Summary of "Unleashing Healing Power Through Spirit Born Emotions - Session 7"
Overview
This teaching explores how faith combined with spirit-born emotions—especially love and compassion—releases spiritual healing power. Fear nullifies faith, while love and compassion energize it. Compassion is described as the primary “carrier wave” that channels God’s healing. Believers are encouraged to cooperate with the Spirit (using the “surfing” metaphor) to catch and ride waves of compassion into practical ministry and personal transformation.
“Surf the wave of the Spirit”: prepare, tune your heart, and then take initiative to ride compassion into practical ministry and healing.
Key wellness, self-care, and productivity strategies (actionable tips)
Combine faith with love (not fear)
- Replace fear, guilt, or performance-motivation with love and gratitude so faith can produce positive outcomes.
- Avoid judgmental, legalistic, or duty-driven motives when serving others—compassion is the effective channel.
Cultivate compassion as a practical habit
- Ask the Holy Spirit to “well up” compassion in you rather than trying to manufacture it by willpower.
- See the need in others; tune your heart to mercy and tenderness before acting.
Participate actively — “surf” the wave of the Spirit
- Take initiative (paddle): prepare mentally and spiritually instead of waiting passively.
- Use godly imagination and visualization (e.g., picture Jesus next to the person; picture the healing accomplished by “His stripes”) to tune into the Spirit’s flow.
- Cooperate with the process through prayer, ministry, journaling, or communion rather than expecting automatic, passive results.
Practical prayer / healing steps (step-by-step)
- Notice someone’s need and invite permission to pray.
- Ask the Holy Spirit to release compassion through you.
- Visualize and declare healing in faith (speak it out, e.g., “My body is healed in Jesus’ name”).
- Sense and picture power/energy flowing from you into the person.
- Give thanks in advance—use gratitude as a posture of receivership.
Build skill through repeated practice
- Pray for many people to gain experience and increase sensitivity; repeated practice improves results.
- Keep a short nightly journal of encounters to track outcomes and learn.
Use scripture, testimony and worship to raise faith
- Read healing scripture aloud and share testimonies to stir belief in yourself and others.
- Repetitive worship or focused Scripture can help groups “tune to the flow.”
Use devotional and inner-work tools to remove blocks
- Work through devotionals and belief-replacement exercises to clear emotional blockages (fear, shame, doubt) that obstruct spiritual flow.
Be patient and expect fulfillment in God’s timing
- Maintain faith and thanksgiving even when results aren’t immediate; trust that change can occur “in the fullness of time.”
- Ask for confirming signs if helpful (dreams, prophetic words, small confirmations), but keep moving in faith.
Practical journaling tip
- Actively cooperate when journaling (have a pen or keyboard ready). Ask the Spirit to speak and capture the flow—don’t expect passive “automatic writing.”
Brief theological cautions for practice
- Faith combined with fear often nullifies intended outcomes; intentionally shift emotions toward love and compassion.
- Avoid motivations rooted primarily in obligation, guilt, or performance—these are less likely to release healing power.
Examples and models cited
- Jesus (moved by compassion; Matthew 14:14)
- Kathryn Kuhlman’s meetings (repeated worship, testimony, and compassion producing many healings)
- Mission experiences (praying in developing nations where visible need and compassion produced notable results)
- Practices such as communion, scripture-reading, worship, and testimony as faith-raising tools
Presenters and sources mentioned
- Primary speaker (unnamed in the subtitles)
- Biblical references: Galatians 5:6; 1 John 4:18; Matthew 14:14; 1 Corinthians 13:13; references to Abraham and the Good Samaritan parable
- Jesus (as the model)
- Charles Spurgeon (commentary on the Greek word for compassion)
- Kathryn Kuhlman (evangelist / practical example)
- Steve Stewart (travel companion to India)
- Charity Cayambe (daughter; wrote “Waves of Compassion in an Ocean of Love”)
- Josh (son; mentioned as a surfer)
- Kathy (sister-in-law; personal testimony of healing)
- Sid Roth (media appearance referenced)
- Strong’s Hebrew and Greek dictionary
- CWG ministry / website (resource referenced)
Category
Wellness and Self-Improvement
Share this summary
Is the summary off?
If you think the summary is inaccurate, you can reprocess it with the latest model.
Preparing reprocess...