I have been a Christian for 25 + years.
Over this time I have seen a LOT of claims of healings done in Jesus name.
Usually these healings cannot be proven and are of a trivial nature, like legs supposedly growing out etc.
Yet when it come to REAL needs like people having cancer etc, these healings are no where to be seen in my immediate life.
Though I do believe in God,and I do believe that He heals, all I can say that I have ever seen is cheap side show tricks by noisy "evangelists".
I have a friend who is ALWAYS advocating healings on Facebook, and for some reason it really annoys me because usually they are the phoney healings I earlier refered too.
Am I too synical these days, or has my discernment increased? Dillemma !!!
Yes, to get back on topic, there
are a lot of sideshow tricks out there. It is not cynical to recognize them for what they are. As far as exposing them, I guess that depends on what you feel lead to do. As a church leader I removed a guy and his friend that visited our youth group one night and pulled off a faked healing of an unequal leg suddenly being grown longer to match the other one. As the leader, it was my responsibility to expose the trickery to the others in attendance so that they would not be deceived by a liar who only wanted to make himself look all high and mighty.
So does that mean that I don't have faith? Does it mean I doubt God's ability to heal miraculously? I don't know. Someone please tell me.
A few weeks before the removal of the faker, we had a person with an injury who was told by his doctors that he would never run again and would be lucky if he could ever walk again without crutches. I knew he and his family well, so knew this to be true. Out of the blue, during an unrelated Bible study, he confronted me and cited the passage about healing in James: "Is any one of you sick? He should call the elders of the church to pray over him and anoint him with oil in the name of the Lord. And the prayer offered in faith will make the sick person well; the Lord will raise him up. If he has sinned, he will be forgiven.." (James 5: 14-15, NIV) He said he wanted us to do this and he believed God would heal him.
That was the first time I had ever been confronted with a request like that, and this was in a church where this kind of thing had never been done before. But the scripture in James was right there in front of me, clear as could be. Do I deny the scripture and make excuses? Or do I have faith in God to reward the faith of the injured person like He said He would?
We got some oil, got the leadership (elders) together, and followed God's word. There was no show needed. No screaming and hitting him in the head and knocking him on the floor. Not even any speaking in tongues. We just calmly and reverently followed the instructions in James to the letter.
The injury was healed right then and there. The guy left his crutches at church and ran (not walked or hobbled, but
ran) home to tell his parents what had happened. The next day his parents took him to the (secular) doctor, who confirmed that the injury was healed, and that there was no possible medical explanation for why this happened. This was many years ago, and the injury never returned.
God used the incident to strengthen the faith of everyone that was involved, resulting in many people being saved and others being strengthened over the years through this.
So, are you being cynical and lacking faith when you see the fakers for the liars that they are? I don't know. Am I cynical and lacking faith for exposing and removing the fakes from my group just a few short weeks after participating in the real healing, the memory of which still strengthens me to this day? Someone please tell me.