The Will of the Healer Has Not Changed
Does He still heal? Is it still His will to heal? I declare to you—YES. And not only some. Not the lucky few. Every one of them. There was not one whom He turned away. There was not one for whom it “wasn’t time,” not one whom He left unhealed to “learn something,” not one He passed over to teach patience. We have no record of that. Jesus healed them all (Matthew 12:15). And if you dare say, “Well, that was Peter, that was Jesus,” then listen to Peter himself—it wasn’t by our power or holiness. It was the Name and the faith in that Name (Acts 3:16).
Jesus said believers—not apostles only—would lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover (Mark 16:17-18). The people saw such power that even demons obeyed the sound of His voice. There was an authority moving through Him that shook hell itself. That same Spirit, that same power, has not lessened. We are not serving a faded Christ with faded power. He is risen and exalted, seated at the right hand of Majesty, and He is your Brother.
The healing doesn’t depend on how thoroughly you understand your condition. You can be healed before you even know what was wrong. The diagnosis is not required—faith is. Jesus already did the hard part. He bore your diseases, carried your sorrows, and broke the curse (Isaiah 53:4-5). Why would you think God sent His Son to be tortured and cursed under sin’s weight, only to turn around and say, “Not now”?
Some say, “But what if it’s not His will?” Then how shall we pray in faith? Shall we need a personal revelation for every sick soul, as if His Word were not enough? No! We don’t wait for a vision to lead someone to salvation. Why would we hesitate for healing when salvation includes it (Psalm 103:3)?
Don’t claim God is sovereign in a way that makes Him inconsistent. Does He have a double standard? He told us the sacrifices had to be clean, whole, and without blemish. Why would He accept your body any other way? You are a living sacrifice (Romans 12:1). He wants His Fluffy—your best, not your broken.
We must stop holding tradition so tightly that we choke out the Word. “He heals all your diseases,” it says, not some. Let the Scripture correct your thinking. If you have to throw away old doctrines to receive healing, then do it. Let every man be a liar, but let God be true.
This Gospel we preach—it is not mere words. It is power. When Paul preached, the people saw something. The Gospel was proven through special miracles, healing the sick and casting out devils. If only preachers today would hold back nothing profitable, healing would flow like rivers again.
Pentecost was full of the Spirit. That’s why divine healing erupted then. If we see it only in fragments now, it’s not because God has changed—it’s because of unbelief and cold hearts. The Holy Spirit longs to reveal the almightiness of Jesus in healing again. But He flows through surrendered vessels, not those clinging to their sins and doubts.
Can a person die early? Scripture says yes—through wickedness or foolishness. But there is also another death—a slow one—when the spirit is weak. Anxiety, dread, laziness, hopelessness… all signs of a feeble spirit. And a weak spirit opens the door to physical sickness. Strengthen your spirit with the Word, and you’ll rise up in health again.
Deliverance is healing. A father once came to Jesus, desperate for his son. The disciples had failed, but Jesus delivered the boy from the unclean spirit. He didn’t call it a disorder—He called it unclean. And when He cast it out, the people marveled at the majesty of God. His healing power revealed the glory of God. We’ve seen this over and over—when one is healed, whole families are saved. God still uses healed bodies to open blind eyes to the Gospel.
Faith is a sixth sense. Don’t expect to feel healing before you believe for it. Just like you can’t hear perfume or taste a picture, don’t wait to see healing before you believe it. Faith sees what your eyes can’t yet. Take it. Hold it. Believe that what you ask in prayer, you receive (Mark 11:24).
Divine healing is for all nations. The cross didn’t just deal with your sin; it dealt with your sickness. “Himself bore our sicknesses,” not just our sins (Matthew 8:17). The Gospel doesn’t teach you to beg—it tells you what is already yours.
Don’t let the devil talk you out of what Christ died to give you. Don’t let unconfessed sin hold back mercy—repent and receive. The Lord is merciful to the one who confesses and forsakes sin. The Spirit is still working in the body, and the name of Jesus still heals.
It’s time to rise up. The Church is to be glorious—not blemished, not broken down. Jesus didn’t come for a wrinkled, sick, powerless bride. He is cleansing us by the Word, and healing is part of that washing. You are not just a servant. You are His Body, His Beloved. Let the healing flow.