Praying for the Sick

There is an old preaching story from the mission field. An African tribe had collected their sick and delivered them to the medicine man who stood in front of a fire. He examined each one and divided them into three groups. He stood in front of the first group and gave them something to eat from the boiling pot that sat behind him. Then, he sent them home. The second group he gave herbs from local plants. Then, he sent them home. He simply prayed for the third group. Then, he sent them home. A Christian missionary witnessed this event and was filled with questions. He asked the medicine man later, “What does this mean?” The medicine man replied, “The first group was sick because they needed a better lifestyle. I gave them vegetable soup and sent them home to rest. The second group needed medicine. The local herbs I gave them had healing power. The third group needed more help than I could offer. I prayed that God would heal them in miraculous ways.”

That story makes one point: all healing really comes from God. You may experience healing if your lifestyle improves. You may experience healing through modern medicine. You may experience healing because of divine intervention. Don’t dismiss any of these methods. The sick don’t care about how they are healed, the sick only want to be healed. Have you ever prayed for someone who was sick? Before I look at the scripture text, let me examine these three sources of healing.

Sometimes people experience healing because they just need a healthier lifestyle. America is facing a health crisis. According to the national Institutes of Diabetes and Kidney Disease, nearly one in three Americans is considered obese. There are thousands of websites devoted to losing weight and maintaining a healthy lifestyle. Each website seems to have a list of things to do. The Mayo Clinic has a website devoted to healthy living. This is their list of what to do:

  1. Eat nourishing food
  2. Sleep seven to eight hours per night
  3. Keep company with good people
  4. Avoid news overdose
  5. Get regular exercise
  6. Do something meaningful each day
  7. Think good thoughts about others

Do you do everything on that list, or do you have some work to do? Sometimes people experience healing because they need a healthier lifestyle.  

Sometimes people experience healing because of modern medicine. Late in 1949, my paternal grandmother, Orbie Adams (1893-1949), came home from church. Her morning had been filled with Sunday School children and worship. She was doing what she always did after church – preparing lunch for her family. It was during that normal routine she suffered a fatal heart attack. She knew she had high blood pressure, so she watched the amount of salt she consumed. My grandfather, Roger Adams (1893-1980), said she didn’t take blood pressure medicine because there weren’t any blood pressure medicines in 1949. I inherited my high blood pressure from my father, Ronald Adams (1920-1996), who inherited it from his mother. The only difference between me and my grandmother is time. I have been taking blood pressure medicine for the past thirty-eight years. These are good times to be alive. The advances in modern medicine are truly incredible. Sometimes people experience healing because of a better lifestyle. Sometimes people experience healing because of modern medicine.

Sometimes people experience healing by divine interaction. At one time Kathryn Kuhlman (1907-1976) was a polarizing figure in America. She was born in Missouri in 1907 and became a born-again Christian through the ministry of the Methodist Church in 1921. At the age of sixteen she began preaching in the west. However, her identity is not as a preacher. She will always be remembered as a faith healer. She claimed to have many healings during her “healing crusades” from the 1940s into the 1970s. Her ministry reached its zenith when her television program, I Believe in Miracles, went nationally. Some believed she had divine power; some believed she was a fraud.

How do you feel about faith healing? The Gospels are filled with miracles. The lame could suddenly walk. The blind could suddenly see. Demoniacs were made whole. The lepers were made clean. I believe that in our world there are still instances of divine interaction. Those stories are important because they remind us God is active in our world. Have you ever known someone who has been healed? Sometimes people experience healing because of a better lifestyle. Sometimes people experience healing because of modern medicine. Sometimes people experience healing by divine interaction. That takes us to our scripture reading.

Our reading is James 5:13-16. Written in the early 60s, James was the oldest stepbrother of Jesus. According to Acts 15, James was a prominent Christian leader in Jerusalem. This letter was written to the scattered Christians throughout the world. It is clear that James understood the power of prayer. These few verses can be broken down into two sections. The first section deals with physical healing. Verse thirteen and fourteen tells us to pray during life’s hardships, including sickness. The second section deals with spiritual healing. Verse sixteen tells us to confess our sins so we may be healed. Do you see what James did? He connects physical healing and spiritual healing. Why? He knows physical healing is temporary, but spiritual healing is eternal. We are preoccupied with physical healings because we are preoccupied with the things of this world. God, on the other hand, is preoccupied with spiritual healing because God is preoccupied with eternity. Don’t miss the point – everyone Jesus healed physically is now dead; everyone who accepted Jesus spiritually is still alive!

When I was in seminary, I had a friend named David. He was from the state of Michigan and was part of the Christian Missionary Alliance Church. I liked him from the very beginning. However, his story was sad. Prior to his seminary days he had been diagnosed with a brain tumor. His body was weak from that battle. However, his mind and spirit were sound. For two years he had been tumor free, but in the last year of his studies the unthinkable happened. The brain tumor reappeared. Everyone prayed for him. The seminary community prayed for him. The Christian Missionary Alliance Church prayed for him. Loved ones in Michigan prayed for him. Everyone who heard David’s story prayed for him. We contacted everyone at home to pray for David. God heard our prayers and God responded to our prayers with a loud, “No!” In time, David died. I went to David’s funeral and heard all the stories.

Someone spoke about what had happened to David one Sunday night. He was physically weak, but he had enough strength to go to a healing service. It was at that healing service David received some misguided teaching. The preacher anointed David with oil and told him healing was still possible. All he had to do was believe. The only thing holding the healing back was his own lack of faith. David was not healed, and he left that prayer service broken-hearted. He felt like a second-rate Christian, full of doubts. It was in that broken state that David died a few days later. He left this world feeling like a spiritual failure. That healing service preacher did David a great disservice. The preacher applied guilt to a man who needed grace. Do you know of anyone who died feeling like a spiritual failure? David wasn’t healed physically, but David was healed spiritually. No one questioned his salvation. When I get to heaven, I am going to look for David. Sometimes healing comes because of a better lifestyle. Sometimes healing comes from medical treatment. However, real healing comes from Jesus!

Lincoln’s Finest Hour

Everyone knows the name Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865), and everyone knows his story. Self-educated, he became a lawyer in Illinois and in time became our sixteenth president in 1860. His election was not embraced by all. Before he could be sworn into office, the country was divided over the issue of state’s rights. We still struggle with state’s rights. Lincoln sat in the oval office during the bloody years of the Civil War, tested time and time again.

History tells us Abraham Lincoln often visited military hospitals during the Civil War to cheer up the wounded. On one occasion he visited a mortally wounded young soldier. Lincoln’s heart was broken. “Is there anything I can do for you,” asked the compassionate President. “Please write a letter to my mother,” the young soldier replied. Unrecognized by the soldier, Lincoln sat down and wrote as the youth told him what to say. The letter read:

My Dearest Mother,  

I was badly hurt while doing my duty, and I won’t recover. Don’t sorrow too much for me. May God bless you and Father. Kiss Mary and John for me. 

The young man was too weak to go on, so Lincoln signed the letter for him and then added this postscript, 

Written for your son by Abraham Lincoln.  

Asking to see the note, the soldier was astonished to discover who it was that had shown him such kindness. “Are you really our President?” he asked. “Yes,” was the quiet answer. That story shows Lincoln’s compassionate side. Has there ever been a time when you needed some compassion? 

Webster defines compassion as, “A sympathy for the feeling of others, often including a desire to help.”  Compassion is important because our world can be a hard place. You don’t have to be a soldier in the American Civil War to relate to that story. I have never met a person who did not need compassion. Have you ever felt victimized? You did absolutely nothing wrong and you tried your very best. The problem is everything went wrong. Your entire world attacked you and you found yourself filled with self-pity. Emotionally exhausted, you felt completely alone in a world filled with over eight billion people. Then, from a most unexpected source, God sent you someone who showed you kindness and compassion. The rest of the world questioned your motives and desires, but your angel only gave you peace. Compassion can be a powerful medicine. That takes us to our scripture reading.

Our text is Mark 1:29-34. One of the best things about retirement is napping. I began this custom when I was still working on Sunday afternoons. I have no proof to support the following statement, but I believe it is true. I expended more energy on Sunday mornings than the rest of the week combined. I got up early on Sunday mornings to review my material and update my prayers. I participated in three worship services, which meant I preached three times. I related to countless people and tried to remember everyone’s story. I tried to welcome everyone who entered the building. I am not complaining but there is a certain amount of stress in the ministry. Some have thin skin. I tried to be prophetic; I was speaking for God, yet I can’t insult anyone. I tried to be supportive, but everyone could not get their way. I fielded a variety of complaints from good Christian people.  I know it doesn’t sound like much, but I found these few hours on Sunday morning to be exhausting. When I left church after Sunday morning I was spent. I struggled with the simplest conversation because I couldn’t focus. Every week following worship, I ate lunch, turned off my cell phone, and took a nap on the sofa. This confession is not exciting, but it is true. 

According to the text today, Jesus was a better man than I. When Jesus left worship, he didn’t nap; he healed the sick. I don’t just mean a healing; I mean a multitude of healings. Verses thirty-three and thirty-four say, “The whole town (of Capernaum) gathered at the door (of Simon and Andrew‘s house), and Jesus healed many who had various diseases. He also drove out many demons, but he would not let the demons speak because they knew who he was.” One of those healings, the first one mentioned, was the mother-in-law of Simon Peter. Verse thirty is key to our understanding. It says she was healed because they told Jesus about her. I am not exactly sure who is included in the word “they”, but “they” must have included Simon Peter. She may not have been healed if “they” had not told Jesus about her. “They” had compassion on her and got her some help. They got her the best help you can possibly get someone in need – Jesus. She benefited from their compassion. Do the people in your life consider you a compassionate person? Our world hungers for compassionate people. If you want to be a compassionate person never forget three things.

First, never forget, compassion is sensitive to the needs of others. British statesman and financier Cecil Rhodes (1853-1902), whose fortune was used to endow the world-famous Rhodes Scholarships, was a stickler for correct dress—but apparently not at the expense of someone else’s feelings. A young man was invited to dine with Rhodes. He arrived by train and had to go directly to Rhodes’s home in his travel-stained clothes. Once there, he was appalled to find the other guests already assembled, wearing full evening dress. After what seemed a long time Rhodes appeared, in a shabby old blue suit. Later the young man learned that his host had been dressed in evening clothes too but put on the old suit when he heard of his young guest’s dilemma.  

Simon’s mother-law lay in bed with a fever. The story doesn’t come with a medical chart and all her test scores. The truth is, we don’t know the source of her suffering. That is not important; all that is important is that others had compassion on her. They got her help. Does anyone in your life need help? Do you have anyone in your life who needs Jesus? Compassion is sensitive to the needs of others.  

Second, never forget, compassion takes advantage of interruptions. Have you ever noticed there are times when your agenda and God’s agenda don’t match? You know the scene. You have a million things to do. You have a deadline to meet or a sea of people waiting for you. You are in a hurry trying to get it done in time and suddenly, someone shows up who just must talk to you. They have a problem, and you are the only one that can help. I know it is hard, but remember, compassion takes advantage of interruptions. 

Consider these ten Bible stories with me.  

1. The Parable of the Good Samaritan 

2. The Greatest Commandment 

3. The Blessing of the Little Children 

4. The Healing of the Ten Lepers 

5. The Healing of the Paralytic 

6. The Healing of the Man Blind from Birth 

7. The Rich Young Ruler 

8. Zacchaeus 

9. Blind Bartimaeus 

  10. Nicodemus 

What do they all have in common? They are all special moments in the Bible that were produced by interruptions. Jesus had compassion on these people and used these interruptions to do real ministry. Have you ever noticed there are times when your agenda and God’s agenda don’t match? The healing of Simon’s mother-in-law was not on the agenda for the day, but Jesus healed her because this was an opportunity for true ministry. 

Third and final, never forget, compassion is gracious. When I was in the Cleveland area, I had a parishioner who claimed he hadn’t missed church for fifty years. One day, I figured out that he had heard 2600 sermons, plus the messages on the liturgical holidays. You do the math, fifty years times fifty-two weeks. I was impressed.   

One year I got involved in the annual pulpit exchange. You know the event, it is a way to get to know other preachers in the area. I went to the Presbyterian Church, and the Lutheran Church minister came to my church. The Lutheran preacher was just great! He was new to the area, and everyone was surprised to discover he was Korean. Mr. 2600 sermons saw the Lutheran minister and thought he was Japanese. He stood up from his pew and began yelling some ugly language. He said, “We fought them in the war. I don’t have to listen to them in my church.”  He stormed out of the church, never to be seen again. Everyone wanted to know what happened. I wanted to know if he had heard a single word of those 2600 sermons. There is no room for prejudicial behavior in God’s church. Compassion is gracious.  

I really don’t want to offend anyone, but I must ask, how much of a difference is Jesus making in your life? How many sermons have you heard in your life? How many of those sermons altered your life? The world doesn’t need your opinions. The world needs your compassion.

Let us end at the side of our dying Civil War soldier. You remember the soldier, he was wounded and Abraham Lincoln came to visit him. In time, the president wrote a letter home for him and said his good-bye’s. The soldier couldn’t believe the president’s kindness and compassion. But he really couldn’t believe it when the president said next, “Now, is there anything else I can do?” The lad feebly replied, “Will you please hold my hand? I think it would help me see this through to the end.” With the weight of the world on his shoulders, Lincoln held the young man’s hand until he died. In my opinion, it was Abraham Lincoln’s finest hour. 

How many hands have you held during life’s most difficult moments? The situation may not be death, it may be divorce. The situation may be a family issue, or it may be a personal pain. It may be disease, or it may be disappointment. How many hands have you held? How many people in your life need compassion? Scottish Baptist minister and author Alexander Maclaren (1826-1910) once said, “Kindness and compassion make a person attractive.”