Monday 12th February 2024
14 responses for salvation and 5 healings at King’s Church, High Wycombe
Blog

14 responses for salvation and 5 healings at King’s Church, High Wycombe

Adrian Holloway on January 29, 2012 with 0 Comments

This is a church which on today’s evidence has doubled in size since I first preached there in November 2008. We had just two people healed in the first service (one story we heard live, one we got in the second meeting) and then after the evangelistic preach and appeal, we had 8 people respond. Then after a 25 minute break, it was straight into the 11.30 service in which we had a couple of immediate healing testimonies from the blanket prayer and then 6 responded for salvation in the second service.

So that was all great, but I was also really pleased to pick up a couple of other healing stories. First was a girl called Emily and told me of a very dramatic healing she’d had at Newday 2011, she was suffering from two conditions, one of which was jaundice, the other I’d never heard of and can’t remember, but she’d been in a really bad way, and her healing was immediate, total and has stood the test of time (which is why she wanted to tell me about it 5 months later). The second was from a man who told me of what happened when I was at King’s Church, High Wycombe in March 2010.

He said on that occasion, his 5 year old son got prayed for regarding autism, and that since then he has made a dramatic and sudden improvement, going up 5 or 6 educational levels in a timeframe whereby 1 or 2 would be considered “normal”. (I also heard that Beaconsfield Baptist Church, took 9 non-Christians to Newday in 2011 and that all of them became Christians) Went out to lunch with the brilliant Neil and Des Bartlett, who lead Kings High Wycombe, and have done a brilliant job.

Comments

comments

about the author

Adrian is married to Julia. They have four daughters. He is based at Everyday Church in Wimbledon, and has written two books, "The Shock of Your Life" and "Aftershock," which tackles the strongest objections to Christianity in the form of a novel.