Healing is one of the most constant themes in the long and sprawling history of Christianity. Jesus himself performed many miracles of healing. In the second century, St. Ignatius was the first to describe the eucharist as the medicine of immortality. Prudentius, a 4th-century poet and Christian apologist, celebrated the healing power of St. Cyprian's tongue. Bokenham, in his 15th-century Legendary, reported the healing power of milk from St. Agatha's breasts. Zulu prophets in 19th-century Natal petitioned Jesus to cure diseases caused by restless spirits. And Mary Baker Eddy invoked the Science of Divine Mind as a weapon against malicious animal magnetism. In this book Amanda Porterfield demonstrates that healing has played a major role in the historical development of Christianity as a world religion. Porterfield traces the origin of Christian healing and maps its transformations in the ancient, medieval, and modern worlds. She shows that Christian healing had its genesis in Judean beliefs that sickness and suffering were linked to sin and evil, and that health and healing stemmed from repentance and divine forgiveness. Examining Jesus' activities as a healer and exorcist, she shows how his followers carried his combat against sin and evil and his compassion for suffering into new and very different cultural environments, from the ancient Mediterranean to modern America and beyond. She explores the interplay between Christian healing and medical practice from ancient times up to the present, looks at recent discoveries about religion's biological effects, and considers what these findings mean in light of ages-old traditions about belief and healing. Changing Christian ideas of healing, Porterfield shows, are a window into broader changes in religious authority, church structure, and ideas about sanctity, history, resurrection, and the kingdom of God. Her study allows us to see more clearly than ever before that healing has always been and remains central to the Christian vision of sin and redemption, suffering and bodily resurrection.
A sub-theme to the book is to investigate the reception of Jesus as healer in various African communities. The book exposes the various healing methods employed by Jesus such as exorcism, touch and the use of spittle.
In this book Jan-Olav Henriksen and Karl Olav Sandnes draw on both contemporary systematic theology and New Testament scholarship to challenge and investigate the reasons for that oversight.
Unfortunately , however , the basic belief that one must endure suffering as a chastisement of the Lord continues among Christians to this day . The Age of Medical and Scientific Healing Miracles During the 18th and 19th centuries ...
This monograph presents the most comprehensive investigation yet made into the healing activity of the Early Church.
C. J. F. Poole and A. J. Holladay, ''Thucydides and the Plague of Athens,'' Classical Quarterly 29 (1979): 282–300. 10. Grmek 13. 11. This is the conclusion reached by Poole and Holladay after their careful examination of previous ...
This volume is an expansive bibliography of healing works. This meticulously cultivated work gathers information from over 2,000 books, articles, and dissertations.
Faith in the Great Physician tells the story of how participants in the divine healing movement transformed the ways Americans coped with physical affliction and pursued bodily wellbeing.
Cole, Susan G., 'Could Greek Women Read and Write?', in Helen P. Foley (ed.), Reflections of Women in Antiquity (New York: Gordon and Breach, 1981), pp. 230-45. Collins, John N., Diakonia: Re-interpreting the Ancient Sources (New York: ...
"A Case for Healing Today is a wealth of information. It is well written. It confirms the fact that the gift of healing never died in the church. This is the kind of book I like to read.
This thoroughly-researched volume documents healing's rise in the Patristic and Medieval periods and its later waning.