Christian Healing Ministry Articles by Francis MacNutt and Judith MacNutt
Following is a guide for most of the articles written by Francis MacNutt for the publication of Healing Line . Some titles have been changed because of input restrictions and there may be one or two of his articles which have been missed. Each article is linked directly to the Christian Healing Ministry web site. Enjoy!! If your want more information on Dr. MacNutt’s background see the article on “The Priest with the Healing Hands.”
Francis MacNutt Articles:
001 A Teaching and Testimony Combined June 1988
002 Overview of England trip Sept 1988
003 A Testimony from England Healing for Arthritis, Sexual Abuse & Women’s Roles Sept 1988
004 How Soaking Prayer Works Feb 1989
005 Always Pray – Never Give Up May 1989
006 Word of Knowledge Dec 1989
007 Healing — Fiction, Fantasy, or Fact Jan 1990
008 The Vision of Christian Healing Ministries Feb 1990
009 Some Observations on Resting in the Spirit April 1990
010 Social Exorcism May 1990
011 Charismatic Renewal Jun_Jul 1990
012 Mainline Churches and Charismatics Aug 1990
013 Ministries coming under Demonic Attack Sept 1990
014 Prophecies Nov 1990
015 Nature and Harmony with God Dec 1990
016 Healing Prayer is Sometimes a Battle Jan 1991
017 What is God Doing These Days Feb 1991
018 Different Prayer Forms April 1991
019 Pentecostal Church Growth May 1991
020 The Mystery – Why Some Are Healed and Others Not Nov_Dec 1991
021 Does it Make Any Difference Who Prays for You Jan_Feb 1992
022 Fish-Net Conference April 1992
023 Controlling Tobacco Industry Child Abuse June 1992
024 Report from England Sept 1992
025 Do We Pray About Aging October 1992
026 Satanism Dec 1992
027 Thoughts on Smoking Feb 1993
028 Healing Testimonies Feb 1993
029 The Royal Touch of Healing Apr 1993
030 Spiritual Health Contributes to Physical Health June 1993
031 Freedom from Demonization testimony Judith Dec 1993
032 Studies on prayer by doctors Mar 1994
033 Seven Years to Heal May 1994
034 C. S. Lewis and Healing Sept 1994
035 Lessons from History Dec 1994
036 Afflicted in Every Way but not Crushed Apr 1995
037 The Real Story Behind the Exorcist July 1995
038 Spiritual Dryness – A Call to Go Deeper Nov 1995
039 When Healing Doesn’t Come Nov 1995
040 Why Do We Suffer Spring 1996
041 Media and Medical Focus on Healing Prayer Summer 1996
042 Our Need for Fun Summer 1996
043 Effectiveness of Prayer Confirmed Fall 1996
044 Greater Joy Than We Have Ever Known Spring 1997
045 Will The Voice of the Bird Be Silenced Spring 1997
046 Reflections on Lent and Easter Spring 1997
047 Fire From Heaven Summer 1997
048 The Baptism with The Holy Spirit by Rev Tommy Tyson Summer 1997
049 Come, Holy Spirit Fall 1997
050 Health and Spirituality from Mayo Clinic Fall 1997
051 Life in the Springtime of the Church Spring 1998
052 Research Study Echoes the Power of Jesus Summer 1998
053 The Healing We Find at the Manger Winter 1998
054 One More Reason to Shout Alleluiah Spring 1999
055 He Really Has the Whole World in His Hands Summer 1999
056 Seeking a Balanced Deliverance Ministry in the Church Fall 1999
057 Y2K – The Year of Jubilee Winter 1999
058 Being Freed From Generational Bondage Spring 2000
059 Prayers for Generational Healing Spring 2000
060 Healing Our Image of God Summer 2000
061 April Richmond Deliverance Conference Summer 2000
062 Homosexuality – Can it be Cured Fall 2000
063 In Jesus’ Birth – Our Deepest Healing Winter 2000
064 What’s New in the Healing Ministry Winter 2000
065 We Celebrate – The Arthritis Study is Released Spring 2001
066 At Last the Great Healing is Set in Motion Summer 2001
067 A Fresh Insight Into Healing Summer 2001
068 A Question for You Fall 2001
069 Healing News Fall 2001
070 Peace on Earth – Is it Only a Dream Winter 2001
071 Healing News Winter 2001
072 Report on our Trip to Rome Jan_Feb 2002
073 Healing News Jan_Feb 2002
074 Back to Our Roots Mar_Apr 2002
075 Healing News Mar_Apr 2002
076 Easter and Healing May_Jun 2002
077 Why Should I take a Course in Healing Prayer May_Jun 2002
078 Praying to Heal Cancer Jul-Aug 2002
079 A Wake-up Call Jul-Aug 2002
080 Praying About Growing Older Sep-Oct 2002
081 Appreciating Our Spiritual Differences Nov-Dec 2002
082 When to Pray for a Peaceful Death Jan_Feb 2003
083 One Grand Alleluia Jan_Feb 2003
084 Piercing the Glass Ceiling Mar_Apr 2003
085 Being Baptized in the Holy Spirit May_Jun 2003
086 The Healing Shepherds of Madagascar May_Jun 2003
087 Remarkable Healing of a Muslim Jul_Aug 2003
088 Should We Be Shocked Sep_Oct 2003
089 Heart to Heart Nov_Dec 2003
090 Our Journey to Scotland Jan_Feb 2004
091 Does Jesus Baptize us with Fire Jan_Feb 2004
092 Praying in Tongues for Healing Mar_Apr 2004
093 A Testimony in Relation to DID Mar_Apr 2004
094 Jesus’ Passion to Heal May_Jun 2004
095 Should a Healer’s Lifestyle be Lavish Jul_Aug 2004
095a News About Healing – Catholic Charismatic Jul_Aug 2004
096 To Live or Die Sep_Oct 2004
097 What Makes Christmas So Great Nov_Dec 2004
098 Beneath the Surface Nov_Dec 2004
099 A Near-Death Experience Jan_Feb 2005
100 Why Did the Charismatic Renewal Peak Mar_Apr 2005
101 Does It Make Any Difference Who Prays for My Healing May_Jun 2005
102 Should a Healer’s Lifestyle be Lavish Jul_Aug 2005
103 News About Healing Jul_Aug 2005
104 Can the Healing Ministry Help Us Become Holy Sep_Oct 2005
105 Broadening the Spectrum of Deliverance Ministry Nov_Dec 2005
106 Can a Sick Person Pray for Another Sick Person Jan_Feb 2006
107 Should We Pray About Aging Mar_Apr 2006
108 How to Pray for Aging Mar_Apr 2006
109 Does Science Prove Intercessory Prayer Doesn’t Work May_Jun 2006
110 Is Charismatic Renewal Dying Jul_Aug 2006
111 Why I Wrote a Book on Homosexuality Sep_Oct 2006
112 A Return to an Old Battleground Sep_Oct 2006
113 The Way We Were Nov_Dec 2006
114 A Christmas Message Nov_Dec 2006
115 Once Blind But Now I See Jan_Feb 2007
116 How I Changed My Ecumenical Approach Mar_Apr 2007
117 Many Pentecostals Don’t Pray in Tongues Mar_Apr 2007
118 The Critical Next Step May_Jun 2007
119 Blessed Elements May_Jun 2007
120 Resurgence of Exorcism in Italy Jul_Aug 2007
121 Does Healing Prayer Work Sep_Oct 2007
122 The Greatest Gift of All – Love Nov_Dec 2007
123 Baptized in the Spirit During the Renaissance Jan_Feb 2008
124 The Struggle to Recover Healing Apr_May 2008
125 Bringing the Obstacles to Healing into the Light Apr_May 2008
125a Our Need For Fun Jun_Jul 2008
126 A Journey to Rome Aug_Sep 2008
127 What is One to Think of the Lakeland Revival Oct_Nov 2008
128 Christmas in a Time of Financial Crisis Dec 2008
129 A Gentle Revolution Jan_Feb 2009
130 My Great Healing Mar_Apr 2009
131 Spiritual Dryness – A Call to Go Deeper May_Jun 2009
132 An AARP Survey on Healing Prayer May_Jun 2009
133 Can You Answer the Mystery Jul_Aug 2009
134 Reflections on Impartation Sep_Oct 2009
135 More on the Dark Night Nov_Dec 2009
136 I Am Not Perfect Jan_Feb 2010
137 The Joy of Being in Healing Ministry Mar_Apr 2010
138 We Are Just Beginning May_Jun 2010
139 Struggles of the Prophets Jul_Aug 2010
140 A Physician Sees a Miracle Sept_Oct 2010
141 Getting the Word Out Nov_Dec 2010
142 The Gift of Healing Jan_Feb 2011
143 A Healing Place Mar_Apr 2011
144 Exorcism – A Critique Mar_Apr 2011
145 Praying for Your Dreams May_Jun 2011
146 The Fragrance of the Holy Spirit Jul_Aug_Sep 2011
147 The Blessing of Persistence Nov_Dec 2011
148 Why You Shouldn’t Pray for Healing Jan_Feb_Mar 2012
149 Is It Truly a Miracle Apr_May_Jun 2012
150 How Does God Use You Jul_Aug_Sept 2012
151 What Makes Christmas So Great Oct_Nov_Dec 2012
152 What I Needed to Hear Jan_Feb_Mar 2013
153 Reflections on Lent, Easter and Pentecost Apr_May_Jun 2013
154 Who Causes Us to Suffer Fall 2013
155 Soaking Prayer Winter 2013_2014
156 My Search for the Spirit Spring 2014
157 The Importance of Blessing Fall 2015
Last Remembrances of Francis MacNutt by Judith MacNutt Jan 2020
Judith MacNutt Articles
001 Curses and Addictions – Ask Judith June 1993
002 Depression – Ask Judith Aug 1993
003 Satanic Ritual Abuse – Ask Judith Dec 1993
004 A Lesson in Grief Mar 1994
005 Angels _ God’s Gift to us Sept 1994
006 Preparation for Ministry Apr 1995
007 How I Discovered Inner Healing Fall 1998
008 Personal Experiences in Generational Healing Spring 2000
009 Touching the Heart of Abba Summer 2000
010 In Search of Jesus Winter 2000
011 A Wedding of Opposites Spring 2001
012 New Year’s Resolutions Jan_Feb 2004
013 How Angels Appear at Christmas – Then and Now Dec 2008
014 The Kingdom of God May_Jun 2011
015 Angels Are For Real Jan_Feb_Mar 2012
016 Angels and Spiritual Warfare Apr_May_Jun 2012
017 Three Messages from God for Sarah Jane Jan_Feb_Mar 2013
018 Encountering Angels Winter 2015/2016
019 Addiction and Surrender – A Spiritual Perspective Spring_Summer 2016
020 Do You Believe in Miracles Fall 2016
021 How I Discovered Inner Healing Winter 2016
022 Walk Together Through Grief Fall_Winter 2017
023 Healing, Where Does It Start Vol.1 2018
024 Shame Vol. 2 2018
025 Courage Vol 3. 2018
026 Called To Love Vol 4 2018
027 Forgiveness is Freedom Vol 5 2018
028 Transformation Vol 6 2018
029 Identity and Unity Vol 1 2019
030 True Self Vol 2 2019
031 What About Deliverance Vol 3 2019
032 Anger Unmasked Vol 4 2019
033 The Call to Loving Community Vol 5 2019
034 Remembering Francis MacNutt Vol 1 2020
035 Angel Encounter Vol 2 2020
036 Spiritual Warfare 101 Vol 3 2020
037 Depression or Discouragement Vol 1 2021
038 Fully Alive in Our Emotions Vol 2 2021
039 Maintain Your Healing Vol 3 2021
040 Mercy Vol 4 2021
041 Physical Healing Vol 1 2022
042 Angelic Realm Q & A Vol 2 2022
043 Living In The Wilderness Vol 3 2022
044 Miracles Vol 4 2022
Following is By J. LEE GRADY (June 30, 2004)
Francis MacNutt has introduced thousands of Christians to miraculous healing. Now 79, he hopes to train an army of healers to take his place.
There’s something calm and comforting about the way Francis MacNutt heals the sick. He rarely raises his voice except when confronting evil spirits. Yet when the 79-year-old priest gently lays his hands on a sick person’s head or shoulders, they often say God touches them at the same moment he whispers the name “Jesus.”
In the 37 years that MacNutt has claimed the gift of supernatural healing, he has seen people cured of everything from asthma, allergies and heart disease to high blood pressure, cancer and torn arches. He once prayed for a woman and then watched as her foot grew to its normal size, from size 5 to 7-1/2. In 1982 a woman’s brain tumor disappeared when he prayed–and after she returned home to South Carolina her doctor documented the miracle.
MacNutt’s methods are not always orthodox. Often he will stand in front of an audience and sing in an unknown language. He doesn’t know what he’s saying, and neither do the people in the crowd, but listeners are sometimes healed just by hearing the heavenly glossolalia.
“I feel stupid doing it,” he says of the unusual practice. “I’ve been doing it for 25 years and it still feels funny.”
Once, a woman was healed when MacNutt simply looked at her. What’s more common in his services is the phenomenon he calls “resting in the Spirit.” After he lays hands on people, they fall to the floor and lie there for several minutes while they undergo soul surgery. A priest he prayed for in England lay on the floor for two hours and got up healed of depression.
MacNutt refers to depression as “the common cold of the mental health field,” and he has lost count of those healed of it in his meetings. In recent years, people in MacNutt’s services also have been cured of mental disorders as well as delivered of demons. A Brazilian woman who had consecrated herself to the devil–and signed the pact with her own blood–was freed after MacNutt spent an hour with her.
Despite his successful track record, however, you won’t find this priest staging mass healing crusades in stadiums or broadcasting his meetings on Christian television. Sensationalism turns him off. He prefers the quiet approach.
And besides, MacNutt’s research shows that only 1 percent of people are healed at large healing services. In contrast, 20 percent or more are healed when there is more time for individual prayer. He is not exactly sure why, except that he knows healing is not always instantaneous.
“Healing takes time,” he says, speaking like a true veteran from his years of experience at the altar. “This is what is missing in most healing ministry today. We always want everything to be instant.”
MacNutt prefers the slower, personal, hands-on approach. So much so that he once wrote a book about the therapeutic power of touch.
“I just listen, love and pray,” he says of his simple formula–which he hopes to teach to the church worldwide before he dies.
Stranger in a Strange Land
MacNutt does not look 79. Although his gait is a bit slower these days and his voice sounds slightly worn, his blue eyes still beam as if electrically charged. He is plugged in to an invisible source of power.
Those who have followed him since the early days of his ministry know that he has clocked a lot of mileage since the peak years of the Catholic charismatic movement. After 14 years of college and seminary (he has degrees from Harvard University and The Catholic University of America) MacNutt was baptized in the Holy Spirit in 1967 through the influence of charismatic healing pioneer Agnes Sanford.
She prophesied that the enthusiastic Dominican priest would take supernatural healing to the Catholic Church worldwide–and the prediction rapidly proved accurate. He took his newfound Pentecostalism to 30 countries, and a book he wrote in 1974, Healing, went on to sell 1 million copies.
Catholic nuns, priests, bishops and laypeople all embraced MacNutt’s nontraditional teachings about healing, speaking in tongues and deliverance from demons. When he preached at a clergy retreat in Australia in the 1970s, all 220 priests in attendance were filled with the Holy Spirit. By the time he left his native St. Louis in 1980, the majority of priests in the city were involved in charismatic prayer groups.
He was as much of a phenomenon in Catholic charismatic circles as flamboyant healing evangelist Kathryn Kuhlman was among mainline Protestants. In fact, Kuhlman prayed for him at one of her meetings in Pittsburgh in 1969. (MacNutt apologetically insists that Kuhlman pushed him to the floor, though admitting that he has fallen under the power of the Holy Spirit more than 75 times in various meetings.)
MacNutt’s glorious days of favor and applause ended abruptly in 1980 when he did something his Catholic brethren could not accept: He married.
And to complicate the matter, he married not a Catholic but a Southern Baptist psychologist, Judith Sewell, whom he had met at a Catholic charismatic community in Clearwater, Florida.
The Catholics may have been open to a priest who spoke in tongues and healed the sick, but they certainly would not stomach one who broke his clerical celibacy vow to marry a woman young enough to be his daughter. A scandal erupted that sent shock waves all the way to the Vatican.
MacNutt remembers the pain he felt when the church rejected him. “There was a lot going against our decision [to marry],” he says. “The leaders were mostly against it. I was 54 and she was 32.
“Everyone was saying to me: ‘You can’t do this! You’ve made a vow! This will destroy the great ministry God has given you!’ One Catholic leader just cried.”
It was difficult for Judith to watch her husband suffer. “It’s a deep sadness that a person like Francis had to lose the fellowship of a church he loved so much,” she told Charisma.
Doors were slammed in MacNutt’s face from that point on. He was officially excommunicated, denied the sacraments and stripped of all clergy privilege. But the newlyweds couldn’t just stop preaching about the new life of the Holy Spirit they had discovered. So they found other places to minister.
Some Catholics were still open to their message of healing, but after the excommunication the MacNutts began to receive speaking invitations from Episcopalians, Presbyterians and Pentecostal groups. And because MacNutt’s clerical collar was gone, Protestants who might have been wary of his Catholic ways found him more acceptable. One door had closed, but several new ones opened.
Mike Evans was a Baptist when he heard MacNutt speak in Bakersfield, California, in 1987. He was as skeptical of Catholics as he was of charismatics, but when he heard MacNutt speak on healing he embraced the charismatic experience and eventually became one of MacNutt’s closest colleagues.
“Francis is the most gracious, humble man I’ve ever met,” Evans says today. “I believe his greatest contribution is his ability to move among a variety of churches and groups, bringing reconciliation and healing.”
By 1987, when the MacNutts moved to Jacksonville, Florida, at the invitation of an Episcopal priest, their ministry was welcomed more in Protestant circles than in Catholic ones. The couple purchased an unused Episcopal church building and turned it into the headquarters for Christian Healing Ministries, where they now operate a school of healing with a staff of 18.
The move to Florida was by no means a step toward retirement–a term MacNutt avoids. His travel schedule today is rigorous, although he manages to fit in time for his favorite hobby of bird watching. (He personally has identified 540 birds in North America and once traveled to the Florida Keys to spot the rare frigate bird.)
Today, the MacNutts’ goal is to train as many Christians as possible to heal the sick the same way Jesus did.
“We wouldn’t have to have this healing center if all churches were fully empowered to minister healing,” says Judith, who was healed of a precancerous condition the year before she married. Doctors told her she may have to have a hysterectomy, but after her marriage she conceived.
“The sad thing is that people fly here from all over the world because the church isn’t helping them,” she adds.
Judith eventually wrote a book with her husband, titled How to Pray for Your Unborn Child. Her prayers obviously worked. Today the MacNutts’ two children, Rachel and David, are 22 and 20 respectively.
Partners in Healing
MacNutt’s Catholic colleagues may or may not agree today, but it’s obvious that Judith is the best thing that ever happened to him aside from his dramatic encounter with the Holy Spirit years earlier. In his case, marriage was a very good idea–even if it violated an antiquated tradition and upset the Catholic hierarchy in the process.
Before the MacNutts met, Judith worked as a psychologist at a Boston hospital. After one of her mentally ill patients committed suicide, she cried out to God in frustration–discouraged that her counseling efforts hadn’t made a difference.
She says God answered her clearly and gave her a strategy: “Bring them to Me, and I will heal them.”
“I realized then that people would not be made whole just through psychology,” she told Charisma. “Psychology can give us skills to help others, but it doesn’t heal people. If you have been severely wounded, it is not enough to change you.”
Judith began to blend her psychological training with biblical principles of healing and faith. Eventually she became an expert on emotional healing, and she taught others how to use prayer to heal mental disorders, phobias, painful memories and even sexual disorders at a time when few Christians talked about homosexuality–and fewer believed Jesus actually could heal a gay person.
When the MacNutts married in 1980, they began a union of two uniquely gifted healers. While doors of opportunity were slamming in their faces because of their marriage (the Catholic Church finally recognized their union 13 years later), their anointing for healing seemed to be increasing. They also started to encounter more sinister forces during their praying and became experts in deliverance without aspiring to such an odd vocation.
The MacNutts have seen it all since they began casting out demons. They’ve confronted spirits of lust, perversion, violence and occultism. They’ve prayed for victims of satanic ritual abuse but are quick to note that they don’t go looking for Exorcist-style spinning heads, projectile vomiting or other sensational manifestations of the devil.
“We are ministering to people, not demons,” Judith says in her faint Kentucky drawl. “Deliverance ministry is not all about people writhing on the floor, although we have seen that.”
What motivates their deliverance ministry is not a taste for the sensational but a love for people. “People have told me: ‘Francis, why do you waste your time [with the mentally ill]? You’re just holding hands with a bunch of nuts.'”
But the MacNutts have solved too many “nut” cases to be deterred by the skeptics and the armchair critics. What they want the church to know is that healing and deliverance ministry is not an exotic ritual reserved for the chosen few. It is the call of every believer.
That was their message in late 2003 when they took a small ministry team to Scotland to introduce Presbyterian leaders to the work of the Holy Spirit. Although MacNutt’s preaching style was soft-spoken, as usual, the results he witnessed in Scotland were anything but mild-mannered.
A healing service at St. Cuthbert’s Presbyterian Church in Edinburgh drew 400 people and lasted until 2:30 a.m. Before it ended, dozens of Presbyterian ministers had been baptized in the Holy Spirit. After a two-day lecture on healing held at a university in Edinburgh, the MacNutts held a deliverance service during which they prayed for a distinguished-looking elderly woman. Before her deliverance she was propelled backward several feet on the platform while baffled Presbyterians watched.
MacNutt intends to stage similar demonstrations of God’s power everywhere he goes, especially among more traditional-minded Christians. He is especially grieved that churches in the West, including his own Catholic Church, have quenched the Holy Spirit’s work.
“In this country the move of the Holy Spirit has been domesticated,” MacNutt told Charisma. “But in other parts of the world it’s growing so explosively that the largest group of Christians next to the Roman Catholics are the Pentecostals.
“Most mainline Protestants in this country don’t realize they are outnumbered. They still see charismatics and Pentecostals as fringe groups. They don’t realize that the main centers of Christianity 25 years from now will not be Rome, Geneva and New York but New Delhi, Lagos and other exotic centers.”
Comments like those may not get MacNutt an audience with the pope or curry favor with traditionalist leaders from any denomination. That’s OK with him, provided that he can reach the people in the pews–anyone who’s hungry to know more about the deeper things of God.
As long as Francis MacNutt has breath in his body and healing in his hands, he will spread the life of the Spirit to those who need a touch.
Veterans of Healing
Francis and Judith MacNutt believe every Christian can be taught to minister.
Francis MacNutt’s hands are not as steady as they were 30 years ago, but he is as eager to pray for the sick today as he was during the heyday of the charismatic renewal movement.
At the same time, however, MacNutt knows his limitations. He can’t go everywhere and heal everybody, and he’ll be passing his mantle to someone else one day. That’s why he and his wife, Judith, have focused their energies on training a new generation of Christians to heal the sick.
“Healing is a gift, but we have to learn how to use it,” Judith says. “We have to train prayer ministers, and churches need to empower them.”
The MacNutts offer that empowerment through an extensive series of training videos as well as a School of Healing Prayer, offered at their Jacksonville, Florida-based headquarters. The course covers everything from “Healing of Abortion and Miscarriage” to “Healing of Addictions” to “Healing Our Image of God.”
The MacNutts teach that emotional healing is an often-ignored tool. They have promoted their message in numerous books including The Prayer That Heals and Deliverance from Evil Spirits.
“In a lot of churches there is still no understanding of the need to bring all the healing disciplines together,” Judith says. “In some denominations you’ll find an understanding of deliverance ministry, but they have no clue about inner healing. Yet 90 percent of all demonic activity is based on trauma or wounding. Many will cast a demon out of someone, but they won’t do the inner healing work that heals the wound, so the demon comes back.”
Francis MacNutt wants to pass on several important principles of healing prayer. Among them:
1. Prayer requires discernment. The key to effective healing, he says, is knowing what to pray for. This understanding only comes by the power of the Holy Spirit.
2. Healing requires time. The MacNutts advocate what they call “soaking prayer”–in which prayer ministers lay hands on a person and pray for an extended period. “Healing takes time, and that is what is missing in a lot of healing ministry,” he says.
3. Emotions need healing. The MacNutts believe that grief, shame, panic attacks, mental disorders, sexual hang-ups and addictions can all be healed by Jesus. Often the healing requires the affected person to renounce hurtful vows, forgive those who hurt them or invite Christ to heal a painful memory.
4. Demons are real. Francis has never shied away from confronting spiritual darkness, and he challenges Christians today to learn how to cast out devils.
For more information about Francis and Judith MacNutt’s ministry, or to receive prayer, write Christian Healing Ministries, P.O. Box 9520, Jacksonville, FL 32208; call 904-765-3332; or e-mail healingline@christianhealingmin.org.