Monthly Archives: December 2024

How Praying for Empty Parking Places Can Lead to Healing the Sick and Raising the Dead (Conclusion)

Smith Wigglesworth (1859-1947) was known for his miraculous healings and for raising at least twelve people from the dead, including his wife Polly. Wigglesworth was once asked, “Smith, how can we have great faith like yours?”

“First the blade, then the ear, then the full grain in the ear,” he replied.

Wigglesworth’s quoting of Mark 4:28 let his listeners know that their faith had to first sprout and then grow. It would take time, effort and learning before mature faith would become evident to them. 

Whether we like it or not, we have to start our prayer journey where we are, not where we want others to think we are, not where our teachers and mentors presently are, but where we are. This usually means praying lesser petitions, like asking for parking places on crowded streets or praying for favor in various situations in our lives. Then, as the Lord answers our prayers, our faith and trust in Him are built on a solid foundation so we can continue to pray for bigger and bigger miracles.

The founder of Vineyard Churches, John Wimber (1934 – 1997), had a tremendous healing ministry that spanned the globe. He is a perfect example of a believer who had to work through various prayer levels before he saw success.

The following is a hilarious and entertaining seventeen-minute video on Wimber explaining his journey on healing the sick:

Remember: keep on praying. God is waiting for us to grow up!

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How Praying for Empty Parking Places Can Lead to Healing the Sick and Raising the Dead (Part 4)

The following is an excerpt from an upcoming novel:

The drive to meet Pastor Rick took me past the Temecula Valley High School baseball field where our son, Cole, played shortstop for the Golden Bears during his four years there. Cole was a good player, but that wasn’t the reason I always thanked the Lord for His mercy when I drove by the field. It was because of a special miracle the Lord did twenty-eight years earlier during a state playoff game.

On that particular day, the Golden Bears were playing the Norco High School Cougars. The pitcher for the Cougars was Carson Riley, a left-hander, who threw around ninety-five miles per hour and was a solid major league prospect. 

Cole stood in the right side of the batter’s box to lead off the seventh inning. Riley’s first pitch was a fastball, which tailed inside and hit Cole in the middle of his chest, knocking him to the ground. He laid motionless on the ground.

The three coaches for Temecula Valley rushed to him. One of them took out a cell phone and made a call.

Jane and I were sitting in the bleachers above the dugout on the first base side of the field. I grabbed Jane’s hand. “Honey, we need to go out there. Cole’s in danger,” I said.

We stood up and hurried to field.

Jim Dawson, the head coach for the Golden Bears, looked up as we approached home plate. “Dylan, he’s not breathing. I phoned for an ambulance. It should be here in four minutes,” he said.

Jane and I dropped to our knees and began praying. She prayed in tongues while I placed my hand on his chest.

“Father, You gave me a promise when Cole was born that He would preach the gospel and do miracles in Your name. When You made that promise, You looked into the future and saw this day. And yet, You still made that promise to me. I am not leaving until You honor Your promise and Cole stands up, totally healed in Jesus’ name. You did it for Elijah when he prayed for the widow’s son and I’m asking You to do the same thing for Cole, right now,” I prayed.

Coach Dawson grabbed my shoulders. “Dylan, let’s wait for the ambulance,” he whispered.

I shook his hands off me. “Let go of me,” I shouted. “God is doing a miracle here.”

Dawson released his grasp and wandered off. A siren could be heard pulling into the school’s parking lot.

“Father, I didn’t ask You to give me that promise for Cole. You did it on Your own. So, I’m asking You to honor Your promise, in Jesus’ name,” I prayed again and again.

“What’s happening here?” asked a paramedic, rushing toward us with a stretcher.

Cole’s green eyes fluttered and opened. He looked into my eyes. “Dad,” he whispered, “I met Jesus. He said I had to come back to life because of your prayers.”

My son was totally healed and wanted to stay in the ballgame, but of course, the two paramedics insisted on him riding in the ambulance to Temecula Valley Hospital. Jane and I followed them in our SUV. 

All of the tests on Cole proved to be negative. The Lord had healed him.

Cole graduated from high school two weeks later and now lives in San Diego with his wife Allyson and their two daughters, Mia and Madison.

 If I drove by the baseball field a hundred times in any one day, I always thanked the Lord for His gracious miracle every time. I always wanted Him to know how much I appreciated what He did for our family on that day.  

(Continued in Part 5)




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How Praying for Empty Parking Places Can Lead to Healing the Sick and Raising the Dead (Part 3)

Most Christians want to do the works of Jesus, like healing the sick, casting out demons and raising the dead. I have seen a few miracles over the years, but only once have I been involved in raising the dead. It happened in Louisville when we rented a home with a big backyard.

Carol and I kissed common sense bye-bye when we purchased two dogs. The Golden Labrador was named Casey and the liver and white spotted English Pointer was named Kelly. Both were females and about fifteen months old at the time of this story.

The two dogs loved each other. They dug holes in the yard, chewed on phone cables, barked at squirrels, raced around with tennis balls in their mouths, but they especially loved to puppy fight. Casey weighed seventy-five pounds while Kelly was a forty-pound lightweight, but Kelly was the alpha dog in the twosome. She always won the fights.

Carol and I had a lunchtime appointment on that particular day. I opened the gate to the dog run before we left so the dogs could play in the backyard. They took off running as we drove away.

When we returned and parked in the driveway, a loud wailing could be heard in the backyard. We scrambled out of the truck and raced to see what was the problem. There in the backyard in the dog run, the two dogs were tangled together. Casey’s lower jaw, somehow, caught itself under Kelly’s dog collar, and in the struggle to get free, Kelly had flipped over. This maneuver caused the cloth collar to strangle the smaller Kelly. Her eyes were glazed over and her breathing faint.

I tried to release the collar, but it was too tight. Carol ran to the house for a pair of scissors. She was gone only a few minutes, but by the time she returned and cut the cloth collar, Kelly quit breathing. She died in my arms with her eyes staring off into space.

Carol kneeled down next to me on the ground by Kelly in the backyard. We began praying in tongues with our hands touching the dead dog.

We wept.

“Father, You can’t let our dog die. You gave her to us. You have to raise her up. You can’t let her die. It’s not right. Father, we’re asking You to raise her up from the dead right now,” Carol and I cried.

We prayed over and over in this fashion with tears flowing down our faces for four or five minutes.

Then, Kelly opened her eyes. She wobbled to her feet and walked over to Casey who stood by the house, watching on. They touched noses as if to say, “That was a close one, but everything is okay now.”

Carol and I remained on our knees, praising our Father for His grace and mercy.

Later, Carol asked, “How long would you have continued praying for Kelly?”

“Until Father raised her from the dead,” I said without thinking.

Was it our great faith that brought about this miracle? No, not really. Our words were not filled with mountain-moving faith. We tugged on Abba Father’s heart like a four-year old child, begging a parent for an ice cream cone on a hot summer day. We knew He would eventually give in and do it because He is head over heels in love with us.

Our God is a good Father. (Excerpt from The Hunt for Larry Who)

(Continued in Part 4)

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