NiceCupOfTea
Pathetic earthlings
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Prayer, magick, spells, witchcraft etc, are these all labels for the same thing the power of belief ?
Prayer, magick, spells, witchcraft etc, are these all labels for the same thing the power of belief ?
I'm not sure that belief is really what we are talking about. Maybe there are similarities but sometimes people pray without believing.
Can you give an example where someone prays without believing? What would be the point of that? Isn't that just talking to yourself? Or if someone prays without believing is that really just another form of meditation?
Praying without believing can work --- if there is someone listening. People can pray without believing and then become believers as a result, or not. It happens. I think in modern times it has become problematic to tell congregants that belief is necessary for them to pray. The meanings of words have changed so that now belief (instead of faithfulness) has become a matter of obedience, which is backwards.Iowaguy said:Can you give an example where someone prays without believing? What would be the point of that? Isn't that just talking to yourself? Or if someone prays without believing is that really just another form of meditation?
'Prayer' incorporates more than 'Believing prayer'. Sometimes a prayer isn't a request at all but merely being thankful and not necessarily to a divine being. It doesn't preclude a non-response though.I'm no expert on witchcraft, but it seems to me that all these examples require "belief" in order to have any perceived effect by those participating in them; either those doing the prayer/spell/magick, or those on the receiving end of the prayer/spell/magick.
You find solid ground in saying there is placebo effect. Yes, there can be that effect and I've seen it. Not all prayers are believing prayers and perhaps not all believing prayers have a placebo effect.Everyone I know that prays believes someone/something is listening and may respond. This is what creates the placebo effect/self-fulfilling prophecy, IMHO. This self-fulfilling prophecy can also work on the receiving end, i.e. if someone believes that others are praying on their behalf.
If you do not believe yet you pray, then there is the possibility for someone to answer the prayer -- or not. That is the 'Benefit' of praying without believing. Believing while you pray is a different kind of prayer.If they didn't believe then what is the benefit of prayer? I don't believe in prayer/deities, so when my sister tells me she's praying for me I don't attribute any perceived benefits in my life to her praying; while a fellow church member of hers might.
I'm not a college graduate, but here is what I think at the moment.What do you see as the difference between meditation and prayer from a believer's standpoint and non-believer's standpoint?
Sometimes a prayer isn't a request at all but merely being thankful and not necessarily to a divine being.
Praying without believing can work --- if there is someone listening......perhaps not all believing prayers have a placebo effect.....If you do not believe yet you pray, then there is the possibility for someone to answer the prayer
Would you say that your sister is a member of one of these types of meetings?
I'm adding you to my collection. If you view my posts, you can see I'm an author who's been quoted internationally by many esteemed persons, including yourself.Radarmark said:"Maybe there are similarities but sometimes people pray without believing. With prayer there is an awareness that someone is listening or may be listening and respond." Dream.
I understand what you are saying, yet there is a difference in expecting something to happen and being neutral. The awareness would be a sort of belief, but you could also pray even without that. Some people do.If you are defining prayer in the second sentence, the first one is a contradiction.
I will clarify what I meant to say. It is possible to pray with words only and without believing. I think this is much more common than it would be to cast a spell without believing, unless you count being alive as a spell and so forth. Its nearly impossible to compare spells to anything, because people who 'Cast spells' often don't like to classify them as they seem to think it has a dampening or mixing effect and view naming as a type of spell casting -- if there are types. You have to come up with your own definition of what spells are.If one is aware, this implies belief if aware means "conscious of".
I see where you're going. So a prayer without belief would be meditation? That is a convenient definition if you want to say that prayers and spells are the same thing. Many spell casters and prayer practitioners would disagree if you put that into a dictionary.If it is prayer and not meditation or comptemplation, then one must be aware (which implies belief) IMHO. Like IG says, praying w/o belief (specifically in something to listen and perhaps respond) is either talking to yourself (I did that a lot in chrch as a kid, lo these many years ago, or some form of meditation or comptemplation.
I hope I'm not missing your point, addressing a different subject than you or getting off track. Meditation and contemplation are new concepts for me. So are spells and to a lesser degree, prayers.So "prayer, magick, spells, witchcraft etc" are a form of the power of belief if yoiu use "prayer" the way I think you mean to. Meditation and comptemplation are something else I think.
In SBC churches the pastor's position and salary traditionally are controlled by votes, and the new worship formats give pastors extra persuasive ability that hymns can't provide. It used to be that Southern Baptists traditionally sang hymns and focused on fellowship, but many pastors lately have been adopting modern worship formats since the mid-80's and paying 'Worship leaders' instead of organists.IowaGuy said:I hope not (I haven't been to her new church since she recently moved) but some of your descriptions do fit a conservative Southern Baptist worship service. And sometimes folks speak in tongues in Southern Baptist services, which I have always thought a little strange... Maybe they are being hypnotized just before the offering tray is passed around
podium-centered
Like having a low end job with no possibility of promotion.Reminds me of teacher-centered: do not question and I will write upon your blank slates everything you need to know.
I think if we remove the God thing from prayer, we can clearly see what prayer really is, a technique for implanting positive suggestions in our minds, another form of Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP). Prayer is also a form of meditation and capable of neuroplasticity (the ability to change how the brain functions).Prayer, magick, spells, witchcraft etc, are these all labels for the same thing the power of belief ?
I think if we remove the God thing from prayer, we can clearly see what prayer really is, a technique for implanting positive suggestions in our minds, another form of Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP). Prayer is also a form of meditation and capable of neuroplasticity (the ability to change how the brain functions).
NLP uses Self image and attitude towards illness to effect change and to promote healing. Hope is our greatest asset. It is one of the main reasons why placebos (sugar pills used in clinical studies) work.
Today's prayers are basically rote recitations or simple wish-making. Originally, prayer was a process of concentrated visualization combined with emotional and mental energy, all made manifest into the physical through proper vocalization.
Prayer is indeed a form of invocation, which is a form of Magick as it unites our meditative state of consciousness with the power of the Word and with our innate force of Will. Magick (not to be confused with magic which is an entertainment based on deception and illusion) is "the Science and Art of causing Change to occur in conformity with Will".