As Bro. Dave indicated, we can speak of healing, etc., and set people up for disappointment. Now, it is NOT, I contend, giving them FALSE HOPE! No, I believe we SHOULD be seeing the sort of miracles we have read about. But while it is not false hope, it can still disappoint when it doesn't happen.I've been disappointed so many, many times. I've prayed for others...NOTHING. I've prayed for direction at times...NOTHING. I've prayed for God to heal some ailment of mine...NOTHING (unless you consider it a miracle to recover from a cold after about a week or so).BUT...there have been a few times (precious few, I'm afraid) were I KNEW God had done the work. I've been miraculously healed EXACTLY ONCE (OK, maybe twice, but I was too sick to know what was going on...it might have been that I would have died, but God kept me). The rest of the time, I was UNmiraculously healed. In fact, in most cases, I have recovered at the SAME RATE as an absolute atheist.But while I've been disappointed, and while I DO, like some of you, want to find a way to explain why we don't see healings like we've read about healings...even though I've wanted to find some solution, I cannot find one. I cannot find a single verse the leads me to think that we SHOULDN'T expect to see God still do the miraculous. And so I am left we holding on to the belief that we should ASPIRE to the level of healing we read about in the NT. We might not be there, we might not have attained, but we still seek to go on to perfection. Perfect faith, I believe, will give us the same results that Jesus had. After all, you cannot have perfect faith that is outside of God's will.