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Healing and Evangelism - John Woolmer

Two sides of the same coin?


healing


- How do we take the church into the market place?
- When (or should it be if?) we get into the market place what do we say to largely sceptical, intensely busy world?
- How can the local church, or any group of local Christians, get heard in our noisy world?

When I was Rector of Shepton Mallet, in Somerset, the home of Her Majesty’s oldest prison, a centre of the cider industry (remember Babycham at one shilling and fourpence a bottle?), and the closest town to the New Wine and Soul Survivor conferences, the frequent headline of the local newspaper billboards was ‘Row in Town Council.’ just once it was ‘Miracle in Parish church’. Like many churches in the last two decades of the twentieth century, we were not particularly ‘successful’. We tried to preach the Gospel faithfully, we prayed for the sick, we exorcised a number of buildings with due help from the splendid priest whom Bishop Jim Thompson called the diocesan dealer in spooks. We saw some dramatic conversions and some gradual transformations. We grew a large number of Readers and such a surprising number of ordinands that ABM wrote to ask us how we did it. We did some useful social work, opening a house for the homeless young and we prayed a lot. However, we never got anywhere near transforming a community, which, despite being in rural Somerset, was riddled with all the worst social problems of the age. I don’t want to sound pessimistic and we were grateful to what God was (and still is) evidently doing in a small market town.

Healing

Overseas Experiences

During this time, with the encouragement of the Bishop and the PCC. I often travelled to Africa. In Zambia, and Tanzania there seemed to be many more obvious signs of healing, much need for deliverance, and many opportunities for evangelism. I found the same thing more recently in northern Argentina. One diocesan evangelist in Tanzania said that his problem was too many people professed a Christian commitment and that he needed follow up material (supplied by the wisdom of the Vicar of Holy Trinity Leicester and his congregation).

Despite famine (our cell group couldn’t come because they had nothing to eat), HIV, lack of work and many diseases such as malaria, the Anglican church in these countries is, by and large, full of faith, hope, and love and it is growing. One church in the Masai area of the Kiteto region of Tanzania has become a hundred in the course of about twenty years. Of course, it is fatally easy to idealize and there are plenty of problems not far below the surface.

There are, however, lessons to be learnt from overseas churches, and these I believe include understanding their view of healing, deliverance and evangelism. In Africa (after twelve visits) and the north of Argentina (after one visit), it seems natural to pray for the sick at every service. If this is not the local church’s practice, it soon becomes normal. The results are very evident. The leader of the Mothers’ Union in Kitwe, N Zambia, testifies on a film, that we made in 1992, that praying for the sick had revolutionised the Mothers’ Union and made them far more effective. She also testified to plenty of clear signs of both healing and deliverance. Very seldom do we know the long-term results of our prayers but over the years I have had testimonies of people who were nearly deaf hearing well, people blind in one eye seeing clearly, cancer disappearing from a small child at a Compassion meeting in Uganda and arthritic pains from the elderly, a woman raising her arm in front of her children who had never seen her use it, a paralysed girl getting out of bed (her mother deeply movingly five years later walked 50km to a meeting to tell me of her death from malaria – not to complain but to give thanks to God for the quality of life that had been restored to her daughter) and a paralysed woman in Argentina who started to move her paralysed leg and unclench her paralysed hand before our eyes. In the midst of all this there was much evangelism, the woman whose shoulder was released in front of her children went back and told her husband. He summoned the local priest to cleanse the house, to destroy all charms, to help them renounce evil and to turn to Christ. Last year when the Spirit was moving powerfully in a service in Babati a man came forward with the fairly normal problem of ‘chest, stomach and knees’. I asked my Tanzanian colleagues (the local priest and my translator who was a lecturer at a theological college) to pray for his chest and stomach, while I knelt down and prayed for his knees. After a brief time of prayer (we had a seven hour journey ahead of us, and time was limited), I asked him ‘How are you?’ He replied ‘Chest fi ne, stomach fi ne, knees awful!’ I was a bit puzzled – then I asked him ‘Are you a committed Christian?’ He shook his head. He then said that he would like to make a public profession of faith. When he had done this, he smiled and said that his knees were now fine.

Do such things happen in UK?

I have often seen the same sort of thing happen in England. A sceptical member of a parish choir seeks healing for his glaucoma. Despite thinking that it was ‘a load of hogwash’; God heals his glaucoma (the healing was verifi ed both then and about seven years later) and he becomes an evangelist. He brings a neighbour, who is ill with terminal cancer, to church. Although his friend is never healed, he has six more years of life fi ve ,of reasonable quality, and he becomes a professing Christian soon after coming to the fi rst service. I could give many other examples. Perhaps the most important thing is that the Church believes that there is a Gospel to be taken into the market place. Non believers get healed (like the son of a local publican who has terrible eczema and is healed when two of our prayer team pray for him shortly after the pub has been exorcised – the body of a condemned highwayman was allegedly buried under the bar!) and good news spreads. A factory, full of strange goings on is prayed through, and the owner becomes seriously interested in the Gospel!

How can we experience more of God’s power and presence?

First, we need to believe that such things are part of today’s Gospel. There is a prevailing scepticism which is hard to overcome. Clergy will stand up at public meetings and say things like ‘Isn’t it time we stopped believing in all this medieval mumbo-jumbo?’ Our African colleagues roar with laughter when they hear things like that and say ‘How can our English brothers be so stupid?’ The Early Church grew mainly by proclaiming a Gospel which included a proclamation that Jesus was Lord (and that people needed to respond), that the signs of healing and deliverance would accompany their preaching and that social problems should be tackled. Ramsay Macmullen, a professor of history at Yale writes: The conversion of the Roman Empire to Christianity was based on miracles, on a head on challenge to non-Christians to a test of power, and on a contemptuous dismissal of merely rational paths towards true knowledge of the divine. Without this sort of belief and expectation, the Church will make little head way in our post-modern age which is not interested in arguments (important though these are – see 1 Peter 3:15 for instance) but is always asking questions like ‘Does it work? Does it make any Perhaps the most important thing is that the church believes that there is a Gospel to be taken into the market place.

I believe it will not be because of mega large churches but because every church and chapel becomes an effective beacon of their light in their community.

difference?’ Secondly, we need to train people to be effective in these areas. We need a sound theology. We need a theology which sees healing as a sign rather than a right, a theology which sees the need for deliverance as a possibility and not a probability, a theology which understands something of the mystery of God’s Sovereignty, a theology which has a positive understanding of death and illness. We need people who are humble, expectant, teachable and prayerful. We need people who are full of compassion (the great Jesus word in healing situations) and who are full of passion to get the wonderful Gospel out of their emptying pews into the madding crowd in the market place. Thirdly, we need to pray that healing and evangelism are not seen as specialist things to be done by great people but are to be a central part of the every member ministry which should be normative in church life. We may have occasional healing services (particularly at diocesan or deanery level – and these should be ecumenical); but every service in every church or chapel should offer the possibility of prayer for anyone who has come and their absent friends. We may have periods of mission (these should be ecumenical. I am just now involved in one that has drawn together a free Evangelical church, the local Methodists and the local parish church), but each of our church services should be so open to the leading of the Holy Spirit that an outsider could walk in and become a Christian. I remember this happening in Shepton Mallet when the retired Bishop of Singapore was preaching. A single-parent mother thought she had better come to a service because her teenage daughter was shortly to be baptised and confi rmed – she left the service a committed disciple. If this country is to turn again to Christ, I believe it will not be because of mega large churches but because every church and chapel becomes an effective beacon of their light in their community. They may sometimes be helped by the large churches acting in servant mode and helping with church planting and sacrificially releasing their wealth to help others. Then local newspapers may start to headline the good news. Instead of ‘Row in Town Council’ the norm could be ‘Miracle in local church’.


About John Woolmer

Preb John Woolmer was ordained in 1971, and served on the staff of St Aldate’s Oxford from 1975-82 and as Rector of Shepton Mallet from 1982-2002. He now works part time on the staff of Holy Trinity Leicester running a church plant which meets in schools and pubs. He is an Associate of ReSource, and travels round the country providing teaching and training on the healing ministry in churches and theological colleges. John is the author of a number of books, including Healing and Deliverance, now recognised as a standard authority on this subject. He has also written on Prayer and on Angels. Over the years John has led many healing missions in East Africa and Argentina. He chaired the Diocesan healing Group in the diocese of Bath and Wells during his time there, and is currently part of both the Wholeness and Healing Group and the Deliverance Group in the diocese of Leicester. He is a Prebendary of Wells Cathedral.