Francis Chan: I healed deaf boy and girl in Myanmar - 'My faith was at another level'
Crazy Love author Francis Chan said that during a recent trip to Myanmar he, along with a team of other Christians, miraculously healed a number of individuals in a rural village, including a little boy and girl who were deaf.
During a sermon delivered at Moody Bible Institute's Founders Week Conference, Chan, former teaching pastor of Cornerstone Community Church in Simi Valley, California, said two weeks ago he and several others traveled to Myanmar.
"At one point, we were in this village that had no believers, like zero. Not a single one," he recalled. "And this lady had built a relationship with the head monk and the village leader and somehow was able to work out that we could go into the village."
"My translator told me he had been in that area before and was chased out with knives and stones thrown at him, so he was terrified," Chan continued. "But the entire village showed up, and I had the honor of sharing the Gospel through a translator, to be the first one to lay out the Gospel and explain that they had a Creator and explain that He had a son and explain what He did on the cross and the resurrection."
"There's no way I can communicate to you how much peace I felt," the pastor stressed. "I am sharing the Good News with a village of people who have never heard of this before. I can't tell you how right it felt."
Later in his message, Chan revealed that while in the village he asked God to help him heal those suffering.
"I'm going, 'God, please, please heal,'" he recalled. "People started coming forward for healing."
"Every person I touched was healed," Chan declared as the audience applauded.
"You guys, OK, this is craziness to me," he added. "I have never experienced this in 52 years. I'm talking like a little boy and a little girl who were deaf. We laid hands, she starts crying and smiling. These are not Christians who have even heard about Jesus, and she's freaking out. We lay hands on her little brother, we lay hands on him, and he starts hearing for the first time."
Chan admitted that the entire process was out of his "comfort zone," adding, "This is stuff I'd read about, but I'm going, 'Man, it happened. It happened.' Stuff left and right."
"I thought I had faith, but my faith was at another level, and I think there are some things that contributed — some of it was just faith in His word, that when Jesus says, 'I am in you and you are in Me,' to take that literally," he declared.
The pastor admitted that when he walked in the village, he had a "little bit of fear," adding, "I said, 'No, no, this is no different than if You walked in the village, and I know what you'd do, Jesus. You'd proclaim the Good News and you'd heal.'"
"I started having this mindset again of going, 'No, no, this is what the Word of God says. You said I would do the same things that You did, and even greater things. Jesus, I know what You would have done in this village.' I believe there was something about that faith, I believe there was something about the unity that we had as a group there," he explained.
Chan said that although he disagreed theologically with some of the individuals on his team, he believes God was "honored by this fight for unity, and I believe God was honored by this pursuit of the unreached, and obeying the Great Commission and we saw power."
"And I don't know that that means it will happen every time," he clarified. "My theology says I don't think it will happen everywhere ... but best I understand Scripture, He wants me to believe in my unity with Him, this power that I have because He and I are one. He wants to believe that you and I can become perfectly one."
Chan revealed that in three weeks, his family plans to move to Hong Kong and go to "some places that are pretty sketchy, dangerous." The reality of persecution, he said, has caused him to "evaluate" his beliefs.
"Do I still believe that my life has no value outside of accomplishing what God wants me to do?" he asked.
The pastor said that while he loves to preach the Word of God to believers, it's "nothing like" preaching to people who have never heard the name of Jesus.
"So I'm excited. In a couple of weeks, we'll be moving, Lord willing," he said.
During the service, Chan also compared Americans to "spiritual foodies," adding: "All of you are. ... We're just picking it apart. And I just go, 'I don't know if I can do that anymore when there are people who have no spiritual food, who have never heard the name of Jesus.'"
"I say this because there's a crowd of young people here, and you're thinking about what to do with your life," Chan continued. "Just think through the calling of Scripture, because I want that peace that I felt there. I want that for your life, and I know what you're going to face your entire life here. You're going to hear a lot of lies and a lot of those are going to come from within the church."
"If I had listened to those voices, I would've missed out on so much of life because so many people, even in the church today, they'll reason with you from their logic rather than from the Scriptures," he warned.
Chan said it is "crazy" to him that it's "perfectly normal" to be a Christian in America and be "obsessed with staying alive," citing John 12:25: "Anyone who loves their life will lose it, while anyone who hates their life in this world will keep it for eternal life."
"Is that what you really see in the Scriptures?" Chan asked. "The only thing I'm trying to do with my every breath is complete the ministry He gave me. If I'm going to breathe another day, it's to finish the task that He's given me, which is to testify to the Gospel of the grace of God. I just want to get out and explain the grace, what God has given me, through Jesus Christ."
Watch Francis Chan's full sermon below: