Making God real and making God good: some mechanisms through which prayer may contribute to healing
- PMID: 23793786
- DOI: 10.1177/1363461513487670
Making God real and making God good: some mechanisms through which prayer may contribute to healing
Abstract
Many social scientists attribute the health-giving properties of religious practice to social support. This paper argues that another mechanism may be a positive relationship with the supernatural, a proposal that builds upon anthropological accounts of symbolic healing. Such a mechanism depends upon the learned cultivation of the imagination and the capacity to make what is imagined more real and more good. This paper offers a theory of the way that prayer enables this process and provides some evidence, drawn from experimental and ethnographic work, for the claim that a relationship with a loving God, cultivated through the imagination in prayer, may contribute to good health and may contribute to healing in trauma and psychosis.
Keywords: healing; prayer; psychosis; trauma.
Comment in
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Perspectives on trauma and healing from anthropology and social and affective neuroscience.Transcult Psychiatry. 2013 Oct;50(5):744-52. doi: 10.1177/1363461513508174. Transcult Psychiatry. 2013. PMID: 24142934 No abstract available.
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