Healing Tetsimonies

 

Mrs. Demaria

SIGHT AND HEALING RESTORED

 

I would like to give my testimony to the healing power  of the Lord Jesus Christ. 

During the air raids on Tonbridge,Kent, I fell down stairs and received injuries to my chest. I lost the sight of one eye and became stone deaf in the right ear. For several winters I have also suffered with sciatica and asthma.

I went to the campaign meetings in the great St. Mungo Hall. I was prayed for and anointed by Principal Jeffreys and was completely healed, having received both eyesight and hearing, and I am now in perfect health.

This was five years ago. I give God all the glory.

                               

Prayer Dynamics

Rev. E. Anderson

PERSONAL PRAYER AND ANSWER

Nehemiah1 & 2

These are memorable memoirs of Nehemiah, another godly and great man whom God raised up at a time of crisis and who filled a significant role in a powerful manner. There was something worth remembering and recording for posterity. ln chapter 1 he altars in a most comfortable zone. He had a respectable job and his future was secure as he stood in good favour of the king.

In these two chapters he is observe to be a man who really prayed and becomes visually the answer to those prayers and divine things are initiated.

 It commenced with bad news from a compatriot with regard toJerusalemand it disturbs him greatly and leads his to pour out his heart to Jehovah. Re prayer recorded in 1: 4-10 is quite revealing.

1/.  HE PRAYED FROM A STATE OF BROKENNESS – v4.

He was disturbed to the point where he wept and fasted for days. Such shows the reality of the divine movement that had taken over his spirit and inward frame. He lived with it day and night and it became an increasing burden and expression. It was something he could not shake of and become an indispensable part of him. .

2/. HE PRAYED WITH A SENSE OF DIVINE RESPECT – v5.

He knew who he was talking to and inverting with. He knew his dictum when in the presence of his earthly monarch form a natural standpoint, likewise with the Lord. He had be trained and schooled in it. An awe of great proportion filled his being and an awareness of His greatness, graciousness and generousness permeated his words of address. He desires His attention to His plea. 

3/.  HE PRAYED KNOWING THE CAUSE OF THE PROBLEM -vv6, 7.

Sin had produced this tragic state of awaits and brought ruination and desolation and he does not excuse the people or himself on the issue. There had been a real breakdown in relation to the Lord with regard to His Word. Disobedient had been the root factor.

4/. HE PRAYED BELIEVING GOD’S PROMISE AND THE PRAYER –vv8-10

He knew if genuine repentance was made and a true returning to the Lord effected, plus the sincerity and continuity of prayer, the future would be much better and greater. There was the consciousness that he would have to present the case before the king. When? A short period time takes place between late autumn and spring.

CONCLUSION

He had to pray again – v2:4  and he proves God had the king in his hand and so things are set in motion. The impossible becomes possible. Able to share it -2:18.

                              

Dave’s Snippets

Dr. David Allen

GRANNY’S WARNING

My   Granny was a small but formidable woman and  a defender of old-fashioned morality. In her younger days she belonged to the Primitive Methodists and hated alcohol, having witnessed the brutality of a bullying drunken father. My grandfather, I believe, suffered three    things: shell-shock in the Great War inFlanders, a very nervous disposition and, eventually, being married to my Granny!

Granny was full of advice and, occasionally, gave dire warnings. One day she noticed that I was looking intently into the mirror and warned, “If you keep looking into the mirror you will see the Devil.” On reflection, I think she anticipated a point made by some modern liberal theologians: they have suggested that the Devil is nothing more than the personification or reflection of the darker side of human nature and not a personal  being  at  all. In effect, they are suggesting that Jesus did not, as recorded in the Scriptures, have a personal confrontation with Satan in the wilderness, but experienced an internal psychological conflict or struggle between his better self and his darker side.

This seems plausible when first considered; but it sets aside much biblical evidence demonstrating that Satan (literally the Enemy) is an actual and powerful person determined   to thwart the plans of God for mankind. The modern theory also contradicts the doctrine, held by believers from the very beginning, that Jesus never actually  sinned  and therefore had  no  “darker side”.

In the Judaean wilderness Jesus, the Light of the world, was confronted by the Prince of Darkness; and Jesus won the contest by the pattern he sets for us in our conflicts with Satan, namely through the Word and Spirit; and not by his own proper deity, but as a man of faith.

It is fine to look in the mirror to comb your hair and so forth; but look frequently into the   mirror of the Word of God and so you can regularly tune your life according to God’s pattern by the help of the Spirit.

                              

Just a Thought

Rev. A. Linford

GOD IS AT WORK

“My Father cometh hitherto” John 5:17

When God ”rested from all His work” on the Seventh Day, He did not abandon His creation. “Heis still working”, said He Jesus. History is still His-story.

I came across a remarkable quotation the other day. It ran like this:

 “God exercises His sway over the historical process in a continuous manner; His activity resides in the direction of events according to a plan formed in view of a determinate end ….. through the apparent confusions of earthly history it is His own work which He accomplishes”.

But we cannot always trace His activities. feel like the Psalmist: We sometimes feel like the Psalmist: ”Arise O Lord: let not man prevail” – Psalm 9:19. In other words: “Please God, get involved; do something!” But God does not act according to our wishes or whims. He has His own purpose to perform. It took 4,000 years for God to provide the remedy for sin. What a distance between the crash of Adam’s fall and the Cross of redeeming grace! But the atoning death of Jesus has provided ‘eternal redemption’ – Hebrews 9:12 for all who believe.

Peter who at first found the idea of Messiah’s crucifixion repulsive – Matthew 16:22 lived to see that it was ‘the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God’ – Acts 2:23 to deliver up His Son to death for us. And God is ever at work for us to perfect our Christian lives and prepare us for everlasting bliss.

                              

Great Stories

Rev. E. Anderson

CEMETERY WATCHMAN

I just wanted to get the day over with and go down to Smokey’s. Sneaking a look at my watch I saw the time – 1655. Five minutes to go before the cemetery gates are closed for the day. Full dress was hot in the August sun. Oklahoma summertime was as bad as ever – the heat and humidity at the same level – both too high.

I saw the car pull into the drive – a ’69 or ’70 model Cadillac Deville, looked factory-new. It pulled into the parking lot at a snail’s pace. An old woman got out so slowly I thought she was paralyzed; she had a cane and a sheaf of flowers – about four or five bunches as best I could tell.

I couldn’t help myself. The thought came unwanted, and left a slightly bitter taste: ‘She’s gonna spend an hour, and for this old Marine, my hip hurts and I’m ready to get out of here right now!’ But for this day, my duty was to assist anyone coming in.

Kevin would lock the In gate and if I could hurry the old biddy along, we might make it to Smokey’s in time.

I broke post attention. My hip made gritty noises when I took the first step and the pain went up a notch. I must have made a real military sight: middle-aged man with a small pot gut and half a limp, in Marine full-dress uniform, which had lost its razor crease about thirty minutes after I began the watch at the cemetery.

I stopped in front of her, halfway up the walk. She looked up at me with an old woman’s squint.

“Ma’am, may I assist you in any way?”

She took long enough to answer.

“Yes, son. Can you please carry these flowers? I seem to be moving a tad slow these days.”

“My pleasure, ma’am.” Well, it wasn’t TOO much of a lie.

She looked again. “Marine, where were you stationed?”

“Vietnam, ma’am. Ground-pounder. ’69 to ’71.”

She looked at me closer. “Wounded in action, I see. Well done, Marine. I’ll be as quick as I can.”

I lied a little bigger: “No hurry, ma’am.”

She smiled and winked at me. “Son, I’m 85-years-old and I can tell a lie from a long way off. Let’s get this done. Might be the last time I can do this. My name’s Joanne Wieserman, and I’ve a few Marines I’d like to see one more time.”

“Yes, ma ‘am. At your service.”

She headed for the World War I section, stopping at a stone. She picked one of the flowers out of my arm and laid it on top of the stone. She murmured something I couldn’t quite make out. The name on the marble was Donald S. Davidson, USMC: France 1918.

She turned away and made a straight line for the World War II section, stopping at one stone. I saw a tear slowly tracking its way down her cheek. She put a bunch on a stone; the name was Stephen X. Davidson, USMC, 1943.

She went up the row a ways and laid another bunch on a stone, Stanley J. Wieserman, USMC, 1944.

She paused for a second. “Two more, son, and we’ll be done.”

I almost didn’t say anything, but, “Yes, ma’am. Take your time.”

She looked confused. “Where’s the Vietnam section, son? I seem to have lost my way.”

I pointed with my chin. “That way, ma’am.”

“Oh!”, she chuckled quietly. “Son, me and old age ain’t too friendly.”

She headed down the walk I’d pointed at. She stopped at a couple of stones before she found the ones she wanted. She placed a bunch on Larry Wieserman, USMC, 1968, and the last on Darrel Wieserman, USMC, 1970. She stood there and murmured a few words I still couldn’t make out.

“OK, son, I’m finished. Get me back to my car and you can go home.”

“Yes, ma’am. If I may ask, were those your kinfolk?”

She paused. “Yes, Donald Davidson was my father, Stephen was my uncle, Stanley was my husband, Larry and Darrel were our sons. All killed in action. All Marines.”

She stopped. Whether she had finished, or couldn’t finish, I don’t know. She made her way to her car, slowly and painfully.
 
I waited for a polite distance to come between us and then double-timed it over to Kevin, waiting by the car.

“Get to the Out gate quick! I have something I’ve got to do.”

Kevin started to say something, but saw the look I gave him. He broke the rules to get us there down the service road. We beat her. She hadn’t made it around the rotunda yet.

“Kevin, stand at attention next to the gatepost. Follow my lead.” I humped it across the drive to the other post.

When the Cadillac came puttering around from the hedges and began the short straight traverse to the gate, I called in my best gunny’s voice: “TehenHut! Present haaaarms!”

I have to hand it to Kevin; he never blinked an eye – full dress attention and a salute that would make his Drill Instructor proud.
 
She drove through that gate with two old, worn-out Marines giving her a send-off she deserved, for service rendered to her country, and for knowing duty, honor and sacrifice.

I am not sure, but I think I saw a salute returned from that Cadillac.

[Oh, and sorry about your monitor - it made mine blurry too!]

                            

Illustrious Ministries

Dr. Mark Buntain, or as some call him “St. Mark of Calcutta” and his wife Huldah were called to serve as missionaries in Calcutta, India. They arrived in Calcutta In October, 1954, expecting to only serve in  Indiafor about a year. Well, God changed there plans and turned the one year service into a fruitful ministry in India, now going on fifty years. Mark Buntain was born and raised in Canada. When he was called to go to Calcuttaat first he did not wan to go, but denied himself and followed God’s call on his life. Many people are thankful of Mark’s unselfishness and self sacrifice. Mark really did lead a life of sacrifice forsaking this world’s comforts and storing up treasures of heaven instead.

The Buntains were called to serve inIndia due to their success in founding one of the world’s most comprehensive Christian inner city outreaches, of which Mrs. Buntain remains the pastor and chairperson. When they arrived inCalcutta their ministry started out in a tent, which later grew into an enormous ministry center. They soon built a school to educate the people on God’s love and to raise up Christian leaders inIndia. But Mark noticed many of his students to weak to study, so he started a feeding program feeding hundreds and eventually thousands of kids a day. The school turned into a one-bed hospital staffed by one nurse, and slowly grew into 16 beds. God had His hand on the work and Mark received a 99 year lease on an abandon cemetery in the middle ofCalcutta. Funds were collected by Christians inCanada and theUS for the building of a hospital. Mark, along with a Christian architect designed and built the “Mission of Mercy hospital”. The hospital being fully paid for was opened in 1977 with a nursing school of its very own. Their motto over the door read “Jesus Heals”. This 120-bed hospital gave medical care to many people, including the Buntain’s friend, Mother Teresa.

GENERAL INFORMATION 

Founded in 1977, CalcuttaMercyHospitalis now a 173 bed full general hospital serving approximately 100,000 patients per year.  The hospital has a variety of services including a complete surgical facility, three critical care centres, a pediatric centre, an emergency centre, and general medical surgical centres.  Recent renovations provide the latest in technology for patients who need phone and internet access during their stay.  Complete diagnostic, laboratory, and pharmacy facilities enable patients to receive most services on site.

Patient care is provided by a staff of highly qualified physicians and nurses.  An affiliation with the Calcutta Mercy School of Nursing allows a better nurse-to-patient ratio, which provides patients with extra one-on-one attention.  Additional staff includes a chaplain, a dietician, patient care assistants, and special care givers for infants.

FIFTY YEARS ON THE FIELD

In 1954, with a 1-year-old daughter, Mark and Huldah found themselves on a ship toCalcutta, the beginning of a voyage that would take them across theAtlanticfor three months on two ships. Their first approach to their new home was up the narrow and treacherousHooghlyRiver.

“It was like entering the mouth of a dragon,” Huldah says. “The murky water resembled sewage flowing down a wide gutter, only this current contained dead dogs and cows and even the skeletal remains of a human body.”

Huldah, widowed since 1989, still lives in the same apartment and runs the ministry she and her husband began 50 years ago. From its humble beginnings, the Calcutta Ministry has grown to include more than 800 churches, an entire educational system, several Bible colleges, a hospital, a nurse’s training center soon to become a college, and a teacher’s college. Huldah oversees and visits them all. She spends roughly three to four months a year in herCalcuttaapartment. The rest of her time is spent traveling throughoutIndiaand the world.

Huldah is responsible for ministry in 11 Indian states, including 230 million people. Thirty thousand children from these regions are in Mission of Mercy schools.

CALCUTTA CHANGES

Computers have changed the face ofIndia. Huldah says that if you have a problem with your computer and you call a tech support line, you are most probably speaking to someone inIndiafor help. And unlike the early days when she moved there, you can now buy electronic equipment and modern appliances. You don’t have to ship them fromAmerica.

But poverty still crushes in onCalcutta. For one reason, there are 18 million residents living in a nine mile by four mile area. And between the hours of 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. during the week, the population swells to 25 million. Some of Huldah’s own employees see their children only on weekends because they travel in from such a long distance. They leave home before their children are up and return after the kids are in bed so that they can earn a wage in the city.

HOPE FOR THE FUTURE

At 79, will Huldah Buntain retire? “NO!” she says emphatically. The satisfaction of changed lives is far too great. She recently met a young doctor and his nurse/wife inTorontowho were “our children.” He was a boy from an extremely poor region who had come to a Mission of Mercy school and later married a nurse trained in Huldah’s nursing training center.

Huldah’s ministry is literally helping blind eyes see. Another of her recent success stories involves the 100 blind students taught at one of her schools. After being observed by a doctor, five blind children in the Mission of Mercy Hospital were selected to receive a unique eye surgery allowing them to see and read. Another 20 students are being screened to determine their possibilities for this surgery.

Huldah will release a 50th anniversary book at the end of this year outlining all the miracles God has accomplished inIndiathrough His servants Mark and Huldah.

GREATEST SATISFACTION

For Huldah, the investment in thousands of lives is a thrill. Of the 1,500 people on Mission of Mercy’s staff, Huldah is excited to point out that two-thirds of them came through Mission of Mercy’s programs as children. Seeing another generation come along keeps her excited and moving forward.

Huldah Buntain is truly one of those people who, when the end has come, will have a whole host of witnesses for whom she has been the vehicle by which they came to Christ.

                                

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