Ron Dunn Podcast - Does God Heal Today - Part 1
Episode Date: December 18, 2024Ron explores the question, "Does God still perform supernatural healing today?"...
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And now, would you open your Bibles to 2 Timothy chapter 2.
2 Timothy, the second chapter, and we're going to read just the 15th verse,
using this as the basis for our study this morning.
And we're beginning today a four-part study on the subject,
Does God Heal Today?
And in 2 Timothy, the second chapter, verse 15, the Apostle Paul says,
Be diligent to present yourself approved to God as a workman who does not need to be ashamed,
handling accurately the word of truth. Does God heal today? I think most of us would immediately answer that question, yes, God does heal today.
There is a sense, of course, in which all healing comes from God, but I want to make
a distinction between what I would call natural healing and supernatural healing. For it is true that in a sense all healing does come from God,
and there is in the natural healing of the body, the natural process of healing within the body,
there is that element of divine superintendency. All healing does come from God. But what we're speaking about when we speak of divine healing is the supernatural healing,
not the natural.
Does God supernaturally, miraculously heal today?
Are there instances where God will intervene in the course of natural affairs and heal some person who perhaps
is unhealable in the sense of natural healing. And again, I think most of us would answer that
question with, yes, God does heal today. All of us, one time or another, have either witnessed or have heard testimonies of those
who have been supernaturally healed by God.
In some instances, the cases were terminal and the doctors had given up all hope, and
yet God intervened and there was a divine, miraculous healing.
Hardly a week goes by that somebody doesn't ask me either in a letter
or personally to remember so-and-so in prayer and ask that God will heal them. And who of
us hasn't at one time or another had a burden on our heart to pray for the healing of a friend or a loved one.
And even while we've been praying, perhaps the question has come,
can we authoritatively pray for their healing?
Will God hear our prayer?
And in many instances, God has. And in others, God has not.
And so the big question really is not so much does God heal, but why does he heal some
and not others? And this is a very perplexing and frustrating question, for there have been times
when it seemed to me that if ever God would heal an individual, it would be this individual. Much prayer has been made, and even
people have stood and given testimony that God had given to them a word that this person
would live, and yet they did not. I remember when my mother was seriously ill several years ago,
I prayed that God would heal her, and there came a point in my praying when I
really believed that God had heard my prayer and had answered it. And I felt right up until the
last that God would heal her, but yet he did not. And so the question keeps coming back again and again, why are some healed and not others?
Well, there are those that have a very easy answer, and when somebody for whom they've
been praying for healing dies, they can explain it by saying, well, they just did not have
enough faith.
And there are others who say that when the person died, well, God did hear our
prayer. He now has perfect healing. Well, the fact of the matter is, if a person dies of a disease,
he has not had perfect healing. The Bible never uses that phrase. The person literally died of
that disease. He has not been healed, and if that's perfect
healing, then why weren't we praying for that in the first place? No, I think these explanations
of why certain people are not healed, the explanation, well, there just wasn't enough
faith or they received perfect healing, I think those are not only unscriptural but
are wholly inadequate.
Why are some healed and not others? It's a nagging question. Even some popular faith healers,
like Catherine Kuhlman, who did not actually call herself a faith healer, but even Catherine
Kuhlman couldn't give an answer to that. In one of her books she makes this statement, Why are not all healed?
The only honest answer I can give is, I do not know, and I am afraid of those who claim
they do know.
For only God knows, and who can fathom the mind of God?
And in her own case, for twenty years, Catherine Cullman was troubled with an enlarged heart
that eventually damaged a
vital valve and caused continuous pain. And for the past last several years of her life, she never
went anywhere without her medicine because the pain was so intense. And eventually she died of
that. Here was a woman who ministered healing to others, and yet she herself never received healing. Why is it?
It's an old issue. I was surprised to discover in my study of this subject that even in the
early church up through the fourth century, there was a great deal of controversy about this. As a
matter of fact, an entire book has been written discussing the issue of healing within the church
in the first 400 years of its existence.
And still today, we're troubled by that question.
Why are some healed and not others?
And in recent times, this subject of healing has been receiving a new emphasis,
and there are some teachings,
I think, that are erroneous and misleading, and we need to understand exactly what the Bible
teaches about this matter of healing. It's a vital issue because sooner or later all of us
are going to be touched by it. We're either going to want the healing of a loved one or the healing
of ourselves. We need to understand the truth of the Bible about it
because some have been hurt and grieved and harmed because of erroneous teachings in it.
I remember a number of years ago in our own church,
we had a man who died, and after he died,
some of the friends of the family came around and told his wife
that if she had only had enough faith
he would have been healed now to me to make that kind of statement in the name of Christianity
borders on blasphemy that's that's simply adding guilt to grief and I've talked to many many
Christians who who felt that something was wrong with their own lives
and they were going through a terrible time of self-condemnation
because they felt that if they had had enough faith or if there had not been some sin in their life,
either they themselves would have been healed or a loved one would have been healed.
So what is the truth?
Does God heal today?
Yes, I believe He does.
Well, does He want everyone to be healed?
In the words of the title of a popular book, Does Jesus Want Everyone to be Well?
Is healing in the atonement?
Can I simply claim healing for whatever malady I have?
In the words of someone to me,
do I have to put up with sickness
because sickness, after all, is from the devil?
And if God does heal, how can I be healed?
Should I pray for healing?
Is sickness always from the devil?
We're going to be looking at these questions and others
as we consider this subject.
Does God heal today?
But first of all, in this first study, I want us to do some foundation work.
I believe that most of the mistaken teaching concerning healing and other issues for that matter
are the result of a violation of what we call the law of hermeneutics, the law of
interpretation. Now how do you go about determining scriptural truth? How do you
discover what the Bible actually teaches on a subject? Well there are certain
basic principles of interpretation.
There are certain factors to be kept in mind and observed in determining scriptural truth.
This is why I have read this 15th verse from Paul's second chapter,
where he says that we are to be diligent to present ourselves approved to God as
a workman who does not need to be ashamed handling accurately the word of truth and that's what we
want to do we want to handle accurately as it ought to be handled the word of truth we do not
want to use any sleight of hand. We want to let the Bible speak for
itself, and we have to be, as Paul says, diligent in this matter. That's a very interesting word.
It means to be persistent and zealous. It carries the idea of hard work with it.
Friends, I want to say to you that good, accurate Bible study is hard work.
And I'm afraid that many of us who preach are guilty of ad-lib preaching.
We're guilty of preaching things that we have not diligently and thoroughly studied.
We hear someone say something, we read a track on some truth and it catches fire,
and immediately we start propagating it without, first of all, for ourselves,
diligently studying to see if this is the truth.
And I'm afraid that one of the problems among great many of us ministers today
is our slothfulness
in getting into the Word.
And so we want to do our best, or do your utmost, as one translation reads,
to handle accurately the Word of truth.
So today we're going to look at some of these laws of interpretation, factors that we must observe if we are going to determine accurately
the teachings of Scripture. First of all, if we are to handle accurately the Word of
Truth, we must recognize the Bible as the Word of God, as our only guide and authority.
Now, let me repeat that.
In handling the Word accurately,
the first and, to me, the obvious factor and principle is
we must accept the Word of God as the final Word
and the only Word of authority.
It is the Bible that gives us our direction and our doctrine.
When I was a teenager, I remember there was a popular novelty song going around
titled, It's in the Book.
Well, that's going to be our motto as we study this subject.
The question is, is it in the book? It's not a
question of what you and I think or what we feel or what others have said. It's not a matter of
basing truth on experience or observation. The question is, is it in the book? And we must
accept this Bible as the full and final revelation of God. There is no additional
revelation from God apart from and outside of the Bible, and any impression that we receive
or any prophecy that is given must square with what is in the book. Today, a lot of people are
going around saying they've received a word from God.
And that's all right as long as they have received a word from God.
And the way that you know whether or not they've received a word from God is,
does it square with what is in the word of God?
Is it in the book?
I remember a woman telling me some time ago that God told her to leave her husband and children
and go out into a ministry.
And so she just left her husband and children and go out into a ministry. And so she just left her husband and children
and went out on the road in the ministry.
I doubt seriously that God would ever tell anybody to do that.
I don't think God told her to do that.
The Lord would never lead us to do something
that is contrary to what is written in the book.
It has to be in the book.
And one of the great dangers among some Christians today
is this idea that the Lord is still giving new revelation
apart from and outside and beyond what is written in the Bible.
Most of us are familiar with Catherine Marshall and her writings,
and I like Catherine Marshall, and her books have blessed me,
but in one book she wrote a few years ago,
she said one of the most dangerous statements ever made.
In her book, Something More, she makes this statement,
how good it is to realize that the Holy Spirit did not limit His revelations
to the truths contained within the canons of the Old and New Testament.
How good it is to realize that the Holy Spirit did not limit His revelations
to the truths that are contained within the canons of the Old and New Testament.
Now, I said that that's a very dangerous statement,
and for this reason.
You see, the word canon itself means a rule,
a standard, a measuring rod.
And the measuring rod for Christian faith
is the Bible,
and that Bible is complete.
The Bible is the only objective part of our faith.
It is that which anchors us and stabilizes us.
And if we see Scripture as less than the final infallible authority
for faith and practice,
immediately we have opened the doors to theological and doctrinal chaos.
Anyone or everyone can claim to be speaking God's revelation. Friend, the revelation of God
ended with the closure of the New Testament, and there has been no additional revelation. revelation what we receive today is illumination and God simply today is illuminating us so that
we can comprehend the truth that is revealed and the record of that revelation is the Bible
and when people stand in some service somewhere and say I have a word from God and we take what
they say as infallible and as authoritative as
what is written in the book, immediately we have cut loose from the anchor and we are
subject and vulnerable to every excess and false teaching.
I think one of the very important verses in this respect is found in Jude and the third
verse. The little epistle of Jude in verse 3, Jude says, Beloved, while I was making every effort
to write you about our common salvation, I felt the necessity to write to you appealing
that you contend earnestly for the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints.
Now, I want you to notice the phrase, the faith. The definite article is used there
in the English text as well as in the Greek, and it points to a definite one and only faith,
the faith. Now, when the Scripture uses that phrase, the faith, it is referring to the body of Christian truth, the whole revelation of God, the faith.
Now, Jude says that he wants us to contend earnestly for the faith, which was once for
all, the Greek word refers to something done for all time, needing no repetition, which
was once for all delivered, That's an aorist passive
participle, if you're interested, and that indicates a completed act. Now, notice Jude says,
the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints. Not is being delivered, not will be
delivered, but has been once and for all delivered now my friends
the faith
the body of Christian truth
the revelation of God
has already been
once and for all
fully and finally delivered
and there is no other
and I know that there have been times
when in trying to authenticate
a certain truth
we pointed to folks
that embraced that truth,
and we said, look how they've been blessed.
Look how they're growing.
Certainly, that must prove that what they're teaching is true.
Well, with that kind of logic,
we'd have to say the Moonies are right.
We'd have to say that all the cults and false sects are right because they're growing by leaps and bounds.
Folks, it doesn't make any
difference how much they seem to be blessed or what kind of lives they seem to live. That is
not the issue. The issue is, is it in the book? Is it in the book? That's the first statement.
If we're to handle accurately the word of truth, we must accept the Bible as the only guide for our faith
and practice. Secondly, in accurately handling the word of truth, we must take into account
the progressive character of revelation. The progressive character of revelation. Now, this is extremely important, and a great deal of misunderstanding
comes about if we fail to recognize this fact, that the revelation of God in the Old Testament
through to the New Testament was progressive. Now, what do we mean by progressive revelation? Well, one theologian gives this
definition. Progressive revelation is the growing apprehension of man of the redemptive purpose of
God which culminated in Christ's person and work. Jesus, you remember, said to his disciples, I have yet many things to say to you,
but you cannot bear them now.
Now, what Jesus was saying is,
fellas, there's some things that I want to say to you,
but I have to save that for later on,
because right now you're just not mature enough,
you're not spiritually intelligent enough to take it in.
Progressive revelation means that God revealed to man
only that which he was able to comprehend.
In the infancy of a human race,
God had to lead them step by step by step.
That's why we use the expression from shadow to substance, talking about the
sacrifices and types and symbols in the Old Testament. Those were the shadows, but in the
New Testament they were brought to fruition and fulfillment in Christ Jesus. That's the substance.
God had to teach them in the kindergarten method. And as he brought them
along, you see, the revelation progressed. It does not mean that what God revealed in the
Old Testament was not true. It was. But he just didn't reveal much of it. The Old Testament
is the beginning. That's the elementary grade.
And then the New Testament comes along
and it completes and complements
that progressive revelation.
This is why Jesus repeatedly uses this phrase
fulfill in Matthew 5
where he is comparing the Old Testament law
with what he is coming to do.
He says, I have come not to destroy the law,
but to fulfill it, to bring it to completion.
He's not saying that what was taught in the law was wrong.
It just didn't go far enough, you see.
And in Galatians 4 and 4,
Paul uses the expression,
in the fullness of time,
God sent forth his Son.
There was a fullness of time.
In other words, there was a progression to that point when men were able to receive the Messiah.
And in Hebrews chapter 1 and the first couple of verses,
you'll have a tremendous statement concerning this idea of progressive revelation where he says that in times past God spoke to the fathers and the prophets
in many portions and many ways,
and in these last days has spoken to us in his Son.
The writer of Hebrews is saying that in the Old Testament days
God spoke to our fathers in many different ways, in many different seasons, but now in these last days, he has spoken to us in his Son. The progressive nature of revelation,
and the New Testament is the final word of that progressive nature. Now, the reason that I make
such an issue of this is because there's a problem.
We believe the Old Testament.
I believe the Old Testament just as much as inspired as is the New Testament.
I preach from the Old Testament.
I believe it's a part of the Word of God.
But I also know that not everything that's found in the Old Testament is for us today. I don't think that all
of the sacrifices and ceremonies that they had to go through in the Old Testament are for us today.
For instance, you take the eating of certain meats, pork. The Jews were prohibited from eating ham or bacon, pork chop. They wouldn't do that.
Well, is that for us today? Some people believe that it is. But Paul, writing to Timothy, said
that one of the signs of the last days and one of the signs of false teachers would be that they
would prohibit from eating certain meats. And he said everything has
been sanctified by God. In other words, Paul is simply saying that that is not for us today.
Well, the problem then is what part of the Old Testament is for us? I know much of it is,
and some of it isn't. How are we to know? What part of the Old Testament
is applicable to us today? The answer is that part which is taught in the New Testament.
Now listen carefully. Only that part of the Old Testament which is reiterated in the New Testament, applies to us in this
Christian dispensation.
Now, folks, this is extremely important, and a great deal of false teaching has come about
because people fail to observe this rule.
As you read through the Old Testament, you will notice that the Old Testament view of
salvation is basically physical and material. For instance, very little is said in the Old
Testament concerning eternal life or the hereafter. Salvation is spoken of in the Old Testament more in terms of physical deliverance and material
blessings. This is the reason Job's friends were certain that Job had sinned, because he had lost
all of his possessions and he had become physically ill. The prevailing philosophy of that day was
material and physical blessings were signs of God's favor.
The Old Testament view of salvation was basically physical and material.
For instance, compare David's thanksgivings
in the Psalms with Paul's thanksgivings
in Ephesians and Colossians and Philippians.
You'll find that David's thanksgivings
were largely concerned with physical and Philippians. You'll find that David's thanksgivings were largely concerned
with physical and material blessings, totally, almost totally concerned with physical and
material blessings. But you'll not find that in Paul's thanksgivings when he prays to God. Now,
he gives thanks to the churches for what they've given him, but you'll notice that when Paul offers his praise of thanksgiving to God,
he doesn't thank God for the big house that he has
and for the double camel garage that he's built.
He doesn't thank God for all the stocks and bonds that he has.
No, sir.
He's thanking God for the spiritual blessings.
In the Old Testament,
in those days, the infancy of the human race, they were not able to see
the value of spiritual blessings.
And in their immaturity, they made salvation synonymous with physical and material blessings.
But as that revelation progressed and in Jesus Christ was brought to fulfillment,
we see that the greater blessings
are not physical and material,
but they are spiritual.
Some time ago I was in a meeting
in a certain church
and the wife of the pastor
had been troubled for a good while
with migraine headaches. And she came to me one night to discuss something that she was
disturbed about. She had gone to a meeting where a Bible teacher was holding a meeting and
she met with him and he counseled her about her migraine
headaches in the area of healing. And using some passages in the book of Deuteronomy that deal
with curses coming on the second and third generations, he told her that her illness,
her migraine headaches, were caused by something that her parents or grandparents had done
and that she was under this curse.
And that if she would break the curse and rebuke the devil and so forth,
she would be healed.
And she was greatly disturbed about this.
And I've run into this a great deal lately
where people are using these passages in Deuteronomy 5 and 29 and 30
and saying that much of the
illness that people have today is a result of a curse that they're under.
Now, the only thing wrong with that is it's wrong.
The book of Deuteronomy was written to a specific people for a particular situation in a time-space
circumstance. Spoken to the Jews in that particular
situation. It is not spoken to us, and the way I know that is that that teaching is not reiterated
in the New Testament. The New Testament doesn't teach that if you have a migraine headache,
or if you have ulcers or if
you're sick in some other way, it's because you're under a curse. That is one of the false teachings
that's causing a great deal of harm to some people that arises because we fail to obey the
laws of interpretation. Only that part of the Old Testament
which is reiterated in the New Testament
applies to the church today.
All right, number three.
If we are to handle accurately
the word of truth,
we must distinguish between
the picture and the frame.
We must distinguish between
the picture and the frame. You say, what in the world are you
talking about? Well, just this. The Bible has a historical and geographical and cultural setting,
that's the frame, in which the divine truth is portrayed.
That's the picture.
You have a picture and you have the frame.
Now you do not mistake the frame for necessary because something must hold
and make presentable the picture
to those that see it
the same is true with the word of God
God did not reveal himself to us
in a vacuum
when God wanted to reveal to man divine truth, he had to have a physical
setting. And that historical and geographical and cultural setting is the frame in which the
picture of divine truth is placed. Now, there is an oriental character to the Bible, of course, because it was set in the East.
That is its historical, geographical, and cultural setting.
Now, listen carefully.
God does not ask us to adopt the culture and customs of the land in which the Bible was written. For instance, Paul wrote to the Corinthians. He
dealt with that issue of eating meat offered to idols. And he goes on and on, not only in
Corinthians, but in Romans. And it was a very, very important burning issue of that day,
eating meat offered to idols. Now, does that apply to me today? I mean, frankly, folks, I can't remember
the last time that came up. I don't, when I go to Whataburger and get a hamburger, I don't ask
the fellow, first of all, before I eat this, I want to know, was this hamburger meat offered
to idols? Some of it ought to have been, but that's not an issue for us today. Well, then, does it mean nothing to us?
Because, you see, Paul, out of that, though, came up with a principle,
and the principle of faith and practice was this,
that we ought to do nothing that would hinder the spiritual life of a weaker brother.
And he says, as long as the world stands, I will eat no meat offered to idols
if it offends my brother. We're not to go around trying to find meat that's been offered to idols
today so we won't eat it. That's not the point. That was the cultural, geographical, historical
setting. That's the frame. The picture is that we're to do nothing that would weaken a brother in Christ. I was in England this
past summer at the Keswick Convention, and one night after one of the sessions, a woman came up
to me, and as we talked, she asked me, do you believe the Bible? I said, well, yes, I do. She
said, well, you think we ought to obey it and do what it says? And I said, well, yes, I do.
She said, then why don't we greet the brethren with a holy kiss
as Peter told us to well that was very interesting I didn't know if she was you know wanting me to
kiss her or what but she had a point and she was very serious about it she says doesn't the Bible
say greet the brethren with a holy kiss and I said yes it does but the emphasis there is not
upon kiss it's upon holy that culture even today the form of greeting was a kiss I was watching
news on television just the other day when Arafat got off the plane in one of those Arab countries
I forget who it was and where it was but anyway as he got off the plane in one of those Arab countries. I forget who it was and where it was. But anyway, as he got off the plane, one of the Arab leaders met him.
And he went up to that fellow and he kissed him on both cheeks twice.
And he kissed him on the nose three times.
I've never seen that done before.
But anyway, Arafat was greeting his brethren with a kiss.
I don't know that it was holy, but he was greeting with a kiss.
If Peter had been writing that to us today, he would say, greet the brethren with a holy handshake.
That's the setting.
That's the frame, the kiss.
And yet, every once in a while,
I run across somebody who believes
that we ought to practice that in our churches.
Greet the brethren with a holy kiss.
Folks, that is not what Peter is saying.
The emphasis is upon holy in other words all of
our relationships with our brethren ought to be a holy relationship even in the greeting
it ought to have about it the character of holiness
uh i hadn't intended to get into this but since since I'm in the neighborhood, I'll stop by and visit it for a while.
A few years ago, I was in a meeting, and there was a singer working with us.
I had not known him before, and this is the first time we'd ever been together.
And one night, as he began the service, he told the audience that he had been raised in a Baptist church and was still a Baptist,
but that he had a real grievance against the Baptist church because he discovered something that the Baptists failed to teach him.
They robbed him of something because they failed to teach him.
Well, I leaned forward in my seat.
I was wondering what in the
world this Baptist Church had failed to teach this fella that was so that was so
awful surely they taught him how to be saved and such as this but then he said
they never taught me to worship God by raising my hands, in the past few years there's been a lot of emphasis upon
the raising of hands, and all of us have sung those choruses based primarily on the Psalms,
I will lift up my hands unto the Lord. And in practically every church I go into today,
you will see some folks that will be raising their hands. As a matter of fact,
even in that Stay Dignified Keswick Convention in England, you will find a few folks out yonder lifting their hands. Now, the only problem is and worship and singing has become a symbol of deep
spirituality and being really with in other words if a church you hear of a church well boy they
raise their hands man that church really on fire that church really spiritual it's really got the
spirit and if and if the churches don't why then they're
dead and stuff and i've been in meetings where uh music director has chided people and and
criticized folks because they didn't want to raise their hands well let me just say this
there's only one place in the new testament where the lifting of hands is mentioned and that
is in 1st Timothy chapter 2 and verse 8 Paul is writing about the prayer life of
the church and in verse 8 he says therefore I want the men in every place
to pray lifting up holy hands without wrath and dissension. Now let me just very hurriedly make these observations. In the first place, again the emphasis here is on holy, not the
lifting up of hands. Among the Jews there were three postures of prayer. They either prostrated themselves face down on the ground, or they knelt, or they stood
with their hands raised to heaven. Those were the three customary postures of prayer for the Jews.
Paul is simply saying to these folks here,
I want men everywhere to pray,
lifting up holy hands without wrath and dissension.
He's not telling them to lift up their hands.
They will do that anyway
because that is a part of their custom.
That's a part of their culture.
What he is telling them to do,
that when they pray,
they had better do it with holiness,
no wrath and no dissension.
Paul here is speaking about prayer,
not praise, not worship.
The only time the New Testament tells us
to lift up our hands is not in singing hymns
or in worshiping or in praising,
but in prayer.
And these words are addressed to the men.
He says, I want the men. And that word has the definite article with it, the men specifically,
and it's not the general word for man. It doesn't mean human race, but it is that specific word
that means men as contrasted with women. other words the males because again it was the
custom for the men only to pray aloud in their public gatherings and of course we're not going
to accept that today we believe men and women both can pray aloud in public gatherings so if
we're not going to accept one custom, why accept the other?
And honestly, most of the folks that I see lifting their hands in services are women,
not men, and yet Paul says, I want the men to do it. Well, he's not talking about what we're doing today. That verse doesn't apply at all.
You say, well, are you against raising hands, lifting hands?
No, not at all.
I believe this.
If you want to lift your hands when you're worshiping God,
if that means something to you,
if that enables you to worship more freely,
if that proves to be an emotional release for you
and enhances your worship,
then you do it. You ought to be free to do it but do not make that a spiritual status symbol listen very carefully
there is absolutely no deep spiritual significance to the lifting up of hands apart from what it
means to you personally no more than what saying amen means to some people.
You see, people are different.
There are some folks that they like to say amen in church.
Some people like to raise their hands.
I used to have some folks in my church
that would say, right on, preacher, right on, preacher.
I believe there ought to be liberty
within the context of dignity and good taste and order.
There ought to be liberty within the
worship service. And if you want to raise your hands, that's fine. You do it. But the lifting
up of hands does not mean that you're more spiritual or the church is more spiritual or
more with it or anything else. It has no spiritual significance
apart from what it means to you personally. You say, well, it's good enough for David,
and he clapped his hands, and the Bible says that we ought to clap our hands in the Old Testament,
and David lifted his hands, and he clapped his hands, and and he danced and if it's good enough for David it's good enough for us well that's right David also worshiped by animal sacrifices too you cannot
use David's worship as a model for our worship that is a part of the cultural historical
geographical frame in which the picture of truth is set and again i i know some folks are
going to go away saying well that brother done boy he is really stuffed in dead and he doesn't
have the spirit he doesn't believe in lifting hands i believe in doing whatever you want to do
within the realm of the holy spirit's leadership and if you want to raise your hands that's fine
all i'm saying is that to make that a vital part of worship and
say that that's the way to worship and we worship better by doing that is totally unscriptural and
unfounded. Well, enough of that. Number four, if we're to handle accurately the word of truth,
we must recognize that Scripture interprets Scripture.
Scripture interprets Scripture, and every verse must be interpreted in the light of
the total Bible context and its own individual context.
Taking verses out of context is dangerous and misleading in establishing truth.
I heard about a fellow, and you've all heard this story, I'm sure, about this brother who believed
that he could get a word from God just by letting the Bible fall open at random and shutting his
eyes and dropping his finger on a verse, and that would be the word that God had for him. Well, he did that, and he dropped his finger on a verse with his eyes closed.
When he opened his eyes, here was the verse.
Judas went out and hanged himself.
And he thought, well, I don't think that's the word.
And so he opened the Bible again, closed his eyes, and let the finger fall on a verse,
and he opened his eyes, and this is what that verse said go thou and do likewise now if that brother had taken those two things out of
context and put them together and said that's a message for God he wouldn't be with us today
every scripture must be interpreted in the light of its context and the total biblical context. And a great deal of false
teaching has come about because we have been guilty of taking verses out of their context
and twisting them to say what we want them to say. All right, number five. If we're to handle accurately the word of truth,
we need to recognize the literary character
of the particular book that we're studying.
I'll repeat that.
If we're to handle accurately the word of truth,
we must recognize the literary character
of the book that we're studying.
For instance, Psalms, the book of Psalms, is largely a book of poetry.
And so you'll find a great deal of poetical images,
figures of speech that are not to be taken literally.
Folks, I don't believe God has feathers.
David said he did.
I don't believe that God actually has wings,
but David said he did.
But we understand that David is speaking
with poetic license,
and those are images.
And we know that God doesn't have feathers
and I don't believe that Jesus literally has a sword protruding from his mouth as the revelation
says that is symbolical of something else I don't believe that Jesus literally right now is walking around with a real steel sword,
a Wilkerson sword,
protruding between his lips
out of his mouth.
I don't believe that.
We must recognize the literary character
of the book that we're studying.
You say, now why are you making
such a deal about this?
Well, pay close attention.
I don't want you to misunderstand. The Gospels
and the Acts are historical records. The four Gospels are historical records of the life and times of Jesus. The book of Acts is a historical record
of the life and times of the early church. Now, the epistles are the teaching books.
They are not historical records. They are not personal accounts of events.
They are the teaching letters to the church.
Now, it is the epistles that give the church its doctrine and direction.
There are some things in the Gospels and some things in the Acts that Jesus did and
that the apostles did that God doesn't intend for us to do today. How do I know that? Well,
I get from the epistles what are taught my direction and my doctrine. I heard a preacher say some time ago that the church today
ought to meet in homes.
We ought not to meet
in one big building.
We ought to meet in homes
because the early church did.
And because the church in Acts
met in homes,
then we ought to meet in homes.
That's the way to do it.
Folks, that's nonsense.
They also wore sandals
and rode donkeys. That is a historical,
geographical, cultural setting. We are not to get our doctrines from what the
Apostles did, but from what they taught, you see. It is the epistles that belong to the church and that give us
our doctrine and our direction. Now, that's not to say, that's not to say that we're not to get
doctrine and direction from the gospels and from the Acts. Don't misunderstand. All I'm saying is,
how are we to know what part of the gospel was simply historical or simply for those immediate
apostles and what part of it is it for us today it's that which is reiterated and taught afresh
and anew in the epistles for instance in john 14 12 jesus said that whosoever believeth on me the
works that i do shall he do also, a great many people interpret that to mean
that we are to do the same physical works,
physical miracles that Jesus did.
And I've heard some people say
and use that as a proof text
that we are to perform the same miracles
and by that they mean the miracles of healing
that Jesus did.
And we have the same right, the same power
to go about healing anybody and everybody because Jesus said in John 14 12 we do the same works that he did well
personally I believe Jesus there is referring to spiritual works not
physical works or miracles the reason for that is Jesus not only worked
miracles of healing I don't know why when people interpret this verse that
way they limit themselves to miracles of healing Jesus did don't know why when people interpret this verse that way, they limit themselves to
miracles of healing. Jesus did far more than that. He also walked on the water. He also turned the
water into wine. He also fed 5,000 out of one sack lunch. He also raised Lazarus from the dead who
had been in the grave for four days. And if we're going to interpret John 14, 12 in that way, then we have to say, then I can feed 5,000 with one sack lunch.
I can walk on water. I can turn water into wine. I just soon turned it into coke. We can do all
those same things. You say, well, no, that's not right. That that doesn't make sense of course it doesn't how do we know then
that jesus is not saying here that we are to duplicate the very physical and material miracles
he did because it's not taught we're not taught to do that in the epistles
if we want to discover what should be the attitude of today's church toward healing,
now listen to me very, very carefully, for this is what we're getting down to.
If we want to know what should be our attitude today toward healing,
we must find it taught in the epistles.
We cannot determine what our place in healing should be
simply by reading the Gospels and the Acts
and saying what Jesus did and what the apostles did.
That means that we're to do the same thing.
We must go to the epistles and see what the church is taught to do there.
You do not build your doctrine on what the apostles did, but upon what the church is taught to do there. You do not build your doctrine
on what the apostles did,
but upon what the apostles taught.
All right, there is one last factor
that we want to look at,
and then we'll be through.
If we are to handle accurately the word of truth,
we must remember
that the primary theme of the Bible is God's redemptive activity.
The primary theme of the Bible is God's redemptive activity. Folks, the Bible deals with
ultimate truth. And I think that in coming to a scriptural attitude
and belief towards healing and other things like this,
one of the basic problems is our view of the Bible,
our philosophy of the Bible,
our philosophy of Christianity.
What is the Bible anyway?
What does the Bible deal with?
I have an old book that someone gave me some time ago
written by a fellow who claimed that he had found
all sorts of things prophesied in the Bible,
specifically in the Old Testament.
For instance, he found where the tire shortage
back in the Second World War,
most of us too young to remember that, but
he found a place in Isaiah where he says that is a prophecy of the tire shortage in World War II.
He found a place where God prophesied concerning the invention of flamethrowers and tanks and
submarines and airplanes. Total nonsense, absolute nonsense. My my dear friends the Bible deals
with ultimate truth I cannot bring myself to believe that thousands of
years ago God writing the Bible and giving the Word of God as it was
concerned with the invention of a flamethrower are the temporary tire shortage during World War II.
The Bible is not, folks, a handbook on nutrition.
The Bible is not a handbook on economics.
One of our problems is we are taking the Bible and turning it into something that it was
never intended to be.
The Bible deals with ultimate truth.
The primary theme of the Bible is God's redemptive activity.
God is concerned primarily, now listen to me carefully,
and you'll find this in the New Testament,
God is concerned primarily not with our physical and material status,
but with our spiritual
status.
That is not to say He is not concerned.
That's not to say that He's not concerned about these other things, for I believe that
He is.
But to take the Bible and teach it and preach it as though one of the primary and major themes of it was material and physical
blessings and prosperity is to do harm to the redemptive purpose of the Word of God.
God is primarily concerned with his own redemptive activity.
Not to say he's unconcerned about the other, for he is.
And the Bible has something to say about that unconcerned about the other, for he is. And the Bible
has something to say about that. I believe that. I recognize that. But many times we
find ourselves preaching these lesser things on the same level and with a par for forgiveness
of sins. And when we do that, we fail to recognize this very important law of interpretation
that the primary theme of the Bible is God's redemptive activity.
All right, time is gone.
Let me just summarize.
Number one, the Bible is the record of God's revelation.
God revealed himself in time and space.
Men saw what God did and the Holy Spirit moved upon them,
helped them to interpret it correctly and to see exactly what it meant,
and gave them the ability to write it down.
And what we have today is the Bible, the record of that revelation.
And it is the sole guide for doctrine and practice.
If I want to know what I'm to believe and how I'm to behave,
I find it in the Bible.
It's got to be in the book.
In establishing truth, nothing else enters in.
Experience and circumstances and such as that may serve to illustrate the truth already established,
but it does not serve to establish the truth.
You are making yourself vulnerable to false teaching
if you let experience or observation of the experiences of others establish truth.
It never establishes truth.
Only the Word of God establishes truth.
Experience and so forth illustrate truth already established.
And finally, we must be diligent and honest in handling the Word of God.
Let the Bible speak for itself.
That's not always easy to do,
but it is something that I believe the Holy Spirit will enable us to do,
and that is the most important thing is that regardless of how many laws or factors or so forth that we have
of interpretation unless the Holy Spirit of God illuminates our heart and mind we cannot come to
the truth and so that is our prayer that the Spirit of God who inspired this book will now illuminate our hearts and minds so we can understand it and come to a
knowledge of the truth let's pray together father I pray that you'll take
the Word of God today and make it real and alive for us and it is our prayer
and God you know our heart our only desire is to handle accurately the word of truth
so we can come to the knowledge of truth so that we can come to full maturity in Christ Jesus.