It's not a gravedig if you have something new that's relevant to post, right?
My Theology class covered spiritual gifts this week and our textbook has a nice discussion of the gift of healing. After reading it, I must say that my views have been modified a good deal!
Previously I was willing to consider the gift of healing as merely a natural talent for medicine or health care - mainly because I freely admit I'm cautious almost to the point of suspicion of the more "miraculous" gifts in the current era because I think to a large extent they've been co-opted, exploited, and counterfeited by hucksters and false teachers or at least used in an un-Biblical way.
However, there's a difference between a natural talent and a true spiritual gift, and I have to say that after consideration, I'd say skill in medicine is more in the former category.
Our theology textbook discusses various methods of healing in the New Testament, including laying on of hands and anointing with oil, but for the most part, it focused on prayer for healing.
This was especially meaningful to me because, for one thing, the best guess I have about my own spiritual gift so far is intercession, which isn't on any of Paul's lists (though I don't think they were meant to be exhaustive) and therefore is considered by some Christians to not be a spiritual gift at all (something that's brought me a lot of emotional hurt recently), and also because the question of how to properly pray for the ill is a question that's been on my mind for several months now.
Besides prayer for physical healing, the section also covered prayer for the healing of spiritual and emotional wounds, and prayer in spiritual warfare, as setting people free from demonic attack is also sometimes referred to as "healing" in Scripture.
The book says: "Perhaps the gifts of being able to pray effectively in different kinds of situations and for different kinds of people are what Paul referred to when he used the plural expression,
'gifts of healings.'"
Now that just blew me away!
It was a huge encouragement to me in my wrestlings with whether my gift of intercession, assuming I really have it, is a "valid" spiritual gift.
Now, I'm not prepared to say I have the gift of healing, especially when I'm still waiting for results on most of the prayers for healing that I've been praying, and because (frustratingly at times) Christians define each of the gifts so many different ways that when I say "gift of healing" to a person they may construe it in a totally different way than I mean it.
Still, after reading this material I'm far more informed and "comfortable" with the meaning and nature of the gift of healing in the present church age than I was before, as well as greatly encouraged in my own personal education about my spiritual gifts.
Coming back more closely to Tenshi's original questions, I would now say that I agree that prayer is the primary means through which the gift of healing is expressed, but we also have to remember that a lot of what the Bible says is about
persevering in prayer. I would never expect even someone with a strong gift of healing to pray over an injury and have the injury instantly be healed. I think the gift of healing through prayer is the ability to pray effectively for healing with fervency, sincerity, and faith and perseverance for as long as it takes to get an answer.