Saturday, December 4, 2010

Church Newsletter

I was asked to write a little something for our church newsletter about our prayer ministry.  As I was searching thru some greeting cards to pick out just the right card for a special person (it takes me FOREVER to pick out a card 'cause the words have to be from my heart and fit the person!!!)....I came across one that had these words about prayer....so I included in my article.

No ocean can hold it back.
No river can overtake it.
No whirlwind can go faster.
No army can defeat it.
No law can stop it.
No distance can slow it.
No disease can cripple it.
No force on earth is more powerful, or effective,
Than the power of PRAYER!!!

This was the verse of scripture that I thought went right along with these words.... 

James 5:16b (NLT)
The earnest prayer of a righteous person has great power and produces wonderful results.

In His Most Precious Love....and with mine!!! 

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

The power of prayer

I don’t often share my personal personal life here – I’ll say I’m going through a bad time, or generally explain what’s happening, but in a lot of ways, I’m very private. I’m also not a particularly religious person as far as “rules” go. I am a very spiritual person as far as faith goes. I believe in my faith and I’m 100% open and believe everyone should have the right to do and think what works for them. That said, I want to talk about the power of prayer. Any prayer to any spiritual being (or thing) IMO = the power of positive thinking. I believe in it no matter where it comes from. And keeping in mind that yes, bad things happen to good people, and yes sometimes no matter how hard you pray, you can’t change an awful outcome. But sometimes, enough people pull together and good things happen. So today I want to thank every single person who said a prayer for my dad when he was diagnosed with lymphoma (no, I never stated the disease until today), everyone who lit a candle, who thought about him in a positive way. For right now, the treatment is working and there is no longer a malignancy. Make no mistake, he has 3 more months of treatment and really, who knows what the future holds. But right now things look very good. And for that I am truly grateful going into the holiday season and the New Year.
And for my favorite boy Buddy, he has started a new medication for his stomach issues and at 12 and a half, he also seems to have taken a more positive turn. It’s definitely been a rough 2010 but we’re looking ahead to a good 2011, I hope!

In case you’re worried that things are TOO good at home, never fear. I was hit by an awful stomach bug last weekend. Whether it was food poisoning or a virus, all I can say is I THOUGHT I DIED. Seriously. I lost almost 2 pounds and I do not advocate the method to anyone. As I am writing this on Tuesday night, it’s been four days and I’m STILL not myself, still not eating all foods, still exhausted, light headed and occasionally queasy. I STILL owe a couple of author quotes to authors I truly love (and this is a good thing because I get to read books early), I STILL am trying to get into the as of yet untitled Serendipity Book 2 and we all know my writing process in the beginning is ugly, and I STILL have a kid to get ready to leave for college in January.

But given the news in paragraphs 1 and 2 above, I’d say for the moment, all is right with my world. Oh and in Weight Watchers, I’ve lost 4.6 pounds since the beginning of November. Slow and steady but progressing.

Whew. It’s nice to have good news for a change. Even if I’m still not feeling all that well! 

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Rain Rain

A little town about 500km away from Cape Town as been suffering a terrible drought. There dams are dry and they the are on a water restriction of 20 liters per household per day. This was brought to my attention this week when I heard about the Water Bottles for Beaufort West drive. It is so easy for us to take water for granted. We open the tap and it is there. Why be worried? But this week I have come to find a new appreciation for the "little" things we take for granted. And I have found a new fire within to fight for our water. I am about to get carried away, but the reason I write this is because of the power of prayer. Since I have heard about it I have prayed for rain. Tonight I was informed that they already received 24mm of rain since the previous night. It gave me goosebumps because it brought home to me that we just need to trust in God. Pray and let God do the rest and tonight I pray that God will bless them with more rain until they are out of trouble. 

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

pyschic prayer?

Here's an article my cousin sent me:

Does prayer’s power heal the sick, change lives, or fulfill our needs and desires? Should you bury a statue of Saint Joseph, if you want to sell your home, or put Saint Christopher on your dashboard as you travel this holiday season? There’s no definitive way to prove the power of prayer, but it’s not for lack of trying. Humans, including scientists, charlatans, and medical experts, have attempted to prove and disprove the efficacy of prayer since the beginning of intellectual curiosity.

The most surprising thing about these studies is that we’ve learned nothing. Some studies seem to showconcentrated group prayer, whatever that is, has a measurable effect on AIDS patients. A decade ago, Dr. Elisabeth Targ’s famous double-blind research convinced some that AIDS patients who were prayed for lived longer than AIDS patients who were not prayed for by a controlled group of prayer-sayers. How do you control that?

Reading university studies is interesting, but confusing. Some show cardiac patients who believe in God do better than those who don’t. On the other hand, in a Harvard study, it looks like cardiac patients assured of receiving prayers of intercession didn’t fare as well as others, and Francis Galton, cousin of Charles Darwin, determined that if a king’s subjects prayed for him, the poor guy lived a shorter life than other kings.

Consider this: Studies aside, nearly everyone has stories of friends, family, and acquaintances that lived a miracle brought about by prayer or devotion. A widow accidentally drops her keepsake wedding ring in the ocean. She prays daily that she will find it. Years later, it turns up in the local fisherman’s catch. A missing child is inexplicably recovered when his whole community gathers to pray.

My husband was diagnosed with a terminal illness ten years ago. We prepared ourselves. We prayed a lot. He’s still around, and his medical team is astounded. He should not have had a positive outcome. There are thousands of stories of humans visited by angels – some of them seem inarguable. We can’t get enough of George’s angel inIt’s a Wonderful Life, and books about causing change through prayer fill the bookstores’ shelves.

You can drive yourself to distraction Googling for answers on whether prayer has power or can effect change. The Online Surgical Technicians Course has a comprehensive list of formal, rigorous, scientific studies. You can find first-hand prayer testimonials on the Experience Project Web site and, I dare say, all over the Web.

Maybe the most rational conclusion was drawn by Wendy Cadge from the sociology department of Brandeis University, Massachusetts. An expert on how religion and medicine impact each other in today’s American culture, Cage remarked, “With double-blind clinical trials, scientists tried their best to study something that may be beyond their best tools; and [this] reflects more about them and their assumptions than about whether prayer works.”

The question isn’t complicated. The answer doesn’t lie in studies funded by millions of tax dollars. If you attend to your spiritual growth, you will have a relationship with your personal mode of prayer and with your higher power. When your devotion is honest and sincere – prayer can smooth out rough areas and improve the quality of your life. Believe in miracles.