Someone asked me last week:
Laura, got any helpful thoughts about that recent study that purports to "prove" that prayer doesn't help heal?
I’ve seen a lot about this study on the various Yahoo! groups I belong to, and people are going round and round about it. What I think, though, as some others have concluded, is if you’re lumping Christian Science treatment into the study’s “prayer” category, it’s comparing apples to oranges.
I can’t speak much to the study itself, not having delved into its methodology or conclusions. There have been various studies of this type throughout my lifetime, and there will probably be more.
The thing is, I’ve never come up with a way myself that could accurately measure the effectiveness of Christian Science treatment. Each case is a unique situation. One case of fever, for instance, could be so unlike another case of fever in the aspects that prayer treats that comparing them would be impossible. Medical science wants to test results on the basis of similar physical conditions. But to really test results for spiritual healing, it would have to be about similar *mental* conditions.
And how do you know what those mental conditions are, actually, until you’ve unlocked what needs adjusting and it’s healed? You can’t know it ahead of time (so you can’t test for it) because treatment to me is often about helping the patient discover the mental condition that needs healing. And once you’ve figured that out, the case is almost done. "Christian Science never healed a patient without proving with mathematical certainty that error, when found out, is two-thirds destroyed, and the remaining third kills itself" (Mary Baker Eddy, Miscellaneous Writings p. 210).
So that’s why when the test states that it took a hundred heart patients, or a hundred ulcer patients, or whatever sub-group they come up with, and then tried to test prayer’s effectiveness, it sounds like nonsense to me. How do we know what each of those people need to learn spiritually? How do we know what the next step on their spiritual journey needs to be for them to experience healing?
And of course, there’s the added wrinkle that they often try to test in a double-blind way, meaning some of the patients themselves do not know they’re being prayed for. This of course to me seems unethical, because I do believe prayerful treatment can have a powerful effect and it’s wrong to impose that effect on people without their knowledge.
I have wondered, though, how I would pray if I were one of the assigned pray-ers. Christian Science treatment would include the understanding that the particular condition is not real for any child of God, is not God’s will for them, and that each and every one of us can feel the healing power of a connection with Spirit. And I would pray that whatever the person needs to learn will be revealed to them, and they will be willing to learn it. That this prayerful treatment will not just improve them physically, but also morally and spiritually.
But in the end, it’s not a fair test. Best results come from one-to-one interaction and divine Mind’s discernment of what needs treating. And I tell ya, it’s never a stomach or a heart. The patient is always consciousness.
Next time, I hope they test that.
Read Kim Korinek's thoughts on this issue, too.
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