The psychological benefits of prayer: What science says about the mind-soul connection

Carol Kochon prayed during her husband’s 42-day hospitalization for Covid-19. Susceptible to lung infections, Rob Kochon had been feeling sick and developing shortness of breath for about four days when he was was admitted to a Florida hospital on Tuesday, March 17. He was diagnosed with double pneumonia. The next day, a coronavirus test came back positive. On Friday, Rob was relocated downtown to AdventHealth Orlando so he could be intubated. On March 29, he flatlined three times after mucus blocked his lungs.

During Rob’s stay, Carol felt alone, sad, concerned and feared the unknown. As a faithful Christian for more than 40 years, she turned to praying to God and meditating upon Bible scriptures.

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“I think that it probably encouraged me,” Carol said. “It calmed me at moments. … I think it centred me back again and reminded me that I was not in charge.”

AdventHealth, a faith-based hospital system, facilitated virtual visits between Rob and Carol, through which Carol and family could pray over and encourage Rob. Rob was in and out of consciousness, but he remembered some of these moments, he said. Carol and Rob credited prayer as one of the factors that led to his recovery. Rob is back home now, recuperating.

The Kochons aren’t the only people who have prayed over pandemic-related outcomes. In March, the Pew Research Center reported that in a survey, 55% of US adults said they had prayed for an end to the spread of coronavirus.

Large majorities of Americans generally and US Christians specifically who pray daily have turned to prayer during the outbreak. But so did some who seldom or never pray, and people who didn’t belong to any religion have started praying.

Despite how many Americans pray and how often, scientific research on health benefits is limited. But based on what science has shown, prayer might help reduce stress, loneliness and fear.

Prayer is hard to study

Studying prayer has been challenging for several reasons, said Kevin Masters, a professor of clinical health psychology at the University of Colorado, Denver.

“Many scientists are very sceptical about anything religious,” he said. There are also issues to overcome during a study, he said: What is prayer? Can researchers rely on self-reports? Will all participants mean the same thing by “prayer,” or will some think thoughts while others formally pray? If scientists study prayer in a laboratory, how do they conduct the study?

Additionally, scientists can’t study God as a mechanism the way they can with a new drug or surgical technique — so it can be difficult to find the process that would explain any results.

Science can, however, study the outcomes of the belief in God rather than the existence — such a study might ask whether people who believe strongly in God report better quality of life than people who do not believe in God.

It has also been difficult to prove whether any benefits derive from distant intercessory prayer, or when people were separated into groups in which they didn’t know who was or wasn’t being prayed for from a distance.

“These studies were meant to be truly a test of prayer by eliminating any natural explanations (e.g., psychological support) that could account for significant differences between groups,” Masters said.

Another “major problem” with the distant intercessory prayer studies, Masters added, is that researchers can’t keep people from praying for the individuals in the control (not to be prayed for) group.

Fostering calm, control and support

Given the limitations, it’s difficult to tell whether the mental and emotional relief some people feel by praying stems from practically casting their cares upon another being, or whether the relief is provided by a metaphysical God intervening and lifting the mental load.

Previous studies have associated prayer with a sense of calmness, peace, encouragement or social support.

“We are now quite aware that psychological experiences are intimately associated with important physiological processes, including immune system functioning,” Masters said. “To the extent that prayer can impact those psychological processes we have, potentially, naturalistic explanations for how prayer could impact health.”

People pray for several reasons, said Dr. Christina Puchalski, a professor of medicine and health science at The George Washington University and director of The George Washington University Institute for Spirituality and Health.

They pray for specific outcomes; to share their angst and suffering in a relational context; to show gratitude; and to reflect, she said. Prayer can foster a sense of connection, whether it’s to a higher power, what a person finds important in life or their values, said Ryan Bremner, an associate professor of psychology at the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota. Prayer can reduce feelings of isolation, anxiety and fear as well.

A 2009 study on the effects of prayer on depression and anxiety found that members of a group had lower rates of depression and anxiety and were more optimistic after sessions in which they prayed for one another, compared to the control group (which had no prayer sessions).

Prayer vs. meditation

Prayer and meditation can have a lot in common, Bremner said. Both might increase mindfulness and prevent excessive worry.

But they’re systematically different, as prayer entails working through thoughts and circumstances while meditation focuses on clearing the mind. Prayer also implies the context of a relationship with a higher being rather than a solitary journey, Puchalski said. Praying within a relationship with God that feels loving and supportive may help with managing stress and life’s challenges.

A study that compared secular and spiritual forms of meditation found that the spiritual meditation group was less anxious and more positive than the other groups. In secular meditation, participants centred on words or texts of self-affirmation. The spiritual meditation group focused on words that described the loving nature of God.

Prayer can reduce anger and aggression

A 2011 study found prayer can help reduce anger and aggression. In a series of experiments in which participants either prayed for or thought about a stranger, a person who angered them or a friend in need, members of the prayer group were more likely to feel less anger and aggression after a provocation.

Another study found that when dating and married partners prayed for one another, they tended to be less aggressive and more inclined to forgive.

“Prayer may help people see situations ‘in a new light’ or from a different perspective,” Ohio State University’s Bushman, co-author of the 2011 study, said.

And behaviour exhibited when praying is the opposite of entering the fight-or-flight response when there is danger or conflict, said Bremner, who was the first author of the 2011 study. When you perceive danger, you’re keyed up and focused on the external world. When you pray, you’re internally focused and attempting to be calm and peaceful.

However, all types of prayer might not work in the same way — when hospitalized patients appraised God as a kind supporter, their mental and physical health improved. But when they perceived God as punishing or were angry with God, their health declined.

What future studies need, according to experts

In addition to research interest and funding, a few different methods could potentially make a quality study on the effects of belief in prayer on psychological health, Masters said.

Longitudinal studies — which follow people over time and collect data at several points — are necessary to determine whether prayer promotes good or poor health, or which came first. Praying more could be associated with vitality if it keeps the person calm and centred, or with illness if the person prays because he’s sick and worried.

Studies could measure physiological factors as well, to determine whether prayer facilitates a physiological process predictive of health outcomes. Ecological momentary assessment studies, which allow people to virtually record actions in real-time, would help when seeking associations between prayer and health on a regular basis.

(This article originally appeared on CNN)

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