The MINISTRY OF HEALING,
Or, Miracles of Cure in All Ages.
-- A. J. Gordon
Pastor of Clarendon St. Church in Boston
Second Thousand Revised 1883
Copyright 1882
X.
THE VERDICT OF CANDOR.
In summing up what has been brought forward in the preceeding chapters, we wish to review
briefly the theory, the testimony and the practice, which our discussion has involved.
As to the theory: — Is it right for us to pray to God to perform a miracle of healing in
our behalf ? "The truth is," answers an eminent writer, "that to ask God to act at all, and to
ask him to perform a miracle are one and the same thing." * That is to say, a miracle is the
immediate action of God, as distinguished from his mediate action through natural laws. We see no
reason, therefore, why we should hesitate to pray for the healing of our bodies any more than for
the renewal of our souls. Both are miracles; but both are covered and provided for by the same
clear word of promise.
Our hesitancy to ask for physical healing we believe to rest largely on a false and
wide-spread error in regard to the relation of the human
* Jellett: Efficacy of Prayer, p. 41.
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body to the redemption of Christ. It is taken for granted by many that this house of clay
was never intended either to be repaired or beautified by the renewing Spirit. The caged-eagle
theory of man's existence is widely prevalent — the notion that the soul is imprisoned in flesh,
and is beating its bars in eager longing to fly away and be at rest — all of which may be very
good poetry, but is very bad divinity. The scripture teaches indeed that "we that are in this
tabernacle do groan being burdened;" but it does not therefore thrust death's writ of ejection
into our hands as our great consolation, and tell us that our highest felicity consists in moving
out of this house as quickly as possible. "Not for that we would be unclothed, but clothed upon,
that mortality might be swallowed up of life," is the inspired testimony concerning our highest
hope of existence. The redemption of the body, not its dissolution, resurrection not death is set
before us in the gospel as the true goal of victory. But because that great promise of the
gospel, "Who shall fashion anew the body of our humiliation that it may be conformed to the body
of his glory," has been so largely supplanted by the notion of a spiritual elimination taking
place at
OF CANDOR. I95
death, in which a purified soul is forever freed from a cumbering body, all this has been
changed in the creed of many. The heresy of death-worship has supplanted the doctrine of
resurrection, with a multitude of Christians, because they have allowed the partial felicity, the
departing to be with Christ, to take the place of the final victory, the coming of Christ, to
quicken our mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in us.
It is easy to see now that when death gets established in the high esteem of Christians,
sickness, his prime minister, should come to be held in great regard also. And so it is, that
while very few enjoy being sick, very many are afraid seriously to claim healing, lest it should
seem like rebellion against a sacred ordinance, or a revolt from a hallowed medicine which God is
mercifully putting to their lips for their spiritual recovery. Those who have such a feeling
should search the scriptures to learn how constantly sickness is referred to as the work of the
devil. From the day when " Satan went forth from the presence of the Lord and smote Job with sore
boils," to the hour when the deliverer came and loosed " a daughter of Abraham, whom Satan had
bound lo these
196 THE VERDICT
eighteen years," — he that "hath the power of death, that is the devil," has been
compelling our wretched race to reap the first fruits of mortality, disease and pain and bodily
decay. Alas, if the Lord's people shall be so deceived by him that they shall willingly accept
sickness, the first fruits of death, as their portion, instead of seeking for health, the first
fruits of redemption! If any shall insist indeed, that God often allows his servants to be sick
for their good; or that he sometimes permits them to fall into sin for their chastening, on that
account we shall not admit that sickness is God's agent any more than that sin is. An old divine
probably spoke as truly as he did quaintly when he said that " the Lord sometimes allows his
saints to be sharpened on the devil's grindstone," but we believe that in the comprehensive
petition, "Deliver us from the evil one" is contained without question a prayer for rescue from
all the ways and works of Satan — from sickness as well as from sin; from pain, the penalty of
transgression, as well as from transgression itself. But, it is asked, if the privilege and
promise in this matter are so clear, how is it that the cases of recovery through the prayer of
faith are so rare ?
OF CANDOR. 197
Probably because the prayer of faith itself is so rare, and especially because when found
it receives almost no support in the church as a whole. Prayer for such matters should be the
outcome of the faith and intercession of the whole body of believers. So it was in the beginning.
When Peter was delivered from prison it was because "prayer was made without ceasing of the
Church unto God for him." And when Paul knelt alone in the chamber of Publius to intercede for
his father's recovery, it was equally true that his petition was an expression of what was the
unanimous and concurring faith of the whole Church. But it is not easy for an individual prayer
to make headway against the adverse sentiment of the great body of Christians. For example let an
earnest soul pray for a revival in a church where the prevailing view is that of indifferent
unbelief, or positive disbelief in revivals, and would he be likely to obtain the coveted
blessing? The promise stands fast, indeed, "How much more shall your heavenly Father give the
Holy Spirit unto them that ask him;" but the condition, "They were all with one accord in one
place," is wanting. How shall one man move the great ship before the wind by hold-
198 THE VERDICT
ing up his pocket handkerchief to the breeze, when all the mariners refuse to spread the
sails? And how shall one Christian's faith prevail against the non-consent of the whole Church ?
There may be scattered instances of blessing in such circumstances, but there can be no
wide-spread exhibitons of divine power. They tell us that all the heat communicated to a cake of
ice short of that which would bring it to the melting point becomes latent and disappears. Faith,
likewise, may become inoperative and fruitless in the Church when multiplied a hundred fold by
unbelief.
But there is another answer also to the question. It is as true here as in any other
field that God acts sovereignly and according to his own determinate counsel. He sees it best to
recover one person at the instance of his people's prayers, and he may see it best to withhold
such recovery for the time from another.* And we would most strongly emphasize the importance of
offering our supplications for this as for all mercies in the most loyal and hearty and
unreserved submission to the will of our Father. He has told us that "all things work
* " Nor are signs wrought continually, but as often as it shall have pleased God and
seems necessary; whence it is evident that to work signs depends not on the option of man, but on
the will of God." Bullinger.
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together for good to them that love God," but we are not to conclude that they all work
in one direction. There are blessings and trials, joys and sorrows, pains and pleasures, sickness
and health, falls and recoveries, advances and retrogressions, but the final issue and resultant
of all these experiences is our highest good. This we conceive to be the meaning of the promise.
And when we remember that God superintends all this complex system of providences, and foresees
the final effect of each seperate element in it, we see how becoming it is that we should bring
every petition into subjection" to the will of the Lord. When Agustine was contemplating leaving
Africa and going into Italy, his pious mother, fearing the effect which the seductions of Rome
might have upon his ardent nature, besought the Lord with many tears and cries that he might not
be permitted to go. He was suffered to go, however, and in Milan he found his soul's salvation.
"Thou didst deny her," says Augustine in his confessions, "thou didst deny her what she prayed
for at that time that thou mightest grant her what she prayed for always." This is a perfect
illustration of the point which we are emphasizing. God may withhold
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the recovery which we ask today because he will give to us that "saving health " which we
ask always. He may permit temporal death to come, in order that he may preserve his child unto
life eternal. How little we can know what is best for us and what shall work our highest good!
Isaac Barrow, the eminent and devout theologian was so wayward and wicked while a lad that his
Christian father confessed that he had prayed "that if it pleased God to take away any of his
children it might be his son Isaac." What would the Church have lost had this prayer been
granted? On the other hand, the mother of Charles I., it is said, bent above the cradle of her
infant boy when he had been given up to die, and refused to be comforted unless God would spare
his life. His life was spared; but how gladly would that mother have had it otherwise could she
have looked forward to the day when his head fell bleeding and ghastly beneath the stroke of the
executioner's ax? Such illustrations open a broad field for reflection, and suggest the real
limitation of the prayer of faith as related to healing, viz., the gracious and all wise will of
God.
And this is the same limitation which belongs
OF CANDOR. 201
to the entire realm of intercessory prayer. " Holding such views in regard to the
efficacy of prayer for recovery from disease, why should you have any sick persons in your
flock?" is the question which a clerical critic propounds. We shall answer by propounding a much
harder one. Holding such views in regard to the efficacy of prayer for the conversion of souls,
and resting on the plain declaration of scripture concerning God our Saviour that he "will have
all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth," why should our questioner allow
any sinner to remain unconverted under his ministry? And yet is it not his sorrowful experience
that of all that come under his word and prayers, only a few comparatively give evidence of being
regenerated? Alas! that we must all concede that this is our observation. But because I have to
admit that all will not hear, and all will not repent and be converted, shall I therefore refuse
to persist in preaching and warning and rebuke and intercession, "that I might by all means save
some?" Indeed not! And since the sure word of promise is given to us on this matter also, let us
hold fast our confidence without wavering, so that whether there be few or
2O2 THE VERDICT
many who shall be recovered we may by all means heal some. Such we believe to be a candid
verdict in regard to the promise concerning prayer for the sick.
And now what shall be said in regard to the testimony brought forward? It would be
considered very weighty, we venture to believe, were it adduced in support of a generally
accepted theory. When evidence and established conviction are put in the same scale they tip the
beam very easily, but testimony against a heavy make-weight of unbelief and prejudice makes slow
headway. If the story of Augustine, or Luther, or Livingston, or Fox, or Dorothea Trudel were
found in the gospels how we should fight for its genuineness. " Ah, yes," you say, "because the
gospels are inspired, and we should not dare to question any statement recorded on their pages."
But miracles were given to accredit inspiration, and not inspiration to accredit miracles. The
first miracles got themselves credited simply on human testimony, on the evidence of men and
women like ourselves, who saw, and believed and reported. And when they had become established as
facts, then their weight went to prove the divine origin
OF CANDOR. 2O3
of Christianity. It is easy for us to say that the works recorded in the gospels are
supernatural, because the system to which they belong is supernatural. That is true; but it is
reading backward. The first Christians could not reason in that way, because the premise from
which we argue was not established in their day. No! The miracles of the New Testament became
established in. precisely the same manner as any alleged fact is proved today, by the evidence of
honest, candid and truthful witnesses, who saw and bare record. If, therefore, our theologians
choose to treat the narratives of such godly and truthful men as Augustine, and Luther, and
Baxter as "silly tales" they must be careful that they do not build a portico to "the school of
Hume," from which their pupils will easily and logically graduate from the denial of modern
miracles to the denial of all miracles.
Nor does age have anything to do with determining the value of signs and wonders. A young
miracle is entitled to the same respect as an old one, provided it bears the same credentials.
And if we give way to the subtle illusion that the marvelous is to be credited just in proportion
to its
2O4 THE VERDICT
distance from us; if we show ourselves forward to admit that the Lord wrought great and
mighty signs eighteen hundred years ago, and utterly averse to conceding that the same Lord does
anything of the kind today, then we must be very careful again that we do not give countenance to
the mythical theory of miracles, which has been so strongly pushed in this generation. Do we
believe that the credibility of miracles depends on the magnifying power of distance; that
antiquity must stand behind them as a kind of convex mirror to render them sufficiently large to
be distinctly seen? How we revolt from such an imputation ! Yet let us be cautious that we do not
give occasion for it, by emphasizing, as we cannot too strongly, the great things that the Lord
did by our fathers, while we utterly refuse to believe that he does any such things by their
sons. Let us not forget that the Jews in Christ's day were condemned for denying the wonderful
works wrought in their own generation, and not for disbelieving those done by Elijah and Elisha
nine hundred years before. The defenders of New Testament miracles are numbered by hundreds, and
there is no special danger of a breach in the ramparts of Christianity at that
OF CANDOR. 205
point. The question of God's supernatural working today and to-morrow is the one where
havoc 'is being wrought. Unbelief shading off from rationalism to liberal evangelicism is doing
its utmost to give away our most precious heritage. With how many is regeneration merely a
repairing of the old nature by culture, instead of a miraculous communication of the divine life!
How many regard the promised coming of Christ in glory as simply a new phase of providence
effected by the turning of the kaleidoscope of history ! To how many is Satan only a concrete
symbol of evil, so that their denial of the reality of the infernal has issued in a disbelief in
the Supernal! To how many is inspiration only a higher state of intellectual exaltation; and
resurrection an elimination or spiritual release, effected by the dissolving chemistry of death !
To read the utterances put forth by Christian teachers in these directions within the last few
years is enough to startle one and make him cry out in the strong words of Edward Irving: "Oh the
serpent cunning of this liberal spirit, it is killing our children; it has already slain its tens
and thousands; this city is sick unto death, and dying of the mortal wounds which she
206 THE VERDICT
hath received from it." Therefore, let us be cautious that by taking up the current sneer
about prodigies and wonders we do not get our eyes blinded and our ears dull of hearing so as to
be utterly unable to discern any divine manifestations in case they should be made.
As to the practice involved in this discussion: Can it be of any service for
authenticating the truth of Christianity today to show examples of men and women healed of
sickness through faith in the Great Physician? So far as our observation goes, the most powerful
effect of such experiences is upon the subjects themselves, in the marked consecration and
extraordinary spiritual anointing which almost invariably attend them. We can bear unqualified
testimony on this point. Of a large number within the circle of our acquaintance, who have been
healed, or who have imagined themselves healed, we have never seen one who did not give evidence
of having received an unusual enduement of spiritual power. It has seemed as though the double
blessing of forgiveness and health had been followed by the bestowment of a double portion of the
Spirit. If we could let the objectors to our doctrine witness
OF CANDOR. 207
some of the examples of alleged healing which have been under our eyes for several years
— inebriates who, after half a lifetime wasted in desperate struggles for reform, declare that
their appetite was instantly eradicated in answer to intercessory prayer; invalids lifted in an
hour from couches where they had lain for years; and now their adoring gratitude, their joyful
self-surrender, their burning zeal in the service of the Lord — if we could let our critics
witness these things we believe that the most stubborn among them would at least be willing that
these happy subjects of — something should remain under the illusion that they have had the
Saviour's healing touch laid upon them.
Such we believe to be the verdict of candor upon this whole question. We do not ask that
the highest place in Christian doctrine be given to faith in supernatural healing. We readily
admit that grace is vastly more important than miracles; but miracles have their place as shadows
of greater things. We urge that they may hold this place, that we may be helped thereby the
better to apprehend the substance.
When the Emperor Theodosius had on a great
208 THE VERDICT OF CANDOR.
occasion given release to all the prisoners confined within his realm he exclaimed: "And
now would to God I could open all the tombs and give life to the dead ! " If we could sometimes
see the Lord unlocking the prison-house of sickness and giving reprieve from the impending
penalty of death to those long in bondage it might be a salutary pledge and reminder of our
Redeemer's purpose to bring forth the prisoners from the tomb in that day when he shall quicken
our mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in us; it might sound in our ears with repeated
emphasis the Lord's word, "turn ye to the stronghold ye prisoners of hope; even today do I
declare that I will render double unto thee."
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