While kneeling at the altar, Randy Clark felt
a sharp pain in his left eye lasting just a split second.
The unusual pain caught his attention because
he had only recently received a "crash course" in different ways to
receive words of knowledge—downloads of supernatural information from the Holy
Spirit that otherwise would be unknown to the recipient. One way was actually
feeling the condition someone was experiencing.
Cautiously, the pastor of the small
Midwestern church approached the pulpit microphone and stammered out, "If
... uh ... some of you ... uh, possibly has something wrong with their left
eye, well ... uh ... if you'll just come forward, we'll pray for you."
His confidence was diminutive and his faith
was even smaller. At the time in the early 1980s, gifts of the Spirit and healing
miracles were foreign territory for this Baptist pastor.
In a matter of minutes, a widow named Ruth
approached the altar. Clark and his team gathered around her, praying until,
Clark says, "we ran out of things to say."
That night, Ruth was reportedly healed of
tunnel vision affecting her left eye.
The miracle was significant, but what
happened the following week would ultimately help shape the "consciousness
of a generation" of Pentecostals and Charismatics as it relates to the
move of the Spirit in recent decades.
The following Sunday, Clark gave the church
an opportunity to share testimonies. A woman stood up in the back, and in a
strong, southern accent, said, "Brother Randy, I think I'm having one of
them there things you was just talking about 'cause there's nothin' wrong with
my right wrist, but it's killin' me.' "
At first, Clark was concerned that his
teaching had opened a Pandora's box of controversy. Was it just the power of
suggestion? No one responded until the end of the church service.
Then, right before the benediction, Clark's
best friend's wife, Barbara, stood and addressed the congregation. With tears
streaking down her face, she told of a debilitating pain in her wrists she had
experienced for years. After two surgeries, and the insertion of plastic
devices, she was about to give up hope. They prayed for her wrists and she was
healed, Clark says.
Those services marked the beginning of a
ministry that Clark says has now been witness to tens of thousands of miracles
God has performed over the last four decades. His driving message: God can use
"little ole' me."
From the very beginning, Clark's ministry
showed how everyday believers could operate in the supernatural.
During his four decades of ministry, a new
move of supernatural Christianity characterized by signs, wonders and healing
miracles has ignited around the globe.
This phenomenon comes amid the explosive
growth of the Pentecostal/Charismatic movement.
Over the last century, the number of
Pentecostals, Charismatics and members of independent churches has grown
geometrically from less than 1 million to nearly 700 million, according to the
Center for the Study of Global Christianity at the Gordon-Conwell Theological
Seminary.
Much of this growth can be attributed to the
fact that Pentecostals and Charismatics "often pray for healing, and those
receiving prayer often perceive these prayers to be effective," according
to the Global Medical Research Institute, a Stoneham-Massachusetts-based center
that "seeks to apply the rigorous methods of evidence-based medicine to
study Christian Spiritual Healing practices."
A 2006 Pew Forum survey estimated 200 million
Pentecostals and Charismatics believe they have witnessed or experienced divine
healing.
"In many countries, healing is the main
reason for the explosion of Charismatic/Pentecostal—and Christian—growth
rates," says Craig S. Keener, a professor of New Testament at Asbury
Theological Seminary and the author of Miracles: The Credibility of the New
Testament Accounts. "
As of about 10 years ago, it was estimated
that perhaps half of all conversions to Christianity were because of
experiences with healing. I so much appreciate Randy Clark because he brings
together strong dependence on the Spirit with
interest in sound biblical and
historical teaching. That is a vitally important combination."
Lending more credibility to this worldwide
phenomena, a survey of 1,000 American doctors found 73 percent believes healing
miracles actually occur and 55 percent said "they have seen treatment
results in their patients that they would consider miraculous."
More than 80 percent of Americans believes in
the "healing power of personal prayer."
"One of the objections people sometimes
raise against miracles is that belief in them is unscientific, because science
must always find a natural explanation," Keener says. "
What the survey suggests, however, is that a
significant proportion of those trained to address natural explanations who
work concretely with real human beings recognize that there are times when
natural explanations fall short and divine activity is involved."
These widespread reports of healing miracles
come several decades after the great healing revivals of the 1940s, '50s and
'60s when healing evangelists Oral Roberts, Jack Coe and Kathryn Kuhlman became
prominent leaders, notable for walking in God's extraordinary miracle-working
power.
Then, in the early 1980s, Vineyard movement
leader John Wimber spoke a prophetic word over Clark—predicting his ministry
would help people worldwide operate in the miraculous power of the Spirit.
From the very beginning, Clark's ministry has
demonstrated that everyday Christians can operate in the supernatural. Today,
the power of the Spirit is flowing everywhere from mission fields and shopping
malls to grocery stores and even aboard airplanes.
"It's a prophetic sign to the culture
that God can use everybody," says Clark, founder of Global Awakening, his
Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania-based teaching, healing and impartation ministry.
"That doesn't mean everybody has a gift of healing, but it does mean that
everybody can pray for healing and see healings."
A Supernatural End-Times Revival?
Many believe the prophetic words of Acts 2
are coming to pass as the Spirit is poured out upon "all flesh."
Today, ministers say the signs point toward a massive end-times revival of New
Testament Christianity where miracles are the norm and not the exception.
"Randy has modeled for us all how to
live the miracle lifestyle in a practical way," says Bill Johnson, the
senior pastor at the Redding, California-based Bethel Church known as the
birthplace of the Jesus Culture phenomenon and the epicenter of innumerable
instances of reported healing miracles. "
The grace on Randy's life to impart
supernatural grace to people is stronger than anyone I've ever met. It goes
beyond encouragement. People become dramatically different after receiving an
impartation from Randy."
Norwegian pastor Leif Hetland, who received
an impartation from Clark at a renewal service in 1995, later founded the
Global Mission Awareness ministry in Peachtree City, Georgia, to spread the
message of God's love and healing power.
"Since receiving impartation from Randy,
we have seen more than 1 million people come to faith in Jesus Christ,"
Hetland says. "Randy empowers ordinary believers to a supernatural life in
a very natural way. If God can use Randy, He can use me!"
Those familiar with Clark's ministry might
recognize him as the evangelist who played a catalytic role in the Toronto
Blessing, one of the greatest revivals in the latter part of the 20th century.
It began in 1994 at a Vineyard church in
Ontario, Canada, and ultimately touched more than 3 million lives—leading to
the creation of 20,000 new churches.
"When God sent Randy up to Toronto, it
changed the world," Bishop Mark J. Chironna told his congregation at the
Church on the Living Edge during a recent visit by Clark.
"There would not be the level of
ministry, or a Heidi and Rolland Baker, if it were not for God using Randy
Clark. There would not be a Bill Johnson. I could name voice after voice that
God has used to touch the planet with a global footprint."
After the service at Chironna's Longwood,
Florida church, several dozen people stood up and waved their hands in the air
to signal that they believed they were healed of different ailments and pains
following Clark's prayers.
Nelson Garcia, a 53-year-old private client
banker, told Charisma he had been suffering from elbow pain
for a year and had received numerous medical treatments, but the "pain
wouldn't go away."
"It got to the point where I couldn't
even read my Bible because it weakened my arm, and today when I came to the
service, the presence of God just
covered me and all I could do is cry all
service long," Garcia says. "
When (Clark) asked if there was somebody who
has a problem with their elbow, inside of me my spirit jolted because I knew he
was speaking directly to me. That's why I stood up and now I can say if I feel
any pain it's probably 1 percent of what I was feeling."
The Blind See, the Paralyzed Walk
Over the decades, Clark has helped launch the
ministries of many prominent Christian leaders, including Heidi and Rolland
Baker, whose ministry had a profound impact on Mozambican pastors and others
who have reportedly raised more than 400 people from the dead.
"As Rolland would say, 'If you want to
verify it, come to Mozambique and start going out to the villages and talking
to the people,' " says Clark, who has videotaped
interviews with many of those involved in these purported reversals of recent
deaths.
"Do we have doctors to prove it? No,
because there aren't any doctors out in the bush. But it doesn't take a doctor
to know what death looks like. That's what I want to get across. There were no
doctors to prove that Lazarus was dead either, but we believe it, or the little
girl in the room that Jesus raised."
Since 2001, Clark's team has recorded more
than 350,000 purported healing miracles in 50 nations, including instances of
the blind regaining sight, the paralyzed walking and people healed of cancer,
AIDS and strokes.
"We've seen the blind see, we've seen
the deaf hear and we've seen people walk who were paralyzed, including a
paraplegic with a severed spine," Clark says. "We've seen people
recover from strokes. We've seen people who had only weeks to live to days to
live with different things—from AIDS to cancer—get healed.
"But we still see lots of people who
don't get healed. It's not like everybody we pray for gets healed. But we're
seeing more than we used to and seeing greater kinds of things than we used
to."
Usually, Clark says about 10 percent of the
people who attend services "get healed"—though in many meetings the
percentages range up to 20-50 percent.
As he saw this wave of supernatural
phenomenon unfolding around the world, Clark decided to get his doctorate and
build credibility in the academic community.
Dr. Andrew Park, a professor of theology and
ethics at United Theological Seminary in Dayton, Ohio, recognizes the unique
call of God on Clark's ministry. Clark received his doctorate of ministry at
the seminary.
"The church has focused on preaching and
teaching, but has neglected healing," Park says. "Randy Clark has
restored Jesus' instructions by carrying out His three-dimensional ministry:
preaching, healing and teaching."
From highly credentialed theologians speaking
from pulpits across the globe to everyday believers serving in the pews, many
are now reporting instances of the supernatural work of the Spirit. Those
interviewed for this article say they believe God is using Clark to impart and
activate the gifts of the Spirit in people around the planet.
As part of his ministry, Clark regularly
conducts four-day healing and impartation schools and has spoken at conferences
and churches worldwide. Others have been impacted by his books and sermons.
Many have attended Global Awakening conferences where many report intense encounters
with God and are activated for supernatural ministry. Some get training through
Clark's
Christian Healing Certification Program (healingcertification.com).
Now, Clark says he wants to bring
"healing crusades" to the United States, combining the "best of
Billy Graham" with healing evangelism.
"I know from my experiences overseas
that when people see the goodness and mercy of God in healing that it has a
tendency to soften them," Clark says. "This seems to match the
biblical emphasis of signs and wonders accompanying the preaching of the
gospel."
Harvard Professor Studying Miracles
As part of his effort to examine the evidence
for healing miracles, Clark's own doctoral dissertation at the United
Theological Seminary was an investigation into the effects of prayer on
mobility restrictions resulting from surgeries on people in Brazil who had
metal screws and plates in their bodies. Following prayer, these people
reported their "movements were restored; the pain was gone," Clark
says.
Dr. Martin Moore-Ede, chairman of the Global
Medical Research Institute and a former Harvard Medical School professor, wrote
in an email to Charisma that GMRI is investigating various
reports of healing miracles "through a systemic process of medical
evidence-based research."
Clark's academic interest in the evidence for
healing miracles follows an education in which he waded through the waters of
liberal theology prevalent in many seminaries today.
Since the founding of the early colonies in
America, most ministers and theologians have taught that the miraculous works
of God ended in the first century. "The First Great Awakening ended
because there was so much opposition to it," Clark says. "So we ended
up with a culture where many unbelievers believe in the supernatural and many
believers have been educated not to believe in the supernatural. That is
changing. There are more and more people who are moving away from these views.
So many people are being healed and so many things are happening—and so many
people are
hearing their testimonies—that it's getting hard to deny the
facts."
A Dynamic, Trial-Filled Life
Clark grew up in one of America's poorest
counties as the son of an Illinois oil field worker and learned at an early age
the importance of perseverance—a trait that explains not only how he survived
decades of "persecution, experienced failures and witnessed
disappointments," but a ministry now characterized by the supernatural.
The journey began on Nov. 20, 1970 when Clark
announced his "call to preach." Just a month prior, Clark was
involved in a severe car accident that nearly ended his life.
"I had severe injuries to my spine,
paralysis of the digestive tract and multiple facial and skull fractures,"
Clark says. "I wasn't healed in a single day; I actually had three
healings in the hospital and instead of being in the hospital for the expected
49-77 days, I was released in 20 days and was healed by the 15th day."
Afterwards, he became the pastor of a small
church in Illinois. However, Clark's journey to this church proved to be a road
paved with great heartache and disappointment.
Chronicled in detail in the book Lighting
Fires, Clark's early years of ministry saw a collapsed home life, a period
of backsliding into sin and the temporary acceptance of liberal theology. In
1971, at age 19, Clark entered into a tumultuous three-year marriage that
ultimately ended in divorce.
In 1974, he obtained a bachelor's degree in
religious studies from Oakland City College and began attending seminary. Not
long afterwards, he had to quit because of the divorce. The dean of students
told him that due to his failed marriage, "you'll never have a ministry."
Clark considered himself to be a marked man.
Thoughts of disqualification for ministry consumed him. This brought him into a
season of bitterness that led to sin—alcohol, sexual immorality and deep guilt
over the divorce.
Then everything changed. Clark had a vision
of his favorite professor who had suffered much rejection in the 1960s from his
church over race issues. In the vision, Clark saw this professor asking him
this cutting question: "Randy, do you love the church of God enough to serve
her when she hurts you?"
As a result, Clark let go of his feelings of
condemnation and unworthiness, and instead believed that—in spite of his
divorce, sin and bitterness—God still loved him and had not lifted the call
upon his life.
In 1975, Clark married DeAnne Davenport, who
is his wife today. Later, he received his Master of Divinity degree from the
Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.
In 1984, Clark dynamically experienced God's
power during a Bible conference in Dallas, Texas, when he heard teaching from
key leaders such as David Wilkerson and John Wimber.
One night, Clark approached Wimber for
prayer. Wimber prophesied over Clark, saying he would go around the world and
lay his hands on pastors and leaders to impart and activate the gifts of the
Holy Spirit in them.
That same year Clark formally left the
Baptist denomination to join the Vineyard church movement.
A Landmark Event: The Toronto Blessing
The night before he departed for his first
trip to the Toronto Airport Christian Fellowship in Canada in January 1994,
Clark received a powerful prophetic word from Richard Holcomb: "The Lord
says to you, Randy, 'Test Me now, test Me now, test Me now. Do not be afraid. I
will back you up! I want your eyes to be opened to see My resources for you in
the heavenlies.' "
While Jan. 20, 1994 marked the official
launch of the Toronto Blessing, Clark says the revival grew in momentum as the
days went by. Originally scheduled to last four days, the meetings turned
into a revival that impacted millions of people around the world. Lasting more
than 12 years, it became the "longest protracted meeting in North American
history."
An Appointment with Destiny
As he looks back over the decades of
ministry, Clark recalls two pivotal moments. In the early 1970s, Clark says
he'll never forget when he heard the Lord speak to him "so clearly and
plainly" that the "issue of my lifetime would be the Holy
Spirit."
This prophetic word is foundational to
everything Clark has dedicated his life to. His greatest desire is to see the
power of the Spirit restored in today's church. The incredible supernatural
move of God that Clark has witnessed also goes back to the prophetic word that
Wimber spoke over him three decades ago.
What qualified Clark to impart gifts of the
Spirit to Christians worldwide? Hunger and humility. In humility, he never
denied his faults or failures, and in hunger, he always pressed in for more of
God. This is Clark's invitation to every Christian—every "little ole'
me."
The truth is, no human being can qualify
himself for service in the miraculous; it's the Spirit alone that levels the
playing field and empowers everyday people to do extraordinary exploits in
Jesus' name.
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Larry Sparks is a conference speaker, student of revival
and author of the book,Breakthrough Faith: Living a Life Where Anything
Is Possible (Destiny Image,
2014). He has been featured on CBN, TBN, and Sid Roth's It's
Supernatural. You can visit him
online at lawrencesparks.com.
Troy Anderson is the executive editor of Charisma and a Pulitzer Prize-nominated investigative
journalist, author and speaker. He spent two decades as a reporter, bureau
chief, editorial writer and editor at the Los Angeles Daily News,
The Press-Enterprise and other newspapers. He's also written for Reuters,
Newsmax, Human Events and other
media outlets. Anderson (troyandersonwriter.com) is the co-author ofThe Babylon Code:
Solving The Bible's Greatest End Times Mystery (FaithWords, September).
Randy Clark discusses the spiritual
outpouring at the 1994 Toronto Blessing revival atrandyclark.charismamag.com.
3 Reasons Why
you should read Life in the Spirit. 1) Get to know the Holy Spirit. 2) Learn to
enter God's presence 3) Hear God's voice clearly! Go deeper!
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