Saturday, March 12, 2016

Christ’s Redemptive Work and Demons and Sickness


March 12

Christ’s Redemptive Work and Demons and Sickness

When the even was come, they brought unto him many that were possessed with devils: and he cast out the spirits with his word, and healed all that were sick: That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the prophet, saying, Himself took our infirmities, and bare our sicknesses (Matt. 8:16-17)

For over a century now there has been quite a bit of controversy over what has been referred to as “healing in the atonement” or “healing in the redemptive work of Christ”.  If healing is one of the benefits of Christ’s death, burial, and resurrection then, naturally, one is just as guaranteed to receive healing if they believe it as they would salvation from sin.
Sadly, many in the body of Christ have difficulty with this truth. Some of it is due to their experiences of seeing others who claimed to believe it but died from sickness. Others have simply seen good Christians die horrible deaths from sickness and have felt that if anyone should have been healed, it should have been that person.
One of the things that keep so many from receiving all of the benefits of Christ’s redemptive work is the failure to remember what we have actually been redeemed from. If we simply believe that Christ’s work of redemption was meant only to appease God’s wrath and keep Him from destroying all of us, we will see no other benefit in it other than to make it into Heaven when we die.
On the other hand, if we see it as the Father rescuing us from Satan’s kingdom of darkness, death, and destruction, which the Bible teaches, then we will begin to take a different perspective on healing in the atonement (Eph. 2:1-6; Col. 1:12-14; 2:15-16; Heb. 2:14-15). In His redemptive work Jesus also came to destroy the works of the devil (1 John 3:8). In Matt. 8:16-17 we find that sickness is connected to the work of demons, who are ruled by Satan. Matthew, quoting Isaiah, says that it is through Christ’s redemption that He was able to heal from sickness and cast out demons.

Healing and deliverance is Christ’s way of destroying the works of Satan and setting us free from them. Christ came to earth on a rescue mission. Part of that rescue mission meant giving up His life for us. The other part was rising again and ascending to Heaven in order to be sure that His will is carried out. Sickness is the work of demons, but the work of Christ in His redemption is to set us free from them. Let us claim the benefits.



If you like this devotional, why not get our book, "Does God Send Sickness?" This book deals with a number of passages, especially in the Old Testament, that some use to paint God as the author of sickness and disease and show how they can be properly interpreted to vindicate God.




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