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
II.
THE TESTIMONY OF SCRIPTURE.
In the atonement of Christ there seems to be a foundation laid for faith in bodily
healing. Seems — we say, for the passage to which we refer is so profound and unsearchable in its
meaning that one would be very careful not to speak dogmatically in regard to it. But it is at
least a deep and suggestive truth that we have Christ set before us as the sickness-bearer as
well as the sin-bearer of his people. In the gospel it is written, " And he cast out devils and
healed all that were sick, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the prophet
saying, Himself took our infirmities and bare our sicknesses."* Something more than sympathetic
fellowship with our sufferings is evidently referred to here. The yoke of his cross by which he
lifted our iniquities took hold also of our diseases; so that it is in some sense true that as
God " made
*Matt. 8: 17.
OF SCRIPTURE 17
him to be sin for us who knew no sin," so he made him to be sick for us who knew no
sickness. He who entered into mysterious sympathy with our pain which is the fruit of sin, also
put himself underneath our pain which is the penalty of sin. In other words the passage seems to
teach that Christ endured vicariously our diseases as well as our iniquities.*
If now it be true that our Redeemer and substitute bore our sicknesses, it would be
natural to reason at once that he bore them that we might not bear them. And this inference is
especially strengthened from the fact, that when the Lord Jesus removed the burden of disease
from "all that were sick," we are told that it was done "that
* Dr. Hovey commenting on this passage says: " The words quoted by the evangelist are
descriptive in the original passage of vicarious suffering. It is next to impossible to
understand them otherwise. Hence in the miraculous healing of disease, a fruit if not a penalty
of sin, Jesus appears to have had a full sense of the evil and pain which he removed. His anguish
in the garden and on the cross was but the culmination of that which he felt almost daily while
healing the sick, cleansing the leprous or forgiving the penitent. By the holy sharpness of his
vision he pierced quite through the veil of sense and natural cause, and saw the moral evil, the
black root of all disorder, the source of all bodily suffering. He could therefore heal neither
bodily nor spiritual disease without a deep consciousness of his special relation to man as the
substitute, the Redeemer, the Lamb of God who was to bear the penalty of the world's guilt." The
Miracles of Christ, p. 120.
18 THE TESTIMONY
the scripture might be fulfilled, Himself took our infirmities and bare our sicknesses."
Let us remember what our theology is in regard to atonement for sin. "Christ bore your sins, that
you might be delivered from them," we say to the penitent. Not sympathy — a suffering with, but
substitution— a suffering for, is our doctrine of the Cross; and therefore we urge the
transgressor to accept the Lord Jesus as his sin-bearer, that he may himself no longer have to
bear the pains and penalties of his disobedience. But should we shrink utterly from reasoning
thus concerning Christ as our pain-bearer? We do so argue to some extent at least.. For we hold
that in its ultimate consequences the atonement affects the body as well as the soul of man.
Sanctification is the consummation of Christ's redemptive work for the soul; and resurrection is
the consummation of his redemptive work for the body. And these meet and are fulfilled at the
coming and kingdom of Christ.
But there is a vast intermediate work of cleansing and renewal effected for the soul. Is
there none of healing and recovery for the body? Here, to make it plain, is the Cross of Christ;
yonder is
OF SCRIPTURE. 19
the Coming of Christ. These are the two piers of redemption, spanned by the entire
dispensation of the Spirit and by all the ordinances and offices of the gospel. At the cross we
read this two-fold declaration: —
" Who his own self bare our sins." " Himself bare our sicknesses." At the coming we find
this two-fold work promised: —
"The sanctification of the Spirit." " The redemption of the body." The work of
sanctification for the spirit stretches on from the cross to the crown, progressive and
increasing till it is completed. Does the work of the body's redemption touch only at these two
remote points? Has the gospel no office of healing and blessing to proclaim meantime for the
physical part of man's nature? In answering this question we only make the following suggestions,
which point significantly in one direction.
Christ's ministry was a two-fold ministry, effecting constantly the souls and the bodies
of men. " Thy sins are forgiven thee," and " Be whole of thy plague," are parallel announcements
of the Saviour's work which are found constantly running on side by side.
2O THE TESTIMONY
The ministry of the apostles, under the guidance of the Comforter, is the exact facsimile
of the Master's. Preaching the kingdom and healing the sick; redemption for the soul and
deliverance for the body — these are its great offices and announcements. Certain great promises
of the gospel have this double reference to pardon and cure. The commission for the world's
evangelization bids its messengers stretch out their hands to the sinner with the message, " He
that believeth shall be saved," and to " lay hands on the sick and they shall recover." The
promise by James, concerning the prayer of faith, is that it " shall save the sick, and if he
have committed sins they shall be forgiven him." Thus this two-fold ministry of remission of sins
and remission of sickness extends through the days of Christ and that of the apostles.
We only suggest these facts, leaving the example and acts and promises of the Lord and
his apostles to stretch out their silent index in the direction which our argument will
obediently pursue throughout this discussion.
Only one other fact need be alluded to—the subtle, mysterious, and clearly recognized
relation
OF SCRIPTURE. 21
of sin and disease. The ghastly flag of leprosy, flung out in the face of Miriam, told
instantly that the pirate sin had captured her heart. Not less truly did the crimson glow of
health announce her forgiveness when afterwards the Lord had pardoned her and restored her to his
fellowship. And it is obvious at once that our Redeemer cannot forgive and eradicate sin without
in the same act disentangling the roots which that sin has struck into our mortal bodies.
He is the second Adam come to repair the ruin of the first. And in order to accomplish
this he will follow the lines of man's transgression back to their origin, and forward to their
remotest issue. He will pursue the serpent trail of sin, dispensing his forgiveness and
compassion as he goes, till at last he finds the wages of sin, and dies its death on the cross;
and he will follow the wretched track of disease with his healing and recovery, till in his
resurrection he shall exhibit to the world the first fruits of these redeemed bodies, in which "
this corruptible shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on immortality."
From this mysterious and solemn doctrine of the
22 THE TESTIMONY
gospel, let us turn now to some of its clear and explicit promises.
We will take first the words of the gospel according to Mark: " These signs shall follow
them that believe: in my name shall they cast out devils; they shall speak with other tongues;
they shall take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly thing it shall not hurt them; they
shall lay their hands on the sick and they shall recover." *
It is important to observe that this rich cluster of miraculous promises all hangs by a
single stem, faith. And this is not some exclusive, or esoteric faith. The same believing to
which is attached the promise of salvation, has joined to it also the promise of miraculous
working. Nor is there any ground for limiting this promise to apostolic times and apostolic men,
as has been so violently attempted. The links of the covenant are very securely forged, "He that
believeth and is baptized shall be saved," in any and every age of the Christian dispensation. So
with one consent the church has interpreted the words, " And these signs shall follow them that
believe" in every generation and
* Chap, xvi: 17, 18.
OF SCRIPTURE. 23
period of the church's history;—so the language compels us to conclude
And let us not unbraid this two-fold cord of promise, holding fast to the first strand
because we know how to use it, and flinging the other back to the apostles because we know not
how to use it. When our Lord gives command to the twelve, as he sends them forth, " to heal all
manner of sickness and all manner of diseases," we might conclude that this was an apostolic
commission, and one which we could not be warranted in applying to ourselves. But here the
promise is not only to the apostles, but to those who should believe on Christ through the word
of these apostles; or as Bullinger the Reformer very neatly puts it in his comment on the
passage, to "both the Lords disciples and the disciples of the Lord's disciples." *
Whatever practical difficulties we may have in regard to the fulfillment of this word,
these* ought not to lead us to limit it where the Lord has not
? " Et discipuli Domini, et discipulorum Domini discipuli." And to show his belief in the
fulfillment of the promise, Bullinger adds, " To this the Acts of the Apostles bear witness.
Ecclesiastical history bares witness to the same. Lastly, the present times tear witness; wherein
through confidence in the name of Christ numbers greatly afflicted and shattered with disease are
restored afresh to health."
24 THE TESTIMONY
limited it. For if reason or tradition throws one half of this illustrious promise into
eclipse, the danger is that the other half may become involved. Indeed we shall not soon forget
the cogency with which we heard a skillful skeptic use this text against one who held the common
opinion concerning it. Urged to "believe on the Lord Jesus Christ," that he might be saved, he
answered: " How can I be sure that this part of the promise will be kept with me, when, as you
admit, the other part is not kept with the church of today?" And certainly, standing on the
traditional ground, one must be dumb before such reasoning. The only safe position is to assert
emphatically the perpetuity of the promise, and with the same emphasis to admit the general
weakness and failure of the church's faith in appropriating it.* For who does not see that a
confession of human inability is a far safer and more rational refuge for the Christian than an
implication of the divine changeableness and limitation. There is a phrase of the apostle Paul
which has always struck us as containing marvellous keenness and wisdom if not covert
*"The reason why many miracles are not now wrought is not so much become faith is
established, as that unbelief reigns."— Bengel.
OF SCRIPTURE. 25
irony — "What the law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh." The law must
not be impugned by even a suspicion; " the law of the Lord is perfect." But there has been utter
failure under its working — the perfection which it requires has not appeared. Rashly and
dangerously, it would seem, the apostle has arraigned the law, telling us what it " could not do"
and wherein it was "weak"— and then, having brought us to the perilous edge of disloyalty, he
suddenly turns and puts the whole fault on us where it belongs — " What the law could not do in
that it was weak through the flesh." The one weak spot in the law is human nature; there is where
the break is sure to come; there is where the fault is sure to lie. In like manner this great
promise, with which Christ's commission is enriched and authenticated, has failed only through
our unbelief. It is weak through the weakness of our faith, and inoperative through lack of our
co-operating obedience.* We believe therefore that whatever difficulties there may be in us,
there is but one attitude for us to
*"It is the want of faith in our age which is the greatest hindrance to the stronger and
more marked appearance of that miraculous power which is working here and there in quiet
concealment. Unbelief is the final and most important reason for the retrogression of miracles."
— Christlieb's Modern Doubt, p. 336.
26 THE TESTIMONY
take as expounders of the scripture, that of unqualified assent.
The treatment which the Commentator Stier gives to this passage is truly refreshing. It
is a brawny Saxon exegesis laying hold of a text, to cling to it, not to cull from it; to crown
it with an amen ! not to condition it with a date. For he puts the two sayings side by side and
bids us look at them; (Greek omitted) " He that believeth; shall be saved:" (Greek omitted) "Them
that believe; these signs shall follow." And then he gives us these strong words. " Both the one
and the other apply to ourselves down to the present day and indeed for all future time. Every
one applies the first part of the saying to ourselves: teaching everywhere that faith and baptism
are necessary in all ages to salvation, and that unbelief in all ages excludes from it. But what
right has any to separate the words that Jesus immediately added from his former words? Where is
it said that these former words have reference to all men and all Christians, but that the
promised signs which should follow those who believe referred solely to the Christians of the
first age? What God hath joined together, let not man put asunder."
OF SCRIPTURE. 27
It should be observed however, that while the same word is employed in both clauses of
this text, there is a change in number from the singular to the plural form. "He that believeth
and is baptized shall be saved." The promise of eternal life is to personal faith, and to every
individual on the ground of his faith. " Them that believe, these signs shall follow." The
promise of miracles is to the faithful as a body. The church has come into existence so soon as
any have believed and been baptized; and thus this guarantee of miraculous signs seems to be to
the church in its corporate capacity. "Are all workers of miracles? have all the gifts of
healing? do all speak with tongues?" asks the apostle. Nay, but some employ these offices, so
that the gifts are found in the church as a whole. For the church is "the body of Christ," and to
vindicate its oneness with the Head it shall do the things which he did, as well as speak the
words which he spake. How significant the place where this promise is found! It was given just as
the Lord was to be received up into heaven to become "Head over all things to his church." It is
Elijah's mantle let fall upon Elisha; so that having this, the disciple can repeat the miracles
of the
28 THE TESTIMONY
Master. Oh timid church, praying for a "double portion of the Spirit" of the ascending
prophet, and having his promise "greater works than these shall ye do, because I go to my
Father," and yet afraid to claim even a fragment of his miracle working power! We conclude
therefore that this text teaches that the miraculous gifts were bestowed to abide in the church
to the end, though not that every believer should be endowed with them.
This promise given in Mark emerges in performance in the Acts of the Apostles. But it is
significant and to be carefully observed, that the miraculous gifts are not found exclusively in
the hands of the Apostles. Stephen and Philip and Barnabas, exercised them. These did not belong
to the twelve, to that special and separated body of disciples with whom it has been said, that
the gifts were intended to remain. It was not Stephen an apostle, but " Stephen a man full of
faith and of the Holy Ghost—" " Stephen full of faith and power' that "did great wonders and
miracles among the people."* We in these days cannot be apostles: but we are commanded to be "
filled with
*2 Kings ii; 9,15. *Acts vi; 5,8.
OF SCRIPTURE. 29
the Spirit," and therefore are at least required and enjoined to have Stephen's
qualifications. According to the teaching in Corinthians it is as members of Christ's body and
partakers of his Spirit, that we receive these truths.*
We come now to consider the promise in James v: 14, 15. "Is any sick among you? Let him
call for the elders of the Church; and let them pray over him anointing him with oil in the name
of the Lord. And the prayer of faith shall save the sick, and the Lord shall raise him up: and if
he have committed sins they shall be forgiven him."
Now let us note the presumption there is that this passage refers to an established and
perpetual usage in the Church.
That command in the great commission —" Baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of
the Son, and of the Holy Ghost," appears in the Acts of the apostles in constant exercise; and in
the
*" You say that Christ Jesus and his Apostles and Messengers were endued with power from
on high not only to preach the word for conversion but also with power of casting out Devils and
healing bodily diseases. I answer, as an holy witness of Christ Jesus once answered a Bishop. ' I
am a member of Christ Jesus as well as Peter himself.' The least Believer and Follower of Jesus
partakes of the nature and spirit of him their holy head and husband as well M the strongest and
holiest that ever did or suffered for his holy name." ROGER Williams’ Experiments of Spiritual
life and Health, 1652.
3O THE TESTIMONY
letters of the Apostles as explained unfolded and enforced.*
The injunction given at the institution of the supper "This do in remembrance of me"
appears in the Acts of the Apostles in constant exercise; and in the letters of the apostles as
explained and unfolded, and enforced, +
The promise given also in the great commission, " They shall lay their hands on the sick
and they shall recover" appears in the Acts of the Apostles in constant exercise, and in the
letters of the apostles as explained, unfolded and enforced. ++ Thus this office like the great
ordinances of Christianity rests on the three-fold support of promise and practice and precept.
And we cannot too strongly emphasize this fact that what was given by our Lord in promise before
his ascension should appear as an established usage in the church after his ascension. For we all
insist that the church of the apostles was the model for all time. When we are called "followers
of the Lord" we might rightly protest that though his followers, we surely could not be expected
to walk in his steps as he enters the field
*Rom. vi: 3,4. Col. ii: 12. 1 Pet. iii: 21.
+Acts. 46: 1 Cor. x: 11.
++ 1 Cor. xii: 29. James v: 14, 15.
OF SCRIPTURE. 31
of the miraculous. When we hear Paul saying "Be ye followers of me, as I am of Christ" we
might well insist that we could not imitate him in working wonders since he is an apostle and we
only humble disciples. But when we read "For ye brethren became followers of the Churches of God
which in Judea are in Christ" we say "Yes! in every point and punctilio. For these are the
pattern for all churches in all time." So we all hold and teach. We believe that there is nothing
in all the ordering and furniture of the church which was present in the beginning which should
be absent now. And if we rejoice in having the laver and the bread of the ordinances, the
ministry of the word and prayer; not the less should we willingly be without the primitive
miraculous gifts which were like the Shechinah glory, the outward visible signs of God's presence
among his people.
To return now to the text which we are considering. Here is the calling for the elders of
the church — a voluntary appeal to the ministry and intercessions of the servants of God. Oil is
applied as a symbol of the communication of the Spirit, by whose power healing is effected. It
does not seem reasonable to suppose, that it is used for its medic-
32 THE TESTIMONY
inal properties. Because observe, it is the elders of the church, not the doctors of
physic, who are called to apply it; and it is accompanied by prayer, not by manipulations and
medications. As in Baptism the disciple confesses his faith in the cleansing power of Christ's
atonement, by the use of water; or, as in the Communion he declares his dependence on Christ for
spiritual sustenance, by the use of bread; so here he avows his faith in the saving health of the
Spirit by the use of oil.* In other words, this whole ceremony is a kind of sacramental
profession of faith in Jesus Christ as the Divine Physician acting through the Holy Ghost. Such
public profession of faith in Christ as the Healer the Lord seems rigidly to require, just as he
demands baptism as a confession of faith in him as the Redeemer. Neither in the forgiveness of
sin nor in the remission of sickness will he permit a clandestine blessing. There are many who
would gladly secure his healing virtue by stealth, laying hold of it secretly, but avoiding the
publicity and possible reproach of having applied to such a phy-
* Lange commenting on Mark vi: 13: " And they anointed with oil many that were sick and
healed them" says that oil here is "simply a symbolic medium of the miraculous work;" and that
"the anointing was a symbol of the bestowment of the Spirit as a preliminary condition of
healing."
OF SCRIPTURE. 33
sician. But this cannot be. The Lord will have an open acknowledgment of our faith. It
will be remembered that from the woman whom he healed of an issue of blood, he drew forth a
public confession before he pronounced that full and authoritative absolution from sickness,*
"go in peace and be whole of thy plague."
The promise of recovery is explicit and unconditional — "And the prayer of faith shall
save the sick and the Lord shall raise hint up; and if he have committed sins they shall be
forgiven him." Doubtless the words "prayer of faith " should be strongly emphasized. It is the
intercession accompanied by the special miraculous faith alluded to in the scriptures as "the
gift of faith," and "the gift of healing"—a faith which we believe to be not wanting in this age,
though comparatively so rare. And the words which Bengel italicizes in his Commentary ought to be
strongly marked — "Let them
*"Threfore when she held her peace trusting that she might still be undescryed, he
looked round about upon the people. This looking about was a gesture of him that courteously
required a confession of the benefit received. He would not utter her by name, lest he should
have seemed to hit her in the teeth with the good turn he did her. It was a pricke or provocation
given to make her to put away that unprofitable shamefasteners and to wryng out of her a holesome
confession." - Thomas Key.
34 THE TESTIMONY
use oil who are able by their prayers to obtain recovery for the sick; let those who
cannot do this abstain from the empty sign.” If the peculiar miraculous faith of which we speak
had utterly disappeared from the church, then it would certainly be best that the usage of
anointing should be wanting also, rather than continue as a hollow sign, or as in the extreme
unction of the church of Rome, a standing sacramental confession of inability to render any help
to the diseased.
But we are persuaded better things than this. We believe that there are those in our own
time who have humbly sought, and manifestly obtained this gift of prevailing faith. If the larger
majority of Christians, either through wrong teaching or indifference have willingly consented to
surrender this primitive birthright of the church, and have learned to say without emotion to the
sick, that lie at their doors "thy bruise is incurable, and thy wound is grevious, there is none
to plead thy cause that thou mayest be bound up;" there are some who are more jealous for the
Lord's honor in this matter. Because they believe that the miraculous gifts are for all ages,
they have thought it not covetous to seek them for them-
OF SCRIPTURE. 35
selves — and yet not for themselves, but that through them the Lord might still show
forth his glory. And why should it be thought a thing incredible that they may have obtained what
they sought? In the old dispensation were miracles of healing shut up within some narrow and
special age? Run through the list and see: — Abraham healing Abimelech and his household by his
prayers to God; Moses crying unto God for Miriam, " Heal her now, O God I beseech thee," and the
Lord, answering with the promise that after seven days her leprosy should depart; God's cure of
the bitten Israelites in answer to Moses' prayer, and through a look of faith at the brazen
serpent; Naaman the Syrian recovered of his leprosy by the faith of Elisha; Hezekiah raised up
from his death bed in answer to prayer and his life lengthened out fifteen years, and other
instances which we have not space to refer to. These miracles of healing were not confined to the
opening of a dispensation, but belonged to its entire history. Indeed intercession for healing
was a part of the very ritual of Jewish worship and its answer a part of God's explicit covenant
with his people. Hear Solomon's prayer at the dedication of the
36 THE TESTIMONY
Temple. "Whatsoever sore, or whatsoever sickness there be: then what prayer, or what
supplication soever shall be made of any man, or of all thy people Israel, then hear Thou from
heaven Thy dwelling-place, and forgive."* And hear God's promise in reference to this same
matter. " I have heard thy prayer and thy supplication that thou hast made before me: I have
hallowed this house to put my name there forever."+ "If I shut up heaven, or if I send pestilence
among my people; if my people humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their
wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their
land."++ Here is a broad promise conditioned indeed by the repentance and faith of the people of
Israel, but fenced by no statute of limitations, shutting up God's mercies within a certain
miraculous era. And we know from the history of prophets and saints how constantly this promise
opened to the key of faith and poured forth its treasures. This under the old covenant! How much
greater things might we expect under the new, after that the Lord had ascended up on high and
given gifts to men — the Comforter the great-
*2 Chron.vi: 28-30.
+ 1 Kings ix: 3.
++ 2 Chron. vii: 13, 14.
OF SCRIPTURE, 37
est and supreme gift to abide perpetually in the church; and with him and through him,
"miracles, gifts of healings, helps, governments, diversities of tongues."
It is comparatively easy indeed to credit miracles in these olden times of patriarchs and
prophets, because of the enchantment of distance and the halo of superior sanctity through which
the men of these times are seen. But antiquity has no monopoly of God's gifts, and ancient men as
such had no entrie into God's treasure house which is denied to us. How very significantly James
enforces the, doctrine, "the effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much." After
the exhortation, " pray one for another that ye may be healed"— as though reading the thoughts
which might come into our minds, of the superior faith of prophets and the higher privilege of
apostles the Spirit adds, " Elias was a man subject to like passions as we are — "Not some
privileged courtier of the King of kings, not some high and titled chancellor of the exchequer of
heaven having rights of access and intercourse with God of which we know nothing — "and he prayed
earnestly that it might not rain: and it rained not on the earth for the space of
38 THE TESTIMONY
three years and six months, and he prayed again and the heavens gave rain and the earth
brought forth her fruit." If he could shut and open heaven, not the less can you the children of
today, since he is a brother and kinsman in the same bonds of frailty, and fear, and also a son
and disciple of "the same Lord over all who is rich unto all that call upon him."
Such is the Spirit's practical enforcement of this great promise of healing. How much we
need to ponder it! How much we need to relearn the truth, that, though Christ who heard the cry
of the suffering and touched them with healing, has gone far off "above all heavens," and ages
have been added to his eternal years " whose goings forth have been of old from everlasting,"
still "his hand is not shortened that it cannot save; neither is his ear heavy that it cannot
hear."
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