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Faith Healing

Safe with pregnancy

Image by Gareth Hubbard
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This is the practice of prayers and hand gestures in a belief that healing can occur as a result. Faith is usually (but not always) part of a religious practice. It can be exercised individually or through a collective of similarly inclined people

Caution
  • Faith healing is safe when used in conjunction with recognised medical interventions


  • Choosing faith healing over medical care for serious injuries or illnesses may lead to death and disability


  • Many people have died doing so, and many continue to die


  • Parents can be sent to jail if they choose faith healing over lifesaving medical care for their children

Therapy for:
  • It offers hope to the individual, for all conditions


  • Spiritual upliftment


  • Promotion of wellbeing


Comments
  • Placebo effect will help many believers experience an improvement in symptoms after prayer healing


  • Although the improvement is not directly due to the prayers, the faith healer actually helps the individual to achieve that peaceful state of mind that hope brings


  • This effect can-not be more than the body’s own natural abilities; therefore, an established ailment will rapidly overcome this initial placebo improvement and overwhelm the body until it succumbs and die


  • There are similarities with positive thinking. This is not far-fetched from the aptly termed ‘wishful thinking’ 


  • Positive thinking is beneficial to the mind, hence the effect of prayers on the mind is positively significant. This effect is however not directly transferrable to the physical body structure


  • Although the physical body may be initially empowered by a positive mind after faith healing, the effect will disappear as the disease condition continues to overwhelm the body


  • Faith healing offers hope, but conventional wisdom suggests that medical care is a must for serious illnesses and injuries


  • Faith healing can be a complementary intervention to support other forms of healing, but it does not appear to be an alternative to conventional wisdom


  • Wisdom in the modern world is measured by evidence available. Although evidence cannot exist for all suitable interventions, the available body of evidence is best taken into account when necessary


  • Faith healing that preaches the rejection of conventional medical wisdom seems to contradict the Abrahamic religion view: ‘Do not forsake wisdom, and she will protect you; love her, and she will watch over you. Wisdom is supreme; therefore, get wisdom. Though it cost all you have, get understanding’ (Book of Proverbs 4:6-7) 


  • Hope without wisdom is unlikely to be sustainable

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