Meetings were held in a building which he called a the Glory Barn, and church services were closed to nonmembers. It was known as Faith Assembly, and it grew to more than 2,000 members. He started his own church in Claypool, Indiana. He began his ministry as a Baptist, and after he had written and taught for some years, in the mid-’60s became very fascinated with faith healing, and it moved him into the Charismatic Movement, and then it moved him further and further toward the fringes of that movement. Nonetheless, one of Freeman’s legs was so much shorter than the other that he had to wear corrective shoes and walked with great difficulty. Hobart Freeman believed that God had healed him from polio. So, he was considered by everybody to be a main line evangelical professor, one who not only understood but could adroitly teach the truth of Scripture. In fact, Hobart Freeman wrote a very significant book entitled An Introduction to the Old Testament Prophets, which in 1969 was published and printed by the Moody Bible Institute. And when he was a professor there in Old Testament, he was considered to be the finest communicator, the finest teacher there. A very interesting man, at one time a professor of Old Testament at Grace Theological Seminary, from which our own Dick Mayhew graduated. A familiar name to anybody who studies the Charismatic Movement and delves into the issues of healing is the name of a man Hobart Freeman. Let me begin with some illustrations that set the scene for us. In fact, if there’s anything that would be typically charismatic or typically characteristic of the modern Pentecostal Movement, Third Wave movement, or Charismatic Movement, it would be a major emphasis on healing. But there is much more that needs to be said tonight as we evaluate a movement that advocates healing. We have said some things about that in some of our prior studies, and we’re not going to repeat those things. Now, in the messages that I’ve been giving, we have intersected with the thoughts about healing. And tonight we come to a section entitled, “Does God Still Heal?” Well, as you now, we are involved in a study of the Charismatic Movement, the contemporary movement.