We don't know because the writers do not specify which one is the first or if it is mentioned at all.
Answer:The Bible records Jesus' first healing as 'many healings' in Matthew 8:5 and Mark 1:32. The first singular healing is described as the healing of a leper in Matthew 8:1, Mark 1:40, and Luke 5:12.
Jesus healed people through no other way other than He was God himself and able to heal supernaturally, not explainable through any other means. His power was sufficient to heal.
Jesus Christ is the Almighty Lord and CREATOR God, who made all things:
"All things were made by Him; and without Him was not any thing made that was made." (John 1:3)
He made the atom... He made matter... and He made man. Healing the physical maladies in people was no problem for Him in the least. Nor was the casting out of demons, who fear Him:
"...art thou come to destroy us? I know thee who thou art, the Holy One of God. And Jesus rebuked him, saying, Hold thy peace, and come out of him." (Mark 1:24-25)
The only requirement He looked for was that the people whom He healed "believed" that He could.
Answer ( According To Islam )
The GOD ( Allah ) gave his second last prophet Jesus this ability .
Allah sends miracles with his prophets to help them convincing people to believe in Allah , and Jesus miracles were healing and creating ( Just like the Qur'an for Prophet Muhammed and the rod that changed to a snake for Prophet Muses ) .
Jesus healed people by the power of God.
Various methodologies were employed to achieve the healings. At times He used words of command. Sometimes He never even saw the person who was healed. On one occasion He spat on some clay and put the mixture on a blind man's eyes. In all cases the person was completely and perfectly healed.
Psychsomatic explanations would be automatically excluded in most cases since bacteria and viruses which cause disease would not be able to be cured with this method. Leprosy and genetic blindness also could not be cured this way.
Most of Jesus miracles were also well attested by numerous witnesses, including His enemies who would have certainly highlghted any trickery or fraud.
Jesus healed people by either touching them, telling them to get well and commanding evil spirits to depart.
A:
In the first New Testament gospel to be written, now known as Mark's Gospel, the Spirit drove Jesus into the wilderness as soon as he was baptised, and here he fasted for forty days, ministered by angels. The first miracle recorded after his return was when he drove the unclean spirit out of the man in the synagogue in Capernaum (Mark 1:23-26).
In Matthew's Gospel Jesus is not ministered by angels during his fast in the wilderness, but the devil takes him and miraculously places him on the pinnacle of the Temple, then onto a high mountain. After his return, Matthew simply reports that Jesus healed all manner of sickness (Matthew 4:23).
Luke's Gospel makes it abundantly clear that Jesus performed a miracle when he fasted for forty days in the wilderness, as he ate nothing (Luke 4:2). The devil tempted Jesus, as in Matthew's Gospel, based on a passage in the hypothetical 'Q' document used by both authors, but the temptation on the high mountain comes before the temptation on the pinnacle of the Temple. In this account, Jesus starts preaching at Nazareth before going to Capernaum, where he drove the unclean spirit out of the man in the synagogue (Luke 4:33-35).
In John's Gospel, Jesus did not go into the wilderness after his baptism, since he returned to see John the Baptist the following day and was then at a wedding in Cana on the third day. At this wedding Jesus turned water into wine (John 2:1-9). Shortly afterwards, Jesus went to Jerusalem, where he must have performed miracles because John 2:23 says that many believed when they saw the miracles that he did.
The ancients expected holy men to cure disease, but not to regrow severed limbs or effect cures that were too amazing. Psychosomatic diseases and skin diseases ("leprosy") are said to have been preferred. In his own country, it was said that Jesus could do no mighty work except heal a few sick people; he marvelled at their unbelief. It is suggested that Jesus was powerless to perform miracles unless the people believed - an indication that psychomatic diseases were involved. On this view, Jesus healed by convincing the afflicted that they really were healed - a practice that even modern medicine sometimes finds useful.
To know how Jesus really healed people, we may need to look over time at whether his technique changed of whether he became increasingly able to heal or cure without difficulty, and even whether the different gospel authors provided useful information about how Jesus cured people. If Jesus simply used an inherent divine ability to cure, then his cures are more likely to have been equally impressive at the beginning as at the end of his ministry, but if he was using worldly methods he could show improvement as his technique improved. In the earliest gospel, that of Mark, Jesus at first had difficulty in healing people, but later in the gospel he could heal without such difficulty, apparent evidence that Jesus did improve his ability to heal people. To answer our question, it is also useful to look at whether others appear to have used any of the same methods or techniques as Jesus.
It was customary for holy men to use spit when curing afflictions. Jesus is reported as using this technique, in the first two cases, which involved a deaf and dumb man (7:32) and a blind man (8:23), in one case with some difficulty. At this point we can only speculate whether the spit was mixed with some form of medicine, or whether it was intended to serve as a placebo. With growing confidence, the gospel no longer reports Jesus as needing to use spit or having any difficulty. Soon he could heal at a distance or even unintentionally, as when the woman with the issue of blood touched his robe.
Finally we should look at the testimony of various evangelists to see whether they provide any further information as to how Jesus healed people. As the decades passed, Matthew, then Luke and finally John discovered ever more amazing miracles that Jesus had performed, until John describes the ultimate cure - the raising of Lazarus from the dead. This miracle would have been out of character in the Gospel of Mark, but entirely in character in John's Gospel. This very fact gives us a clue as to the performance of at least some of the miracles: they seem to have been literary inventions created for congregations eager for more awesome miracles. If so, a focus on these more miraculous cures reported in the later gospels could cause us to misinterpret the cures that perhaps he really did perform, so we should instead look closely at the early miracles to see what these cures involved. It seems that those earlier cures were of the same nature as performed by other holy men of the time, and were at first performed with some difficulty. The best we can say is that Jesus appeared to have been using techniques already known to some of his contemporaries.
By the power of God. Jesus was God in the flesh, 100% God, 100% man. As such He could heal just with His touch or a word.
Jesus healed people anywhere and everywhere.
Jesus Christ is almighty God. He spoke this universe into existence. To heal anyone is child's play for God.
Jesus' first miracle was when He turned water into wine at a wedding in Galilee.
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February of 27 AD.
Jesus performed the miracle of the blind man, and the water into wine. Those are some, but more can be found in the New Testament.
Jesus performed that first miracle at a wedding at Cana.
The first miracle did by Jesus was to turn the water into wine at the wedding feast.
Jesus was not passive when He performed his first miracle. Everything was at the right time.
Jesus first miracle was turning water into wine at a wedding feast. (John 2:1-11)
A:In John's Gospel, Jesus performed his first miracle of turning water into wine on the third day after his baptism.In the synoptic gospels, Jesus went into the wilderness immediately after his baptism, so was not at the wedding in Cana. In these gospels, his first miracle was to fast for forty days and resist the devil.
Turned water into wine, fed the multitudes, healed the blind man, healed a lepper, rose Lazerus from the dead, calmed the seas when Peter was fishing.
Jesus performed his first miracle at a wedding in Cana, where he turned water into wine. This event is recorded in the Gospel of John in the Bible.
When he turned the water into wine at the wedding.
He performed his first miracle at a wedding in Cana, and he turned water into unfermented wine (grape juice).
Jesus performed his first miracle at a wedding feast in Ca'na of Galilee. (John 2:1-11)