Why does God heal some people and not others?
By Christin Ditchfield
Q. I don't understand why God heals
some people and not others. Those who aren't healed—is it because they don't
have enough faith or that they're somehow out of God's will?
—Eleanor Jackson, via e-mail
A.
That's a question people have wrestled with for centuries. The sovereignty of
God isn't something we can easily understand or explain. Over and over in the
Scriptures, we find accounts of God's awesome power, his supernatural ability
to heal and restore. We read verse after verse on his great love for us, his
desire that we live life abundantly, and receive all that he has to give us.
We're told to pray for the sick in faith that they will be healed (James
5:14-15).
So why aren't some people healed?
It's true that there are biblical examples of people whose prayers were
hindered because of a lack of faith or as a result of sin in their lives—of
which they had not repented. I guess that's always a possibility.
But there are just as many—if not
more—examples of righteous, godly men and women who experienced trials and tribulations
through no fault of their own, and who did not receive miraculous deliverance.
Their suffering forced them to depend on God completely and drove them to a
deeper relationship with him. It taught them wisdom and maturity. It produced
character. Hebrews
11:35 indicates that for some, enduring suffering—rather than being
delivered from it—was a deliberate choice! These saints understood that the
rewards they would receive in heaven were far greater than any pain they
experienced in this life.
The apostle Paul was able to keep a
heavenly perspective on the adversity that believers experience in this world:
Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly, we are
being renewed day by day. For our light and momentary troubles are achieving
for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all (2
Corinthians 4:16-17).
And we would do well to embrace
Paul's outlook. So when a loved one is diagnosed with a life-threatening
illness, when someone we know needs healing, how should we pray?
Well, first of all, we pray for
God's will—for his purposes—to be accomplished. Pray that the person will
experience grace and peace, that God will give them strength and courage as
they face this trial. And yes, by all means, pray for their healing. Because it
is God's will to heal them. Just remember that some believers receive their
healing on earth, while others receive it in heaven.
The Scriptures say, "Blessed is
the man who perseveres under trial, because when he has stood the test, he will
receive the crown of life that God has promised to those who love him" (James
1:12).
Those who've received that crown
wouldn't trade it for anything!
Christin
Ditchfield is the host of the syndicated radio program Take It To Heart, and
the author of A Family Guide to Narnia: Biblical
Truths in C. S. Lewis's The Chronicles of Narnia (Crossway) and Take It to Heart: 60 Meditations on
God and His Word (Crossway).
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