Getting someone to rise and walk can easily be faked too. A "healer" can do things to temporarily relieve someone's pain and they may get up out of a wheelchair or throw away their crutches. But the real test is whether a person was actually healed or simply had a placebo effect. The history of faith healing is loaded with people who thought they were healed; were told they were healed; but weren't really healed. When you study so-called faith healers, what you see is they stay away from people who have serious problems; and when they do actually try to heal someone with an incurable disease they aren't able to heal them.
William Branham was a popular faith healer from the '50s and '60s. He was famous for his healing revivals in which he would supposedly heal people and tell them they were healed, they just had to believe. By the time they realized they weren't really healed, many died and Branham was long gone. This became such a scandal Branham had to start holding his revivals in foreign countries where he wasn't known.
Scandals like these follow most of the so-called miracle workers. There are a million tricks they use. The real miracle is how they can still get people to believe in them.
William Branham was a popular faith healer from the '50s and '60s. He was famous for his healing revivals in which he would supposedly heal people and tell them they were healed, they just had to believe. By the time they realized they weren't really healed, many died and Branham was long gone. This became such a scandal Branham had to start holding his revivals in foreign countries where he wasn't known.
Scandals like these follow most of the so-called miracle workers. There are a million tricks they use. The real miracle is how they can still get people to believe in them.
Jas_3:8 But the tongue can no man tame; it is an unruly evil, full of deadly poison.