RECENT PRAYER RESEARCH SPURNED BY EXCUSE-MAKERS
How can we tell if something isn’t so?
Throughout all time, humanity has cared deeply about
answering this question. If someone tells us evil spirits are making us sick,
we’ve got to know if they’re right. If
someone says they can foretell the future, it’s really important to know if we
should crown them king.
It’s only in an eye blink of history that we’ve come up with
a good answer. A few hundred years ago,
we learned that wishful thinking and self-deception were very real
problems. That’s when we started testing
things in ways that tried to avoid them.
Some ways of testing worked.
Those stayed around. Others
didn’t, so they were thrown away. What
survived became known as the scientific method, and that’s what we’ve got
today. People are always welcome at any
time to find a better way of understanding the world. So far, no takers.
This method of finding out what isn’t so tells us that the
earth is round, that it orbits the sun, and that objects attract one another
with a force proportional to their masses.
It tells us that germs, not spirits, cause diseases. It tells us that observing the world, and not
animal entrails, is a better way to learn about the future.
It also tells us that intercessory prayer doesn’t work.
As reported in the Gazette a few days ago, the most thorough
and careful prayer study ever attempted has finally concluded. The results were negative. Nada.
Zip. Zero. The same techniques that tells us that
astrology isn’t real and that black cats don’t bring bad luck tells us that
praying for sick people who don’t know they’re being prayed for makes no
difference whatsoever. You’d get similar
results by flipping coins or rolling dice.
I’ve been following this study with great interest for the
past year or so, watching its progress in “Science and Theology News”. S&T is published by the Templeton
Foundation, an organization committed to honest, constructive engagement
between science and religion. Atheists,
agnostics, and deeply religious thinkers of all faiths are involved in
Templeton, exploring the frontiers of the human mind and religious belief. It’s exciting stuff.
Responses to the study fall into two categories: Excuse making, and thoughtful
engagement. The excuse makers are those
who say the power of prayer can’t be tested, or that God shouldn’t be put to
the test, or that supernatural events are beyond the ability of science to
understand.
These are excuses because if the test had been positive,
they’d have been the first to trumpet the results from the puplit, the TV
studio, and the op-ed page.
Excuse making is also degrading to religion. Claiming that supernatural events can’t be
tested is what dowsers, tarot readers and telephone psychics do. They fail every test they’re put to. Is this really the company the excuse makers
want to keep?
But there are other, more thoughtful responses as well. Dr. Harold Koenig, a co-director of Duke’s
Center for Spirituality, Theology and Health,
says that “It is not religion by itself through some supernatural
process that is responsible for the religion-health relationship.” Dr. Keith Meador, a psychiatrist who teaches
at Duke’s Divinity School, thinks studies like this “distort” the relationship
of God to man. “It’s as if we have some
kind of contractual exchange … as opposed to a covenantal relationship.” That’s thoughtful engagement.
I’m not a theologian, but I’m passionate about religion and
science. I want to be a thoughtful
engager, not an excuse maker. The best
attempts we’ve made so far tell us that human prayers don’t affect the material
world. So be it. Can religion assimilate an answer like
that? I think it can. I think in many cases it already has.
The universe, as we find it, is an awfully big place. It’s been around for several billion years, and
in all likelihood will be around for several billion more. Studies like this one that add to our
knowledge can only help move humanity forward on its journey toward our
ultimate destination. Wherever that may
be. Perhaps it is God.
Dr. David Myers, in reacting to the study, put it best: “My understanding of God and God’s
relationship to the world would be more challenged by positive than by null
results.”
Amen.