Bishop Dag Heward-Mills has never stopped believing in the full gospel. Not a watered-down version that only comforts the mind, but the full, living gospel that saves, delivers, and heals. He preaches Christ crucified with deep conviction—not as a historical message, but as a present-day solution to the problems that plague humanity. In his crusades, healing is not a segment of the service—it is a living testimony of what Jesus still does.
He teaches that healing is not separate from the gospel. It is not a side benefit or an optional extra. It is part of the atonement. Jesus bore not only our sins, but our sicknesses. And when we preach the cross in its fullness, healing flows. People are healed not by emotional hype, but by the power of the Word and the presence of Jesus.
He has seen it again and again—when Christ is lifted up, the crippled walk, tumors vanish, pain disappears, and testimonies break out across the crowd. Not because he is special, but because Jesus is alive and still healing through the gospel.
A Gospel That Touches the Whole Person
Bishop Dag carries a deep understanding of human brokenness. He knows that people are not only physically sick—they are emotionally wounded, mentally oppressed, and spiritually bound. That is why he preaches a gospel that touches the whole person.
He ministers to the soul as much as to the body. His words are full of compassion and strength, reminding people that Jesus is not distant. He is near. He is touched by our infirmities. And He is still healing today. Healing doesn’t always come in the way people expect, but it always comes where faith is released.
He teaches that healing is not just physical restoration—it is wholeness. It is the soul being lifted out of darkness. It is the mind receiving peace. It is the heart receiving love. This is the gospel that still heals. The gospel that puts the broken back together.
Demonstrating the Love of Christ
For Bishop Dag, healing is not a performance—it is a demonstration of love. He often says that Jesus healed because He was moved with compassion. And that same compassion still moves today. Healing is a sign that God sees. A sign that He cares. A sign that He has not forgotten.
When Bishop Dag lays hands on the sick or speaks healing over a crowd, it is never about showcasing power. It is about showing love. He believes that the greatest miracle is not the one that gets attention—it is the one that brings someone closer to Jesus.
And that is what happens in every crusade. People come for healing, but they leave with salvation. They leave with their hearts touched. They leave with Jesus.
A Call to Preach the Gospel in Its Fullness
Bishop Dag continues to call the Church back to the fullness of the gospel. Not a safe, soft version, but the raw, beautiful, powerful message that Jesus still heals. He challenges pastors and leaders not to be ashamed of the supernatural. Not to reduce the gospel to motivational speaking. But to believe again. To preach again. To lay hands again.
He has built his life on this message. And through his example, we are reminded that the gospel is not only relevant—it is powerful. It still opens blind eyes. It still cures disease. It still casts out devils. It still heals the deepest pain in the human soul.
And it still points to the One who bore it all—Jesus Christ, the healer of hearts and bodies alike.