Category Archives: reformation

What’s Your Option “A” for Healing? (Part 15)

Click on following links for: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7, Part 8, Part 9, Part 10, Part 11, Part 12, Part 13 and Part 14.


What happened when the twelve disciples returned from their preaching and healing journey?

The disciples gathered together with Jesus; and they reported to Him all they had done and taught. (Mark 6:30)

When the apostles returned, they gave an account to Him of all they had done. Taking them with Him, He withdrew by Himself to a city called Bethsaida. (Luke 9:10)

What do you think the disciples told Jesus? Maybe something like the following:

“Lord,” said Peter, “You should have seen the man. He was a raving lunatic, totally out of his mind. And to be honest, I didn’t really know what to do but I knew he had a demon. So I said to him, ‘In Jesus’ name, come out of him.’ And it did. He was set free and healed. And then there was a woman …”

John, in his excitement, interrupted Peter.

“Lord, Lord,” said John, “I healed a six-year old girl, lying on a stretcher. She was paralyzed and near death. I laid hands on her and she was instantly healed. She jumped up and ran around, doing somersaults and cartwheels. And then, there was the man…”

James could not contain himself any longer and interrupted John.

“Guess what, Lord?” said James. “I laid hands on a dead man while they were carrying him in a funeral procession to a tomb. Everyone praised God. And then…”

Matthew pushed James aside, interrupting him.

“You should have heard me, Lord!” exclaimed Matthew.  “I preached an awesome Kingdom of God message in front of some Pharisees and Sadducees. Their eyes almost bugged out of their heads. It was so anointed. And …”

Then another disciple interrupted Matthew. And another. And another. Until everything they had done was told to Jesus.

Now, what do you think Jesus was doing when the disciples told Him about their adventures?

I don’t think He was critiquing them, nitpicking and telling them what they did wrong. Jesus is the perfect Teacher. He understands that first graders do not have the maturity level of high schoolers.

So, I believe Jesus was excited and acted like a cheerleader for them. Maybe He said things like, “Yea! Oh boy, that’s great! Way to go! Yes!”

Maybe, He stood up and danced and slapped his leg in joy and laughed aloud.

What about the disciples’ mistakes and mishaps? Did Jesus just overlook their errors?

Jesus is the great Teacher. He understood what level the disciples were at when this preaching and healing journey took place, then He promoted them to the next level. They then received more teaching and more was expected of them.

The soil produces crops by itself; first the blade, then the head, then the mature grain in the head. (Mark 4:28)

Just like a crop, there are learning stages we believers have to go through if we want to be used in healing ministries. We will make mistakes. But all we have to do is stay teachable.

(Conclusion for now. This series will be continued often in the future.)

A new series begins on Wednesday.

10 Comments

Filed under Christianity, Church, Faith, Gifts of the Spirit, God, Home Church, jesus, Kingdom of God, Prayer, Prophecy, reformation, spiritual warfare

What’s Your Option “A” for Healing? (Part 14)

lick on following links for: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7, Part 8, Part 9, Part 10, Part 11, Part 12 and Part 13.


Then He appointed twelve, that they might be with Him and that He might send them out to preach, and to have power to heal sicknesses and to cast out demons. (Mark 3: 14-15)

The Greek word apostello is translated into our English word send in the above verses. And from this Greek verb, the English word apostle is derived, which simply means the sent one.

Paul referred to apostles in this manner:

Therefore, we are ambassadors for Christ… (2 Corinthians 5:20)

for which I am an ambassador in chains… (Ephesians 6:20)

By definition, the word ambassador means a representative sent by a sovereign (person or state) to represent that sovereign with all of the power and authority of that sovereign backing him in whatever he does or says.

For example, the U. S. Ambassador to France, Charles Rivkin, when he speaks to Nicolas Sarkozy, President of France, he has all of the diplomatic power and authority of the U.S. government and President Barack Obama backing him. It’s as if President Obama and the U.S. government were standing before President Sarkozy and speaking personally to him.

And He called the twelve together, and gave them power and authority over all the demons and to heal diseases. And He sent (Greek word: apostello) them out to proclaim the kingdom of God and to perform healing. (Luke 9: 1 -2)

The apostles understood the principle of transference of power and authority from Jesus to themselves.  They had seen it work in their own lives before they were sent out on their own.

Therefore when the Lord knew that the Pharisees had heard that Jesus was making and baptizing more disciples than John (although Jesus Himself was not baptizing, but His disciples were) (John 4: 1 -2)

And one of the crowd answered Him, “Teacher, I brought You my son, possessed with a spirit which makes him mute; and whenever it seizes him, it slams him to the ground and he foams at the mouth, and grinds his teeth and stiffens out. I told your disciples to cast it out, and they could not do it. (Mark 9: 17 – 19)

The twelve apostles were trained by Jesus in a hands-on style.

Yes, they watched Him. Yes, He taught them. But even more importantly, they did not stand around with notebooks in their hands, jotting down important points here and there. Jesus used them in His work and transferred some of His power and authority to them.

So, when the twelve apostles went out on their journey, they were confident in the power and authority of the One who sent them.

(Continued in Part 15)

7 Comments

Filed under Christianity, Church, Faith, Gifts of the Spirit, God, Home Church, jesus, Kingdom of God, Prayer, Prophecy, reformation, spiritual warfare

What’s Your Option “A” for Healing? (Part 12)

Click on following links for: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7, Part 8, Part 9, Part 10 and Part 11.


How did Jesus train His disciples?

Try to visualize Jesus standing in front of a lectern that is located in a large classroom. He is wearing a dark suit, a white shirt and a conservative tie. In one of His hands is a large wooden pointer and behind Him is a white screen.

He looks out over the lectern at His disciples. Each one is sitting on a wooden pew with a Thompson Chain Reference Bible in his lap, a writing pad atop the Bible and a pen in hand.

All of the disciples hope to take notes which will help them on any upcoming exams. And at the same time, they hope to focus their minds on Jesus’  message and not have their thoughts wandering to the roast beef dinners awaiting them afterward.

Jesus clears His throat. “Just a heads-up, there will be a pop quiz tomorrow over the first four chapters of the book of Mark,” He says.

The groans instantly slip out of the disciples’ mouths. Most had planned on spending the day relaxing with families, and maybe taking a catnap or two. Now, all would have their noses in books. Oh well, each thinks to himself, no rest for us weary disciples.

“Let’s begin, shall we?” Jesus says. “My lesson today is entitled The Seven Steps to Healing a Sick Person.” He pauses a moment to allow the disciples to write on their pads.

“Okay, slide one, please,” Jesus says to a servant at the back of the room.

A picture of a small flask appears on the white screen behind Jesus. He walks over to the screen and points His wooden pointer at the flask.

“Step number one,” Jesus says, “you must always carry a small bottle of oil with you at all times. I recommend the Gilead Balm brand because it contains myrrh, cinnamon, calamus and pure Israeli olive oils and is formulated according to ancient recipes. ”

Did Jesus actually train His disciples in this manner? No, of course not.

Then, why do we Christians insist on training believers this way? After all, the classroom style of instruction has been proven to be the least effective way of teaching students. At best, a retention rate of 5-10% can be expected and this retention rate will only last for a few days before it is completely forgotten.

So, if not in this manner, how did Jesus train His disciples?

(Continued in Part 13)

7 Comments

Filed under Christianity, church planting, Faith, Gifts of the Spirit, God, Home Church, jesus, Kingdom of God, Prayer, Prophecy, reformation, spiritual warfare

What’s Your Option “A” for Healing? (Part 10)

Click on following links for: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7, Part 8 and Part 9.

…But the people who know their God shall prove themselves strong and shall stand firm and do exploits [for God]. (Daniel 11:32 AMP Version)

For nearly nine years, William Branham was the shining light of the Healing Revival. He walked in the prophet’s calling like no other person had been able to do since the early church. Signs, wonders, miracles and spiritual gifts flowed through him.

Then, as the Healing Revival’s fires died down, he started a teaching ministry. Why? What would cause him to leave his prophet’s calling and attempt to take up a new calling?

Gordan Lindsay asked Branham, “Why don’t you function where God wants you and manifest the gift God’s given you? Stay there! Don’t try to get over into another ministry.” Branham simply answered, “Yeah, but I want to teach,” said Branham. (Understanding the Anointing, Kenneth Hagin, 1983,

In his book, God’s Generals, Roberts Liardon wrote:

It is possible that through his prophetic gift, Branham saw the awakening of the teaching gift that would move on the earth through the Word of Faith Movement, which began in the late 1970’s. He obviously jumped ahead of its timing, perhaps hoping to regain his status as the leader of it….(God’s Generals, Roberts Liardon, Albury Publishing, pp. 335)

Maybe Liardon is correct in his speculation about Branham’s reasoning for attempting to be a teacher when he was not called to be one. But I have my own ideas on Branham’s reasoning…and who knows? Maybe there’s some validity to my speculation.

I believe William Branham and the other healing evangelists were forerunners and pioneers, much like Moses. They led the church through a wilderness of unbelief where signs, wonders and miracles were not really known to us Christians. These healing pioneers led us to the Jordan River, but most of them, like Moses, were not allowed to cross over. (There were a few Joshuas and Calebs, such as Kenneth Hagin and Oral Roberts, who crossed over, but not many.)

So, when the church crossed over the Jordan, what happened next?

For over fifty years, I believe the church has been in a Gilgal-like place, just as Israel was when it crossed over the Jordan River into the Promised Land. Gilgal has been a place of circumcision for the church. It has been a painful and frustrating time for us.

Yes, we’ve seen a few healing miracles over the years, but for the most part, healing miracles have just dribbled out of the River of Life on a here and there basis. And we believers have mostly watched our loved ones die and continue to suffer even though we have prayed for them, anointed them with oil and spoken prophetic words to them.

I believe William Branham saw today and the Move of God which is about to happen soon and it caused him to want to be a teacher.

Why teaching, huh?

(Continued in Part 11)

9 Comments

Filed under Christianity, Church, church planting, Faith, Gifts of the Spirit, God, Home Church, jesus, Prayer, Prophecy, reformation, spiritual warfare

What’s Your Option “A” for Healing? (Part 9)

Click on following links for: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7 and Part 8.


2. Strengthening Oneself (Physically).

In high school, I played football and suffered a knee injury which required surgery. Four years later, in college, I injured the other knee playing intramural football. It, too, required surgery.

Now, when I was young, middle age and arthritis seemed like a million years away. Won’t I stay young forever? I foolishly thought.

I paid no attention to work conditions. I just gritted my teeth and plowed through whatever pain I was suffering, knowing that four Ibuprofen tablets would relieve most of the pain so I could do it all over again the next day.

Then, at the age of 55, I could no longer jump an inch off the ground. Walking downstairs or upstairs was a painful experience. The years of climbing ladders as a painting contractor or walking on concrete for twelve hour shifts as a car salesman had destroyed what was left of the cartilage in both knees.

And arthritis? It was in my shoulders, elbows, knees and hips. Just standing up after sitting on a chair was a major undertaking filled with pain. And also, even though I was an easy going guy who hardly ever got upset, I was grumpy all the time. Constant nagging pain does that to a person.

Then what happened?

At the age of fifty-eight, Honey and I bought a home which had to be completely gutted and remodeled. I worked six months, tearing out walls, kitchen cabinets, bathrooms, carpet and whatever; and then redid everything. I even laid a thousand square feet of hardwood floors.

How could I endure all this work with bad knees and arthritis?

I felt that the Lord had whispered these words to my heart at the beginning of the project, “I will raise you up out of the remodeling.”

Did I suffer pain during the remodeling? Yes. But at the same time, there was an amazing grace that allowed me to endure it. It seems funny, right? Pain and grace being mentioned in the same context, but this is what happened to me.

It was three more years of agony and pain before a friend finally prayed for me. “Lord, you know what Larry needs, just do it for him now,” she prayed.

As you can see, it was not a pin-point, specific prayer, but rather a general one. But let me tell you, it was an effective prayer. All of my arthritis disappeared at once. It was gone!

Today, I am arthritis free, but I still have bad knees that cause me problems. So much so, that I quit exercising late last year, hoping rest would help the knees.

In January of this year, at sixty-four years of age,  I realized that I needed to quickly do something. My physical strength was rapidly dwindling. It was an all-out effort to lift a bag of groceries or walk upstairs.

Thus, I began power-walking, lifting weights, exercising and eating properly. After three months of this regimen, my strength is up 50-60% and my weight is down.

Do I still believe the Lord is going to heal me? Absolutely, yes! There is not a doubt in my mind, but sometimes, you have to go out to meet the Lord.

And there’s another reason why I am putting myself through this work-out and dieting discipline:

Therefore I run in such a way, as not without aim; I box in such a way, as not beating the air; but I discipline my body and make it my slave, so that, after I have preached to others, I myself will not be disqualified. (1 Corinthians 9: 26-27)

I have waited almost twenty-five years to be a part of a move of God and I don’t want to sit on the sidelines, watching others do the work.

(Continued in Part 10.)

13 Comments

Filed under Christianity, Church, Faith, Gifts of the Spirit, God, Home Church, jesus, Kingdom of God, Prayer, Prophecy, reformation, spiritual warfare

What’s Your Option “A” for Healing? (Part 8)

Click on following links for: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6 and Part 7.


…But the people who know their God shall prove themselves strong and shall stand firm and do exploits [for God]. (Daniel 11:32 AMP Version)

2. Strengthening Oneself (Spiritually).

Studying the word. Prayer. Fasting. These three exercises have to be a part of every believer’s life in order to build up his or her spiritual muscles, especially for a healing ministry.

But there is another characteristic which we must have to be spiritually strong:

And He has said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for power is perfected in weakness.” Most gladly, therefore, I will rather boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may dwell in me. Therefore I am well content with weaknesses, with insults, with distresses, with persecutions, with difficulties, for Christ’s sake; for when I am weak, then I am strong. ( 2 Corinthians 12: 9)

The weakness mentioned in the above verses comes only through humility. And whether we like it or not, humility is not a characteristic quickly learned from How To- books or teaching seminars.

Humility is a Christ-like characteristic forged into a person while he (or she) goes through trials filled with countless insults, distresses, persecutions, difficulties and mistakes. And from these trials, he learns that if the Lord doesn’t show up to help him in any given  circumstance, he will be an utter failure.

But also, humility allows a believer to be content and at peace with this truth. After all, he (or she) knows that he can do nothing without the Lord; and thus is weak.

Now, William Branham was a humble man at the beginning of the Healing Revival. He was a quiet man who never really cared about money and was quite satisfied with an old pickup truck, a cabin and a fishing pole.

But Branham was the man for nine years. His ministry was the biggest, most well-known and had the greatest successes. Thousands of people had been saved and healed through his ministry.

So, when the Healing Revival fires died down (as all revivals do) in 1955, Branham struggled with  the dwindling crowds and the smaller numbers of miracles. He resisted change and continued onward with his large ministry, the huge financial overhead and even added a teaching element to his ministry.

Roberts Liardon wrote in his excellent book, God’s Generals:

“Instead of seeking the Lord for his place of ministry in the next move of God, Branham turned to radical doctrine and sensationalism…Everything he had stood for in the former days of ministry seemed to have escaped him. (God’s Generals, Albury Publishing, pp. 335)

For whatever reasons, William Branham ignored the changes the Lord wanted in his ministry, and he walked away from his greatest asset: humility. He somehow forgot that his ministry served at the will and pleasure of the Lord. Jesus is Boss!

But if you have any doubts that Branham and his gifts were the real deal, his last miracle might help to convince you:

In 1965, Branham and his wife were driving through Texas when their car was struck by a drunk driver. Branham’s son, who was in another car, quickly arrived at the scene and checked out his parents. Branham’s wife had no pulse and was dead. Branham had a faint pulse, broken bones and was unconscious.

Branham stirred for a moment. “Is Mom okay?” he asked.

“Dad, she’s dead,” his son replied.

“Just lay my hand on her,” Branham said.

The son laid his bloody hand on the woman. She instantly revived and lived. Branham went into a coma and died six days later.

So, how else should we strengthen ourselves?

(Continued in Part 9)

12 Comments

Filed under Christianity, Church, Faith, Gifts of the Spirit, God, Home Church, jesus, Kingdom of God, Prayer, Prophecy, reformation, spiritual warfare

What’s Your Option “A” for Healing? (Part 7)

Click on following links for: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5 and Part 6.

(1) Knowing God.

Before Jesus and His ministry arrived on the scene, how were Jewish believers healed?

Now there is in Jerusalem by the sheep gate a pool, which is called in Hebrew Bethesda, having five porticoes. In these lay a multitude of those who were sick, blind, lame, and withered, [waiting for the moving of the waters; for an angel of the Lord went down at certain seasons into the pool and stirred up the water; whoever than first, after the stirring up of the water, stepped in was made well from whatever disease with which he was afflicted.] (John 5: 2-4)

Approximately 450 years separated the prophet, Malachi, and the ministry of Jesus.  These are known as the silent years when no inspired prophet arose among the Jews. And without the Old Testament prophets, there were no healing ministries.

Yet, Jehovah Rapha kept his healing candle flickering in Jerusalem at the Pool of Bethesda. There, an angel of the Lord would periodically stir up the water, and whoever stepped into the pool first was supernaturally healed.

The odds of an individual sick person being healed at the pool were slim because hundreds of people were laying on the five porticoes, waiting for a chance to be healed.

So, think about this:  For every supernaturally healed person who shouted for joy at the Pool of Bethesda, there were tears, anguish, disappointment and cries from the many hundreds who were not healed.

Jesus walked into one of these porticoes during a feast.  Now, wouldn’t you think that this would have been a perfect time to hold a healing meeting? After all, the porticoes were filled with hundreds of desperate, hurting people.

But Jesus walked past and stepped over countless numbers of people to find one man. And just that one man, out of the hundreds laying there, received his healing from Jesus.

How could Jesus focus on one person and not be overwhelmed by all the suffering people at the Pool of Bethesda?

Truly, truly, I say to you, the Son can do nothing of Himself, unless it is something He sees the Father doing; for whatever the Father does, these things the Son also does in like manner. (John 5: 19)

Jesus intimately knew the Father, and the Father showed Jesus that just one person was to be healed by Him. And  Jesus was at peace with the Father’s decision.

This is an important revelation for everyone who has or will have a healing ministry.

We need to intimately know God, walk with him and only do what He wants us to do. Otherwise, we will end up like William Branham, overworked,  exhausted and sitting on the sidelines. Our hearts will be weighed down and tugged on by all the suffering people in the world.

Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For My yoke is easy and My burden is light. (Matthew 11: 29 -30)

When William Branham returned to ministry in 1950, he prayed for sick people in a different manner than he did in 1946 and 1947. No longer did he push himself past his physical limits. Yet, he was just as successful.

If you have a calling to a healing ministry, spend time with the Lord and get to know Him now. So, you can run the race and finish the course the Lord has set before you.

(Continued in Part 8)

10 Comments

Filed under Christianity, Church, Faith, Gifts of the Spirit, God, Home Church, jesus, Kingdom of God, Prayer, Prophecy, reformation, spiritual warfare

What Is Your Option “A” for Healing? (Part 6)

Click on following links for: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4 and Part 5.

…But the people who know their God shall prove themselves strong and shall stand firm and do exploits [for God]. (Daniel 11:32 AMP Version)

(1) Knowing God.

One of the most common cliches used by us Christians is: “We need to know God.”

But what are we really saying when we use this phrase? Are we saying that we need to learn more about God? More facts. More sermons. More teachings. More seminars. More schooling. More church. More books. More of this. More of that.

Now, there are certainly some valuable lessons in learning more about God by whatever methods possible, but I believe this type of knowledge falls far short of us really knowing God.

Larry Burkett, on his radio program, once talked about the most amazing Christian that he had ever met. He had attended a church service where a Chinese man had given his testimony.

This particular Chinese man testified how he was a lieutenant of Mao Zedong when Mao took over China in 1949. The man’s assignment was the rural areas of China where he was ordered to execute every government official, every Christian leader and every Chinese national who had ever visited America or attended a U.S. school. This was one of many bloodbath purges during Mao’s reign where he hoped to rid the nation of Western influence.

But the man ran into a group of Watchman Nee-taught Christians who prayed and fasted for the man. The Chinese man was gloriously saved, much like Paul on the Damascus Road.

In the man’s zeal, he determined that he needed to return to Peking (now called Beijing) and tell Mao the good news about Jesus. Needless to say, Mao was not impressed with the gospel and ordered the Chinese man to recant of his new love for Christ. The man refused.

Then, Mao brought the man’s wife and children to the man with soldiers standing next to each person with guns to their heads. Mao said, “Recant or I will kill your family.”

The man wept and pleaded, but said, “I cannot deny Jesus. He is so real to me.”

Mao executed his family.

Next, Mao brought the man’s parents, brothers, sisters and every living relative and stood them before the man with soldiers standing next to them, holding guns to their heads. “Recant or I will kill all of your relatives and eliminate your legacy for all of eternity.”

Again, the man wept and pleaded, but he would not deny Jesus.

Mao executed all of his relatives.

Next, all of the man’s friends and their families were brought and executed before him. Yet the man would not deny Christ.

Mao decided the man was less than a dog and not worth a bullet. So the man was stripped of his clothing, thrown into prison and routinely beaten for the next twenty years.

But even in these hardships, the man led 90% of his guards to Christ and the guards ended up smuggling a Bible into him. Yet, the man never had fellowship with a church or a pastor or read any other books during his stay in prison. He just prayed and read the Bible when he could.

After Mao’s death, the man was eventually released from prison. As the man walked on the road, heading away from the prison, peasants working in fields  next to the road were overcome by the Spirit of God. The peasants fell to their knees and gave their lives to Christ. All of this happened without the man doing or saying a word.

As the man finished up his testimony at the church, tears filled his eyes and he said, “I have visited all of the great churches in America. And sadly, you Americans do not know the Jesus that I know.”

So, how could knowing God, in such an intimate manner like this man did, have made a difference to William Branham and his healing ministry? Or for us today, in our healing ministries?

(Continued in Part 7)

17 Comments

Filed under Christianity, church planting, Gifts of the Spirit, God, Home Church, jesus, Prayer, Prophecy, reformation, spiritual warfare

What Is Your Option “A” for Healing? (Part 5)

Click on following links for: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3 and Part 4.

William Branham’s strength was that he walked in the spirit realm unlike any person since the Apostle Paul. So what was his weakness?

Branham’s weakness was that he walked in the spirit realm unlike any person since the Apostle Paul.

“Wait a minute,” you say, “how can his strength also be his weakness?”

No one could relate or understand what it was like to be William Branham in the 1940’s. He had sixty or seventy visions a day. In fact, he would have to force himself out of the spirit realm so that he could spend time with his wife and other people.

Before meetings, Branham fasted and prayed for three days. He granted no interviews before a night service. Other preachers handled the morning and afternoon services, allowing him time to prepare himself.

Then, at the evening service, Branham preached a short message before heading to the prayer line. Then, he would not do anything until he sensed his angel standing at his right side. After the angel’s arrival, his two gifts kicked in.

His left hand would vibrate and he would know the secrets of  people”s hearts.

For example, let’s say the sick person Branham was praying for had a sin which hindered the person’s healing.  Branham would know about the sin and turn aside to the person and whisper, “The Lord has shown me that you have sin which needs to be repented of before you can be healed.”

If the person refused to admit or repent of his sin, Branham would go a step farther and whisper something like, “Your sin is adultery and you need to repent of it.”

If the person still continued to deny his sin, Branham would press the issue even more by whispering something like, “The name of the woman was such and such. She’s your secretary. She wore a certain color of dress on this date. You need to repent.”

Branham was persistent and dogged when he prayed for people. He wanted them healed. His 35,000 miracles in 1947 attest to the success of his methods.

But all of the agonies of the suffering people weighed heavily on his heart so that he prayed for people until 2 AM in the morning. Night after night. He did not know when to stop. After all, he was the man of signs and wonders and there was no one else quite like him.

In 1948, Branham suffered a nervous breakdown. He was mentally and physically fatigued. His weight dropped considerably and rumors circulated that he was dying.

William Branham did not hold another major healing crusade until 1950.

Now these happened to them as an example, and they were written for our instruction, upon whom the ends of the ages have come. Therefore let him who thinks he stands take heed that he does not fall. (1 Corinthians 10: 11-12)

I believe William Branham was a forerunner for the upcoming apostolic move of God, much like Elijah was a forerunner for John the Baptist. And I believe we can learn some valuable lessons from his ministry which will help us in the new move of God.

(Continued in Part 6)

15 Comments

Filed under Christianity, Church, Gifts of the Spirit, Home Church, jesus, Kingdom of God, Prayer, Prophecy, reformation, spiritual warfare

What Is Your Option “A” for Healing? (Part 4)

Click on following links for: Part 1, Part 2 and Part 3.

Almost all of the preachers in the Healing Revival (late 1940’s – 50’s) depended on their gifts of healing, gifts of faith, gifts of effecting of miracles,  plus their laying on of hands to produce healings for sick people. This was true for Kathryn Kuhlman, Oral Roberts, Kenneth Hagin, A. A. Allen and Jack Coe.

But this was not true for William Branham. He was a man of signs and wonders.

From his birth through his childhood until his salvation at twenty-one years of age, Branham had wild experiences. A whirling light at his birth. A voice speaking out of a rushing wind when he was a youth. A miraculous healing on his deathbed. A cross lit up on a shed’s wall at his salvation.

But none of those experiences matched the experience he had with an angel in 1946. The angel told Branham that he would have two gifts as signs for his healing ministry.

First, Branham would be able to detect diseases by a vibration in his left hand. The angel then instructed Branham that when he felt the vibrations, he was to pray for the person until the vibration went away. If the vibrations stopped, the person was healed. If not, he was to bless the person and walk away.

The second gift was a prophetic one. The angel said, “You will know the very secrets of their hearts. This they will hear.”

In the half hour visit, the angel told Branham about his healing ministry and that he would soon stand before thousands of people.

Without any money, preparation or proper clothing, Branham received a telegram the following Sunday evening from a pastor in St. Louis asking him to come and pray for the pastor’s daughter. Branham’s congregation gave an offering to him and a brother loaned a suit. He left later that same night on a train to St. Louis.

In St. Louis,  he saw the little girl at the pastor’s home, lying on a bed, her hands clawing her face and her voice hoarse from screaming. She had been tormented like this for three months.

Branham retired to a room to pray and seek the Lord. There he received his answer in a vision.

He returned to the girl’s room and waited for the conditions to match what he saw in the vision. When he prayed for the child according to the vision, the evil spirit left the child and she was healed. The young girl went on to have a normal childhood.

This was the beginning of the Healing Revival.

A few weeks later, Branham returned to St. Louis and held a twelve-day meeting. The tent was packed each night with thousands of people. A dead woman was raised up. A blind minister was healed; then the healings multiplied and grew beyond count.

For nine years, William Branham walked in a signs and wonder ministry. People were saved and healed by the thousands at his meetings.

…After it [the gospel] was at first spoken through the Lord, it was confirmed to us by those who heard, God also testifying with them, both by signs and wonders and by various miracles and by gifts of the Holy Spirit according to His own will. (Hebrews 2: 3-4)

William Branham’s strength was that he walked in the spirit realm unlike any person since the Apostle Paul. So what was his weakness?

(Continued in Part 5)

19 Comments

Filed under Christianity, Church, Faith, Gifts of the Spirit, God, Home Church, jesus, Kingdom of God, Prayer, Prophecy, reformation, spiritual warfare