Archived entries for prayer

Couple who believed in faith healing sentenced in son’s death

The Schaibles’ 2-year-old son, Kent, died after fighting what began as a cold and progressed over two weeks to bacterial pneumonia. According to testimony, Herbert Schaible, 42, and Catherine Schaible, 41, prayed for their son and thought he might be getting better.

But on the night of Jan. 24, 2009, the Schaibles discovered that Kent was dead. They called the church’s assistant pastor, Ralph Myers, who came to the house, joined the parents in prayer, and then called a funeral director.

“We tried to fight the devil, but in the end the devil won,” Herbert Schaible told homicide detectives in a statement read to the jury during the trial, which began Tuesday.

Judge Carolyn Engle Temin set sentencing for Feb. 2 but allowed the Schaibles to remain free on $150,000 bail pending that hearing.

Assistant District Attorney Joanne Pescatore said the manslaughter count carries a 5- to 10-year prison term and the child-endangerment charge one of 31/2 to 7 years. She said she did not know if she would ask for prison time.

Pescatore said she would ask the judge, as part of the sentence, to require regular doctor visits for the Schaibles’ children.

“The law is what it is,” Pescatore said. “You have to take care of your children. It’s not enough to pray for them.”

Source: The Philadelphia Inquirer

Breaking news: prayer does not work

An interesting prayer study was released a while ago, and reported upon by the New York Times. See this Wikipedia article for some good background information on these prayer studies.

A wide ranging study on the effects of intercessory prayer (not to be confused with the more violent “imprecatory” prayer), was conducted on over 1,800 heart patients. There was a “blind” group of patients that was not told someone was praying for them, and a second group that was told someone was praying for them. The blind group did no better or worse than the average heart patient, and the group that was told they were prayed for did slightly worse.

My first reaction to this study was dismay that the Templeton foundation found another $2.4 million to waste on studying prayer that could have been spent on studying real remedies. More alarming, our United States government has spent $2.3 Million on studying prayer, according to the article. Continue reading…

What do we pray for?

I heard this song while driving back from my grandmothers. I usually have a great disdain for country music, but this song takes a new approach to the “I’m praying for you” crowd. It’s called “Pray for You” by Jaron and the Long Road to Love.

Now, I personally wonder what’s more offensive to people. Praying for bad things to happen, or not praying at all? Atheists already are the most hated minority group in America, but is our lack of praying really worse than praying for the death of an ex-girlfriend? Either way I think it’s funny.

Louisiana and Texas declare day of prayer for Gulf spill

Governors Bobby Jindal of Louisiana and Rick Perry of Texas declared Sunday the day of prayer for the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. According to the AP article, Jindal is hoping for ‘perseverance in coping with the environmental crisis’ and Perry wants to pray for ‘healing of individuals, the rebuilding of communities, and the restoration of the entire Gulf coast environment.’ According to NBC, Mississippi and Alabama are participating as well, with perhaps more states to follow.

If people want to set aside time for ‘remembrance,’ or ‘reflection,’ that is different in nature than setting aside time for a specifically religious ritual of ‘prayer.’ We should mourn the 11 dead in the drilling rig explosion, and we should express deep care for the local ecosystem, but endorsing this day as an official representative of the government is too far. The National Day of Prayer (also found here) that we covered earlier in the year was found unconstitutional for the very same reasons that this is. Government must allow, generally, for people to observe their religions, but it is too far for the government to request that you act in a religious fashion. However, it seems when an atheist, or even a religious person advocating separation of church and state speaks up, he/she is the bad guy. I will likely put an update when I find articles of people claiming that God’s grace closed the oil spill, how technology is nothing in the face of God, and how anyone injured or any damage suffered was because of sin somewhere by someone.

National Day of Prayer Found Unconstitutional

National Prayer Day was recently found unconstitutional by a federal judge in Wisconsin. The ruling found that government observance was unconstitutional because it went further than simply allocating time for prayer, and instead acted as a government ‘call to action’ for prayer. Time will tell what the final result will be based on the appeals process, especially since so many high ranking government officials (members of congress in particular) greatly support the National Day of Prayer.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100415/ap_on_re_us/us_day_of_prayer

Lancaster Enters the Spotlight

The City Council of Lancaster, Ca. joins the many other cities that fall under criticism of prayer before meetings. Lancaster’s recently re-elected mayor R. Rex Parris adamantly defends what he views as the right of the Lancaster City Council to open with prayer. The prayers are not a vague worship of God or simply reciting hope for the good of the city, either; they explicitly mention Jesus Christ in 11 of the 14 prayers preceding government business. The ACLU has recently butt in to the debate and insists that “we don’t allow the voters to decide [what] the official religion in the city of Lancaster [is].” As usual, the City Council and community of Lancaster view the ACLU’s involvement as a trampling of their rights to observe religion.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100415/ap_on_re_us/us_lancaster_s_prayers



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