Thanks for the reply.
Which verse is that you say I use that does not say what the Holy Spirit is teaching?
I have no problem with Bible verses you use. I do see you using verses in ways that are different from what they mean in the passages you quote, and wresting certain religious phrases about of scriptures and stringing them together in ways that do not match what they mean in the passages you quote. I have given you several examples of this over the years.
One is using 'walk by faith and not by sight' to mean that believing in or operating in certain miracles or certain spiritual gifts are unbiblical. That is what you appear to be saying. The way you phrase sentences, sometimes, requires some assumptions as to your meaning, but I've read enough of your posts that I think I get a sense of what you are trying to say. Sometimes you try to extract some broad principle by misinterpreting a passage of scripture, but your broad principle contradicts specific teachings of scripture. Your interpretation of 'we walk by faith and not by sight' is an example of this.
No ones gets healed by the laying on of hands as ceremonial law a shadow. It represent a desire that God would heal .It is not different or greater than praying in ones heart in silent meditation. God does need a sign from us to move His will.
During the ceremony it used as a parable for then time present. The hand was laid on the head of the goat and sent into the wilderness .
Neither the laying on of hands or the goat can take away sin. But as we are informed in Hebrew 9 it stood only in meats and drinks, and divers washings, and carnal ordinances, imposed on them until the time of reformation.
There are things that had roots in Old Testament times, such as having elders, baptism, the laying on of hands, prayer, that are still valid, ongoing practices in the church that we are not to do away with. You are lumping the laying on of hands into a category of things you consider to be for the past, when the author of the same book you are quoting lists it among the basic principles of the doctrine of Christ.
Can you prove that and elaborate on it.
We have a privilege to pray in a hope he will heal.
Jesus taught His disciples.
Mark 11:24
Therefore I say unto you, What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive
them, and ye shall have
them.
He also told Lazarus sister that if she believed, she would see the glory of God. He told people things like 'according to your faith be it unto you.' There are a number of passages like this in the gospels.
It is not a sign gift that we seek after to confirm we have a gift. That would seem to be more befitting to the Pharisees a Pagan idea as those who walk by sight (no faith)
The wording of that first sentence makes it a little hard to decipher. But since i have read many of your posts, I will assume I know what you mean.
It seems to me that you think that those who believe God to actually heal are really just wanting to see a healing so that they will believe God, or to confirm they have a gift. If you think people just pray and ask God to heal so they can get confirmation they have a gift, in most cases, I would think you are attributing the wrong motives to people. There are multitudes of Christians out there, and may someone somewhere has the motives you are imagining. But praying and hoping God will heal out of a motive to confirm that one has a gift is probably a very rare thing, and it does not, IMO.
If your religion is not the same one as presented in the New Testament, you have a problem. The New Testament shows people believing God and receiving from God. The New Testament shows people believing Jesus and receiving healing, deliverance from demons for a loved one, etc.
Someone performing a miracle--believing God to do it and seeing the power of God work through him-- and seeing the results before his very eyes is not contrary to walking by faith. The apostles did such things, and this does not mean that their faith was nonexistent or that it was inferior to yours.
If I understand you right, I believe you are using 'walk by sight' wrongly, interpreting it to mean something that it does not mean in scripture-- something contrary to what the scriptures teach about the apostles and other miracles workers.
Luke 17:20 And when he was
demanded of the Pharisees, when the kingdom of God should come, he answered them and said,
The kingdom of God cometh not with "observation:"
They were probably looking for a conquering king on a horse to come in and set up a kingdom on earth. The restoration of the kingdom of Israel is for some time Christ did not reveal to the apostles, but the kingdom came in a way they were not expecting. Nevertheless, Jesus said if He cast out demons by the Spirit of God, then the kingdom of God is come unto you. Jesus called casting out demons a sign or miracle (depending on the translation).
Jesus casting out demons and doing miracles was not contrary to the kingdom of God. It was not 'walking by sight.'