Guest
article by Steve Higginbotham
While flying home from Denver, Colo., last
week, I sat next to a man who was reading his Bible. We struck up a
conversation and I soon realized he believed he had the spiritual gift of
healing.
After giving me a couple examples of how he
used his powers, he asked me if I believed what he was saying. I told him that
my beliefs aren’t based on experiences, which can sometimes be deceptive, but
upon what the Bible teaches. I then proceeded to explain 1 Corinthians 13 and Ephesians
4 as he followed along in
his Bible.
When I finished he said, “I see what you’re
saying, and have never really studied this before, so I don’t have an answer,
but what I do have are my experiences, and I know that God has given me the
power to heal.”
So for the remainder of the flight (nearly
three hours), this man recounted story after story of his alleged healings. I
had already made my point that my beliefs aren’t based on experiences but upon
what the Bible teaches, so as he shared these stories, I simply let him talk.
There was no need to argue point by point with all the stories he told, but as
I sat and listened, I wondered what I could say that would expose his error.
When we eventually touched down and regained
phone signal, this man’s phone dinged. He had a text message from his
son. It was a picture of his son’s finger that had been cut while he was
using a weed-eater. When this man saw the picture of his son’s finger, he
said, “Oh no, my son has cut his finger and from the looks of the picture, he
will probably need a few stitches. I need to get off this plane and take him to
the hospital.”
It was then that I broke my silence and simply asked,
“Why?”
The man swung his head around and stared at
me with a look that resembled that of a child caught with his hand in the
cookie jar. For a moment, he just froze. It looked like he was searching for
words, but they escaped him.
The force of that one word was convicting.
This man had just spent nearly three hours trying to prove he had the power to
heal people, but his first thought when he saw that his son was injured was to
take him to the hospital.
The take-away from this story is that one
word that has the backing of Scripture is more convicting than thousands
of words lacking Scriptural backing.
This article was first published on Steve’s
site Preaching Help.
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