Question:
Follow up: Will you still believe in the power of prayer?
Drakim
2008-08-24 13:49:20 UTC
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=Aks4DlMeMHYTtp6w7quGfO3ty6IX;_ylv=3?qid=20080816141632AAKTEuH

In my question here, people insisted that if evidence didn't fit their beliefs, they would change their beliefs, and not ignore the evidence.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12082681/

"In the largest study of its kind, researchers found that having people pray for heart bypass surgery patients had no effect on their recovery. In fact, patients who knew they were being prayed for had a slightly higher rate of complications."

----

Now, for those who believes in the power of prayer. Will you still continue to do so when the evidence says it doesn't work? In fact, the evidence says you are HURTING the person when you tell him that you are going to pray for him.

So, will you either change your belief to that praying for healing doesn't work, or will you ignore the evidence? (If you provide evidence for prayer working, that's okay too).
Eighteen answers:
whatagal828
2008-08-24 13:58:57 UTC
Nope. God is an imaginary friend for grownups. I believe man created god, not vice versa.
no1home2day
2008-08-24 13:54:58 UTC
Actually, that's not true. Studies have shown that when a person is prayed for, their chances of recovery go up.



But to make matters worse for your case, I know people who have been healed of anything from cancer to an inoperable brain tumor the size of a baseball!



So, will you still believe that prayer doesn't work, now that I've told you about two people (and yes, there are a LOT more), who were healed by the power of prayer?
lisk
2016-10-21 03:21:52 UTC
ya be conscious of praying does no longer fee funds and you do no longer want someones permission to desire a minimum of no longer on your guy or woman area and you do no longer could desire to circulate to a doctor for a prescription to desire in spite of the undeniable fact that prayer is a request from god and that i nonetheless pray yet i don;t continuously like the respond. I fairly have had circumstances wheni have prayed finally end up greater perfect than i anticipated
super saiyan 3
2008-08-24 14:04:06 UTC
Pastor Marilyn Hickey is a woman pastor who is known all over the world. She is known for her prayer healing conferences where many have been healed and had miraculous prayers answered. One day she said there was a member who had a daughter who was sick unto death. This member asked Pastor Hickey to pray for her daughter's healing. So Pastor Hickey had the church pray and fast for this woman's daughter and the girl eventually died. Pastor Hickey said that she was so angry at God because the little girl died. She went on to say that God spoke to her and said, "Will you still be faithful, when it "appears" your faith has failed. My point is that God remains sovreign over all prayer according to His own will and desire. If I have a prayer that goes unanswered it does not mean God does not exist. But He moves on prayer according to His will and purpose and according to things which we can't see in the situation. But even if He does not heal someone right away. His judgment can still be trusted.
2008-08-24 13:57:14 UTC
If you believe in a higher power than mankind, whether you refer to that power as God or Big Spirit or Creator, that higher power provides us with an avenue of conversation that we most likely would not have with another human. That's how psychiatrists make their living. They provide a way for people to talk to them and tell them everything on your mind, which helps you get things off your chest without the chance of somebody else finding out about it. Just like your higher power, get in private and release whatever you feel you need to . It's absolutely good for the spirit and body. That's been proven. Talk to your higher power yourself as often as you feel you need to in order to lift some burden from your consciousness. Peace
2008-08-24 13:54:39 UTC
But on the other side of the equation, people that pray for themselves have a much higher recovery rate...and people that belong to religious organizations tend to live longer and more fulfilling lives



QUESTIONS OF VALUE - Prof Glum

(who is an avowed atheist, btw)
UniCool
2008-08-24 14:12:18 UTC
Yes I believe in Prayer. Try the link below
2008-08-24 14:01:59 UTC
Prayer may have some psychosomatic effects, but actual healing or anything else for that matter, NO.
Just a Nobody
2008-08-24 13:52:33 UTC
Yes I believe in prayer. Thanks.



BTW Here's research that says otherwise to your figures. I would find more but I don't have time for games. 75% of those who were prayed for showed significant inprovement.



http://www.whatthebleep.com/herald7/articles-2.shtml
2008-08-24 13:54:56 UTC
Does any of you guys thought about taking some classes on Bible ...that would answer alot of your questions and be valid too
undeluted08
2008-08-24 13:55:35 UTC
There are billions of prayer made every day, it is common sense that tells me no one is listening.
2008-08-24 13:54:20 UTC
I'll trust the integrity of the word of God any day over MSNBC



Jesus always healed everyone....He never failed



He is the same yesterday, today, and forever
E P
2008-08-24 13:54:26 UTC
I believe in prayer to the God of the Bible.
2008-08-24 13:58:48 UTC
Throughout time, the power of prayer has been questioned by science. The analytical mind of the scientist calls for proof of the existence of a higher being. These scientists, both the faithful and nonbelievers alike, have produced studies into the affects of prayer on our physical as well as spiritual well being. Although most of us, who possess the belief that prayer can and does work, do not require physical, quantitative proof of the power of prayer, it is interesting to read the results of these studies.



Was a scientific study of prayer and its effect on heart patients done?



One of the most quoted scientific studies of prayer was done between August of 1982 and May of 1983. 393 patients in the San Francisco General Hospital’s Coronary Care Unit participated in a double blind study to assess the therapeutic effects of intercessory prayer. Patients were randomly selected by computer to either receive or not receive intercessory prayer. All participants in the study, including patients, doctors, and the conductor of the study himself remained blind throughout the study, To guard against biasing the study, the patients were not contacted again after it was decided which group would be prayed for, and which group would not.



It was assumed that although the patients in the control group would not be prayed for by the participants in the study, that others-family members, friends etc., would likely pray for the health of at least some of the members of the control group. There was no control over this factor. Meanwhile all of the members of the group that received prayer would be prayed for by not only those associated with the study, but by others as well.



The results of the study are not surprising to those of us who believe in the power of prayer. The patients who had received prayer as a part of the study were healthier than those who had not. The prayed for group had less need of having CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) performed and less need for the use of mechanical ventilators. They had a diminished necessity for diuretics and antibiotics, less occurrences of pulmonary edema, and fewer deaths. Taking all factors into consideration, these results can only be attributed to the power of prayer.



Did prayer lower blood pressure?



The August 31, 1998 issue of Jet Magazine questioned whether prayer could lower blood pressure in high blood pressure sufferers, Again the obvious conclusion was reached. The magazine reported of a study conducted by Duke University Medical Center in Durham, NC. This study had over 4,000 participants over the age of 65. The study found that those who pray and attend religious services on a weekly basis, especially those between the ages of 65 and 74, had lower blood pressure than their counterparts who did not pray or attend religious services. They found that the more religious the person, particularly those who prayed or studied the Bible weekly, the lower the blood pressure. According to the study these people were forty percent less likely to have high diastolic pressure or diastolic hypertension than these were who did not attend religious services, pray, or study the Bible.



Dr. David B. Larson, president of the National Institute for Health Care Research in Rockville, MD, who co-authored the study, also says that prayer can lower high blood pressure. "The at-risk population of people with illnesses, such as the elderly seem to be helped if they have faith and religious commitment." Dr. Larson states: "Faith brings a calming state which helps decrease nervousness and anxiety with coping with day to day stress."



How does prayer effect people who lack health care?



In the Essence Magazine May 1997 issue, Allison Abner writes that African-Americans have historically turned to faith in times of illness and other crises. She cited Luisah Teish who states: "Because of limited access to quality health care and our distrust of the medical establishment we have occasionally relied on spiritual healing through such practices as prayer and the laying on of hands, Most of us, at some time have used prayer chanting or proverbs as ways to guide, direct, and heal ourselves." "Now," states Allison, "Our beliefs are being backed by medical research," Science is setting out to prove what most of the faithful already know--prayer does work.
Mark K
2008-08-24 14:16:34 UTC
http://godisimaginary.com/i1.htm

I rest my case your honor.
2008-08-24 13:53:01 UTC
I still believe, that didn't convince me.
2008-08-24 13:56:04 UTC
are you vomiting misinformation or what
2008-08-24 13:53:21 UTC
NO!


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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