In the Closet

Power Through Prayer

The headline is “Study: Prayer Has No Effect on Heart Surgery Recovery” — and underneath that should be “What Did They Miss?”

In the largest study of its kind, researchers found that having people pray for heart bypass surgery patients had no effect on their recovery. In fact, patients who knew they were being prayed for had a slightly higher rate of complications.

They actually tried to do a “serious” study on this? I’ve often wondered how people participate in sleep tests and sex tests and other such ought-to-be-private “enterprises.” I mean, how could you perform normally in any of that sort of stuff when you know you’re being studied, scrutinized, scored, and so forth?!

But studying prayer? Now that isn’t just silly or sick — it’s stupid.

How is anyone going to pray normally and sincerely as part of a test? How is anyone going to genuinely pray to God and communicate with Him knowing it’s all being studied, scrutinized, scored, and so forth?!

And how do they know what the effect of no prayer would have been on any given person? A control group certainly won’t reveal that!

And how did they keep away the prayers of people not participating in the pseudo-study?

Man, attempting to be wise, again makes a fool of himself.

Researchers emphasized that their work can’t address whether God exists or answers prayers made on another’s behalf. The study can only look for an effect from prayers offered as part of the research, they said.

Oh, so they do admit it’s all a crock.

And they admit this isn’t a study about genuine prayer to God. Rather it was a study about the psychological impact of suspecting that someone might be praying for you. It isn’t a study on the effectiveness of prayer at all!

They also said they had no explanation for the higher complication rate in patients who knew they were being prayed for, in comparison to patients who only knew it was possible prayers were being said for them.

Can you help them solve that mystery?

Or perhaps you would rather answer a different question. How many of those prayers remain stuck in monastery ceilings or floating around loose in the air, unattended and unheard…and unanswered?

(So much more to say, but I’ll let it at that.)

Oh, here’s another news report on the story.

Immigration Crime

It seems so many politicians and pundits and reporters are purposefully misrepresenting what’s going on at the US-Mexico border.

They keep talking about the immigration issue.

(In case you didn’t miss it in that sentence, illegal does not appear between the and immigration.)

Personally, I’m all for immigration and all against crime.

When reporters, pundits, and (especially) politicians refuse to make a clear distinction between legal immigration and illegal entry, my level of trust in them overall goes down even further.

Not that I expect them to care, but that’s a different subject.

Now a note to the politicians yakking away in DC about this plan and that: If current laws aren’t being enforced (penalties against illegal entrants; penalties against those who employ them; etc.), what’s the use of writing up another set of laws?

Oh well.

As a parent, there is a question much closer to home and much more applicable to me.

How do I do in enforcing the “laws” I have in my home?

Ah me. Now there’s a tough one. I think I would rather harp on the illegal immigration issue. 🙂

Good News: Iraq

Thank God her life was spared! (I wonder what she plans to do with it.)

If you want to read more of the story than I have here, go ahead.

American journalist Jill Carroll was freed in Baghdad on Thursday, nearly three months after being kidnapped in the city.

“I’m just happy to be free. I just want to be with my family,” Carroll, wearing a headscarf, told Baghdad Television, adding she had had no warning she was being freed.

That’s very good news. (I also wonder what she plans to do with that headscarf.)

Another tidbit from the story:

[Islamic] Party leader Hashemi offered her a Koran at the end of her brief television interview and, speaking in English, said: “Don’t forget the Iraqi people.”

“Here’s the book being used to justify (and explain?) the kidnappings, murders, riots, and mayhem going on.” No, I’m sure he wouldn’t say that. But that “Don’t forget the Iraqi people” was very good. Don’t blame the people as a whole. (I’m sure she won’t forget the kidnappers either.)

Hashemi said Islamic principles had ensured her good treatment.

Come again?

Persecution in Afghanistan

One has been set free. But there are many others:

US-based Christian news source, Compass Direct, reports that more Christians have been arrested for their faith in Afghanistan in the wake of the release of Abdul Rahman. Compass, a news service that tracks persecution of Christians mostly in Islamic countries, says harassment of the Christian community has been stepped up.

Compass says two more Christian converts have been arrested in other parts of the country, but further information is being withheld in the “sensitive situation” caused by the international media furor over Rahman.

Reports of beatings and police raids on the homes of Christians are filtering out of the country through local Christian ministers.

The threat of death hangs over the heads of all Afghan Christians, of whom US-based groups say there may be as many as 10,000, meeting secretly in houses for prayer and bible study, and living in fear of their lives.

Oh my. Blogging about more than just one would become too time-consuming and wearisome.

So let me console myself with this call for ongoing prayer support for the persecuted church in Afghanistan.

Especially if the release of one means greater rage against the rest.

Berlin Wall

Yeah, I know — we’ve heard this before about the proposed wall on the US southern border.

Critics compare it to the Berlin Wall and say it goes against the American spirit of openness, sending the wrong message to the rest of the world about the United States.

The Berlin Wall? Where’s the historical accuracy in that comparison?

  • I haven’t heard that the House bill includes shoot-to-kill orders.
  • I haven’t heard that the intent of the House bill is to keep Americans in the US.
  • I haven’t heard that the House bill acknowledges that the current border between Mexico and the US is an artificial, foreign-imposed border dividing a single country from itself.

Berlin Wall, indeed.

And as far as sending the wrong message to the rest of the world about the US . . . . Protecting national sovereignty, promoting national security, and enforcing domestic laws are all part of a wrong message? Yes, if you believe that the concept of nation-states is an antiquated idea that must give way to the new world, one world order.

How about a bit more from the story:

But the U.S. Department of Homeland Security described the planned barrier, which would run for 698 miles, as a “stupid fence . . . .”

Oh wow!

Immigrant welfare groups are also critical of the proposal, and point to the fact that past policing crackdowns such as “Operation Gatekeeper” in the San Diego sector in 1994 only succeeded in rerouting the flow of immigrants to more remote and dangerous areas of the border.

“Nothing has actually succeeded in slowing down the number of migrants crossing the U.S. border,” said Rev. Robin Hoover, president of Tucson-based welfare group Humane Borders.

“The fence is just another gimmick that will just expose migrants to greater danger,” he added.

Does the fact the illegals make the choices that expose them to greater personal danger somehow obligate the US to make their illegal deeds less hazardous?

In that case, the logical conclusion is that the Border Patrol’s big buses ought to be used to ferry illegals north from the border instead of south to the border. Have the US agents meet the illegals at the normal (ie, safe) crossings, not with entry applications, but with bus tickets, meal vouchers, and motel passes.

OK. 😯

It Fits in the Plan

Jerusalem Countdown

Although I’m disposed to think of this as bad news . . .

Interim Prime Minister Ehud Olmert claimed victory on Wednesday in Israel’s election . . . .

Olmert, appealing in his speech to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, said Jews had aspired for thousands of years to create a homeland throughout the Land of Israel, biblical territory that includes the West Bank.

“But acknowledging reality and circumstances, we are ready to compromise, to give up parts of the beloved Land of Israel … and evacuate, with great pain, Jews living there, to create the conditions that will enable you to fulfill your dream and live alongside us,” Olmert said.

. . . I also believe events are unfolding in accordance with God’s ultimate plan. In that plan, final good comes even from the bad.

As a relevant side note, I hardly see how Kadima will help solve this dilema:

Olmert’s unilateral approach appeals to many Israelis worn down by a five-year-old Palestinian uprising and concerned by the rise to power of Hamas in the West Bank and the
Gaza Strip after the Islamist militant group won elections in January.

But maybe Kadima can pull off what I think Kadima can’t.

I expect Israel’s adversaries to take courage and new vigor from this election, and continuing wearing away at the Israeli psyche.

Oh . . . and while I was about to finalize this post, I came across this perspective.

PS: No, I have not read the book shown above.

Is It My Eyes?


Or is there something fishy about this photo?


OK, I wasn’t going to post anything more today, but I saw this photo this story:

A Shi’ite man is held by friends as he shouts during a mock funeral for victims of a shooting incident at a mosque in Baghdad March 27, 2006. (Ali Jasim/Reuters)

Maybe it is just my eyes.

That guy sure seems like a giant, all out of proportion to the other guys.

Maybe it’s just the camera angle, but why doesn’t anyone else seem similarly enlarged?

Private
Above all, love God!

since November 9, 2005