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Octavius Winslow

Evening Thoughts — April 21

Octavius Winslow April, 21 2016 4 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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April, 21 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 4 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about healing?

The Bible teaches that Jesus is the ultimate Physician who can heal both physical and spiritual ailments (Luke 5:31).

In Luke 5:31, Jesus states, 'Those who are whole need not a physician; but those who are sick.' This emphasizes His role as the healer of all disease, both moral and physical. Throughout the Gospels, we see Christ exhibiting compassion and power over sickness and death, demonstrating that He is divinely equipped to heal. Believers are encouraged to come to Him in faith for healing, as Christ responds to the cries of those in need with tenderness and skill.

Luke 5:31, John 11:21-22

How do we know Jesus' healing power is true?

The healing power of Jesus is affirmed by His miracles and the changed lives of those He healed (John 11:43-44).

The truth of Jesus' healing power is corroborated through numerous miracles documented in Scripture, such as the raising of Lazarus (John 11:43-44). These accounts not only showcase His ability to overcome physical death but also exhibit His authority over sin and moral decay. The testimonies of those who encountered His miraculous works serve as a powerful witness to His divine nature and compassion for the suffering. Ultimately, His resurrection from the dead solidifies His power to heal both the body and the soul, assuring believers of their eternal life in Him.

John 11:43-44, Matthew 9:35

Why is faith important for Christians facing illness?

Faith is crucial as it directs Christians to trust in Jesus' power and sovereignty in times of illness and suffering.

Faith plays a vital role for Christians when confronting sickness and hardship. It allows believers to bring their anxieties and requests before Jesus, trusting in His ability to heal and sustain. In moments of despair, such as when medical intervention seems fruitless, faith assures Christians that they are not alone, and gives them hope in the Lord's sovereignty over their circumstances. Believing in Christ's promise that He hears the prayers of His followers and acts according to His divine wisdom brings comfort and strength, reminding them that whether in healing or in death, He is glorified and in control (Romans 8:28).

Romans 8:28, Matthew 17:20

And Jesus answering said unto them, Those who are whole need not a physician; but those who are sick. Luke 5:31

THAT Physician is He who spoke these words. The power of the Son of God over the moral and physical diseases of men, prove Him to be just the Physician which our circumstances require. Want we skill? He possesses it. Sympathy? He has it. Patience, tenderness, perseverance? all belong to Jesus. Wonderful Physician! No disease can baffle You, for You are Divine. No suffering can fail to move You, for You are human. Are your deep anxieties awakened, my reader, on behalf of some loved object, now pining in sickness, perhaps, to all appearance, in circumstances of extreme danger? In simple faith call in the aid of this Physician. Let the prayer of Moses for Miriam be yours, presented with the faith and urged with the importunity of the Syrophenician mother, "Heal her now, O Lord, I beseech You." "I will come and heal her," will be His reply. Deem not the case beyond His skill. Thus reasoned the sister of Lazarus: "Lord, if You had been here, my brother had not died. But I know that even now, whatever You will ask of God, God will give it You." Go in prayer and faith, and lay your sick one at His feet. Jesus is with you. One word from Him, and the disease shall vanish; one touch of His hand, and health shall be restored. He who raised Lazarus from the grave, can bring back from its brink the dear one around whose fast-waning life the veins of your heart are entwined. Ask believingly, ask submissively, ask importunately, and then leave the result with Him.

When human power has come to its end—when skill and affection can do no more—when man retires, and hope is extinguished, and the loved one is despairingly abandoned to death—then to see the Lord step forward and take the case in His hands, arresting the disease, rebuking the distemper, bringing back the glow of health to the cheek, vigor to the frame, elasticity to the limb, and brilliance to the eye, raising as from the very grave itself—oh how glorious does He appear in that chamber of sickness! Who bowed down His ear to the whisper that faintly cried for help and support? Who heard the fervent agonizing prayer that that precious life might be spared, which in another room broke from the lips of some anxious, holy wrestler—a parent, a brother, a sister, a friend, it may be? It was the Son of God! and oh how is He glorified in the recovery!

Or, if that sickness terminates in death's slumber, is He less glorified? Ask the spirit just emerged from its shattered tenement, and soaring away to its home on high—ask it as it enters the portals of heaven, the blaze of eternal glory bursting upon its view—ask it as it finds itself before the throne of God, once an earthly, polluted creature, now whiter and brighter than an unfallen angel—ask it as it rests in the bosom of its redeeming Savior, blissfully conscious of its final and eternal safety, and reposing in expectation of its complete glorification, when its reunion with the spiritual body shall take place on the morning of the first resurrection—ask, and it will testify how great was the glory brought to the Son of God, by the termination of a sickness which, while it left kindred and friends weeping around the death-bed below, demonstrated His life, and power, and love, "who has abolished death, and has brought life and immortality to light through the gospel."

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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