Tag Archives: healing

Unleashing Healing Power: Laying on of Hands

The Power That Flows From the Father

O sons and daughters of light, hear now the trumpet of truth that calls you into the realm of the miraculous. The ministry of Jesus was never only word—it was Word with Power, Word made Flesh and Fire. He healed the sick, cast out demons, and raised the dead—not by His humanity, but by the Spirit who had come upon Him like a dove. This same Spirit has now been poured out upon all flesh. Why then do we hesitate to walk as He walked?

Let it be clear: miracles were not occasional interruptions of Jesus’ ministry—they were His ministry. “I have glorified You on the earth,” He said to the Father, “I have finished the work which You have given Me to do.” And what was that work? To preach, yes—but also to demonstrate the Kingdom. He passed that very work on to His disciples and, by the Great Commission, onto us. Shall we now diminish the works that Christ Himself made central?

Do not fall for the lie that healing power is earned by your striving. Some think that if they fast long enough or cry hard enough, power will fall. No! This is foolishness. Did Jesus heal before the Spirit came upon Him? No—though He was sinless and perfect in godliness. It is not by power or piety, but by the Holy Ghost. Peter said, “Why do you look at us, as though by our own power or godliness we made this man walk?” (Acts 3:12). It is God who works through faith, not effort.

The anointing flows from intimacy and obedience, not performance. Peter and John saw a man lame at the temple. They did not pause to wonder if they were holy enough that day—they acted on the authority of the name of Jesus. “Rise up and walk!” they commanded. And he did! Not because they prayed long, but because they moved in the gift of faith that fell upon them.

Let us not try to recreate what God intends to release. The gifts of healing, miracles, and deliverance are not of this earth—they are beams of divine energy, operated by heaven but applied through human hands. Like a surgeon uses a laser, so too does the Lord use you when you yield.

Some saw healing come suddenly—spines straightened, limbs grew, and even the tormented were set free with screams that split the air. I tell you, these are not fairy tales. These are the Father’s works. They are your inheritance.

Reject the lukewarm lie that says, “Maybe God only wants to partially heal, or maybe He’s teaching you something through this pain.” Jesus never said that. When people came in faith, He never turned them away. The leper came saying, “If You are willing…” and Jesus said, “I am willing. Be cleansed.”

We live in a time of much learning and little doing. This is not the way of the Kingdom. The Kingdom moves with power. Will you only observe? Or will you become a vessel? The healing anointing flows even now—through those who believe, risk, and obey.


Rise Up and Walk—The Ministry Passed On

I speak now to a sleeping church: Awaken to your calling. Jesus said, “These signs shall follow them that believe.” Not the famous. Not the ordained. Them that believe. You were never called to merely sit in pews—you were called to raise the dead.

Many cry out, “Why are we not seeing what they saw in the Book of Acts?” I ask you, when did you last act? The early believers didn’t merely pray for the sick—they commanded healing. After Pentecost, there is no record of disciples asking God to heal. They spoke healing. Why? Because the Spirit had come, and they knew the power was in them.

Do you?

We’ve been tricked into believing healing must be scheduled, hyped, or manipulated. But I tell you, real healing doesn’t need a spotlight. It needs faith. Sometimes it begins in small settings, even once-a-month gatherings. But even there, God shows up. The sick feel cared for, not showcased. The atmosphere is faith, not frenzy. And the glory goes to God, not man.

One woman came to testify of her own healing, not knowing a child was present with the same affliction. That night, both danced before the Lord, healed. Another man with a short arm—an injury from childhood—saw it grow out before all eyes. Not by hype, but by the demonstration of the Spirit and power (1 Cor. 2:4).

And what of the demons? Yes, they tremble still. Jesus cast them out with a word. His servants still do. They are not impressed with titles; they bow only to authority. The demon said, “Jesus I know, and Paul I know, but who are you?” Authority comes not from volume or ritual but from intimacy with God.

Demons flee when confronted in Jesus’ name—the highest authority in heaven or earth. Not all are possessed, but many are oppressed—bound by addiction, shame, fear, and mental torment. And these spirits know they are defeated. They tremble at the sound of holy praise. They rage at the preaching of truth. But they cannot withstand the Spirit-filled believer.

Let me tell you: the same Spirit that raised Jesus from the dead lives in you. You are not ordinary. You are armed. When you lay hands on the sick, you carry resurrection power. When you cast out demons, they must obey. When you speak truth, it cuts chains.

Cowboys healed. Children running. Eyes opened. Shoulders restored. These are not exaggerations—they are the evidence of God still working among us. And the most thrilling thing is this: many of those healed now go forth preaching Jesus, healing others, multiplying the harvest. The miracle is not just for you—it’s to flow through you.

The world is broken. Your hands are anointed. The time is now. Rise up and walk—in power, in faith, in the name of Jesus. For greater works than these shall you do, because He has gone to the Father, and His Spirit has come upon you.

Let the works of the Father begin anew—in you.

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 Spirit of Healing: Unlock Your Authority

The Manifestation of the Spirit and the Voice of Healing

Have you not read? The Spirit of God has spoken—not in mystery, but in manifestation. In 1 Corinthians 12, the Lord commands us not to be ignorant of spiritual realities. Yet today, a famine of knowledge has dried the mouths of many saints. Not because God has ceased to speak, but because men have ceased to listen. “There are diversities of gifts, but the same Spirit,” Paul declared. “There are differences of ministries, but the same Lord… operations, but it is the same God.” And the manifestation? It’s been given to every one of us—to profit withal!

We were not called to sit idle, waiting for a heavenly lottery. You say, “But I don’t see healing in my life.” Open your eyes! The Word says, gifts of healing, working of miracles, faith, prophecy, discerning of spirits. You weren’t called to watch the waters stir—you were called to walk on them.

Some speak as though healing is rare, as though it must be earned or timed like a celestial appointment. But listen: there was not one “unlucky” one in the Gospels. Not one was told to come back later. Not one was refused because “God was teaching them something.” You ask if He still heals today? The blind men said, “Have mercy,” and they received healing. Not sympathy. Not theory. Not delay—healing.

People determine God’s will by their failures, not His Word. They base theology on what didn’t happen. But I ask: where are their 30 verses saying it’s not His will to heal? Where are their 10? Even 5? They do not exist. But we—the “minority”—stand on a mountain of truth. We are not building castles on sand. We are standing on the Rock.

God didn’t create disease; it’s not native to heaven. So how could it be His will for His dwelling place—you—to host what does not dwell in His kingdom? If your body is a temple, and if the Spirit lives in you, should not the house be clean? Holy. Healed. Whole.

You have power. You have authority. Jesus gave it. Say it aloud: “He has given me power and authority over all demons and over all disease.” Let the weak say, “I am strong.” Why? Because faith feeds spirit, and the strong spirit of a man sustains him through pain, through trouble, through the valley.

Stop waiting on God to drag you forward. He gave you the Word, the Spirit, the Name, the Blood. You’re not waiting on Him—He’s waiting on you. You want Him to override you, but He desires to work with you. Just like finances, healing won’t fall on you like ripe fruit. You walk it out. You speak it out. You believe it in.

This is not fantasy. This is not motivational talk. This is the eternal truth of the living God. His name is still Jehovah-Gemuwal—the Lord who repays. And He is repaying His people now.


The Healer Dwells Among Us Still

Let it be shouted across pulpits and whispered in prayer closets: God has not changed. The One who healed then, heals now. And He heals all. Not a few. Not a select. All. The earnest of our resurrection is not a thought—it’s power. And healing is a taste of that coming resurrection, the down payment of glory, the prelude of transformation.

How much disease is in heaven? None. So how much belongs in the house of God? None. You are the house. Your body is the temple. The Spirit of God dwells in you. Would the Holy One share space with sickness? Would the flame of heaven burn alongside infection? I tell you, absolutely not.

Church is not cold stone and wood. It’s family—forever joined. And this family is meant to walk in love, not only toward one another, but toward the truth: that the Father’s heart is to heal, to restore, to prosper. Yet many rise in irritation at the very doctrines that could save them. Tithing? Speaking in tongues? Divine healing? Prosperity? Miracles? These are not burdens—they are blessings! And so many fight the very hand stretched out to help.

When Jesus healed the woman bound for 18 years, what did He say? “Ought not this woman, being a daughter of Abraham, be loosed?” That word “ought” shakes the heavens—it speaks of justice. Healing is not a gift of chance. It is a righteous act of covenant fulfillment.

Do not reason it away. Do not explain it into oblivion. Say what the Word says. Believe what He said. If He said, “If you ask anything in My name, I will do it,” then He will. But say it. Believe it. Act like it’s true—because it is.

We’ve grown tired of waiting for lightning. But the Word is fire. It pounds into your spirit until it breaks up unbelief. Until your eyes open. Until your body obeys the life within it. Healing doesn’t begin in the body. It begins in the heart. And the Word—His Word—feeds that heart.

The house of God must be clean. Your body must be healed. Your mind must be whole. It glorifies Him to see His people rise and live, to defy death, to overcome pain, to stand unshaken and say, “I am strong!”—even as the world says otherwise.

We are not chasing signs. We are following the Spirit, and signs are following us. Miracles in the road, like the young man brought back from the edge. Encounters with heaven. Testimonies of light and sound and healing that break the bounds of language.

This is the inheritance of the saints. It belongs to you. “I am the Lord who heals you.” Not who healed you once. Not who might someday. Who heals you now.

Let the Word break the chains, cast out the lies, and set your feet on healing ground. The King is among us, and He is still giving.

Healing Through Compassion: Unleashing God’s Power

O beloved, we live in an hour when the Spirit of the Lord is crying out through the saints—not for another program, but for power. Not for another teaching, but for demonstration. The cry is for healing, for deliverance, for the tangible mercy of God to flood the earth like a river of glory. And that cry begins in compassion.

Jesus, our Master, never healed for display or fame. His healing flowed from the Father’s compassion. “He did nothing of Himself” (John 5:19), but yielded to the compassion within Him. That compassion still beats today through His body—you and I.

Do not ask, “Why could we not cast it out?” (Matthew 17:19), if you have not allowed compassion to fill your being. Compassion is not emotion—it is alignment with heaven’s agenda. It is the fuel of faith and the trigger of miracles. You will never release what you have not first received. So first, be filled with His love.

Many say, “I believe in healing,” yet remain unchanged. Faith must have action. The Word of God, when received in faith, becomes living power. “It works effectively in those who believe” (1 Thessalonians 2:13). You must receive the Word not as the word of man, but as the very breath of God, able to mend the body and restore the soul. Healing is not theory—it is covenant. It is not optional—it is His will.

Our bodies are not accessories to spirituality; they are instruments of Christ’s presence. We are the physical interface of Jesus to the world. When He wants to touch the broken, He sends you. When He wants to comfort the grieving, He uses your voice. Your body is His instrument; your spirit, His conduit. “The body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also” (James 2:26).

Lay your hands on the sick, not with doubt, but with divine boldness. He has said, “These signs will follow those who believe…” (Mark 16:17-18). Do you believe? Then act. Obey. Move. Speak. Believe not just for your own healing, but carry healing to others. The Holy Spirit within you is greater than any darkness before you.

Even a child can lay hands and see miracles. Even a janitor can explain cancer being vomited onto the church floor—because the power of God makes no room for sickness to dwell. You do not need elegant prayers. You need raw obedience and Spirit-breathed compassion.

Do not accuse the weak or judge the sick. Show mercy, for “mercy triumphs over judgment” (James 2:13). Never say, “God made you sick.” That lie is foreign to the Kingdom. He is a healer—not a tormentor. His will is healing. His nature is mercy. His compassion never fails.


Carriers of His Power

Now is the hour to walk in the very works of Christ. Did He not say, “Greater works than these will you do” (John 14:12)? This is not a poetic exaggeration—it is a commission. It is the call to live as true sons and daughters of the Kingdom.

Jesus sent out ordinary disciples to heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, and cast out demons. We have been sent with no lesser charge. You must stop measuring your capacity by your personality and start measuring by your position in Christ. He is seated far above all power and dominion—and you are seated with Him (Ephesians 1:20–21).

The supernatural is not a sideshow—it is the normal Christian life. The local church is not a club for doctrine; it is a dwelling place of power. Every believer should move in signs and wonders. Like Stephen, filled with the Spirit while waiting tables, you too can carry healing in the grocery store, the workplace, the classroom. Power does not come by title but by surrender.

Let the healing river flow through your hands. Stand close to those who are suffering; the Spirit in you will become a force field of deliverance. In one meeting, hundreds were healed—power erupted and sickness fled. Not because of a man, but because of the manifested Christ.

Healing is not always instant. But when you believe, healing begins. Stand on the Word. Declare the covenant. Jesus never told a seeker, “It is not God’s will to heal you.” To the leper He said, “I will—be clean” (Matthew 8:3). That is still His response today.

God will not violate His covenant. When you meet the conditions, healing must follow. So receive His Word, mix it with faith, and act upon it—even if your body resists. The Word planted and watered will bear fruit—healing fruit, deliverance fruit, resurrection fruit.

We are not spectators in this divine story. We are participants. If Jesus wants to heal, He will send you. If He wants to speak, He will use your voice. Let not your spirit remain locked inside—express Him. Be His hands, His feet, His eyes. The world cannot read your spirit, but they can see your works.

You are anointed to destroy yokes. “The yoke shall be destroyed because of the anointing” (Isaiah 10:27). When the enemy comes in like a flood, you rise up in the Spirit of the Lord. When people are dying, you lay hands. When darkness presses in, you shine brighter.

This is your calling: to be His image on earth. Show the world what Jesus looks like—not just in speech, but in power. Miracles are not past tense. Healing is not a lost art. It is alive in you, O child of God. Rise. Move. Minister.

The world is waiting.

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.

Empowered by the Spirit: Miraculous Healing Unleashed

The Vision of the End-Time Body

By the unshakable hand of the Lord, I was awakened in the early hours of July, in the quiet of Winnipeg, Canada. The Spirit of the Living God came upon me with fire and clarity, and I was taken into the revelation three times — the same vision, the same details, branded into my soul. This was not a dream; it was divine summons. And from that hour, I knew: the ministry of the end times would not be like what we have seen before. It would be marked by fire, by discernment, by the gifts of the Spirit flowing in unrestrained power — tongues, prophecy, miracles, discernment — all distributed by the same Spirit, the breath of God moving like wind through dry bones.

The Spirit said, “This is My body: not fractured, not feeble, but full of glory.” I saw children healed by command — one by a touch, one by a cloth, and one by a word. Three afflicted with the same disease, yet each set free differently. I understood then: there is no formula but faith. No power but the name of Jesus. No limit to His mercy. Even across oceans, the anointing of the Holy Spirit traveled with a letter, igniting healing in a woman we had never met.

We must not look to the flesh, for the outward man decays. But the inner man, oh yes — he is renewed day by day! Healing is not the highest aim, but it is the sign. It is the mercy of God touching human need, pointing always to the cross. Jesus said, “The light of the body is the eye,” and our eyes must be single — fixed not on our pain or limitation, but on His Word.

Do not say, “If it be His will,” when He has already spoken, “I am the Lord who heals you.” His name is not “the afflicter,” but “the Redeemer.” And His covenant still stands.

We are living in a time when Jesus is walking into rooms again. Shirley saw Him. She did not imagine; He entered, because where the hunger is, there He walks. We must cast out devils, for they tremble at His presence. “Be quiet and come out!” He said — and still says.

To every believer, I declare: This is not reserved for the elect few. The Spirit is poured out on all flesh. You have been knit in your mother’s womb for such a time as this. By faith and compassion, go forth. Heal the sick, raise the dead, cast out demons — not by your strength, but in the name of Jesus. Amen.


The Unstoppable Will of God

Let it be known in the courts of Heaven and the streets of earth: God’s will is to heal. He desires wholeness in spirit, soul, and body — not for some, but for all who will come. Jesus never turned one away who came in faith. His will is not hidden. His Word is not unclear. And His nature is never at odds with His power. Shall the Healer become the bringer of sickness? God forbid!

“What shall it profit a man to gain the world and lose his soul?” Yes, salvation is eternal. But healing is the sign of His goodness here and now. As surely as Jesus forgives, He heals. The same blood. The same cross. The same compassion.

There is a stirring in the body. Songs rise up that exalt Christ’s victory. Young men and women burn with the call to be holy. The Spirit baptizes them not just in tongues but in fire — fire that burns away the trivial and sets their eyes on eternity. They are not called to be “better citizens,” but ambassadors of another realm. Their words carry weight. Their hands transmit healing. Their eyes see in the Spirit — images, letters, body parts — and they know how to minister with accuracy, not guesswork.

I saw jaws align, limbs move, and a little girl rise like a calf let out of the stall. She had been bound by muscular dystrophy, but the Spirit of the Lord had other plans. God said, “Because you have tithed, because you have believed, I will not let your vine cast its fruit.” And He healed her in the night.

We do not understand all His ways — how could we? We barely comprehend the orbit of the stars, much less the circuitry of His healing mercy. But this we know: faith moves Him. Compassion releases His hand. Holiness pleases Him. And worship sustains the flow of His power.

Healing is not always instant, but it is always promised. Sometimes it comes by the laying on of hands, sometimes by a word, and sometimes by the simple declaration of faith. The Gospel is not a theory. It is power. It is deliverance. It is sozo — salvation in all dimensions.

Let the skeptics scoff. Let the weary doubt. But let the remnant arise. God is forming a company of ministers who will not tolerate defeat. They will anoint with oil, speak with boldness, and refuse to back down. Their eyes are set on Jesus. Their hearts are full of the Word. And their hands are ready for miracles.

This is the generation of the outpoured Spirit. These are the days of Elijah and of the greater One still. Go, and heal, and proclaim: The Kingdom of God is here! Hallelujah.

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.