E-Book, Englisch, 208 Seiten
Merrill Miracle Invasion
1. Auflage 2018
ISBN: 978-1-4245-5609-0
Verlag: BroadStreet Publishing Group, LLC
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
Amazing true stories of the Holy Spirit's gifts at work today
E-Book, Englisch, 208 Seiten
ISBN: 978-1-4245-5609-0
Verlag: BroadStreet Publishing Group, LLC
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
Dean Merrill is a former magazine editor and writer best known for his award-winning collaborations with such Christian leaders as Jim Cymbala (Brooklyn Tabernacle), Wess Stafford (Compassion International), and Gracia Burnham (Philippine missionary hostage survivor).
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
SETTING THE STAGE
Mother’s Thanksgiving table was picture-perfect. Her lavish centerpiece glowed with hues of autumn color. Great-grandmother’s antique silverware flanked our beautiful Lenox china. The turkey, encompassed by a moat of green parsley and laced with lavender plums, was golden brown. The mashed potatoes and gravy, green beans, and sweet potatoes were hot and ready to serve.
Everyone was there: Mom and Dad, my older sister, my younger brother … and of course, me. Nothing could ruin this moment. Nothing, that is, until Dad tried to sit down. For six months he had suffered with disabling back pain. Every morning he slipped into a steel brace hoping to mollify the chronic suffering. He couldn’t even drive a car unless his custom-made board seat was placed on the cushion beneath the steering wheel.
This unforgettable holiday was the first time I saw a grown man cry. As Dad started to sit, he got stuck in a partially seated position. The pain was so severe he couldn’t finish sitting down; yet he couldn’t stand back up. His desperate cry frightened us all. By the time we got Dad into bed, Thanksgiving was pretty much ruined.
Afterward, the rest of us ate the delicious meal and prepared for dessert when Mom shouted, “Oops! I forgot the whipped cream for the pumpkin pie!” She promptly elected me to rush to the QuikTrip just two blocks away. It would be open on this holiday. With the Cool Whip in hand, I paid the clerk, got back into my tan and white ’55 Chevy, and drove home.
Miracles Today?
A miracle healing for my dad was not on the radar, and far out of range for our family’s worldview back then in the midsixties. My life was pretty much defined by girls, grades, and sports. All of my needs were cared for by my parents, and the closest I came to the supernatural was Clark Kent leaping tall buildings and flying faster than speeding bullets.
I did go to church, but it was a liberal Protestant congregation. People became Christians, they said, by taking a pastor’s class and getting baptized. When my sister decided to join, I agreed to follow. Coming out of the baptismal tank, they gave me a certificate of church membership and told me I was a Christian. Nothing could have been further from the truth.
Nineteen sixty-three was the year Mom and Dad had been invited to hear a man named Larry Hammond talk about an amazing physical healing he had experienced. I really don’t think Dad would have gone, except that the speaker had a PhD. My father valued education and couldn’t reconcile medical science with miracles. So he was curious. Mom, on the other hand, was thirsting for truth … and for God.
Dr. Hammond’s extraordinary testimony of an instantaneous, hospital deathbed healing in response to prayer rocked my parents’ world. Dad wanted more information, and that meant connecting with people—lots of people. Our home turned into Grand Central Station, thrusting the Farmer family into a strange world of unfamiliar faces, gospel music instead of sacred hymns, and prayer meetings where people raised their hands in worship and prayed out loud all at the same time.
These exuberant believers talked about miracles as casually as I did about Friday night dances and the latest Elvis hit. To me, their stories sounded strange, even impossible to believe—until that Thanksgiving Day when I walked through the door of our home on Boston Street in Wichita, Kansas, and encountered the living, miracle-working God.
First Miracle
As I entered our home, my dad—the one we had half-dragged and half-carried to bed—was doing jumping jacks and deep knee bends in the kitchen. “I’m healed! I’m healed!” he shouted at the top of his lungs. His face was glowing. Mom was crying.
“What … what happened?” I asked, picking my jaw up off the floor.
“I was listening to a tape the Coxes gave me,” he explained, referring to the family who had invited us to their church. “The preacher on the tape said, ‘If you’re listening to this message through a taped recording, reach out and touch the recorder as a point of faith. Good! Now, ask God to heal you.’ ”
Desperate and hopeful, Dad had done just that while I was down the street getting Cool Whip. “It was like a warm heating pad touched my back,” Dad exclaimed. “I felt it! God delivered and healed me. I’m free! The pain is gone.”
We sat down for dessert, overcome with awe. As newcomers to this kind of faith, we were smitten with wonder. That day marked me forever, teaching me an important truth—someone with a personal experience is never at the mercy of someone with an argument! A miracle settles every quarrel over the reality of God and the authenticity of his Word.
More than fifty years have now passed. Since then, I have witnessed more miracles and manifestations of the gifts of the Spirit than I can remember. And every time God displays his power and glory, I am humbled and awed to see beyond the veil.
The Natural and the Spiritual
“What veil?” you ask. I’m talking about the veil that separates the natural from the spiritual. Let me explain.
Jesus told the woman at the well that “God is spirit.”1 When God created people in the very beginning, he made them in his image and likeness, as spirit beings.2 When he fashioned us outwardly, however, he gave us a natural body.3 Therefore, a dynamic tension is ever-present between the spiritual and natural.
Miracles and the other gifts of the Spirit have their origin in the spirit dimension. They are beyond natural—they are natural. They are spiritual. They are otherworldly because their source of authority and power originates outside of this natural world.
Unless a person is born again by the Spirit of God (by grace through faith in Jesus Christ), he or she does not understand this unseen reality. That is why a skeptic, or anyone who rejects Christ, has trouble admitting that miracles take place. Their natural mind cannot apprehend the things of the Spirit.4 In fact, modern-day miracles are foolishness to them.
Opposition and rejection of things of the Spirit go beyond unbelievers, however. Many Christians also struggle with the spirit dimension, often because they have not experienced the power associated with being baptized in the Holy Spirit, as recorded at least four times in the New Testament.5
Even some church leaders are afraid of the moving of the Spirit. They are unfamiliar with his person, his works, and his gifts. They are more comfortable in the natural arena and are strangers to the realm of the supernatural. Leaders can control natural events, but the Holy Spirit cannot be controlled, organized, or duplicated. And he is full of surprises!
When the Holy Spirit came upon the 120 followers of Jesus Christ at Pentecost,6 he took everyone by surprise. Is it any wonder, then, that his miraculous actions today are still a surprise? Manifestations of the miraculous gifts of the Spirit have their origin in a real spiritual dimension and cannot be analyzed in our intellectual laboratories or voted upon in our church committees. Only the Spirit of God “knows” the things of God.7
Many church leaders don’t want surprises during their worship services. So, authentic manifestations of the Spirit have diminished in number, at least in churches of the West. Sadly, we are more comfortable trying to fit God into our dimension of the natural rather than rising in faith to trust his power and glory in the dimension of the spiritual.
Supernatural Action through Gifts of the Spirit
However, the message of Scripture is clear: The miraculous nature of God is to be seen at work through his children. God has provided for supernatural acts and events to take place through his sons and daughters by the gifts of the Spirit.
It is true, some miracles God initiates by himself without any involvement of people: he dispatches an angel to save a life,8 ignites a desert bush into a fiery ball without it being consumed,9 or strikes down the persecutor of the infant church with a flash of lightning that renders him blind.10 These are sovereign acts of God, requiring no participation by people—they are miracles.
Other miracles, however, are the result of men, women, and even children stepping out in bold reliance on the Word of God. The Holy Spirit equips and anoints them with a (“grace-gift”) and sets in motion a supernatural event that is beyond any power or resource of mankind. The result is not a coincidence of circumstances and is completely unexplainable to the natural mind. That is to say, the miracle is unreasonable.
Paul, the great apostle of the first-century church, provided three gift lists in the Bible.11 These lists describe assorted gifts distributed to believers through which the Holy Spirit moves to administer the church and usher in the kingdom of God. The testimonies and miracle stories you are about to read in this book spotlight the list found in 1 Corinthians 12 and illustrate that when one of these nine gifts of the Spirit is in operation, it is nothing short of a miracle.
“There are various gifts, but the same Spirit.” (1 Corinthians 12:4 MEV)
“To one is given by the Spirit the word of wisdom, to another the word...




