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SECOND ADDRESS ON THE CHURCH’S MINISTRY OF HEALING
FIRST SUNDAY IN LENT
10th February 2008
Isn’t it strange? Today’s healing address was planned
some months ago: yet it was only very recently indeed that Bishop
Morris Maddocks entered the fuller life. Why do I mention him? Quite
simply, because obituaries have appeared about him – notably in
last Tuesday’s Daily Telegraph – and his name is so
pre-eminently linked with the church’s healing ministry. He
actually resigned his bishopric of Selby in an act of faith to become
Adviser on Health and Healing to the Archbishops both of Canterbury
and York – and that without any official remuneration! His book
“The Christian Healing Ministry” is now the classic
Anglican text book on the subject, and he has probably done more than
anyone else in recent years to re-invigorate this ministry – so
much so, that significant provision is now made for the Healing
Ministry in the Anglican Church’s various prayer books. He went
on to found the Acorn Christian Healing Foundation, and within that
the teaching of Christian Listening skills. In twenty five years
Acorn has taken this work to all parts of Britain, and eventually to
South Africa, America and Eastern Europe.
Let me remind you: Jesus saw his own mission as being one not only of
preaching the good news but also of healing. But that was not all. In
Luke 9 (1-6) we read “then Jesus called the Twelve and gave
them power and authority over all demons and to heal diseases, and he
sent them out to proclaim the kingdom of God and to heal.” But
it didn’t stop there: for in the very next chapter he
commissioned a further seventy people to do just the same thing. In
Jesus’ final commission at the end of Mark’s gospel
(16.15, 17 &18) he says “Go into all the world and proclaim
the good news to the whole creation…These signs will accompany
those who believe; by using my name they will …. lay their
hands on the sick and they will recover.” Clearly Jesus expects
all disciples to be involved in healing – not just clergy, but
the whole people of God.
The gospels tell us that Jesus himself exercised this ministry in
many different ways. Sometimes he laid hands; sometimes (and most
offensively to some!) he healed by absolving from sin. We are told
that once he even applied clay made with spittle. He might tell
lepers to go and show themselves to the priests. We also know that he
could heal at a distance – as when the Centurion came asking
Jesus to come to his house and heal his servant, and Jesus effected a
healing then and there without actually going home with him: and so
one might go on. It is not surprising that as we follow his command
we too have various alternative tools. There are many questions to
discuss, and at 6 pm this evening you are warmly invited to meet here
so that we can explore some of them together. This morning, in our
limited time, I want to speak of just two of the formal ministries
now more readily available – though there are others besides.
1. First: The Laying on of hands
If we take our bodies seriously as being God-given gifts, then
touch is certainly one of our most fundamental methods of
communication – something that goes right back to bonding with
our mothers at our moment of birth. Throughout childhood both love
and pain relief are expressed pre-eminently through touch. Later,
social welcome is expressed by shaking hands or a hug. Taking by the
hand is the significant moment in the marriage service. ‘Laying
on of hands’ has always been seen as the perfectly natural
channel for conveying God’s gifts in confirmation and
ordination. Therefore it is hardly surprising that this method has
also been regarded as a channel for his gifts of wholeness and
healing. This laying on of hands with prayer will be one of the means
most frequently used by the Christian community for carrying out
Jesus’ command to “heal the sick”. The most usual
means for transmitting this gift is to lay hands on either the head
or shoulder of the recipient. This is far from being some form of
magic. The author of all healing is the Holy Spirit of God: our hands
are merely the outward and visible channel through which God’s
inward and spiritual grace can have full course in the person needing
wholeness. Normally hands are laid with brief spoken words of prayer,
though prayer can be silent – and some prefer it that way.
There is much to be said for two people (if possible) jointly
administering this gift. This avoids the possible implication that
healing comes from any individual in his or her own right – but
rather is symbolic that this is a corporate activity of the
church.
2. Secondly: Anointing.
The application of oil was a common remedy for pain in the ancient
world. (Remember the Good Samaritan who poured in oil and wine on the
man mugged on the Jericho road). Certainly the disciples used it when
Jesus sent them out to heal. Mark tells us: “they anointed with
oil many who were sick and healed them.” (Mark 6.13) Usually
olive oil is used, and in Episcopal churches this oil is usually
blessed by the Bishop on each Maundy Thursday. (Some of us will be
going to Glasgow when Bishop Idris does this in a few weeks time). It
was also the Old Testament method for consecrating Kings, and to this
day it forms part of our British Coronation service. It is usually
administered by dipping the thumb in oil and making the sign of the
cross on the recipients’ forehead. The upturned palms may also
be anointed too if this is wished. Because of the element of
absolution within it, this is normally administered by a priest.
Anointing once endured a poor reputation when it used to be called
‘Extreme Unction’ – or something administered only
to the dying. Can we be surprised if this ministry was not regularly
asked for? Yet James in his Letter quite clearly regarded it as a
healing act in continuing life.
Listen to what he says in chapter 5: “Are any among you
suffering? They should pray. ..Are any among you sick? They should
call for the elders of the church and have them pray over them,
anointing them with oil in the name of the Lord. The prayer of faith
will save the sick, and the Lord will raise them up; and anyone who
has committed sins will be forgiven. Therefore confess your sins to
one another and pray for one another, so that you may be healed. The
prayer of the righteous is powerful and effective.” (Note how
those words “pray” or “prayer” occur five
times in those four verses. Those who heard my first address may
remember my final words – that the healing ministry
“begins and must continue with prayer.”)
Following that address in November, I detected that some of you
thought there was no healing ministry in this church and
congregation. I challenge you to think again!..... In my own
experience, over the last few months I have become aware of a
tremendous power of prayer for members of my own family and for
others known among us here – a ministry valued beyond words,
and demonstrating vividly that this is not the preserve of the clergy
and/or one or two specialists in the field. I know there are others
here who would want to endorse my experience.
My wish for this church and congregation is this: that we should
become a vibrant powerhouse of prayer for the healing of individuals,
of families, communities and nations. ……And that
through the power of the Holy Spirit, we should ourselves receive
that “growth towards wholeness”
………enabling us to share more fully as channels
of Jesus Christ’s healing in his broken world.
J. Paul Burbridge
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