“He sent his word, and healed them, and delivered them from their destructions” (Ps. 107:20).
If sickness or disease comes from God, how does He give it to us? Does He reach out and touch us, giving it to us by His own hand?
Jesus was the express image of God – the will of God in action. He said, “If you’ve seen Me, you’ve seen the Father” (John 14:9). So if it were true that God gave us sickness by His hand, then Jesus would have given sickness to people instead of taking it away from them.
But when Jesus touched people, they were healed. He lived on this earth thirty-three and a half years and ministered for three and a half of those years. In all that time, Jesus never gave sickness or disease to anyone. He acted out the will of God, taking sickness away from people.
Well, then, does God give us sickness by His Word? Does He speak it on us? No, Psalm 107:20 says, “He sent his word, and healed them.” So God doesn’t put sickness on us with His hands nor by His Word.
Where would God get sickness to put on us anyway? He doesn’t have sickness in heaven. And when sickness entered this earth through the fall of man, Jesus paid the price to send it to the depths of hell, where it belongs.
So there’s only one conclusion to make: God doesn’t have any sickness to give us. Therefore, sickness and disease are not from God.
Father, let Your will be done in my life, as it is in heaven. Because
there is no sickness in heaven, sickness must leave my body!
I receive God’s healing Word now in Jesus’ name.
Excerpt permission granted by Harrison House Publishers
For over 40 years, Pastors Mark and Janet Brazee have traveled throughout the world sharing the Word of God and the Spirit of God. Together they've shared the powerful truths of faith and healing in more than 50 nations.
Today Mark and Janet pastor World Outreach Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where they base their ongoing outreach to the world. The Brazees still travel as the Lord leads, and they are raising up a congregation who share their passion to reach Tulsa and the world.