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God’s healing power is an indisputable fact, with or without human assistance.

Kathryn Kuhlman

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God’s Healing Power

Topic: Self-Cultivation & Health

God’s healing power is an indisputable fact, with or without human assistance. If you believe that I, as an individual, have any power; you are dead wrong. I have had nothing to do with any miracle recorded in this book, nor have I had anything to do with any healing that has taken place in any physical body. I have no healing power whatsoever. All I can do is point you to the way—I can lead you to the Great Physician and I can pray; but the rest is left with you and God. I know what He has done for me, and I have seen what He has done for countless others. What He does for you depends on you. The only limit to the power of God lies within the individual!

Kathryn Kuhlman

Kathryn Johanna Kuhlman was born on May 9, 1907, in Concordia, Missouri, to German-American parents Joseph Adolph Kuhlman and Emma Walkenhorst. Growing up in a modest, rural environment, Kuhlman had a close and loving relationship with her father, which deeply influenced her spiritual life. At the age of 14, she experienced a profound spiritual conversion at an evangelistic meeting, which set her on the path to ministry. By 16, she had joined her sister and brother-in-law, both evangelists, traveling across the Midwest and gaining experience in preaching and evangelism.
In 1933, Kuhlman established her own ministry in Boise, Idaho, and later moved to Denver, Colorado, where she founded the Denver Revival Tabernacle. Her dynamic preaching and healing services quickly garnered a large following. Despite personal challenges, including a brief and troubled marriage to evangelist Burroughs Waltrip, Kuhlman continued to grow her ministry. By the late 1940s, she had relocated to Pennsylvania, where her healing ministry began to gain national attention. Her services, characterized by charismatic preaching and spontaneous healings, drew large crowds and were broadcast on radio and television, further expanding her influence.
Kathryn Kuhlman's ministry reached its peak in the 1950s and 1960s, with her healing services attracting thousands of attendees. She emphasized the work of the Holy Spirit in these healings, often stating that she was merely a vessel for God's power. Kuhlman continued her ministry until her death on February 20, 1976, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, following open-heart surgery. Her legacy endures through the countless individuals who claimed to have experienced healing through her ministry and the lasting impact of her teachings on modern evangelical and charismatic movements.

(1907-1976) Christianity

Kuhlman, Kathryn. I Believe in Miracles. Prentice-Hall, 1962. [Source: Kuhlman, Kathryn. I Believe in Miracles. Prentice-Hall, 1962].

Kathryn Kuhlman


Theme: Healing

About This Kathryn Kuhlman Quotation [Commentary]

Kathryn Kuhlman’s statement—“God’s healing power is an indisputable fact, with or without human assistance”—reflects her deep trust in the reality of divine intervention. Healing, in her view, is not dependent on any person’s gifts. It is entirely God’s work. She makes this plain: “If you believe that I, as an individual, have any power; you are dead wrong.” For Kuhlman, healing is not mediated through her, but given directly by God. Her only role was to point the way.

“I have had nothing to do with any miracle… nor have I had anything to do with any healing,” she writes. Kuhlman removes herself from the center and reaffirms that she has “no healing power whatsoever.” Her work was to “lead you to the Great Physician,” to pray, and to direct attention to the source. What happens from there is “left with you and God.” She emphasizes that this divine power is already present, not needing to be summoned through her or any other person.

In the context of healing, Kuhlman is clear: the limit is not on God’s side. “What He does for you depends on you,” she writes. “The only limit to the power of God lies within the individual.” This is not about earning or deserving healing, but about openness to it. She knew what God had done for her and had “seen what He has done for countless others.” Her message is simple: healing is real, and God is the one who heals.

Additional Kathryn Kuhlman Quotations

“When Jesus died on the cross and cried out, ‘It is finished!’ He not only died for our sins, but for our diseases too.”

—Kuhlman, Kathryn. I Believe in Miracles. Prentice-Hall, 1962. [Source: Kuhlman, Kathryn. I Believe in Miracles. Prentice-Hall, 1962].

“God does not patch up the old life, or make certain repairs on the old life; He gives a new life, through the new birth.”

—Kuhlman, Kathryn. Heart to Heart. Bridge-Logos Publishers, 1998. [Source: Kuhlman, Kathryn. Heart to Heart. Bridge-Logos Publishers, 1998].

“Faith begins where reason and logic end.”

—Kuhlman, Kathryn. The Greatest Power in the World. Bridge-Logos Publishers, 1997. [Source: Kuhlman, Kathryn. The Greatest Power in the World. Bridge-Logos Publishers, 1997].

“The presence of God is the greatest healing balm.”

—Kuhlman, Kathryn. A Glimpse Into Glory. Bridge-Logos Publishers, 2000. [Source: Kuhlman, Kathryn. A Glimpse Into Glory. Bridge-Logos Publishers, 2000].

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