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
VIII.
THE TESTIMONY OF EXPERIENCE.
"Prove me now herewith " is the challenge which the Lord has given in his word; and there
are many in the present generation who have accepted and tested his challenge on the promises of
bodily recovery.
We wish in this chapter to consider the experiences and testimony of certain, who within
our own times have exercised a ministry of healing. Let us not be misunderstood. We do not
attribute to any man the power of curing sickness, though we think many are called to be
instruments to that end. A physician is a mediator between nature and our suffering humanity. And
his skill depends solely upon his ability to interpret and apply the laws of health to the sick,
and to bring the sufferer into contact with the recuperative forces of the natural world. In like
manner if the primitive "gifts of healing " are still bestowed in the Church, as we believe,
those endowed with them have power only
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through the mediation of their faith and prayers. We are told that Paul entered into the
house of Publius, and, finding his father sick, "prayed and laid his hands on him and healed
him." But we do not understand from this that the apostle had any inherent personal power to heal
disease; else why did he pray? Prayer is touching the hem of Christ's garment by the human
intercessor, while in the laying on of hands he at the same moment touches the body of the
sufferer. It is simply, in a word, the repetition of what was done again and again during the
earthly ministry of our Lord, the bringing of the sick to Jesus for healing and cleansing. " Why
look ye so earnestly on us, as though by our own power or holiness we had made this man to walk
?" asks Peter of those who were wondering at the miracle at the Beautiful Gate. If it were a
question of human power or holiness we might be quite ready to relegate the gifts of healing to
the apostolic age, confessing our utter lack of these qualifications. But since it is a question
of the power and holiness of "Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, today, and forever," it is quite
another matter. " If thou canst believe " is the question now. " A year famous for believing,"
is the
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language in which Romaine designated a certain unusual twelvemonth of his ministry. If
such a year should be graciously injected into the calendar of any Christian life it would be a
year of success. For believing is knowing God and finding the depths of power and privilege that
are hidden for us in him: and "the people that do know their God shall be strong and do exploits
" says the scripture.*
Now, there have been some in our day who have had faith to take the Lord at his word in
connection with the promises of healing. And having, as they believed, proved him, and found him
faithful, their testimony will be deeply instructive to our readers.
Dorothea Trudel is a name especially honored in this relation. The story of her life and
labors in connection with the home for invalids in the Swiss village of Mannedorf on Lake Zurich
has been very widely read, and has caused great searchings of heart in many who have pondered
it.+ The Lord provides deep roots when there are to be wide-spreading branches. And this life
whose boughs so ran over the wall, and stretched
* Dan. 11: 3a. + Dorothea Trudel, or The Prayer of Faith London: Morgan and Scott
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beyond the bounds of ordinary service, was unusually rooted and established.
The mother from whom she received her birth and early training was so remarkable for her
faith and consecration that, though living in the utmost obscurity and poverty, her biography has
been placed among those of the illustrious Christian women of the ages.* The wife of a brutal and
godless husband, and so cut off from human sympathy that there was none but God to whom she could
appeal in her need, she was schooled by this bitter tuition into a life of faith and absolute
dependence on God. She looked to Him for food for her family when they must otherwise have
starved; for deliverance when they must otherwise have perished; for healing when they must
otherwise have died. Dorothea grew up with perpetual exhibitions before her eye of the Lord's
restoring of the sick for a poor household which could employ no other physician. The faith which
it is so difficult for us to recover was her native inheritance. Hence what we doubt so painfully
whether we may do, she bitterly condemned her-
* Consecrated Women. London: Hodder and Stoughton.
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self for not doing when she Had subsequently neglected it.
After her parents had died we find her engaged in labors of love among the working
people; teaching them the gospel, and seeking to lead them to the Saviour. How her personal use
of the prayer of faith begun in connection with these labors she tells in the following words:
" Four of them fell ill, and, as each could do as he pleased, all four summoned a doctor.
It was remarked, however, that they got worse after taking the medicine, until, at last, the
necessity became so pressing that / went as a worm to the Lord, and laid our distress before him.
I told him how willingly I would send for an elder, as is commanded in James v., but, as there
was not one, I must go to my sick ones in the faith of the Canaanitish woman, and, without
trusting to any virtue in my hand, I would lay it upon them. I did so, and, by the Lords
blessing, all four recovered. Most powerfully then did the sin of disobeying God's word strike
me, and most vividly did the simple life of faith, the carrying out just what God orders, stand
before me."
Soon after she gave herself wholly to the Master's work; and as the effects of her
evangelistic efforts, and the answers to her earnest prayers were noticed, she was importuned to
receive patients into her house. Consenting reluctantly
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the life-work thus began, from which was to flow such a blessing to the souls and bodies
of men.
Her methods were very simple: the Bible and prayer were her medicines. She dealt with the
soul first, using every effort to bring it to faith and obedience to the Gospel; she prayed for
the body, laying hands on the sick and anointing them with oil in the name of the Lord. In all
this she recognized the necessity of the most absolute consecration on her part and that of her
helpers, and of the most surrendering faith on the part of the sick. Very beautifully does she
thus speak of the believer's privilege:
" In the New Testament we are called kings, and priests. Power accompanied the anointing
of the kings, and if we really belong to the kingly priesthood shall not strength to heal the
sick by prayer come on us also through the anointing of the Spirit? If we only wear our Levite
dress, and are consecrated in soul and body if we are only prepared to be vessels of his grace
it is his part to bless. Oh, that we were willing not to do more than God would have us do,
then would this day be one of great reviving to us! "
Thus her work was inaugurated, and thus was she inducted by unseen hands into her
remarkable ministry.
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Rarely have we traced the story of a life whose consecration was so even and unreserved.
Among the sayings which she left on record is this. "The heart ought not to be an inn where the
Lord sometimes comes, but a home where he always abides." It was her calling for many years to
keep an inn where the sick could lodge, a hospice into which the suffering and distracted
wanderer could turn for solace. These came and went with the recurring months, but so constantly
was the Lord abiding with her, that it might be said according to Luther's beautiful simile that
the way-farer coming and knocking at her heart and asking " who lives here ? " would hear the
instant answer from within, "Jesus Christ." Not that she ever claimed as much; for none was ever
more humble and self depreciatory; but her life declared it. It comes out in her biography that
her prayers were sometimes prolonged into midnight: that her soul so wrought with intense desire
that often the sweat would stand in beads upon her forehead. Once in busy labors among the sick
she passed the whole day without food, utterly forgetting the claims of nature in her absorbing
devotion to her work; and then finding it impossible to get food on account of
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the lateness of the hour she falls at Jesus' feet, and begs for that meat that the world
knows not of, and is so refreshed and filled that she goes all night in the strength of it.
Such rare and Christ-like consecration has always proved an apt soil for the
manifestation of the miraculous; especially when chastened and fertilized by bitter persecutions.
And this token which the Scripture promises to "all who will live godly in Christ Jesus" was not
wanting to her, as the spirit to endure it with unresenting meekness was not wanting. "I have had
enemies," she writes "both known and unknown in crowds; and thickly scattered falsehoods and
slanders were no pleasant portion. I write this with the feeling that whoever cannot bear,
without emotion, even the blackest falsehoods and slanders has yet to experience something of the
peace of God which is like an ocean without bounds." Medical men and others conceived great
hostility to her, and sought to convict her of malpractice in the courts; though it was shown in
testimony that most of her patients were such as had spent all their living upon physicians only
to be made worse; and that the only
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medicine she employed was prayer. Speaking of this adversity she says:
"But a storm was now to burst over the work; for in 1856 when the second house was filled
with invalids, and the Lord was working mightily we were fined sixty francs, and were ordered to
send away all the patients by a certain time. Though it was the most grevious day of my life I
obeyed the command; but the houses so hastily emptied, filled as fast as ever with the blind, the
lame, and the deaf, for whom the Lord did great things. Evil spirits were cast out of some of the
invalids by prayer, and the sufferer became instantly free. Many were delivered from the power of
darkness which had been exercised over their minds, though less visibly and outwardly and
received what we consider the highest and best blessing, that of being changed from wolves into
lambs."
In 1861 a second persecution was raised against this most saintly and inoffensive woman.
At the instigation of a physician, the magistrates imposed a heavy fine upon her, and ordered her
patients to be sent away. Then, through appeal to a higher tribunal, her case was brought into
court, and the world was made acquainted through the testimony of scores of living witnesses,
with the wonderful work which God had wrought through her prayers.
Mr. Spondlin an eminent advocate of Zurich
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volunteered to conduct her case; Prelate Von Kopff, Prof. Tholuck and many others were
witnesses on her behalf, and the result was that she was fully acquitted and left undisturbed in
her gracious work. Henceforth her house which had too often through the malice of enemies been a
Bethaven "house of affliction," became only a Bethesda "house of mercy." If her own simple
record, confirmed by the word of scores who bore testimony at her trial, could prove that
miracles of healing were wrought in her house, the fact must be considered as established.
With a deep conviction that sin is often the hidden root of sickness, she dealt most
earnestly with the souls of her patients. "Confess your faults one to another and pray one for
another that ye may be healed," was an injunction that had a deeply practical meaning to her,
and often conviction and conversion were the first symptoms of physical convalescence.
"On one occasion a young artisan arrived, in whom cancer had made such progress as to
render any approach to him almost unbearable. At the Bible lessons this once frivolous man, now
an earnest inquirer, learned where the improvement must begin; and from the day that he confessed
his sins against God and man, the disease abated.
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Some time afterwards he acknowledged one sin he had hitherto concealed, and then he
speedily recovered his bodily health and returned to his home cured in spirit also."
In some instances her prayers and her eager seeking for the will of God were long
continued before any sign of recovery was manifested: in some she gained the strongest impression
that it was not the Lord's will to restore them, and then she labored with unceasing diligence to
bring them into peace with God before they should die; in others healing was vouchsafed at once.
"A lady in S. had so injured her knee by a fall, that for weeks she lay in the greatest
agony. The doctor declared that dropsy would supervene, but the heavenly physician fulfilled
those promises which will abide until the end of the world, and by prayer and the laying on of
Dorothea's hands, the knee was cured in twenty-four hours, and the swelling vanished."
One giving an account of her arraignment says:
" During the course of the trial, authenticated cures were brought forward, it is said,
to the number of some hundreds. There was one of a stiff knee, that had been treated in vain by
the best physicians in France, Germany, and Switzerland; and one of an elderly man who could not
walk, and had also been given up by his physicians, but who soon dispensed with his crutches; a
man
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came with a burned foot, and the surgeons said it was a case for "either amputation or
death," and he also was cured; one of the leading physicians of Wurtemburg testified to the cure
of a hopeless patient of his own; another remained six weeks, and says he saw all kinds of
sicknesses healed. Cancer and fever have been treated with success; epilepsy and insanity more
frequently than any other forms of disease.'
Such was the ministry of healing and comfort carried on by this holy woman till the day
when she fell asleep in Jesus, and such was the blessed example which she left behind her.
Travellers tell us of a deep and secluded lake in Switzerland in whose crystal mirror the
reflection of distant mountains may be seen, though the mountains themselves are not visible to
the eye. In the tranquil, hidden life of this Swiss peasant girl, the image of the invisible
Saviour was clearly mirrored, and how many of those who knew her in life, and of those who have
read the story of her consecration since her death have therefrom caught a reflected glimpse of
the unseen Redeemer, and been quickened with new love to him, and a new sense of his present
power.
Samuel Zeller took up the work at Mannedorf as it dropped from the dead hands of sister
Dorothea. He is the son of the founder of a well-known boys'
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reformatory at Beuggen, near Basle, and brother, in-law of Gobat, late bishop at
Jerusalem. He had been a colaborer at the home before the death of its founder, and with much
prayer that the gifts of faith and of healing might rest upon him she had committed the work to
his care. Since her death the institution has continued with no apparent loss of power or
usefulness under his direction, he being aided by Miss Zeller, his. sister, and by several
devoted assistants. All the helpers, even to the servants, render their service as a labor of
love, in grateful return in most cases for the recovery which they have received at this home.
Mr. Zeller is a fervent evangelist, going out in every direction preaching the word, as
well as laboring " in season out of season " for the souls and bodies of those who come under his
care. From two houses the home has grown to ten, and they are always filled with patients, from
many nations. The same methods are employed as under his predecessor. He lays hands upon the
sick; he anoints with oil in the name of the Lord, and pleads the promise given in James, 5th
chapter; and his reports published year by year are full of striking instances alike of healing
and of conversion.
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He entertains no extravagant views of his mission. Holding most tenaciously to the
perpetuity of the promise: "The prayer of faith shall save the sick," he yet strongly recognizes
the sovereignty of God in the answer. To the question asked by a recent visitor, whether it is
not God's will" that all his children should be free from sickness, he replied that it is
evidently the Father's will that some should overcome sickness and that others should overcome in
sickness, and he quoted significantly the words of Heb. xi. chap.: Some, "through faith, subdued
kingdoms, wrought righteousness, obtained promises, stopped the mouths of lions, quenched the
violence of fire, escaped the edge of the sword, out of weakness were made strong, waxed valiant
in fight, turned to flight the armies of the aliens; Women received their dead raised to life
again; and others were tortured, not accepting deliverance, that they might obtain a better
resurrection. And others had trial of cruel mockings and scourgings, yea, moreover of bonds and
imprisonment. They were, stoned; they were sawn asunder, were tempted, were slain with the sword;
they wandered about in sheepskins and goat-skins, being destitute, afflicted, tor-
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mented (of whom the world was not worthy); they wandered in deserts, and in mountains,
and in dens and caves of the earth. And these all having obtained a good report through faith,"
&c.
A visit to this home was made a few years since by several eminent German preachers and
professors, and when one of these was asked his opinion of the work he answered; " Where the Holy
Spirit speaks with so much power, we can do no other wise than listen to his teaching; critical
analysis is out of the question." A quiet and deep spiritual life, a profound faith in the
promises of God, and a humble and self-denying surrender to his word and will are the traits
which have characterized the work from the beginning until the present time. The cases of
recovery at Mannedorf are so fully given in the report of the home that we need not here
reproduce them.
Pastor Blumhardt exercising his ministry in the small Lutheran village of Mottlingen, in
the heart of the Black Forest in Germany is another, who was greatly honored of God in his
prayers of faith. He died quite recently, but during many years of his active pastorate he was
credited with extraordinary grace in praying for the sick. Like oth-
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ers of whom we have spoken he had the ministry of healing thrust upon him. He first
became known for his unusual consecration, and for his zeal and ability in stirring up formal
Christians to renewed activity. He prayed for the diseased with such efficacy, and such well
attested cures were reported from his intercessions, that very soon he was resorted to by the
suffering from every direction. His home and neighborhood became a hospital, where not only
invalids, but sorrowing and sin-sick souls came for counsel and help. One writing of him says;
"as regards Blumhardt and his work, it may emphatically be said that the pleasure of the Lord
prospered in his hands." He seems to have taken no pains to report his success, having evidently
learned the secret that "the way to have a strong faith is to think nothing of yourself." But
others praised him if not his own lips, and he became widely known throughout his country as a
pastor who considered the sick bodies of his flock to be under his ministration as well as the
sick souls.
We give one instance from the life of Blumhardt, to show the vast influence which a
striking exhibition of miraculous power may exert upon the spiritual life of a people.
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On commencing his ministry in Mottlingen he found the place fearfully given over to
infidelity and sensuality. As his fervent preaching began to tell upon the community, Satan
seemed to come in, with great wrath to resist him. A case occurred in the village which exactly
resembled the instances of demoniacal possession recorded in scripture. The woman thus afflicted
endured the most excruciating agony. The Pastor being called in was quite appalled, having never
seen anything of the kind; and in his perplexity was inclined to be excused from interfering with
it. But some of his brethren in the Church who had listened to his strong utterances on the
subject of the prayer of faith, came to him saying. "If you do not wish to shake our belief in
your preaching you cannot retreat before the evil one." After a moment's thought, and silent
prayer he answered: "You are right; but to be in accord with the word of God you must also unite
with me in supplication according to James v: 14." What followed appears from the following
account by his friend Pastor Spittler. He says:
"Kindly permit me not to mention in this place the frightful details of her sufferings.
The medical man who attended the person was perfectly at a loss as to the case. He said, ' Is
there no cler-
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gyman in this village who can pray? I can do nothing here.' The minister (Blumhardt) who
had then the spiritual care of the village felt the force of such a reproach, joined as it was to
that of his believing people. He went to the house in the strength of faith. The more frightful
the manifestations of the destroying power of Satan became, with the more unshaken faith in the
all-overcoming power of the living God, that pastor continued to struggle against the assaults of
the infernal powers, till at last, after a tremendous outcry of the words, 'Jesus is Victor!
Jesus is Victor !' heard almost throughout the whole little village, the person found herself
freed from all the dreadful chains under which she had sighed so long, and often come to the very
brink of death."
"That voice, 'Jesus is Victor!' sounded like a trumpet of God through the village. After
a week one man of very loose and deceitful character, whom the pastor on that account felt almost
afraid of approaching, came trembling and pale to Blumhardt into his study, and said, 'Sir, is it
then possible that / can be pardoned and saved ? I have not slept for a whole week, and if my
heart be not eased, it will kill me.' He made an astonishing confession of iniquity, which for
the first time opened the pastor's eyes to the multitude and enormity of sins prevailing among
the people. The pastor prayed with him and put Christ before him, in his readiness to pardon even
the vilest of sinners that would come to him for mercy. When the man seemed completely cast down
and almost in despair, Blumhardt found it his duty, as an ambassador of Christ, solemnly to
assure him of God's mercy in Jesus Christ; and lo ! immediately his
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countenance was changed, beaming with joy and gratitude.
"The first thing which the man now did was to go to his fellow-sinners, from cottage to
cottage, and tell them what he had just experienced. First they were astonished, and could not
understand it; yet they saw the marvellous change in him. He urged them to go to the minister
about their souls; some he even dragged as it were in triumph to the manse, till about twenty
persons were in the same way convinced of sin, and found grace and forgiveness in Jesus."*
Then follows the account of a most gracious and wide-spread revival. The whole village
became a Bochim. With tears and lamentations the people came confessing their sins, and inquiring
the way of escape from the wrath of God that was resting upon them. The Pastor's house was
besieged from morning to night with penitents, so that within two months, as he declared, there
were not twenty persons in the place who had not come to him bewailing their sins and finding
peace in Jesus Christ. The transformation which resulted was hardly less wonderful than that
which occurred in Kidderminster under the preaching of Richard Baxter. The story gives a most
striking indication of what might result even now, under the preaching of the gospel "with signs
following."
* Pastor Blumhardt and His Work. London. Morgan and Scott
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"The soul is the life of the body; faith is the life of the soul; Christ is the life of
faith " so wrote the good John Flavel; and thus he traced very obviously and directly the
course through which Christ the Redeemer acts upon the human body.
Pastor Otto Stockmayer might be fitly named, the theologian of the doctrine of healing by
faith. He has given some very subtle, not to say bold and startling expositions of the relation
of sin and sickness. "The soul is the life of the body," and the Lord does not intend that his
saving and sanctifying ministry shall stop with the regeneration and renewal of the soul, is
Stockmayer's strongly asserted doctrine. Attaching great weight to the words of Scripture which
declare that Christ, "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" he reasons that
if our Redeemer bore our sicknesses it is not his will that his children should remain under the
power of disease, any more than that having borne our sins it is his will that they should remain
under condemnation and disobedience. He says:
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" Once understanding that it is not the will of God that his children should be sick
(James v: 14-18), and that Christ has redeemed us from our sickness as from our sins, (Matt,
viii: 16, 17), we can no longer look upon healing as a right which it would be lawful for us to
renounce. It is no longer a question whether we wish to be healed, God's will must be fulfilled
in our bodies as well as in our souls. Our beloved Lord must not be robbed of a part of the
heritage of his agony.
It is by virtue of a divine will that the offering of the body of Jesus Christ has
sanctified us (Heb. x: 10), which means that Christ by his death has withdrawn the members of our
body, with our entire being, from every sacrilegious end or use. He has regained and consecrated
them for his own exclusive and direct use.
Wrested by Christ's ransom from all foreign power, from the power of sin or of sickness
or of the devil, our members must remain intact, surrendered to him who has redeemed them.
"Let my people go " was God's word to Pharaoh, and such is God's command to sin and
sickness, and to Satan: " Let my people go that they may serve me.
Thus God's children must not seek the healing of the body without taking at the same time
by faith, all the new position which Christ's redemption gives us and which is expressed in
these words of Moses to Pharaoh: or better still in Paul's words (2 Cor. v: 14, 15), which
amounts to this Nothing more for self, but all for Christ. Before seeking freedom from sickness
we must lay hold of the moral freedom which the Redemption of Christ has obtained for us, and by
which we are
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cut off from any self-seeking: from the seeking of our own will, our own life, our own
interests, or our own glory. Our members are henceforth Christ's, and neither for ourselves or
for our members, but for Christ and for his members we desire health. We knew none other but
Christ."
This in brief is the doctrine of Pastor Stockmayer as set forth in a tract entitled "
Sickness and the Gospel,"* which has passed through many editions and been very widely read. As
the minister of a Christian flock his practice has conformed to his teaching. He has used the
same methods as those employed at Mannedorf; and he has now a home in Hauptwiel Thurgan
Switzerland for the reception of such as desire to be healed through prayer.
Pastor Rein is another of the same group of primitive teachers and ministers. He was
greatly esteemed while living, and it is only a few years since he fell asleep. He began his
service in the gospel as a decided formalist. But shutting himself up to the Bible and
determining to shape his ministry rigidly by its teachings without regard to tradition, a great
change came over him. He now abandoned the habit of reading prayers at the bedside of the sick,
and began to pour out peti-
* Partridge and Co., London.
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tions directly from the heart. Later he felt constrained to use the practise of laying
hands on them while praying, according to the word of the Lord in Mark xvi. Still later he began
to anoint with oil in the name of the Lord in connection with his praying for the sick, carrying
out strictly the directions given in the Epistle of James. His ministry seems to have been as
conspicuous for its humility as for its zeal and consecration; and diligent care for the welfare
of others so marked his course, that he may be said to have illustrated the maxim that "true
humility consists not so much in thinking meanly of ourselves as in not thinking of ourselves at
all."
From a very tender tribute to his life which recently appeared we make the following
extract: *.
"When sick people were brought to him he received them as sent by the Lord. Much blessing
and consolation was found in the silence and retirement of the simple cure of Pastor Rein. He
loved to work for the kingdom of God in self-renunciation, and always in silence, without show,
and he always shrank from being spoken of. Oh how blessed it is when the word of God accompanied
with prayer is used as the medicine of the body as well as soul.
Rein never employed a doctor, believing in
* Sec Israel's Watchman, Aug. 1878.
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the words of Exodus xv: 26. "I am the Lord that healeth thee," or as it is 'in many
translations " I am the Lord thy physician. When he was ill the elders of his Church or his
friends laid hands on him, and prayed over him, and he was always better than if he had taken
medicine; he was kept in a greater calm, and his communion with God was not interrupted by the
doctors' visits, and by the continual occupation of punctually following their directions. He
lived in such intimate relation with God that he asked him for all he wanted, the greatest and
the least things alike. This was why he could not except even healing, and he shrunk from seeking
any help but that which came directly from God.
He was jealous for God that he alone should have the glory. That which grieved him deeply
was to see how little glory is given to God in general, and especially in the cure of illness,
which is attributed generally to doctors or to medicine. Thus he would not allow any remedy to
come between him and his God, and he rejoiced with all his heart when he saw others leave the old
track of this world's laws of prudence, to follow the path of an obedient and unreserved faith.
When he prayed over and laid hands on the sick he watched attentively for a knowledge of
God's will regarding the person whom he was occupied with, and always besought him to reveal to
him, whether the sickness was unto death, or whether it was rather a merciful visitation, sent to
lead the subject of it to reflection; and he prayed accordingly.
This confidence in God, which made him renounce all human means in illness, caused him to
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be much criticised. But we must say to his honor, that Rein was extremely charitable
towards others, never seeking to put a yoke upon them or to lay down the law to them, in that
which he looked upon as a permission, a precious grace from on high.
He never regarded it as a sin in any one to take medicine, or to consult a doctor, when
they had not the special faith to do without them; a faith which very precious as it is, is not
necessary for salvation. Who can find fault with such as declare, like Rein, that they cannot do
otherwise than commit themselves solely to God in ail things, even for bodily health, and that
they esteem as happy those who can do the same.
He was actuated by a holy jealousy, when he heard the signs which should follow them
'that believe, (Mark xvi: 17, 18), spoken of as belonging only to Apostolic times, instead of its
being recognized, that it is owing to the decline of faith that these signs no longer exist. It
has been said that "Faith is God spower placed at mans disposition." So he believed, and on this
principle he acted."
Several interesting incidents of recovery under his prayers are given in connection with
this sketch of his life, but they are of the same type as those elsewhere recorded, and we will
not reproduce them.
Among other Evangelists and pastors abroad, who hold the same faith and practice as these
we may mention Lord Radstock of England A very
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devoted and deeply spiritual man he is known to be by all who have come in contact with
him. And many who have never seen him have read with interest of his evangelistic work among the
higher ranks especially in Russia and Sweden. Writing to the London "Christian" concerning his
work in the latter country, he sends reports of several very striking instances of cure in answer
to prayer and says:
" One interesting feature of the Lord's grace in Stockholm is the obedience of faith with
which several pastors and elder brethren have accepted their privilege of anointing the sick and
praying over them in the name of the Lord. There have been many remarkable instances of God's
gracious healing. I enclose details of a few cases, that God's children may be encouraged to see
that God has not withdrawn the promise in James v: 15, and that it is better to trust in the Lord
than to put confidence in man."
In America there are several homes for healing conducted on the same principle as that of
Miss, Trudel. Quite a number of them are under the direction of pious women, who have learned the
secret of the prayer of faith. We have only space to refer to one work which is most widely known
through its published reports, and of which, from
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his near neighborhood to it, the writer has had an excellent opportunity to judge.
Dr. Charles Cullis is at the head of what is known as the "Faith-work" in the City of
Boston. The work has many branches, the Consumptive's Home; the Willard Tract Repository; homes
for children; city mission work; foreign missionary work; schools among the freedmen, etc., all
maintained upon the same principle virtually as the orphan work of Pastor George Muller, at
Bristol in England. Any one who has been made acquainted with a single department of this
enterprise, as for example, that of the Consumptive's Home can have no doubt as to the most
beneficent and Christ-like character of the labors there carried on.
Dr. Cullis has for several years been accustomed when applied to, to minister to the sick
in the manner above described. And there are among us many unimpeachable witnesses to the answers
which have been granted for the recovery from disease. The writer is well acquainted with quite a
number of these, some of several years standing, and has no hesitation in saying that they bear
every evidence of genuineness. How Dr. Cullis
OF EXPERIENCE. 171
was led to exercise this ministry is best told in his
own words which we extract from his published report called "Faith cures."
"For several years my mind had been exercised before God as to whether it was not his
will that the work of faith in which he had placed me, should extend to the cure of disease, as
well as the alleviation of the miseries of the afflicted. I often read the instructions and
promise contained in the fourteenth and fifteenth verses of the fifth chapter of the epistle of
James."
They seemed so very plain, that I often asked of my own heart, why, if I can rely on
God's word, "whatsoever ye shall ask in my name, that will I do," and every day verify its truth
in the supply of the daily needs of the various work committed to my care, why can not I also
trust him to fulfill his promises as to the healing of the body. " The prayer of faith shall save
the sick, and the Lord shall raise him up ? I could not see why with such explicit and
unmistakable promises, I should limit the present exercise of God's power. I began to inquire of
earnest Christians whether they knew of any instances of answer to prayer for the healing of the
body. Soon afterwards the " Life of Dorothea Trudell" fell into my hands, which strengthened my
convictions, and the inquiry arose, "if God can perform such wonders in Mannedorf, why not in
Boston ? "
At this time I had under my professional care a Christian lady, with a tumor which
confined her almost continuously to her bed in severe suffering. All remedies were unavailing,
and the only human hope was the knife: but feeling in my heart the
172 THE TESTIMONY
power of the promise, I one morning sat down by her bedside, and taking up the Bible, I
read aloud God's promise to his believing children; 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."
"I then asked her if she would trust the Lord to remove this tumor and restore her to
health, and to her missionary work. She replied ' I have no particular faith about it, but am
willing to trust the Lord for it.'
I then knelt and anointed her with oil in the name of the Lord, asking him to fulfill his
own word. Soon after I left, she got up and walked three miles. From that time the tumor rapidly
lessened, until all trace of it at length disappeared.
The work thus begun has gone on now, for quite' a number of years, and we think there can
be no reasonable doubt that in Boston as well as in Mannedorf and in Mottlingen there has been a
living and repeated demonstration that God is still pleased to recover the sick directly and
manifestly in answer to his people's intercessions.
If these things be so, can any say that we have not reason to praise God and rejoice with
new joy in him:
"Who forgiveth all thine iniquities, Who healeth all thy diseases.?"
"Any explanation but the admission of the miraculous " is the cry which an unbelieving
world
OF EXPERIENCE. 173
raises when anything wonderful happens. And Christians more solicitous for their caution
than for their faith, have sometimes joined in the cry. And thus the seal of the supernatural has
been assiduously withheld we fear, where it should have been permitted to place its impress and
testimony. But we do not, so much call attention to these instances of healing as to these
examples of faith. There may be mistakes in the estimates put upon the cures, but can there be
any in the sure ward of promise ? If any of these testimonies of recovery should prove
ill-founded, it would only demonstrate the ignorance of men. But God hath in the last days spoken
to us by his Son and "he that receiveth his testimony hath set to his seal that God is true."
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