Why Doesn't God Always Heal the Sick?
1) Direct Answer
God does heal, but He does not always heal every sickness instantly or in the same way. Healing is provided in Christ’s atonement, yet we still live in mortal bodies awaiting the full redemption. In this present time, God heals according to His Word, our faith, our obedience, and His purpose and timing.
2) Scriptural Explanation
- Healing is provided:
- “By His stripes we are healed” (Isaiah 53:5). Matthew 8:16-17 shows Jesus bearing our infirmities. 1 Peter 2:24 confirms the provision at the cross.
- Yet not everyone was healed at once:
- At the pool of Bethesda many sick lay there, but Jesus healed one man and moved on (John 5:2-9). He said, “The Son can do nothing of Himself, but what He sees the Father do” (John 5:19).
- In Nazareth He “could do there no mighty work” because of unbelief (Mark 6:5-6; Matthew 13:58).
- Believers can face sickness and even remain sick for a season:
- Trophimus was left sick at Miletum (2 Timothy 4:20).
- Epaphroditus was sick, near death, and God had mercy (Philippians 2:25-27).
- Timothy had “often infirmities”; he was told to take a little wine for his stomach (1 Timothy 5:23).
- Elisha, a mighty prophet, “was fallen sick” of the sickness whereof he died (2 Kings 13:14).
- Causes and conditions the Bible names:
- Unbelief hinders (Mark 6:5-6).
- Chastening and irreverence can bring weakness and sickness (1 Corinthians 11:29-32).
- Obedience is linked with Jehovah who heals (Exodus 15:26).
- Confession and prayer are God’s order (James 5:14-16).
- Sometimes affliction is allowed to display God’s works or to keep us lowly: the man born blind (John 9:3); Paul’s buffeting and God saying, “My grace is sufficient” (2 Corinthians 12:7-9); Job’s trial and later healing (Job 2; Job 42:10).
- Ultimate healing is future:
- We “groan within ourselves, waiting for the… redemption of our body” (Romans 8:23).
- It is appointed unto men once to die (Hebrews 9:27). The full change comes at the resurrection (1 Corinthians 15:51-54).
3) Simple Clarifying Logic
- If healing were automatic now in all cases, no believer would ever die. But the Bible says our bodies are still mortal until the resurrection. So the provision is real, and we should ask and believe, but its full manifestation awaits the redemption of the body.
- Jesus is the Healer, yet He did not heal everyone at the pool, and He was limited in Nazareth by unbelief. So the promise stands, but conditions and God’s purpose matter.
- The same Bible that commands “call for the elders” and promises “the prayer of faith shall save the sick” also shows saints who were sick, disciplined, or preserved through a trial so God’s grace would be seen. There is no contradiction—God heals, and God also governs.
4) How to Walk in It
- Examine and align:
- Search your heart; repent of known sin; make wrongs right (1 Corinthians 11:31; James 5:16).
- Follow God’s order:
- Call the elders, be anointed, and receive prayer in faith (James 5:14-16).
- Believe and hold fast:
- Stand on the Word; healing may be instant or progressive (Mark 8:22-25; John 4:52).
- Stay in obedience:
- Walk clean, forgive others, keep your confession lined up with Scripture (Exodus 15:26; Mark 11:25).
- Do not condemn:
- If healing tarries, do not accuse the sufferer. Strengthen them. Sometimes God is glorified in the trial and the deliverance (Philippians 2:27; John 9:3).
- Use means without unbelief:
- Scripture does not forbid practical help; Timothy received counsel for his health, and Luke was a physician (1 Timothy 5:23; Colossians 4:14). Trust God first and use what He provides.
Short Reinforcing Statement
Now notice, the cross secures both salvation and healing. We press our claim by faith, obey the Word, and submit to God’s wise purpose. He heals today, and the final, perfect healing is the resurrection, when this mortal puts on immortality.