I saw Tyler Stillman give a talk on this at the SSSP conference we hosted last 
month. In my opinion, they don't have adequate controls to rule out a simple 
dissonance or self-perception explanation (if I'm praying for this person, I 
must like them).

________________________________________
From: Mike Palij [[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, December 14, 2009 9:37 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Cc: Mike Palij
Subject: [tips] The Power of Prayer?

APS' "This Week In Psychological Science" provides a summary
of recent online published articles (prior to paper publication) and
though there are several interesting research studies, the one
detailed below stood out for me.  First, it appears to have as
co-authors a couple of guys I knew back in grad school at
Stony Brook (Oh! How they have wandered!).  Second, it puts
another spin on the role of prayer that doesn't required the operation
of a supernatural agency (at least that's the way I read it). That
is, engaging in one behavior may be related to other behaviors
(e.g., engaging in prayer may be related to forgiveness and other
behaviors).  I haven't read the entire article so I don't really
know what the explanation actually is.  It also seems as though
this is not an isolated article but part of a more or less systematic
research program on religious behavior.  Anyone familiar with it?

-Mike Palij
New York University
[email protected]


Motivating Change in Relationships Can Prayer Increase Forgiveness?

Nathaniel M. Lambert1, Frank D. Fincham1, Tyler F. Stillman1,
Steven M. Graham2 and Steven R.H. Beach3

Author Affiliations
1Florida State University
2New College of Florida
3University of Georgia
Nathaniel M. Lambert, Family Institute, Sandels Building, Florida State
University, Tallahassee, FL
Email: [email protected]

Abstract
The objective of the current studies was to test whether praying for a
relationship partner would increase willingness to forgive that partner.
In Study 1 (N = 52), participants assigned to pray for their romantic
partner reported greater willingness to forgive that partner than those
who described their partner to an imagined parent. In Study 2 (N = 67),
participants were assigned to pray for a friend, pray about any topic,
or think positive thoughts about a friend every day for 4 weeks. Those
who prayed for their friend reported greater forgiveness for their friend
than did those in the other two conditions, even when we controlled for
baseline forgiveness scores. Participants who prayed for their friend also
increased in selfless concern during the 4 weeks, and this variable
mediated the relationship between experimental condition and increased
forgiveness. Together, these studies provide an enhanced understanding
of the relationship benefits of praying for a partner and begin to identify
potential mediators of the effect.

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