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Discover how the Blood Covenant of Jesus Christ redeems believers from the curse of sickness and disease, and how to apply that covenant power in daily life.
In this powerful installment of the ongoing Blood Covenant series, the preacher traces the unbroken thread of God’s covenant faithfulness from Adam through Abraham and into the finished work of Jesus Christ. The message opens by establishing that God has never withheld His love from mankind, and that every covenant recorded in Scripture was God’s legal and redemptive strategy to restore fellowship with humanity after the Fall. Using Galatians 3:13-14, Romans 8:2-3, and Deuteronomy 28, the sermon demonstrates that Christ has fully redeemed believers from the curse of the law, which explicitly includes sickness and disease. A key emphasis is that this redemption cannot be owned through intellectual effort alone; it must be revealed by the Holy Spirit and applied through personal faith and consistent engagement with God’s Word. Drawing on Acts 10:38, Matthew 8:14-17, Isaiah 53, and John 14:12-14, the preacher builds a compelling case that healing is not a distant hope but a present covenant right. Practical guidance is offered on how believers can apply the Word to their lives, from making healing confessions to calling on the elders of the church, all while encouraging confidence in the covenant partnership secured through Jesus Christ.
Romans 8:2-3, Galatians 3:13-14, Galatians 3:29, Deuteronomy 28:15-22, Deuteronomy 28:27-28, Deuteronomy 28:35, Deuteronomy 28:58-61, Psalm 91:15-16, Psalm 118:15-17, Psalm 138:2, Acts 10:38, Matthew 8:14-17, Isaiah 53, John 5:20-21, John 14:12-14, 2 Corinthians 5:17, 2 Corinthians 5:21, Hebrews 6, Proverbs 4, 1 Corinthians 12, Philippians 2
The sermon traces a clear redemptive arc from Adam to Abraham to Jesus, showing that every blood covenant in Scripture was God’s intentional legal framework to maintain relationship with humanity after the Fall. When Adam surrendered authority to Satan, God immediately began working through covenants to reclaim it. The covenant with Noah established God’s faithfulness after judgment. The covenant with Abraham gave God legal permission to send His Son into the earth. Each step in this covenant progression reveals a God who is relentlessly pursuing His creation and who operates within His own laws rather than overriding them, demonstrating both His holiness and His unwavering love.
A central biblical anchor of this message is Deuteronomy 28, where sickness and disease are explicitly listed among the curses that come upon those who fail to keep the law. The preacher pairs this passage with Galatians 3:13-14 to make a powerful declaration: because Christ became a curse for us on the cross, every believer has been legally redeemed from those curses, including physical sickness. This is not wishful thinking but a covenant reality grounded in Scripture. Understanding this distinction between the old covenant curse and new covenant redemption is foundational to approaching God with confidence in prayer for healing.
One of the most striking exhortations in this message is the insistence that head knowledge of Scripture will never produce the results that heart revelation produces. The preacher uses Peter’s confession of Christ in Matthew 16 as a model: flesh and blood did not reveal it, the Father did. In the same way, a believer cannot truly own the promise of healing, redemption, or any other covenant benefit through intellect alone. The Holy Spirit must illuminate the Word, making abstract doctrine a living reality in the inner person. This is why Paul prayed for the spirit of wisdom and revelation, and why being continually filled with the Holy Spirit is treated as a practical daily necessity.
Rather than leaving the theology of healing as an abstract doctrine, the message offers concrete steps believers can take. These include making regular healing confessions based on scriptures such as Exodus 15:26 and Isaiah 53:5, calling on church elders for the prayer of faith as instructed in James 5, laying hands on oneself or others in faith, and using medical care while simultaneously standing on God’s Word. The preacher shares a personal story of battling a recurring throat condition that ultimately required surgery, making the point that seeking medical help and trusting God are not mutually exclusive. The goal is to get healed by any means available while continuing to build personal faith.
The message concludes with a call that extends beyond personal healing. Citing John 14:12-14 and Acts 10:38, the preacher challenges believers to see themselves as anointed covenant partners who are meant to bring God’s power to others. Just as Jesus went about doing good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil because God was with Him, believers filled with the same Holy Spirit are expected to do the same. A personal account from an airport in Seattle, where a woman practicing transcendental meditation was healed and gave her life to Christ, serves as a vivid illustration that ordinary believers can be instruments of God’s covenant power in everyday moments.
The Blood Covenant established through Jesus Christ redeems believers from the curse of the law, which Deuteronomy 28 identifies as including sickness and disease. Galatians 3:13-14 confirms that Christ became a curse for us so that the blessing of Abraham would come to the Gentiles. This means healing is a covenant right for every born-again believer, not something to be earned through personal merit.
Deuteronomy 28:15-61 lists sickness and disease among the curses that come upon those who fail to keep the law of Moses. However, Galatians 3:13 declares that Christ has redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us on the cross. Believers are therefore no longer under the curse of sickness but have been legally redeemed from it through the blood of Jesus.
God made a covenant with Abraham that gave Him legal permission to operate in the earth and ultimately to send His Son. Abraham’s willingness to offer his son Isaac demonstrated covenant faithfulness, and God provided a substitute just as He would later provide Jesus as the Lamb of God. Galatians 3:29 confirms that all who belong to Christ are Abraham’s seed and heirs according to the promise made to him.
The Holy Spirit is the one who makes the truths of Scripture real in the heart of a believer rather than remaining mere intellectual information. Just as Peter’s confession of Christ was revealed by the Father and not by human reason, every covenant promise must be received through the Spirit’s illumination. Without this revelation, believers may know about healing, redemption, and blessing but be unable to truly own and apply those truths in their daily lives.
Yes. The preacher clearly states that doctors are given understanding by God to help people, and seeking medical care is not a sign of weak faith. The encouragement is to use every means available to receive healing while simultaneously standing on God’s Word and making healing confessions. Taking medication alongside Scripture-based confession is presented as a wise and practical approach, not a compromise of faith.
Acts 10:38 states that God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and power, and He went about doing good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil. This verse reveals both the Father’s desire for healing and the method by which Jesus ministered, namely through the anointing of the Holy Spirit. It also establishes a model for Spirit-filled believers who are similarly anointed to bring healing to others.
The new covenant, established through the blood of Jesus Christ, is described in Hebrews 10 as a better covenant built on better and more sure promises. Unlike the old covenant, which only temporarily covered sin through animal sacrifices and continually reminded worshippers of their failure, the new covenant fully removes sin and its consequences, including sickness, spiritual death, and poverty. Its promises are more certain because the covenant was made between Jesus Christ and God the Father, not between God and fallen humanity.
The preacher emphasizes that faith is built through consistent, earnest engagement with God’s Word, which Proverbs 4 describes as life and health to all the flesh. Making daily healing confessions based on Scripture, inclining the ear to God’s sayings with effort and intentionality, receiving prayer from church elders as instructed in James 5, and remaining filled with the Holy Spirit are all presented as essential practices. Receiving healing through another person’s faith is wonderful, but building personal faith ensures that healing can be maintained and extended to others.