After Christopher Hitchens famously claimed that religion
poisons everything, researchers discovered that when patients on chemotherapy
believe in God their chemo works better. This is not about faith healing. It
is more about supplementing the chemo with prayer.
Today Melissa Dahl offers some thoughts on the power of
prayer, especially prayer to God. Dahl suggests that atheists might also do
well to pray from time to time. In that she is undoubtedly correct. But, that opens the question of what or whom atheists
would pray to.
The news about prayer is not all good. A 2006 study has suggested that when someone prays for a
patient undergoing open heart surgery, the surgery is less likely to be successful.
To understand these results, one assumes that those who are the objects of such
prayers know that someone else is praying for them.
Dahl reports:
For
example, in 2006, researchers at the Benson-Henry Institute for Mind/Body
Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital (and elsewhere) reported the results
of their ten-year study of more than 1,800 heart-surgery patients: Not only did
the prayers of others not help them recover, but those who were prayed for were
actually more likely
to suffer complications, “perhaps because of the expectations the prayers
created,” reported the New York Times in
an article headlined “Long-Awaited
Medical Study Questions the Power of Prayer.” It’s kind of like the original
version of “thoughts and prayers are not enough.”
What does expectation have to do with it? One suspects that
those who are told that other people are praying for them believe that their
condition is so bad that there is nothing left to do but to pray.
Dahl started looking into the power of prayer when she was thinking about the now-infamous New York Daily News front page, the one that
suggested, after the San Bernardino terrorist massacre that God was not going
to fix this. Apparently, the Daily News believes that it will all be fixed when
we disarm unilaterally. That will surely help us when faced with armed enemies.
The paper took offense at the fact that some of the Republican presidential
candidates offered their prayers to the victims of the terrorist attack. Perhaps it would have been better to say that they did not really care about the victims.
Of course, if we disarm unilaterally, prayer will be all we have left to defend ourselves.
So, Dahl chose to examine the studies on the power of prayer.
She discovered that prayer is notably therapeutic.
She writes:
The
explicit studies of prayer, for example, have linked the
act to improved self-control, decreased anger and stress, as well as increased
likeliness to forgive and trust.
She continues to contrast prayer and meditation:
If for
the religious prayer is a personal conversation with God, then for the
nonreligious it’s considerably more one-sided, and in that way it’s a lot like
introspection. But it’s also more than that, the musician Andrew W.K. argued in
a Village Voice column last
fall. “Prayer is a type of thought,” he wrote. “It's a lot like meditation — a
type of very concentrated mental focus with passionate emotion directed towards
a concept or situation, or the lack thereof. But there's a special X-factor
ingredient that makes ‘prayer’ different than meditation or other types of
thought. That X-factor is humility.” It’s communing with something that’s
bigger and more powerful than your tiny self, whether that thing is God or the
simple fact of your smallness in the vastness of the universe.
Prayer brings the virtue of humility.Meditation does not. Prayer is an antidote to
egotism and narcissistic self-involvement. When you pray you are asserting that
you do not control everything. Understanding that you are narcissistic does nothing to mitigate your narcissism, because it allows you to feel superior for having understood your problem.
Effectively, the power of prayer is one of the
underpinnings of 12 Step programs. When participants offer up something like
prayers, they, of course, pray to a Higher Power. Do atheists accept there
being a higher power, while rejecting the notion that there is a God?
One understands that atheists would rather pray to the
vastness of the universe, but still, vastness is a quality, not an agent.
Vastness will not humble you in the same way that God will.
More than a century ago William James wrote a book called The Varieties of Religious Experience. He
argued that religion provides believers with experiences that cannot be gained
by scientific reasoning. The book ought to have had a place in the history of
psychotherapy, because it foreshadows forms of therapy that involve
spirituality.
When people pray, Dahl reminds us, they experience a sense
of awe. But, doesn’t one feel awe when faced with a natural
phenomenon that one did not create, that one’s mind cannot influence, that one’s
interpretations cannot change? Doesn’t the sense of awe suggest that another
mind, a greater mind created it and that one cannot uncreate it.
In Dahl’s words:
It’s an
awesome experience in the original sense of the word, to put it another way,
and awe is an emotion that has been increasingly linked to greater happiness
and overall well-being in studies by the University of California, Berkeley,
psychologist Dacher Keltner and others. One fascinating study published
earlier this year in the journal Emotion,
for example, found that people who reported regularly feeling a sense of awe or
wonder were also less likely to harbor potentially dangerous inflammatory
markers in their bodies — proteins that have been linked to illnesses such as
heart disease or cancer. There are numerous ways to tap into that feeling:
Hiking Machu Picchu, catching a glimpse of a grizzly in a national park, even a
simple sunrise. All of these are humbling acts, ways to get a real sense of
your own smallness, and maybe all of these are also tiny prayers, in their way.
Atheists pray to people with a god-complex. Unfortunately, so do many people of other faiths. There is a practical motive to replace God with gods in order to receive immediate, material gratification.
ReplyDeleteStuart: Prayer brings the virtue of humility. Meditation does not. Prayer is an antidote to egotism and narcissistic self-involvement. When you pray you are asserting that you do not control everything.
ReplyDeleteI understand the attempted distinction here, but I'm unsure. A key idea of giving up control is "surrender", but as you say what are you surrendering to, a vast uncaring universe, or a benevolent creator who needs your help.
I recall the story of the faithful man who drowned because he missed the signs of help he was looking for.
http://epistle.us/inspiration/godwillsaveme.html
--------- Ending...
Shortly after, the house broke up and the floodwaters swept the man away and he drowned.
When in Heaven, the man stood before God and asked, “I put all of my faith in You. Why didn’t You come and save me?”
And God said, “Son, I sent you a warning. I sent you a car. I sent you a canoe. I sent you a motorboat. I sent you a helicopter. What more were you looking for?”
---------
So if you pray, you need humility, and the nature of that humility perhaps is a willingness to see things outside of your expectations.
If you live your life in fear, and demand safety, you can build walls and defensive systems and reduce your dependencies upon the kindness of strangers. So that might work for 99% of your problems, but if you wait until that final 1%, where you have to depend on a benevolent universe, you may be so afraid of the world that you mistake what you see by what you're afraid is there, and perhaps even shoot dead that very stranger who was sent by god to help you.
As FDR said "The only thing to fear is fear itself", at least if you're willing to consider you're the most dangerous person you'll ever meet.
I also think of Minnesota'a Michele Bachmann. I first saw her in person at the Capitol building a decade ago where she was leading a public prayer that God would lower their taxes. Its hard to imagine how child-like your mind has to be to make such public prayers. And again, expectations are a problem and supplication is a troublesome type of prayer, because it assumes you know the best possible outcome.
On the other hand, a prayer of gratitude, that looks at all you've been given, perhaps its okay if you don't get what you want, and you say "Thy will be done" and be at peace under any outcome.
But back to the atheists (or buddhists) I tend to think the meditation has the same intention as prayer in the power to bring humility. I mean all you have to do is to try to quiet your mind for 5 minutes to find how hard that is, and you'll be properly humbled. So I think the idea there is we have our smaller self (ego) and a greater self (maybe soul?) and its in the surrendering of the smaller self that lets the creative potential of the greater self, (and perhaps Jung's collective unconscious/soul) to solve our problems in ways we'd never imagine from our own little perspective.