Chapter V - NOT BY OUR OWN POWER
"And when Peter saw it he answered unto the people, Ye men of Israel, why marvel ye at this?
or why look ye so earnestly on us, as though by our own power or holiness we had (Acts 3:12).
As soon as the impotent man had been healed at the gate of the temple through Peter and John,
the people ran together unto them. Peter, seeing this miracle was attributed to their power and
holiness, loses no time in setting them right by telling them that all the glory of this miracle
belongs to Jesus, and that it is He in whom we must believe.
Peter and John were undoubtedly full of faith and of holiness; perhaps even they may have
been the most holy and zealous servants of God in their time, otherwise God might not have
chosen them as instruments in this case of healing. But they knew that their holiness of life
was not of themselves, that it was of God through the Holy Spirit. They think so little of
themselves that they ignore their own holiness and know only one thing that all power belongs to
their Master. They hasten, then, to declare that in this thing they count for nothing, that it
is the work of the Lord alone. This is the object of divine healing: to be a proof of the power
of Jesus, a witness in the eyes of men of what He is, proclaiming His divine intervention, and
attracting hearts to Him. Not "by our own power or holiness." Thus is becomes those to speak
whom the Lord is pleased to use in helping others by their faith.
It is necessary to insist on this because of the tendency of believers to think the contrary.
Those who have recovered their health in answer to "the prayer of faith" [James 5:15], "the
supplication of a righteous man availeth much in its working" (James 5:16, RV), are in danger
of being too much occupied with the human instrument which God is pleased to employ, and to
think that the power lies in mans piety.
Doubtless the prayer of faith is the result of real godliness, but those who possess it will
be the first to acknowledge that it does not come from themselves, nor from any effort of their
own. They fear to rob the Lord of the least particle of the glory which belongs to Him, and
they know that if they do so, they will compel Him to withdraw His grace from them. It is their
great desire to see the souls which God has blessed through them enter into a direct and
increasingly intimate communion with the Lord Jesus Christ Himself, since that is the result
which their healing should produce. Thus they insist that it is not caused by their own power
or holiness.
Such testimony on their part is necessary to reply to the erroneous accusations of
unbelievers. The Church of Christ needs to hear clearly announced that it is on account of her
worldliness and unbelief that she has lost these spiritual gifts of healing (I Corinthians 12: 9)
and that the Lord restores to those who, with faith and obedience, have consecrated their lives
to Him.
1 Corinthians 12
9 To another faith by the same Spirit; to another the
gifts of healing by the same Spirit;
This grace cannot reappear without being preceded by a renewal of faith and of holiness. But
then, says the world, and with it a large number of Christians, You are laying claim to the
possession of a higher order of faith and holiness, you consider yourselves holier than others.
To such accusations this word of Peter is the only reply before God and man, confirmed by a
life of deep and real humility: Not "by our own power or holiness." "Not unto us, O Lord, not
unto us, but unto Thy Name give glory, for Thy mercy and for Thy truth's sake" (Psalm 115:1).
Such a testimony is also necessary in view of our own heart and of the wiles of Satan. As long
as, through the Church's unfaithfulness, the gifts of healing are but rarely given, those
children of God who have received these gifts are in danger of priding themselves upon them, and
of imagining that they have in themselves something exceptionally meritorious.
The enemy does not forget to persecute them by such insinuations, and woe unto them if they
listen to him. They are not ignorant of his Y devices; therefore they need to pray continually
to the Lord to keep them in humility, the true means of obtaining continually more grace. If
they persevere in humility, they will recognize that the more God makes use of them, the more
also will they be penetrated with the conviction that it is God alone who works by them, and
that all the glory belongs to Him. "Not I, but the grace of God which was with me" (I
Corinthians 15:10). Such is their watchword.
Finally, this testimony is useful for the feeble ones who long for salvation, and who desire
to receive Christ as their Healer. They hear of full consecration and entire obedience, but they
form a false idea of it. They think they must in themselves attain to a high degree of knowledge
and of perfection, and they fall a prey to discouragement. No, no; it is not by our own power or
holiness that we obtain these graces, but by a faith quite simple, a childlike faith, which
knows that it has no power nor holiness of its own, and which commits itself completely to Him
who is faithful, and whose almightiness can fulfill His promise. Oh, let us not seek to do or to
be anything of ourselves! It is only as we feel our own powerlessness, and expect all from God
and His Word that we realize the glorious way in which the Lord heals sickness by faith in his
name.