
Last week, I posted on
the power behind the power of
prayer regarding a study basically suggesting that prayer does not help people heal, and to make matters worse,
prayer seems to inadvertently act with evil-eye power, making those prayed for suffer more difficult recovery than
their counterparts who were not prayed for at all. But if prayer can have a negative affect on the health of someone
prayed for, then it must have the power to heal too. Yes? Yes. As Nietzsche once pointed out, good and bad cannot, and
do not, travel separately, as each is merely a side to a two-sided coin. So if the study is suggesting prayer does not
have any power to heal, it cancels out its conclusions by suggesting that prayer does have the power to harm. All this
study provides is a reference for those who believe there is nothing beyond life but what we experience in a
skin-and-bones existence, much the same as a religious text is used by those to support their take on ultimate truth.
You would think we could learn to agree to disagree, because, dare I suggest, each of us is partly right and none of us
owns the exclusive rights to reality and truth. But then again, what good is that perspective when it comes to pissing
contests or the impassioned discourse that fuels the religious and scientifically political punditry.
In a
Slate article,
The Deity in the Data by William
Saletan, the author asserts that the researchers of the study, many media outlets and clerics are shrugging off the
study findings because the findings did not go the way most expected, or wanted. The study "cannot address a large
number of religious questions, such as whether God exists, whether God answers intercessory prayers, or whether prayers
from one religious group work in the same way as prayers from other groups." To that, Saletan says bull. He
presents some interesting, and entertaining, perspectives of his own. I do not think anyone is shrugging. As I see it,
the power of prayer was not the real focus of the study, but whether or not God can be proven as real. Quite a task,
and an unneeded one. Those who believe in the power of their God, believe in the power of their prayers. For those who
do not believe, there is nothing to prove, is there? It is my guess that the researchers might not have received the
same level of funding by stating the obvious hypothesis.