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Executive leaders at the
Assemblies of God recently affirmed the role churches
and pastors have in faith healing.
Apr. 23, 2010:
Executive leaders at the Assemblies of God recently
affirmed the role churches and pastors have in faith
healing.
George O. Wood, general superintendent of the
Pentecostal denomination, said every church service
should include a time when people are given the
opportunity to be prayed for, whether it's for physical
or spiritual healing.
But some of the Pentecostal leaders admitted to being
hesitant at times to offer faith healing or prayers for
healing.
"I find as a pastor, if I prayed for people and they
weren't healed, I let that be a reflection of my
spirituality," said James T. Bradford, general secretary
of the Assemblies of God in a recent informal roundtable
discussion. "I worried too much about what would they
think about me as a pastor. They must think I'm not very
spiritual."
But Bradford realized that he had to get himself out of
that thought.
"I think we really have gotten hung up on why doesn't it
(healing) always happen," he said. "So we're hesitant;
we don't want to give false hopes to people rather than
maybe reframing that and say[ing] 'no matter what we're
always invited to ask abundantly [of God].'"
"I just have to obey the word," he added. "If they're
not healed ... that had to at some point not become my
problem."
The roundtable discussion – which also included
Assemblies of God leaders L. Alton Garrison, assistant
general superintendent, and Douglas E. Clay, general
treasurer – comes after a number of faith healing cases
involving parents whose sick children died of easily
treatable conditions.
Most recently, Jeff and Marci Beagley from Oregon City
were convicted in February for failing to seek medical
help for their son. The couple had simply laid their
hands on their 16-year-old son and prayed for him, but
did not take him to the hospital. Neil died from
complications from a urinary tract blockage. The parents
were found guilty of criminally negligent homicide.
Wood is a believer of faith healing. He received healing
himself when elders prayed for his torn retina.
"There's a lot of mystery about healing I don't
understand," he said. "But I do know that I was healed
in that moment."
Still, he's critical of those in what he calls the
"hyper-faith movement" who essentially neglect New
Testament passages that mention suffering and
individuals who remained sick and never received the
miraculous physical healing that others did.
"There are many persons who have lost their relationship
with God because of the disappointment that has come as
a result of the false hyper-faith teaching," Wood said.
Clay called faith healing one of the most confused and
abused values among Christians.
There is a distinction, he explained, between faith
healing and divine healing that people need to
understand.
"Faith [healing] is my part to do what the Word says but
not to be the actual agent of the physical restoration,"
Clay explained. "Divine healing leaves both the timing
and to the degree in God's hands."
Supporting Clay's assertion, Wood stressed, "Our faith
has to be not faith in faith but faith in God which
brings us to divine healing rather than faith healing."
Founded in 1914, the Assemblies of God is one of the
largest Pentecostal denominations in the country. The
U.S. body has experienced 15 percent growth over the
past decade and is currently nearing 3 million members.
Audrey Barrick, Christian Post Reporter
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