Silas
Beloved Servant
As you’ve asked, I’m joining you in praying for this man and the lymphoma he is facing. I’m asking the Lord for a complete remission, and for true healing to touch his body.
That word remission is a powerful one. In the Scriptures, it’s anchored in the shedding of blood. The old sacrifices could cover sin for a time, but they could never make the worshiper perfect in conscience. Then Jesus took the cup and declared a new covenant in His own blood, poured out for the remission of sins. His sacrifice was once and for all, needing no repetition. Where that full remission exists, there’s no more offering for sin. So when I pray for a complete remission of cancer, I do it in light of a greater, already finished remission: the cleansing that flows from the cross. Christ’s blood continues to wash us clean, and it also touches our frailty, because He Himself bore our infirmities and carried our diseases. The prophet Isaiah saw that, and the Gospel writers show Him healing every kind of sickness among the people. He hasn’t changed.
Healing shows up in many forms. Sometimes it came instantly when Jesus touched someone or simply spoke a word. Other times, like the gradual restoration of sight at Bethsaida, it unfolded in steps. God designed natural processes of repair within the body, and even those are gifts from His hand. I don’t pretend to understand why one person is delivered while another waits, or why the apostle Paul prayed three times and yet lived with a thorn. What I do know is that God is able, and that the full picture won’t come until we see the Lord face to face. Right now, we see in part. So we pray boldly, with open hands, not dictating a pattern but trusting the One who holds every member of His body in His right hand.
I’m asking specifically for the lymphoma to go into complete remission. Not because we can presume upon God’s will, but because He invites us to ask, and He is both Jehovah-Rapha, the Lord who heals, and our righteousness. If that healing comes all at once, we will praise Him. If it comes gradually through treatment and the body’s own recovery, we will still acknowledge His hand. And if the answer is different from what we long for, we still rest in a complete righteousness we could never improve, and in the assurance that when Christ returns, every partial thing will give way to wholeness.
Let’s hold this man before the throne. Father, you know him by name. Your Son’s blood speaks a better word than any illness can shout. We ask for a total arrest of this lymphoma, for remission in his body, for strength, peace, and the felt touch of your presence. Guard his mind and spirit from fear, and let your healing work spread through every part of him. We lean on your mercy, not on our own understanding, and we trust the outcome to you. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
That word remission is a powerful one. In the Scriptures, it’s anchored in the shedding of blood. The old sacrifices could cover sin for a time, but they could never make the worshiper perfect in conscience. Then Jesus took the cup and declared a new covenant in His own blood, poured out for the remission of sins. His sacrifice was once and for all, needing no repetition. Where that full remission exists, there’s no more offering for sin. So when I pray for a complete remission of cancer, I do it in light of a greater, already finished remission: the cleansing that flows from the cross. Christ’s blood continues to wash us clean, and it also touches our frailty, because He Himself bore our infirmities and carried our diseases. The prophet Isaiah saw that, and the Gospel writers show Him healing every kind of sickness among the people. He hasn’t changed.
Healing shows up in many forms. Sometimes it came instantly when Jesus touched someone or simply spoke a word. Other times, like the gradual restoration of sight at Bethsaida, it unfolded in steps. God designed natural processes of repair within the body, and even those are gifts from His hand. I don’t pretend to understand why one person is delivered while another waits, or why the apostle Paul prayed three times and yet lived with a thorn. What I do know is that God is able, and that the full picture won’t come until we see the Lord face to face. Right now, we see in part. So we pray boldly, with open hands, not dictating a pattern but trusting the One who holds every member of His body in His right hand.
I’m asking specifically for the lymphoma to go into complete remission. Not because we can presume upon God’s will, but because He invites us to ask, and He is both Jehovah-Rapha, the Lord who heals, and our righteousness. If that healing comes all at once, we will praise Him. If it comes gradually through treatment and the body’s own recovery, we will still acknowledge His hand. And if the answer is different from what we long for, we still rest in a complete righteousness we could never improve, and in the assurance that when Christ returns, every partial thing will give way to wholeness.
Let’s hold this man before the throne. Father, you know him by name. Your Son’s blood speaks a better word than any illness can shout. We ask for a total arrest of this lymphoma, for remission in his body, for strength, peace, and the felt touch of your presence. Guard his mind and spirit from fear, and let your healing work spread through every part of him. We lean on your mercy, not on our own understanding, and we trust the outcome to you. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
