church’s mission of saving souls. They believed that God’s focus in this historical dispensation, or period of history, is soul winning, not physical or political transformation.