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Why Don't North American Christians Raise the Dead?

Jessica lives among the poorest of the poor just north of Lima, Peru. As a very young child she fell ill, languished for a few days, and died. In her neighborhood there were no telephones--no electricity, no running water. Her mother gathered the women in the neighborhood and began to pray. She sent others to find her husband, and still others to find the elders of the church, who showed up within a couple of hours and joined in prayer. After hours more of prayer, Jessica came back to life.
I met Jessica when she was about eight years old. Her mother told me how Jesus had raised her daughter from the dead. I suggested that perhaps her daughter had been very sick, but not dead. With typical North American smugness, I reasoned with the woman that God most certainly had healed the girl, but remained skeptical of outright resurrection. The woman became incensed and told me she knew very well that her daughter had died, and that Jesus brought her back. Mom was pretty angry with me.
Now, every semester I tell my students of the day I met a little girl raised from the dead. Then I watch them process the story--as I did when I first met Jessica. Then we talk about why North American Christians don’t raise the dead.
  • North American Christians don’t raise the dead because we don’t ask. Death has the final word in our society: call the doctor, call the coroner, call the funeral home. Let them make the pronouncement and carry the dead away. Affluent societies are insulated from the dead. The dead are whisked away, cleaned, dressed and embalmed by professionals while we weep and mourn at home. It doesn’t occur to us to stay by their side and ask God to intervene. When a woman named Tabitha died in Joppa, the believers asked Peter to come help. (Acts 9) They didn’t accept death as the final word.
  • North American Christians don’t raise the dead because we don’t see death as an enemy. We attribute every death with God’s sovereign plan, and comfort ourselves with superstitions like “everything happens for a reason.” Yet the Apostle Paul makes it clear that death is indeed the enemy of humankind, “For he must reign until he has put all his enemies under his feet. The last enemy to be destroyed is death.” (1 Corinthians 15: 25-26) Death is real, and inevitable, but we have forgotten it is also our foe.
  • North American Christians don’t raise the dead because because we have not learned from Jesus. Jesus taught by his actions as well as his words. Bill Johnson, pastor of Bethel Church in Redding, CA, reminds us that Jesus ruined every funeral he attended. True, his actions spoke of his own coming resurrection, but perhaps there was something else to learn from his example. Perhaps Jesus raised the dead because not everyone dies in God’s perfect timing. A quick study of those raised from the dead in the gospels and Acts reveal that Jesus and his disciples intervened in the deaths of those who were young, or who died accidentally.
  • North American Christians don’t raise the dead because we have pushed all resurrections into a single event at the end of time. It is a day to be desired: the grave will give up its dead, we will meet him in the clouds. But our faith is about more than the End Times. An illustration: when a local college-aged girl died of a mysterious illness a few years ago we sent a team to pray over her body. One local minister snorted--why would anyone want to bring her back from the dead? She’s happier with Jesus, isn’t she?” The minister could think of no compelling reason for resurrection apart from the Last Day.

Jesus himself gave these instructions to his disciples: “As you go, preach this message: ‘The kingdom of heaven is near.’ Heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse those who have leprosy, drive out demons. Freely you have received, freely give.” (Matthew 10: 7-8) The scripture presents the example of Jesus, Peter, and Paul, all involved in resurrection ministry. It’s true that we will all taste death eventually, but it’s not true that all death is for us to taste. The Kingdom of God message should be met with Kingdom of God demonstration. Forgiveness, justice, mercy, community, healing, and yes, resurrections are all signs of the in-breaking of God’s Kingdom.
Four bullet points aren’t enough to change anyone’s mind. But they should be enough to open the discussion: why don’t North American Christians raise the dead? Believers in Asia, Africa, and South America do. We cannot dismiss their experiences. In many respects believers on those continents are more familiar with death than we are. And more familiar with resurrection.
This is no academic exercise. This discussion is important to individual followers of Jesus. We need to embrace all possibilities of life in Christ, especially, perhaps, the ones that blow our minds.
What do you think? Should we raise the dead? Can we raise the dead? Why are North American and Europeans Christians the exception?

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  • Response
    This is one awesome blog. Much obliged.

Reader Comments (28)

Hi Cameron!

There’s no question that the ultimate in healing is the restoration of relationship with the Father. I think everyone has that goal in mind when we talk about mission. The new birth in Jesus Christ is God’s saving power, and there is no substitute--you must be born again.

Here’s what this post comes down to: do we read the book of Acts as a normative description of church life, or do we read it as the history of the early church? Believers in Asia, South America and Africa receive the book of Acts as normative. Western Christians read it like a history book. A history book describes what happened long ago. The events are a safe distance away from our lives, and they do not challenge Christians to re-think their way of life. As to why we should even think in terms of raising the dead, I can only quote a line from the original post, “Perhaps Jesus raised the dead because not everyone dies in God’s perfect timing.”

Try reading the book of Acts and looking for the connection between signs and wonders and success in the gospel. The goal is not signs and wonders, but a “sign” points people toward the reality. The reality is Jesus. As to the tendency of Westerners to “explain away” the miraculous intervention of God, I assure you that those who have been touched have no desire to explain it away--they rejoice! The ones apt to do the explaining are those watching from the outside.

Here are three points to consider:
(1)You will discover the use of of the miraculous in Acts chapters 1,2,3,4,5,6, 8,9,10,12,13,14,16,18,19,20,27, and 28. My point: you described the “extra-ordinary signs and wonders” of the early church, yet they were not extraordinary to those believers. Nor are they extraordinary to the majority of believers around the world today. We are the ones in need of a change.
(2)The ministry of Jesus is filled with the demonstration of the in-breaking of the kingdom. He not only proclaimed the kingdom, he demonstrated it. He instructed his disciples to do the same (Matt 10, Luke 9, Luke 10, Mark 16, Acts 1). His most amazing statement regarding the role of the miraculous is found in John 14: 11-14. What are we to do with that?
(3)The witness of the third-world church is largely ignored by Western Christians, who have money and education, but are not very effective in their witness. I think we should learn from our brothers and sisters around the world.

I know your questions come from a sincere heart and an honest desire for dialogue. I welcome them! I’m sincerely not trying to “win an argument,” just sharing the passion of my heart. Blessings to you, Cara, and you wonderful new addition!

July 25, 2011 | Unregistered Commenterrayhollenbach

Back in the 90s I heard evangelist Guy Chevreau tell about a policeman who prayed to raise the dead every time he encountered a fatal accident or crime. He viewed it as "practice", figuring that one of those times Jesus would do it! Let us all be that faithful!

August 20, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterAbbasgirl51

That's one policeman I would want at my side in an auto accident. Thanks for sharing that!

August 20, 2011 | Unregistered Commenterrayhollenbach

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