Berserk2
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This morning a parishioner, Dick Just, shared a remarkable healing miracle with me. He and his wife had taken a vacation to Turkey and visited the "house of the Virgin Mary" near Ephesus, where the apostle John allegedly took Mary after Jesus' crucifixion. A Catholic nun/ mystic, Anne Catherine Emmerich (1774-1824 AD), had received visions which gave many details about this house and its location. When archaeologists discovered the house, these details were strikingly confirmed. A Catholic lady advised Mary Ann, Dick's wife, to bottle some of the spring water there because it had miraculous healing power. Mary Ann did not believe this but bottled the water just be polite.
A couple of days later, Dick and Mary Ann were back in their Turkish hotel. Dick was scheduled to have surgery on both torn miniscus in his knee. His knee was very sore; so Mary Ann wanted to pour the holy water from "Mary's spring" on his knee. Dick agreed to this and then forgot about it. When he returned to America, he entered the hospital for his knee surgery. His surgeon cut his knee open and was astounded to discover that both miniscus had completely healed! So he stitched Dick's knee up and sent him home to ponder his healing miracle.
What strikes me is this: on historical grounds, I am absolutely certain that Mary's house at Ephesus is bogus. I can't explain the nun's detailed vision of the site. But Mary never drank from or bathed in the spring by that house. Somehow decades of reverent regard for the imagined healing powers of that spring became a self-fulfilling prophecy. I label this type of phenomenon as "valves to release your faith." Jesus exploited this principle in several of His healings. He would anoint the sick with olive oil, spittle, clay, mixtures of clay and spittle, not because He believed in their healing power, but because many of the sick peasants He encountered believed in such healing agents. Similarly, Jesus would heal by laying on hands and his apostles would pray over the pillow slips of absentee sick people and then return them to the sick, so that they could receive their healing. Such techniques make an end run around the mind games we play in TRYING to believe. Trying to believe causes one to look within to see how much faith we have. But this very act automatically creates doubt! Valves to release faith avoid such cerebral conteminants and create a flash point for healing faith to be imparted.
Don
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