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Proximity
could be key to success of Healing Prayer
Newswise,
August 2010 — Findings reported today from a
new international study of healing prayer
suggest that prayer for another person's
healing just might help -- especially if the
one praying is physically near the person
being prayed for.
Candy Gunther Brown, an associate professor
in the Department of Religious Studies at
Indiana University Bloomington, led the
study of "proximal intercessory prayer" for
healing. It is available online today and
will be published in the September 2010
issue of the Southern Medical Journal.
The study, titled "Study of the Therapeutic
Effects of Proximal Intercessory Prayer (STEPP)
on Auditory and Visual Impairments in Rural
Mozambique," measured surprising
improvements in vision and hearing in
economically disadvantaged areas where
eyeglasses and hearing aids are not readily
available.
"We chose to investigate 'proximal' prayer
because that is how a lot of prayer for
healing is actually practiced by Pentecostal
and Charismatic Christians around the
world," Brown said. "These constitute the
fastest-growing Christian subgroups
globally, with some 500 million adherents,
and they are among those most likely to pray
expectantly for healing."
Brown and her colleagues carried out the
study as part of a larger research program,
funded by the John Templeton Foundation
Flame of Love Project, on the cultural
significance and experience of spiritual
healing practices. As editor of a
forthcoming book on Global Pentecostal and
Charismatic Healing (Oxford University
Press, scheduled for release January 2011),
Brown has made an in-depth, seven-year study
of how pentecostals worldwide pray for
healing.
Although Pentecostals often pray for their
own healing and request distant intercessory
prayer, they consider proximal prayer to be
particularly efficacious and emphasize the
importance of physical proximity and human
touch in praying effectively for healing.
"When people feel that they have a serious
need for healing, they are willing to try
almost anything," Brown said.
"If they feel that a particular religious or
spiritual practice healed them, they are
much more likely to become an adherent. This
phenomenon, more than any other, accounts
for the growth of these Christian subgroups
globally."
Brown and her colleagues studied the
activities of the healing groups Iris
Ministries and Global Awakening in
Mozambique and Brazil because of their
reputation as hotspots of specialized prayer
for those with hearing and vision
impairments.
The researchers used an audiometer and
vision charts to evaluate 14 rural
Mozambican subjects who reported impaired
hearing and 11 who reported impaired vision,
both before and after the subjects received
proximal intercessory prayer (PIP).
The study focused on hearing and vision
because it is possible to measure them with
hearing machines and vision charts, allowing
a more direct measure of improvement than
simply asking people whether they feel
better.
Subjects exhibited improved hearing and
vision that was statistically significant
after PIP was administered. Two subjects
with impaired hearing reduced the threshold
at which they could detect sound by 50
decibels.
Three subjects had their tested vision
improve from 20/400 or worse to 20/80 or
better. These improvements are much larger
than those typically found in suggestion and
hypnosis studies.
Brown recounted that one subject, an elderly
Mozambican woman named Maryam, initially
reported that she could not see a person's
hand, with two upraised fingers, from a
distance of one foot.
A healing practitioner put her hand on
Maryam's eyes, hugged her and prayed for
less than a minute; then the person held
five fingers in front of Maryam, who was
able to count them and even read the 20/125
line on a vision chart.
The study focuses on clinical effects of PIP
and does not attempt to explain the
mechanisms by which the improvements
occurred.
Supplemental digital content for the
published study reports on a follow-up study
with similar findings conducted by the same
researchers in urban Brazil. Co-authors
include physicians Stephen C. Mory of
Nashville, Tenn., and Rebecca Williams of
Johannesburg, South Africa, and Michael J.
McClymond, associate professor of
theological studies at Saint Louis
University.
Scientific research on intercessory prayer
has in recent decades generated a firestorm
of controversy, with critics charging that
attempts to study the efficacy of prayer are
inherently unscientific and should be
abandoned because the mechanisms are poorly
understood. Several studies have produced
contradictory findings.
The title of the current study makes
reference to the widely discussed 2006
"STEP" (study of the therapeutic effects of
intercessory prayer) paper, which concluded
that prayer itself had no effect, but
certainty of receiving prayer adversely
affected health.
However, the STEP study, like most previous
research on the efficacy of prayer, focused
on distant intercessory prayer (DIP) rather
than proximal prayer.
It also included only one group of
Protestant intercessors: Silent Unity, a
"New Thought" group whose leaders have
explicitly rejected prayers of supplication
or petition as "useless."
"If empirical research continues to indicate
that PIP may be therapeutically beneficial,
then -- whether or not the mechanisms are
adequately understood -- there are ethical
and nonpartisan public policy reasons to
encourage further related research," Brown
said. "It is a primary privilege and
responsibility of medical science to pursue
a better understanding of therapeutic
inventions that may advance global health,
especially in contexts where conventional
medical treatments are inadequate or
unavailable."
Dr. John Peteet, a professor at Harvard
Medical School, similarly commented in an
editorial in the current issue of the
Southern Medical Journal: "Whatever their
views about the efficacy of healing prayer
and about whether it belongs in the
armamentarium of medicine, clinicians and
believers share core commitments to healing
whenever it is possible, and to meaningful
acceptance when it is not."
The World Health Organization estimates that
278 million people, 80 percent of whom live
in developing countries, have moderate to
profound hearing loss in both ears; and 314
million people, 87 percent of whom live in
developing countries, are visually impaired.
Only a tiny fraction of these populations
currently receive any treatment.
The study will be available online Aug. 5 at
http://journals.lww.com/smajournalonline/toc/publishahead.
In September, an interview with Brown will
be available on the Southern Medical Journal
website.
"Study of the Therapeutic Effects of
Proximal Intercessory Prayer (STEPP) on
Auditory and Visual Impairments in Rural
Mozambique." Southern Medical Journal,
September 2010, Volume 103, Issue 9