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INITIAL ADDRESS ON THE CHURCH’S MINISTRY OF HEALING
at St John’s Episcopal Church, Dumfries
SECOND SUNDAY BEFORE ADVENT: YEAR C
18 November 2007
(Unquoted text is Malachi 4.2a – one of
the prescribed readings)
As the shops ratchet up their pre-Christmas sales techniques and
try to persuade us to “buy, buy, buy”, their loudspeaker
systems will be engaging the services of the Herald Angels
increasingly to try and get us in the mood!
“Hail, thou heaven-born prince of peace;
Hail thou Sun of Righteousness;
Light and life to all he brings,
Risen with healing in his wings.”
(Those who were listening to this morning’s Old Testament
reading from Malachi about “the Sun of righteousness shall
rise with healing in his wings” will not expect prizes for
guessing where Charles Wesley got that from!)
But what was your own reaction when you heard that word
“healing”? Or when you read (on last Sunday’s
leaflet) that I was to speak about healing today? I am going to give
you a few moments to think about it – be honest with yourself!
* * * * *
I thought I could almost detect an uncomfortable shuffling of feet
just then. After all, we Anglicans don‘t normally talk about
this sort of thing, do we? – even if Pentecostalists and
charismatics do! As my first vicar observed nervously to me,
“we don’t want that sort of thing here!” (He did
actually stop short of using the word mumbo-jumbo – though some
would not). Do we ever think about it?
Have you ever noticed that in churches and cathedrals which
provide space for written prayer requests, it is pretty fully used by
locals and visitors alike – and how often the subjects are not
just illness and bereavement, but broken relationships too? People do
seem to want or need something. Bishop Morris Maddocks, who founded
the Acorn Christian Healing Foundation wisely said: “Christian
healing is Jesus Christ meeting you at your point of need.”
So what we are to make of the Christian Ministry of Healing? Take
a moment and think to yourself; what do you think it is?
* * * * *
1. Some see it as being an outstanding opportunity for self-styled
“faith healers” who like doing their own thing –
unrelated either to church or medicine. These people have probably
done more to cause distrust among us than anything else –
especially when accompanied by an emotional razzmatazz more
reminiscent of Presidential elections in the USA than any
Christ-centred healing ministry! (Yet remember sometimes Jesus would
actually say “See that you tell no
man….”)
2. Others see healing as having been confined to the ministry of
Jesus personally, and that of his immediate followers – a sort
of temporary ‘loss leader’ (as we might say) to get the
Christian faith launched.
3. Some have been hurt by bad experiences or irresponsible
promises.
4. Yet others perceive the healing ministry as some quite new
discovery, and spend an inordinate amount of time asking questions
that have long been answered, rather than listening to what God has
already said to the Church, and receiving the lessons already
learned. Of course, there are some very good questions to be
addressed, and I hope that many of you will take up the opportunities
we plan to offer to explore them. So what are we to make of it?
I think we have to go back to the Gospels. Is healing the first
thing that comes to mind when seriously thinking about Jesus’
earthly ministry? Possibly not: and yet healing was not only a prime
part of his own ministry, it was equally a vital element in his
commission to his followers. In Luke 9 we read that when Jesus
ultimately launched his wider ministry he first gathered round him a
group of twelve, and then another of seventy, and he sent them out
charged with a clear twofold commission. Luke, “the beloved
physician”, writes: Jesus “gave them power and
authority…and he sent them out to proclaim the kingdom of God
and to heal.” In other words, proclaiming the kingdom and
healing were inextricably linked – indeed, in Judaism healing
had long been expected to be a sign of the breaking in of God’s
kingdom. That kingdom implied abundant life and wholeness. I find it
very significant indeed that in the New Testament the words for
‘wholeness’, ‘healing’ and
‘salvation’ all share a common root in the original Greek
language of the New Testament.
In the time since Jesus’ earthly ministry, the pattern has
changed. In recent centuries there has been no shortage of preaching
– but what of healing? The post-Reformation *Prayer Books were
coyly silent on the subject. Indeed the 1662 English Book of Common
Prayer even went so far as to suggest that since sickness was
sent by God to punish us for our misdeeds, then it was our
job to put up with it patiently – a point of view that was
singularly at odds with that of Jesus himself, who worked constantly
to do away with sickness and disease. But alas, that notion is still
very widespread even to this day. During 48 years of ministry, I
cannot count the number of times that I have heard it said of a sick
person “I can’t think what he/she has done wrong to
deserve this.” Yet what human parent would ever punish
their child with (say) cancer or heart disease? Is it not a most
appalling indictment of our merciful and loving God even to suggest
it? (Of course, I know perfectly well that some sicknesses are
self-generated, but that is an entirely different matter).
The simple fact is, of course, that many of us have exercised a
healing ministry for very many years, but it has usually been private
and personal, with the result that very few people generally have
known about it – it has not been visible. It is only
through the recent provision made in various books of public worship
visibly restoring such things as the sacramental
Laying-on-of-hands, Anointing, and the Blessing of Oils by the bishop
each year on Maundy Thursday, that many people have begun to be aware
of this ministry at all. And this has led to the notion that the
Church’s Ministry of Healing is something new. Yes, it is a
revival – but it is not an innovation!
I quote from the booklet on this subject produced by the Diocese
of Glasgow and Galloway: “The Church’s Ministry of
Healing is a fundamental part of its mission”; and from
Bishop Idris’ Foreword: “Healing is being restored to
its place as a normal part of the life of a Christian
community.”
Our concern for mission as a Church must surely include making
Christ’s present day healing work visible and available to any
who are in need. And we are most able to do that when we first
recognise our own deep needs, (both individually and collectively,)
and receive his loving, healing, saving grace ourselves – as we
shall be doing shortly in this Eucharist.
An initial address in this service leaves no time to explore
further, but my aim for today has been quite simply to awaken
interest, to get us thinking, and above all to stimulate prayer about
this. It is an occasion to encourage questions, and to open our eyes
for signs of healing in our church. I shall be really pleased to
receive feed-back of any kind.
I will leave you with these questions – (homework, if you
like!).
1. What examples of healing have you experienced or observed in our
church community?
2. How was that healing channelled? (One clue might well be through
listening).
3. Is healing limited to curing?
If I have any vision of tomorrow’s church, it is of one that
will receive Christ’s healing power more deeply, and will dare
to channel it into the world more effectively. And by the Church I
don’t just mean its leaders in high places, or even just those
in dog-collars. All baptised people are entrusted with this ministry
to share – though in a variety of ways. But above all, remember
it begins and must continue with PRAYER.
J. Paul Burbridge
* Note: The first English Book of Common Prayer of 1549 was an
exception, in that it did provide for anointing: but that quickly
disappeared in the 1552 revision.
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