carrie s said:How exactly has it been proven that prayer doesnt work? Prayer has been proven time and time again to work.
Groucho said:Consider that prayer has been proven OVER and OVER to be completely incapable of affecting anything, you're welcome to pray all you want... feel free to cross your fingers, not walk under ladders, throw spilled salt over your shoulder, and stay away from black cats, too!![]()
LoraJ said:My FFIL is dead. Prayers did not save him.
KikiFan said:eh I have to disagree with ya. the opposite is actually true. Prayer has actually been shown help people in times of illness/crisis.
jimmiej said:I don't know if you're a parent or not, but consider this. Do you ALWAYS tell your child yes? Of course not! Parents see the big picture & know that sometimes the answer must be no, or wait, even though the child may not understand.
I guess you didn't read that last sentence huh?LoraJ said:So, if someone else gets cured, then their prayers were "answered" why does God/Jesus not care about the other people's whose prayers weren't answered?
It's all hogwash to me and has more to do with attitude than anything.
Baloney. Find one.carrie s said:How exactly has it been proven that prayer doesnt work? Prayer has been proven time and time again to work.
LoraJ said:So, if someone else gets cured, then their prayers were "answered" why does God/Jesus not care about the other people's whose prayers weren't answered?
It's all hogwash to me and has more to do with attitude than anything.
Groucho said:Baloney. Find one.
The Columbia study, the only one that showed any effect whatsoever, was a sham - one of the three authors wasn't even a doctor and has since been indicted on various charges, and the other two refuse to comment on the article, essentially disowning it. Meanwhile, countless other ones have shown the fact that it's useless. (Except maybe as a mental aid to the person doing it.)
Most recently was in August, the results of a ten-year test were released, as written up here. It was "by far the most rigorous and comprehensive study on the effects of intercessory prayer on the health and recovery of patients ever conducted." The result?
"Results showed no statistically significant differences between the prayed-for and non-prayed-for groups. Although the following findings were not statistically significant, 59% of patients who knew that they were being prayed for suffered complications, compared with 51% of those who were uncertain whether they were being prayed for or not; and 18% in the uninformed prayer group suffered major complications such as heart attack or stroke, compared with 13% in the group that received no prayers."
If anything, it sounds like it hurts!
jimmiej said:That's like your kid saying, "But Billy's mom lets him (whatever)!" You know what's best for your child. You believe your decision is best for your child.
I'll ask you directly this time. Do YOU always say yes to your children?
LoraJ said:I don't have kids.
And if I did, saying "no" if Billy wants a cookie is not the same as praying for someone who is very ill. Your reasoning as to why God only answers certain prayers is for your comfort when things don't go your way. It's the only explanation you have to keep you believing.
I think prayer can be comforting. People were praying for FFIL, it didn't help him physically, but it gave him comfort in knowing people were "thinking" about him.
jimmiej said:You act as if Christians pray for nothing but new cars & fancy houses!
You didn't answer my question. I'll rephrase it: Would you ALWAYS say yes to your child?
jimmiej said:I don't know if you're a parent or not, but consider this. Do you ALWAYS tell your child yes? Of course not! Parents see the big picture & know that sometimes the answer must be no, or wait, even though the child may not understand.
LoraJ said:So, if someone else gets cured, then their prayers were "answered" why does God/Jesus not care about the other people's whose prayers weren't answered?
It's all hogwash to me and has more to do with attitude than anything.