To pray makes sense if the energy dispended by the prayers can be
redirected to a purpose. If it can, or not, be redirected can't be
proved by the actual, knows it all, science. Maybe, under some
conditions, to pray works very well for those experienced!

On Apr 19, 11:00 pm, frantheman <[email protected]> wrote:
> Prayer puzzles me - even in my years as a believer, it puzzled me. I
> don't understand what it's for - even for believers. Does God react to
> things differently if he/she is prayed to? Does knocking on heaven's
> door evoke a different answer to that which would have been
> forthcoming if one hadn't knocked? Is God's immutable will capable of
> being influenced or bribed?
>
> Prayer - and it is central to almost every religion known to me -
> seems to be an essential part of the religious impulse. Modern
> ("enlightened") believers usually explain its importance as a way of
> staying in contact with a personal God - communication as the basis of
> relationship. This often seems to me to be the religious reflection of
> intellectual preoccupation with communication/media prevelant
> worldwide since the middle of the 20th. Century.  But even this
> tendency reinforces my suspicion that prayer is an indication of the
> deeply anthropological basis of all theologies - a prime example of
> the anthropomorphing bias (ineluctably) prevelant in human thinking
> structures.
>
> But the instinct is stronger, deeper and more primitive than happy
> encounter theories of "God my partner, with whom I must remain in
> communication if I want our relationship to develop and grow." As a
> (relatively) convinced agnostic/atheist, I still occasionally find
> myself (usually in difficult situations) mentally muttering, "Oh God,
> please don't let this happen, please don't let this be true ...!" The
> rational part of me insists that this is ridiculous. Even the part of
> me which remains theoretically open to the possibility of some sort of
> theological foundation to things reasons that there is no way in which
> human imploring could possibly move God to change his/her mind.
> Sometimes the hindbrain just isn't listening and shoots off
> invocations regardless..
>
> Brendan Beehan once made a comment to the effect that there were no
> atheists at three in the morning, when worries clamour and sleep won't
> come. In such states there remains the agnostic's prayer; "Dear God,
> if there is a God, save me from hell, if there is a hell!"
>
> Francis
>
> On 19 Apr., 11:33, akshay <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > I am only earning person in my family which consist of 8 people. I
> > have to stay away from my family for my job.
>
> > Pl. pray for me for prosperity and stability in my job and good
> > position and peace for me. God bless you with happiness and peace and
> > prosperity.

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