Do We Minister Creative Miracles Differently Than We Minister Healings?

Nothing in the Bible indicates that you minister to someone who needs a creative miracle differently than you minister to someone who needs a healing.  In fact, Galatians 3:5-6 proves the opposite.  God does miracles among us the same way He does healings among us – by faith.  It doesn’t matter if the person needs a healing or a miracle.  That person has the right to be healed, purchased by Jesus’ stripes.

As a practical matter, you may or may not even know if a person’s condition requires a creative miracle.  It’s good to know that you don’t HAVE to know!  The name of Jesus works in both cases.  Jesus didn’t say that we would lay hands on the sick and they would recover but if we encountered someone who needs a miracle, the rules would be different and laying on of hands would not work.  Jesus touched people who needed miracles and they got miracles, and He said that we would do the works that He did.

We have seen quite a few deaf people healed, but we didn’t minister to them differently if a creative miracle was needed.  Some people had lost their hearing and just needed their ears to be healed.  Another was born without part of her eardrum and another was born with mis-formed ear parts.  They got healed when we commanded their ears to be healed in the name of Jesus, which is the same thing we did in the cases where the people didn’t need creative miracles.

What if it’s a deaf spirit instead of either a withered body part or a birth defect?  The name of Jesus works just as well.  No spirit has the right to continue making someone sick when you command that person to be healed in the name of Jesus.  Jesus saw a crippled woman healed without directly addressing the spirit in Luke 13:11-16.  We can do the works He did.

Since people have always been the same in general, I’m sure there were people who needed creative miracles in the multitudes who were ALL healed by the Lord Jesus.  Nothing in any of these “He healed them all” accounts indicates that He had to deal with a need for a creative miracle differently from a need for a healing.