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Prayer and Compassionate Healing

Posted by admin on Nov 25, 2009

Larry Dossey, MD, took a leap of faith fifteen years ago when he wrote the book “Healing Words,” about the power of prayer to heal.

The only study to prove the power of prayer to heal at that time was done by a cardiologist names Randolf Byrd. He prayed for half of his patients and left the other half prayer-less.

The control group didn’t fare as well as the group Byrd prayed for.

This was the study that inspired Larry Dossey to begin praying for his patients.

Dossey describes his upbringing as Fundamentalist Christian in a Texan community, which he later rejected. By the time he was a doctor, he rebelled against any form of prayer or anything at all having to do with religion.

But the Byrd data provoked an inner change of direction for Dossey.

He decided to incorporate prayer into his daily morning ritual.

He said he locked himself in his office, brought out the incense and shamanistic rattles, as he calls it, and started actively saying unconditional prayers for the well being of his patients.

After these rituals, he felt well. He began to know that the world of medicine was much more than drugs and strict medical interventions.

Oprah asked Larry Dossey what was the single experience that led him to the work he is doing now.

Dossey explained the time he had an emergency appendectomy and was rushed to surgery without ever meeting his surgeon or anesthesiologist. When the surgery was done, he woke up fearfully and in tremendous pain.

A nurse saw his distress as she was walking by and stopped to take his hand.

She said soothingly, “Don’t worry, Larry. Everything is going to be OK!”

Larry’s pain instantly vanished. He remembers feeling confident that he would get better. The fear he felt a moment before receded.

At this point, Larry and Oprah briefly discuss the role of nurse as healer.

Oprah said, “Nurses are healers but are called nurses instead.”

Dossey remembers the experience with the nurse healer as pivotal as to why he embarked on the journey he is now on: researching the healing effect of prayer on his patients.

Twenty-one studies have been done since the Byrd study, proving the power of prayer to heal.

Medical students are now taught about these experiments in their education. Prayer in medicine has reached the mainstream.

There is no turning back.

Dossey says that one person sending compassionate loving thoughts to a person across the planet is just as effective as if she was praying by the bedside.

This is called distant healing, distant prayer.

One of the most remarkable examples of this kind of distant prayer, according to Dossey, was done on a group of women at an Infertility Clinic in Seoul, Korea. One half of the patients were prayed for and the other half were not.

Again, those prayed for had twice the pregnancy rate as the half who were not the recipients of prayer.

Oprah asked, “How does prayer work?”

“No one knows,” said Dossey.

Another interesting factor: it matters not if ten or more people prays for you or if one person prays for you, as long as the prayers are authentically done with a compassionate heart.

Quality not quantity is the key to good solid results.

Prayer without the need to control outcome, with an attitude of surrender, of Thy Will Be Done, are the prayers having the most import. Prayer done fearfully with a desperate, bargaining with God mentality do not have any effect. These prayers are called Fox Hole prayers, the “get me out alive and I’ll go to church every Sunday for the rest of my life” kind of prayer.

Fear and desperation are low vibrational energies that are best left in the trash heap of the psyche.

Prayer done with a vibration of love and compassionate has a high fast moving vibrational frequency that transforms rather than distorts, heals rather than harms.

Larry Dossey said that studying the effects of prayer in health led him away from the world view taught in Science that says when the body dies, we are gone forever.

The study and practice of prayer put him in touch with the infinite or “nonlocal” part of ourselves that will never die.

Prayers of gratitude and Thanksgiving get us in touch with our own innate sense of optimism, goodwill and the peaceful silence that underlies all peaceful forces.

Albert Einstein said that we live in a friendly universe. By distrusting people and the goodness of life, we halt the body’s great ability to heal.

Dossey’s latest book, “The Extraordinary Healing Power Of Ordinary Things,” explores different healing modalities that have been known to cause spontaneous healing of incurable conditions.

He cites the use of maggots and leaches in modern surgery to debride diseased staph resistant ulcerations in Diabetic patients. People choose this therapy after trying everything else and modern medicine has failed them at every juncture.

Maggot and leach therapy may seem like a good alternative when all else has failed.

Or take the case of people in comas. When Christmas Carols are played, some of these comatose people rise up, take out their tubes and walk out the door. Carols create tremendous emotional memories that resonate deeply with some people. Maybe all of us raised with this music would have the same emotional reaction.

Spontaneous healing, miraculous cure, prayer from great distances: these are all possibilities in a world full of loving potential. We can learn and immediately practice what Dossey teaches.

Touch your patients with unconditional loving intention.

Pray for and with your patients.

Direct healing rays to everyone you meet today.

You may suddenly realized that you are healed, as well.

Kate Loving Shenk
http://www.articlesbase.com/self-improvement-articles/prayer-and-compassionate-healing-717959.html

14 Comments »

thehiddenangle:

Do Compassionate Conservatives Believe in Making Fun of People with Diseases?
Just wondering how compassionism and making fun of cripples go hand-in-hand. Is this similar to saving gays from their gayness out of compassion for them? Scorning them for their gayness so they can feel properly ashamed and find another path? Will the same thing work on Fox? Can we embarass him until his Parkinson symptoms just stop?

If you are compassionate, why aren’t your prayers for him healing him yet? Are you not praying for him hard enough?
Am I to believe conservatives are above taking a happy picture in Iraq to show how great things are going?

November 25th, 2009 | 12:55 am
alfawolfette10:

I can’t believe an adult would go on national radio making fun of a person with a devastating disability. Then again I have to consider the source!

Michael J. Fox has every right to speak out about this disease.
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November 25th, 2009 | 5:58 am
cork:

Compassionate Conservatives is an oxymoron
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November 25th, 2009 | 6:00 am
Wanda:

Well, I don’t pray, but also do not appreciate anyone making fun of an actor that thrilled me with his movies, and I appreciate very much.
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November 25th, 2009 | 6:02 am
donna-gary@sbcglobal.net:

Limbaugh is a jerk. My husband has Parkinson’s but he is NOT a cripple.

Whatever anyone here says (goliath AND covinced), I know first hand what the symptoms of Parkinson’s look like. Fox looked like after hubby takes meds. Before he takes them he can’t move, speak, etc.
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November 25th, 2009 | 6:04 am
TxSup:

The mockery strengthens their tribal ties and their false sense of superiority.
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November 25th, 2009 | 6:06 am
goliathntime:

You would have to ask a compassionate conservative about that. I’m not compassionate, but I am a cripple, and Fox does embarrass me because he’s a lying cripple.
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November 25th, 2009 | 6:08 am
jasonzbtzl:

Do Compassionate Liberals feel guilty for using disabled people and sick people as political shields to prevent any form of argument against their political ideas. This crap has to stop, Liberals are chicken-s!ts that know their wing-nut ideas won’t fly if they are just presented as ideas and left to public debate so they exploit someone effected in some way by the issue to voice their ideas and then condemn anyone who dis-agrees with the exploited person. Just because you dis-agree with someones opinion that is given in a public forum does not mean you do not hold compassion for that persons situation in life.
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November 25th, 2009 | 6:10 am
convinced:

how can the dem party ask fox to be a shill for them??? fox deliberately manipulated his medications for this ad….shame on him and shame on the dem party
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November 25th, 2009 | 6:12 am
Common Sense:

No…
Conservatives do not do this..
Lies & exaggerations are a liberal thing…
Such as your question….
I watched the Rush Limbaugh piece you are referring to…
And he did not make fun of M.J.Fox as so many ignorant liberals
would like to believe…
Rush said the M.J.Fox was either exaggerating or off his meds..
And M.J.Fox agreed and admitted that he went off his meds to make a point & give an example of Parkinsons..
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November 25th, 2009 | 6:14 am
willys56cj5:

As a conservative, I have the utmost respect AND compassion for Michael J. Fox. But you have to remember that he is using his fame to push for a political agenda, albeit from a medical perspective. He will obviously receive criticism from those that oppose his view points but do not mistake this as a lack of compassion.
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November 25th, 2009 | 6:16 am
arcticchick:

Wait just a second – people in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones! Read this before you start judging others:

Anti-Bush Political Flyer Draws Wrath of Special Olympics
By Susan Jones
CNSNews.com Morning Editor
October 14, 2004

(CNSNews.com) – Leaders of the Special Olympics say they are "astounded and appalled" by an anti-Bush political flyer being distributed in Tennessee.

It shows the head of President Bush superimposed on the body of a Special Olympics athlete; and it reads, "Even if you win, you’re still retarded."

"We see this communication as an egregious, gratuitous insult to our almost 2 million athletes in over 150 countries around the world and a stunning affront to the more than 200 million people in the world who have intellectual disabilities," said Timothy Shriver, Special Olympics chairman and CEO in a statement.

"We cringe at the thought that any one of these capable and courageous athletes would ever have to endure the agony, embarrassment, pain and suffering that this flyer would certainly cause."

The Special Olympics said it hopes the people responsible for the "outrageous political advertisement" would come forward and "explain to the people of Tennessee and everywhere else why they would choose to denigrate the spirit, courage, and accomplishments of the Special Olympics athletes."

Shriver’s statement noted that ignorance about mentally disabled people is common – among comedians, on America’s playgrounds, and in society at large.

"Our commitment in this political season and in every other is to reverse this ignorance and bigotry and to replace them with the stunning realization that many people with intellectual disability are, in fact, among the most gifted within our communities," the statement said.

"There is no reasonable and legitimate defense of this hateful material," it concluded. "We would expect those responsible to make an abject public apology and a sincere, determined effort to clear the public domain of this offensive material."

Shriver is a nephew of the late President John F. Kennedy.
References :
http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewPolitics.asp?Page=/Politics/archive/200410/POL20041014b.html

November 25th, 2009 | 6:18 am
turboweegie:

WAFLOS. TP!
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November 25th, 2009 | 6:20 am
wyldfyr48:

Only the ones who themselves, have a disease.
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November 25th, 2009 | 6:22 am
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