Miracle Healing: From Ancient Beliefs to Modern Practice
- HealerRiz
- Aug 20, 2025
- 3 min read
Updated: Sep 6, 2025

Miracle Healing - An Introduction
Across cultures and centuries, people report recoveries that defy explanation. When doctors have no answers and symptoms resolve anyway, many call it miracle healing. This article looks at how different traditions understand miracles, what modern research says and how I, HealerRiz, approach this work today.
Ancient perspectives (the roots)
Christianity: The Gospels describe Jesus restoring sight, curing disease and freeing people from unclean spirits. Over time, saints became known for healings through prayer and blessing.
Islam: Believers seek shifāʼ (healing) through supplication and verses of the Qur’an. The tradition holds that God is the true Healer and servants are the means.
Hinduism & Buddhism: Yogis and monks are described as channeling spiritual power to relieve suffering, often after years of discipline.
Shamanic traditions: Healers serve as bridges between the seen and unseen, combining prayer, ritual, herbs and guidance from the spirit world
Through history (why people sought healers)
When medicine was limited - or simply unavailable - communities turned to trusted holy people and healers. Records of recoveries traveled by word of mouth, letters and sacred texts. Whether skeptics accepted them or not, these accounts gave people hope when nothing else did.
Science & skepticism (what modern language calls it)
Modern medicine documents cases of spontaneous remission - conditions that resolve with no clear medical cause. Researchers sometimes define a “miraculous cure” as one that occurs when medicine fails, is unavailable or is considered futile. The label doesn’t explain how it happened; it simply describes that it did.
Modern practice (what people mean today)
Today, miracle healing can mean faith healing, energy healing or recoveries that happen outside any ritual context. People come to healers when:
tests show “nothing wrong,” but suffering continues,
treatments haven’t worked or have reached their limit,
the issue feels spiritual as much as physical.
My perspective (what I actually do)
I don’t claim to create miracles. Healing doesn’t come from me - it comes through me when the Creator permits it. My role is to:
See the problem clearly through remote scanning (often by viewing the client’s face),
Apply targeted energetic correction, and
Step out of the way so Divine healing can reach the exact place it’s needed.
Some clients describe the results as miraculous—sudden relief, fast recovery, or change after years of struggle. Others improve gradually. And at times, the answer is “not yet.” That boundary—Divine permission—is central to how I work and how I communicate.
When should someone consider this path?
You’ve tried conventional options and need a different approach.
Your tests are “normal,” but your body says otherwise.
You feel a spiritual weight or interference that no treatment touches.
You want help that respects faith, privacy, and dignity.
Practical guidance (how to approach it)
Keep your doctors informed. Healing paths can complement - not replace - medical care.
Be open but grounded. You don’t have to “believe” for this to work.
Pay attention to changes after a session: sleep, pain levels, mood, clarity, and peace.
Final word
Miracle healing sits at the meeting point of faith, experience and the unknown. Whether you call it spontaneous remission, divine mercy or energy realignment, the outcome is a life changed. My commitment is to serve as a clear, honest vessel - doing the work precisely and letting the results speak for themselves.
👉 If you’re ready to explore this path, you can reach me here:




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