Sunday, March 15, 2009

Healing


I have been in some type of healing activity for many years. During that time I have helped others get better even though sickness and pain have been my personal friend.

Several times I was counseling a person in depression while struggling myself with a deep melancholy. Interestingly enough my ability to focus on helping another person in pain also helped give me some relief.

For the past few months I have experienced pain in both shoulders. It has been difficult to raise my right arm above my head at times and that is frustrating. I asked for prayers from the good people at Dwelling Place Church in February and experienced some relief.

Because I was heading for Scandinavia with luggage it occurred to me that I needed to seek some assistance from Dr. Mark Korchok, a great Chiropractor near my home. After several sessions my shoulders are better but not pain free.

I am staying in the home of Jens-Petter and Astrid Jorgensen in Oslo and sleeping in the bed of their daughter Marie Theresa who is away at school. After spending a couple of nights here, my shoulder is substantially better. I am very thankful for prayers, Dr. Korchok and this good bed.

So here are the questions: "How does God heal" and "Is relief from a good night's sleep count as one way God heals?"

Secular Humanists do not believe in God so they cannot believe in a God who heals. It is said that an atheist believes in "The uniformity of natural causes in a CLOSED SYSTEM". I believe in the "Uniformity of natural causes and cures in an OPEN, GOD-SOAKED SYSTEM".

Here is the difference. Humanists discount any intervention into nature from outside the natural order. We Christians believe in a natural order that God can and often does interact with. My shoulder was damaged by some of my behavior and nature took its course and the pain alerted me to the damage I had caused myself. I have sought several "remedies from nature" such as pain medications and Chiropractic interventions. They have helped.

I also sought supernatural interventions through prayer. It also helped. This is not an "either-or dichotomy" but a "both-and unity". God gave the Hebrew people many different natural interventions stop the spread of communicable diseases. He was the first chemist in history and his advice saved thousands of lives. God created nature so why would He be hostile to its healing properties?

May God bless you and your Christian community as you seek to live under Hios rule and reign. I sometimes read that the modern church has lost its way when there is an emphasis upon being a "Therapeutic Community". The root words for salvation and therapy are similar. Let us go into the world as agents of salvation, healing and good works.

For more on the ways we foster healing, growth and health, see our web page.

Gary Sweeten
www.sweetenlife.com

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

One of your last lines, "let us go into the world as agents of salvation, healing , and good works." Amen! My thought is that we can best do that by blooming where we are planted. Surely, most of us by now are settled in where we are going to be...aren't we? Show up for work...on time...work hard, do right. In short, live life as a believer in Jesus Christ, in His righteousness. As we live life in His righteousness, we are the best thing our employers have going for them. That is evangelism, and that is therapy that will foster healing, growth, and health. I realize a little scripture can be added, as well as an invite to your Sunday night bible study, but concentrate on showing them a redeemed life, saved by grace. It might not turn heads as fast as a bumper sticker, but it soaks in a whole lot deeper.

Gary Sweeten said...

Vicar of Vicksburg?

I love that comment. Going into the world means exactly what you are saying. The world if the job, the neighborhood, the corner grocery and so on.

Read my next post because I will add more from Luke 9 and Luke 10 to your insights.