Ep.1435: Are Christians Today Really Capable of Healing People and Speaking in Tongues? (Part II)
The biblical guidelines for when and when not to engage in these miracles
CHAPTERS
Theme Scripture: 1 Corinthians 12:28
Are Christians who claim to heal and who claim to speak in tongues operating within the scriptural guidelines of Christianity today, or have they taken a giant step over the line of appropriate Christian behavior? In our last episode, we observed how the Old Testament established healing as an occasional gift and was not necessarily granted based on faith. We also observed that Jesus healed the masses and generally did not require faith and following to give that gift. We also saw that Old Testament speaking in tongues was absolutely speaking in foreign languages. It was a sign of God’s disapproval when foreign languages were introduced. The Apostle Paul verified that speaking in tongues - in foreign languages - was STILL a sign, but now it was a sign of approval to UNBELIEVERS. In this episode, we examine healing and speaking in tongues in the New Testament to understand how these gifts functioned in the early church.
The New Testament pattern
As we turn to the New Testament, Jesus sets the pattern. He healed out of compassion, not as a reward for personal faith. In fact, out of the hundreds he healed, only four individuals are specifically commended for their faith. Healing was never meant to be a spiritual performance or a measure of someone’s worthiness. It was a sign that the Messiah had arrived and the call to the kingdom was open.
After Pentecost, the pattern remained narrow
Only two non-apostles—Philip and Ananias—are specifically recorded as performing healings. Both did so under circumstances that were tied to the spread of the gospel. The Apostle Paul later explained that healing was one of the lesser gifts and would eventually fade as the church matured and the written word took center stage. Scripture, not miracles, would become the enduring tool for building faith.
The same is true for speaking in tongues. The New Testament records only three instances of this occurring. In every case, tongues were real human languages used to communicate the gospel to foreigners. Tongues were never intended to be a private prayer language or a display of spiritual superiority. Paul repeatedly corrected the misuse of this gift, reminding believers that prophecy and teaching were far more valuable because they edified the entire church. Once the gospel was firmly established and the Scriptures completed, the purpose of tongues was fulfilled, and the gift ceased—just as Paul said it would.
Key Takeaways
- Healing in the New Testament was a sign of the Messiah and the arrival of the kingdom.
- Jesus healed out of compassion, not as a response to personal faith.
- After Pentecost, only two non-apostles are recorded as performing healings, both for specific gospel purposes.
- Speaking in tongues was always the miraculous ability to speak real foreign languages.
- Tongues served as a sign to unbelievers and a tool for spreading the gospel.
- Paul identified healing and tongues as lesser gifts that would eventually cease.
- The completed Scriptures replaced the need for miraculous signs.























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