God’s Promises of Healing: 35 Scriptures to Stand On
Christian Book Digest · Bible Verses by Topic
God’s Promises of Healing
35 Scriptures to Stand On
Healing is one of the most personal things a person can ask God for. It is also one of the most complicated things to write about — because some people reading this have been waiting a long time. They have prayed. They have believed. They have stood on promises that did not seem to move. And they are still standing, still waiting, still hurting.
I want to honor that reality before we go any further. This is not a collection of easy answers. It is not a formula. Thirty-five scriptures will not automatically produce the outcome you are asking for, and any writer who tells you otherwise has not sat long enough at bedsides, or beside graves, or in waiting rooms where the news did not come out the way anyone hoped.
What these bible verses for healing will do — what they have done for people across thousands of years of documented human suffering — is hold you. They speak to a God who is not indifferent to your pain. They come from people who were sick, broken, desperate, and honest about it. And they testify, again and again, to a God whose character is oriented toward restoration.
That is the foundation on which these verses stand. Not that healing always comes in the form we expect, or on the timeline we need. But that the God we bring our broken bodies and broken hearts to is not a God who looks away.
The Hebrew word most often translated as “heal” — rapha — carries within it the idea of mending, restoring, and making whole. It is the word behind one of God’s covenant names: Yahweh Rapha, the God who heals. It appears in medical contexts, in emotional restoration, in the healing of nations, and in the forgiveness of sin.
The Greek words used in the New Testament — iaomai and therapeuo — cover physical cure, but also include the restoration of a person to full functioning and wholeness. When you bring your need to God, you are not bringing it to someone who specializes only in the body or only in the spirit. You are bringing it to the one who made both — and who redeems both.
Part One
The Foundational Promises
These Bible verses establish who God is in relation to healing. They are the theological bedrock on which everything else rests.
Part Two
When You Are Sick in Body
The healing ministry of Jesus was physical, immediate, and without discrimination. These verses speak to that reality.
Part Three
When You Are Broken in Spirit
Emotional and spiritual healing carries the same weight in Scripture as physical healing. These verses speak to the soul that is depleted, disoriented, or in despair.
Part Four
When You Need Healing in Your Relationships
Broken relationships carry their own particular pain. Scripture speaks to relational healing with the same seriousness as physical and emotional healing.
Part Five
When You Are Waiting for Healing That Has Not Come
This section may be the most important in the collection. Many readers are not at the beginning of their waiting — they are deep inside it. These verses do not offer easy resolution. They offer honest companionship.
Scripture 25
Scripture 26
Scripture 27
Scripture 28
Scripture 29
Scripture 30
Part Six
The Healing Promises of Jesus
The Gospels record Jesus’ healing ministry with remarkable consistency. These verses capture the character of the healer — not only the healings themselves.
Reading healing scriptures is a starting point. Praying them is where the real work happens. Here is a simple practice that has served many people through long seasons of waiting:
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Choose one verse per dayWrite it at the top of a page and pray it back in your own words. “Lord, you said you heal all my diseases. I am bringing this specific sickness to you today, and I am asking you to do what you said you would do.”
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Be honest about the gapIf the verse feels like it contradicts your current reality, say so. “Lord, I read that you are close to the brokenhearted. I am not experiencing that closeness right now. I am asking you to close the gap.” Honest prayer is not faithless prayer — it is the kind of prayer God responds to throughout Scripture.
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Bring others into itThe James 5 passage is explicit: call the elders. Ask people to pray with you. Do not disappear into private suffering. You were not designed to carry this alone, and the body of Christ exists in part for exactly this moment in your life.
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Hold the tension without resolving it prematurelyHealing scriptures do not promise that every sickness will be cured before death. They promise that God is a healer — that his nature is oriented toward restoration, and that nothing you are suffering is wasted in his hands.
A word for the long roadThere is no clean theological answer that resolves the ache of unanswered prayer. Anyone who offers you one is not being honest with you. The Bible itself does not provide a formula that explains why some are healed and others are not. It does not explain Paul’s thorn. It does not explain why Lazarus was raised while John the Baptist was beheaded.
What it does offer is a Person. A God who entered human suffering himself — who knows what it is to be in agony and to cry out and to receive not the answer he asked for, but the presence of his Father. Jesus in Gethsemane asked for the cup to pass. It did not pass. What came was “nevertheless thy will be done” — and then the angel who strengthened him.
That is the path through unresolved suffering that Scripture offers: not an explanation, but a companion. Not an answer, but a presence. And from that presence, the slow, often painful, but real formation of a hope that is not destroyed by circumstances — because it is not built on them.
You are not forgotten. Your prayers are not lost. The God who heals has heard every word.
Pursue every available means. Scripture never positions faith as an alternative to medicine. Seek good medical care. See specialists. Follow treatment plans. God heals through doctors, surgery, medication, community, and miracle. Do not narrow the channels through which healing might come.








