Divine Healing Myths Put Lives at Risk While Churches Profit from False Hope
Joseph Mattera’s latest piece on “divine healing” perfectly captures how evangelical churches package dangerous medical advice as spiritual wisdom. Writing for The Christian Post, Mattera claims to debunk “myths” about divine healing—but his real agenda is promoting a practice that delays proper medical care while filling church coffers with desperate believers’ donations.
Let’s be clear about what’s happening here: Churches are literally telling sick people that prayer and faith can cure serious medical conditions. Mattera frames this as balanced theology, but the underlying message is unmistakable—if you’re not healed, you didn’t have enough faith. (Because nothing says “loving God” like blaming cancer patients for their own suffering.)
The psychological damage from these teachings is staggering. Former believers describe the crushing guilt of “failing” to be healed, the shame of seeking medical treatment after being told it showed “lack of faith,” and the financial devastation from donating to healing ministries instead of paying for actual healthcare.
Here’s what Mattera and his fellow healing promoters won’t tell you: Every single peer-reviewed study on intercessory prayer has shown zero measurable healing effects. Meanwhile, medical interventions have demonstrable success rates that churches can’t match. A 2006 study in the American Heart Journal found that cardiac patients who were prayed for actually had higher complication rates than those who weren’t—possibly due to performance anxiety from knowing they were being prayed for.
But the evidence doesn’t matter to healing advocates because they’ve rigged the game. When someone recovers after medical treatment, it’s “God working through doctors.” When treatment fails, it’s “God’s mysterious will.” When prayer doesn’t work, it’s the patient’s insufficient faith. It’s a perfect system that can never be wrong—and never has to produce results.
The financial exploitation is equally insidious. Healing conferences generate millions in revenue while promising desperate families miraculous cures. Bethel Church in Redding, California, built an entire empire around healing claims, selling books, conferences, and “ministry training” to people convinced they can learn to heal others. Former members report spending thousands chasing healing promises that never materialized.
Meanwhile, secular medical professionals actually cure diseases. Oncologists extend lives and eliminate tumors. Cardiologists repair hearts and prevent strokes. Mental health professionals treat depression and anxiety with therapies that produce measurable improvements. These doctors don’t require faith, don’t blame patients for treatment failures, and don’t ask for donations before providing care.
The contrast couldn’t be starker: Evidence-based medicine that saves lives versus faith-based promises that exploit hope. Yet evangelical culture continues promoting healing theology because it serves church interests—keeping members dependent, generating revenue, and maintaining pastoral authority over life-and-death decisions.
Former pastor Bruce Gerencser spent decades in evangelical healing circles before recognizing the harm: “We told sick people their healing depended on their faith, then watched them die feeling guilty and abandoned by God. The cruelty was breathtaking, but we called it ministry.”
Every day that churches promote divine healing over medical care, people suffer preventable complications, miss early intervention opportunities, and waste precious time and money on spiritual snake oil. The tragedy isn’t just individual—it’s systematic deception that prioritizes religious authority over human welfare.
If evangelical leaders truly cared about healing, they’d enthusiastically direct people to hospitals, specialists, and evidence-based treatments. Instead, they offer prayer requests and faith conferences. The difference reveals everything about their actual priorities.
Source: The Christian Post [https://www.christianpost.com/voices/10-myths-regarding-divine-healing-part-2.html]