Category Archives: healing teaching

Paul shaking off the serpent’s bite

In the last six months, headlines have been dominated by stories of a global resurgence of health crises—like tuberculosis re-emerging in certain regions and fears over persistent viruses and environmental toxins. This prophetic word cuts through the noise of these headlines, declaring the ancient yet ever-living promise: “By His stripes we are healed.” Just as the headlines speak of diseases threatening lives, the Spirit’s word declares that believers are called to rise in faith, trusting in Jesus’ finished work.

Recent reports have also highlighted how communities coming together—whether in prayer vigils or in health initiatives—bring real change and healing. This echoes the prophetic word: the prayer of faith is not a solitary endeavor, but a uniting force that invites the Spirit’s power. In a world shaken by disease and despair, this prophetic call to stand in faith and covenant living is a beacon of hope, aligning perfectly with the news that true healing comes through collective faith, Spirit-led obedience, and the abiding presence of the Great I AM.

The Gathering of Faithful Hearts

Hear the voice of the Spirit in this hour! The prayer of faith is not the lone cry of an isolated soul, but the symphony of hearts in one accord. For in the fellowship of believers, the Holy Spirit ignites a greater flame. This is the prayer that opens heaven’s storehouses, commanding blessings on every provision and promise.

The Lord’s voice echoes still: “Blessed be your storehouses.” Like the ancient covenant, His word yet commands prosperity to rest upon His children, for He delights to see His people blessed. But know this: blessings are not the fruit of rebellion or the self-willed heart. The covenant life is the only life that flourishes. “If you obey Me,” He says, “I will pour out My blessings.”

See also the ministry of healing released to every believer—not the privilege of the few, but the commission of the many. Jesus sent out the Twelve and they healed “everywhere,” proving the Gospel’s power in both soul and body. Peter and John knew that their holiness was nothing of themselves—it was the Spirit’s work. They spoke plainly: “Not by our own power or holiness,” but by the name of Jesus.

As David treasured the Word, so must we. Let it be our meditation, our delight, our lifeline. “Thy word is a lamp unto my feet,” and in this light, we walk with confidence. The power is in the Word, and the Word is near—on our lips and in our hearts. Let every heart be found echoing the Living Word, for God’s promises stand sure across generations.

The Lord who healed in days of old has not changed. The promise of Psalm 91:16—“With long life will I satisfy him”—was not merely for ancient days. It is the covenant of life for every believer dwelling in the secret place of the Most High.


Power, Authority, and Healing in the Name

The Spirit of prophecy declares: “You have been redeemed from every affliction!” Jaundice, consumption, cancer—the Lord has broken the power of these afflictions. By His stripes, He has borne not only our sins but the spiritual root of every disease. The judgment that fell on Him was for our complete deliverance.

Like Paul shaking off the serpent’s bite, we are not called to provoke or test, but to trust and obey. Even in a world filled with toxins and dangers, we are covered by His command: “They shall drink any deadly thing, and it shall not hurt them.” Let this be your confession: “I am redeemed. The Lord commands blessings upon me.”

The unclean spirits that resist must yield to the authority of Jesus’ name. In the synagogue of the religious, the demon had to go. Such was the demonstration of power that astonished the watchers. When Jesus speaks, all other voices must fall silent. His authority is complete, and we walk in it as His body.

The Lord is still the I AM—ever-present, sustaining all by the Word of His power. Every breath, every heartbeat is a testament to His self-existent glory. In Him, all things hold together. In Him, healing flows to every obedient child of the covenant.

Let your faith arise in this hour. Be led by the Spirit in every decision—whether to go, to stay, to take medicine or trust for healing. The Spirit leads where your faith is ready to stand. And remember, it is not our might or our name that breaks the yoke. It is Jesus, lifted high. His name silences demons, heals the sick, and brings life to the broken.

May the Spirit grant fresh revelation today—of the One who was bruised for our transgressions, who bore the root of every disease. Let every doubting heart be filled with faith. And let the healing that testifies to Jesus be seen in this generation.

Healing: A Call to Divine Ownership

The Body for the Lord, the Soul for His Glory

The Lord does not heal the body as an end in itself. His healing is a calling, a summons, an invitation into divine ownership. When He touches our mortal frame and raises it from weakness, it is not merely so we can return to the routines of daily life. It is so we may become living sanctuaries of His presence. For too long, we have misunderstood healing as a gift without a giver, a miracle without a Master. But when Jesus heals, He comes to inhabit.

Yes, there is a healing that comes by means of natural law, by the wisdom of physicians and the mercy of created remedies. But that is not the healing of the upper room. That is not the healing that made Bartimaeus leap, nor the healing that raised the paralytic from his mat. The healing of Jesus is divine. It flows from the throne of God, through the hands of the anointed, by the power of the Holy Ghost.

I tell you now, the method of Jesus is not a method at all—it is a Person. It is Jesus Himself stepping into our affliction, not with a prescription, but with resurrection. He takes possession of the sick body, not just to relieve it, but to re-purpose it—to make it His.

When a soul is healed this way, joy erupts like new wine in old wineskins. There is dancing, and shouting, and trembling. The one who receives it cannot stay silent. He glorifies God, not just with his lips, but with his life. Every breath becomes praise, every step a testimony.

Consider Fred Bosworth—dying by man’s measure, but traveling to Fitzgerald, Georgia, upheld by God’s purpose. He didn’t just arrive; he witnessed. His healing was not just survival; it was surrender to a calling.

Many have read the Word and found healing while no hands were laid, no voices raised in prayer—just truth seeding faith. “The Word is the seed,” Jesus said. And the harvest comes when faith is mixed with hearing. Faith is not manufactured by emotion. It is ignited by revelation.

So I ask: how big is God in your body? In your pain? In your diagnosis? Is He there only to comfort, or is He present to conquer?

This is the Gospel we must preach—Jesus the Healer, Jesus the Possessor, Jesus the Temple-Dweller. It is not enough to be healed. We must be taken over. For when the body is given over to Christ, the soul follows. And in that surrender, the full blessing of the Gospel is made known.

Psalm 29:11 declares, “The LORD will give strength to His people; the LORD will bless His people with peace.” Not just peace from sickness—but the peace that comes when the Healer becomes your Lord.


The Fullness of Life and the Secret of Victory

It is not enough to say, “Zap me, Lord.” Healing is not magic. Healing is holy. And it requires attention—a listening ear, a yielded heart, a readiness to be transformed. The sickness that brings us low can be the invitation to walk higher. For God is not simply interested in mending what is broken; He is forming vessels of glory.

This is why some do not receive. Not because God is unwilling, but because the seed has not taken root. No farmer expects a harvest without planting. And no believer can expect healing without the Word. “Faith comes by hearing,” says Romans 10:17, “and hearing by the Word of God.” You must know that healing is God’s will. You must see it in the Word, hear it in your spirit, and believe it in your bones.

The life that Christ brings is exuberant. It is the calf leaping from the stall, kicking and jumping with strength it didn’t know it had. It is a spiritual bucking of every former boundary. It is the joy of release, the wild freedom of grace.

But with freedom comes fruitfulness. Jesus said, “You did not choose Me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit—fruit that remains.” (John 15:16). Not just healing, but wholeness. Not just relief, but purpose.

Healing that comes from Jesus is tied to repentance. Sin is not just a problem to manage—it is rebellion to renounce. And many do not get well because they want to stay in charge. But the moment we yield, the moment we say, “Lord, have all of me,” the Holy Spirit begins His work—not just in the blood or bones, but in the depths of the soul.

Bosworth knew this. He saw thousands healed. But he declared, “Even if I never see another man healed, I will preach the whole Gospel.” Why? Because healing is not the cornerstone. Christ is. Experience may vary. But the Word never fails.

Some will say, “But Paul was sick.” Yet even through what others saw as weakness, handkerchiefs from his body healed the sick. The anointing does not always look like strength. Sometimes it looks like surrender.

Jesus bore not just our sin, but our sickness. He carried our pain. That’s not allegory—it’s truth. It’s blood-soaked redemption. It is real and raw and raging with love.

You say you want victory? Then abide. Stay in Him. Let the Vine flow through the branch. “All the paths of the LORD are mercy and truth to such as keep His covenant” (Psalm 25:10).

Healing is not just recovery. It is resurrection life breaking through time and touching mortal man. And this Gospel—the full Gospel—must be preached. For Jesus has not changed. He is still the Healer. And He is still calling you to rise.

The Gospel That Heals and Delivers

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.

The Awakening of a Healing Generation

By the spirit of the Modern Prophets

People of God, awaken to the fullness of your inheritance! Too long has the Church tolerated sickness as a silent tenant, calling it a mysterious guest of God. But I tell you plainly—it is a thief, not a teacher. It is the fruit of the fall, not a flower from heaven’s garden. The Lord has given us His Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty—including liberty from affliction.

Have you not read? The Father said to the elder son, “All that I have is thine” (Luke 15:31). And yet many stand outside the feast of healing, questioning their worth, unsure of their access. But I declare this: the doors are open. The table is set. Healing is the children’s bread!

Let us stop exalting human experience above divine truth. A wreck caused by distraction is not divine sovereignty—it is human error. Do not ascribe foolishness to the Almighty! We must be bold in discerning His will, as Ephesians 5:17 commands: Be not unwise, but understand what the will of the Lord is. If it is not in Christ, it is not God’s best. If Christ bore it, you are not meant to.

God is not glorified in your weakness but in your victory. Yes, He can redeem a bad moment, but He does not author destruction. The blind man cried out and received his sight (Mark 10). The lame walked, the lepers were cleansed, and Jesus did not say, “Wait and see what lesson I’m teaching you.” He said, “Be made whole.”

This gospel we carry is not just words, but power. We cannot call ourselves Spirit-filled and yet live power-empty. The world does not need another explanation—it needs a demonstration. Let the Church rise in signs, wonders, and healing again!

And to you who still carry sickness in your body—I speak prophetically—your healing is not a distant hope, but a present promise. God has not left you to figure it out. He has given you the Holy Spirit—the Anointed Teacher who dwells in you. He will guide you into healing. He will strengthen your faith.

Do not believe the lie that God has grown passive. He is still the God who moves. He still heals by the same power that raised Jesus from the grave. That power now dwells in you (Romans 8:11). Your body, your temple, is the very dwelling place of the Spirit of God.

A nation without a feeble person—this is not fantasy; it is covenant promise! The Gospel is wholeness to spirit, soul, and body. Rise, O believer, and lay claim to every word. Preach it, live it, release it. The world groans for the sons and daughters of God to be revealed. The time is now. The hour has come.

You are anointed. You are appointed. And by His stripes, you are healed.

I say unto you, shake off the chains of doubt! The time is now to cast down every imagination that exalts sickness as divine strategy. Say not in your heart, “Perhaps this is God’s will,” for such sayings are not rooted in truth but in fear and faulty teaching. The Scriptures declare with clarity: By His wounds, you have been healed (1 Peter 2:24). Not merely spiritually, but bodily.

Why then do many stagger in unbelief? Because their faith has been replaced by human logic and tradition. They have exchanged the power of the living Christ for the wisdom of dying men. The same Jesus who walked the shores of Galilee walks now by His Spirit. The same authority is in His Name—faith in that Name made the lame man leap at the Beautiful Gate, and faith in that Name still raises the broken today.

O Church, the gifts of healing have not ceased! The operation of the Spirit has not been shut up in the tomb with the apostles. Did Paul not say that the gifts of healing were of the Spirit’s working (1 Corinthians 12:9)? Did James not command the elders to anoint and pray (James 5:14), with no expiration upon that instruction?

Say this aloud in your room, in your car, in the night hours: He has put all things under my feet (Ephesians 1:22). I am not subject to the curse. I am redeemed from it. The compassion of Jesus has not changed. He was moved with compassion and healed their sick—not just one, not just some, but all. The multitudes were made whole because the love of God compelled Him. That love has been shed abroad in our hearts—shall it not move us too?

There are many who believe God for salvation but falter in believing Him for healing. I declare to you: the same cross that bore your sins bore your sicknesses. What Jesus carried, you need not carry again. He bore our iniquities AND our pains (Isaiah 53).
Both nasa and sabal—the burden lifted, the burden removed.

Let the prophets of this age rise, not with complicated philosophies, but with fire in their bones and healing in their hands. Let the Church walk in the covenant of Christ, where signs follow the Word, where faith does not rest in argument but in demonstration. He is not bound by time or dispensations—He is the same yesterday, today, and forever.