Should I Avoid People Who Don’t Believe in Divine Healing If I Need Healing?
Not in general, as you would almost have to leave the area in some places to avoid encountering healing skeptics. You still have a life to live while needing healing. I certainly don't recommend that you tell relatives who are unbelievers or “unbelieving believers” that you cannot have contact with them until you are well.
However, it is proper and right to set boundaries. As long as these people keep their faithless thoughts to themselves, it is not a problem to be around them. If they start talking unbelief, you have the right to contradict them and you should. You need to make it clear that you will not tolerate talk that contradicts what you believe about healing. Pushing back with what the Word says will probably put an end to their ramblings anyway. If they insist on slobbering all over you with unbelief, you may have to insist that they not be around until they stop. You do yourself no favor if you are deathly ill in a hospital bed and you let people come in and pre-grieve your alleged impending demise, lamenting how hard it will be for your family when you're gone and how much they will miss you.
Jesus certainly loved Peter and kept associating with him, but Peter crossed a line when he tried to talk Jesus out of doing what He was born to do at Jerusalem. Jesus even said, “Get behind me, Satan!” He wasn't mistaking Peter for Satan, but He recognized that Satan was the source of the thought. If Jesus could refuse to let anti-truth statements be directed at him without correction, so can you, though I would be careful about telling Satan to get behind you when dealing with relatives who would think that you are calling them Satan. As Jesus' disciple, Peter could understand what Jesus was saying more than a generic person who isn't a disciple!
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