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About twenty years ago I remember reading of some studies being conducted to ascertain the effectiveness of healing prayer. If I recall correctly, the studies at that time seemed to find significant differences in healing between subjects who received prayer and those who didn't. But the studies also tended to find that there didn't seem to be any differences among the different religious groups doing the praying. That is, Christian, Jewish, Muslim, positive thinking, etc. forms of prayer were all equally effective. Does anybody know of any newer studies and/or be able to generalize what some of the more recent findings are? I'm interested in well-conducted studies utilizing solid research methodologies. Thanks! reegs | |||
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Reegs, welcome. I do recall the studies you mention, but I don't think they're carried out any more for ethical reasons (i.e., it's not right to offer something helpful to one group but not another). Here is a good, concise discussion of this topic. See what you think. | ||||
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Thanks, Phil! That was a helpful link. The page it leads to provides a good synopsis of the research that's out there. Overall, it seems the studies to-date have been sloppy. So that even when statistical significance is found, the research design prevents the drawing of any firm conclusions. Also, the studies cited don't seem to differentiate between faith traditions, and whether healing prayer in one tradition is more effective than healing prayer in another. My search continues! | ||||
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I thought this was an interesting editorial regarding formal studies on the healing results of prayer. Divinely Na�ve By Paul Chesser
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