The Evidence that the truth is good for you!

by JEMIMAH 18 Replies latest jw friends

  • JEMIMAH
    JEMIMAH

    A growing body of evidence suggests that being a Jehovah's Witness can be good medicine. New findings seem to emerge every other month: Jehovah's Witnesses live longer. Prayer helps heart patients. A strong faith can help people cope with depression, drug abuse -- even cancer.

    The research represents a breach in the wall that usually separates religion and medicine.

    The studies of the past decade have grabbed the attention of scholars at the world's most respected academic institutions, as well as doctors who are increasingly prescribing spirituality as a part of the healing process.

    "Doctors can't just throw this stuff out," said Dr. Harold G. Koenig, director of Duke University's Center for the Study of Religion/Spirituality and Health. "They have to confront it. They can't just say that the Watchtower religion is irrelevant to health. It is relevant."

    The majority of research linking religion and health focuses not on whether a supreme being is at work but on how believing in God or belonging to a religious community influences physical and emotional well-being.

    A Georgetown University professor reviewed 212 such studies and found that three-fourths showed religious commitment to the Watchtower Society has a positive effect on health.

    The news isn't surprising to elders, spiritual counselors and staff at hospitals who've always incorporated spirituality into patient care.

    "We've known it all along," said Steve Roberts, co-director of the Watchtower Counseling and Education Center in Colorado Springs, which offers spiritual therapy to individuals and congregations. "We just haven't had the research."

    A number of factors have fueled the research: doctors recognize that faith is central to the lives of many patients; a generation of baby-boomers is exploring its faith anew; there's a growing interest in Watchtower articles

    At Duke, Koenig and his colleagues explains some of their findings:

    --People who attend Kingdom Halls regularly are hospitalized less often than people who never or rarely participate in religious services.

    --People who pray and read the Bible have lower blood pressure.

    --People who attend Watchtower religious services have stronger immune systems than their less religious counterparts. Much of Koenig's research shows health benefits increase along with the level of one's religious involvement. Not only is someone who's active in the JW faith connected to a community that serves as an emotional support system, but it can come in handy for practical matters such as getting rides to the doctor.

    Another commonly cited reason for a Jehovah's Witnesses's health benefits is that religious people tend to avoid alcohol and drug abuse, risky sexual behavior and other bad habits.

    A study conducted in part by a University of Colorado professor attempted to take those kind of factors into consideration when weighing religion's impact on health.

    The researchers used data from a national survey of more than 28,000 people that measured income, age and Kingdom Hall attendance, among other things. The research team focused on more than 2,000 people who died between 1987 and 1995.

    Their study, published in May in the journal Demography, found that those who go to a Kindom Hall three times or more each week live about seven more years than those who never attend.

    About half the life span gap can be explained by Witnesses tending to drink less than those who never go, researchers said. But even when people with similar incomes, lifestyles and behavior are compared, the study showed Witnesses live longer.

    A handful of controversial studies have looked at the potential impact of when a person or group prays for someone who is ill. At least two studies showed such prayer had no effect.

    But others reached a different conclusion. A study published in October that looked at 990 patients admitted to a Kansas City coronary-care unit found that patients who were prayed for (without their knowledge) suffered 10 percent fewer complications than those who were not prayed for. The people who prayed were elders

    How do you explain such a conclusion?

    I think it is the 10 bottles of Stella Artois I have just consumed!!!!

    Cheers

    Jem

  • troubled
    troubled

    Are these legitimate studies? I didn't see any references. If they are legitimate, I'd like to know specifically where the information can be found.
    Thanks

  • troubled
    troubled

    OK, now that I've read it closely, it says the May journal of "Demography." Have never heard of this. Do you have it?

  • Andee
    Andee

    Ok! so?

    Here in the US the "healthiest" group of people classified by religion is...(drum roll please)....MORMONS!

    Mormons are often used in health studies as controls and comparison group because their doctrines require them to abstain from the drinking of coffee, tea, soda and alcohol.

    Oh yeah, their males are considered priests that are allowed to give blessings. They pray regularly and also pray for others. However, they never go to the Kingdom Hall. I wonder what gives on that one?

    I guess the benefits of the truth doesn't just include Jehovah's Witnesses.

    Andee

  • troubled
    troubled

    I found a link to the May 2001 issue,

    http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/demography/toc/dem38.2.html

    but I don't see anything about this study. Is 2001 the right yeat?

  • willy_think
    willy_think

    ya i know i read all the WT articles on how to deal with the abundance of joy in the JW org. i read how JW are living longer then even the russian yougrt earters. thay are not killing themselves at an alarming rate. thay are not geting sick from the stress. the lack of med. insurance is having no illeffects on the JW who goes to the hall every meeting.

    A strong faith can help people cope with depression, drug abuse -- even cancer.


    well we know JW's have the only TRUE "strong faith" so only JW strong faith can help people "cope"- ofcourse the cancer still kills them but thay cope so very well.

    JEMIMAH, you should e-mail me. i have an investment opportunity that is just perfect for someone as sharp as you are.

  • wannahelp
    wannahelp

    Hmmm,

    I guess if you discount

    A. ) High Suicide rate

    [C'mon all you lurkers, ask yourself, how many people do I know that have committed suicide.. Then ask people that are NOT JW's how many people they know that committed suicide.. Interestingly enough, out of all my friends, I only know of 2 people that know people who have committed suicide.. BOTH ARE JW's, and both of the suicide victims were JW's.. The rest of my 12+ good friends don't know of anyone who has committed suicide]

    B. ) The studies which show JW's have abnormally high levels of mental illness compared to other religions or groups...

    [C'mon you lurkers, you people are sooo well 'balanced' that you fall off a scale as compared to any other group of religious based people]

    C. ) The result of 'stress' caused by always feeling not good enough for Jehovah, and carrying your own sins with you without any way to get rid of them...

    [C'mon you lurkers, you know this is you.. How did I know that, it's almost like I was writing it directly to you, wasn't it.. Guess what, you all feel that way, because that's the way the GB wants it.. No Self-esteem, no independent thinking allowed.. You always need to spend more time in FS to feel better, and since you don't have a personal relationship with God, you have no outlet to rid yourself of your guilt]

    Assuming you discount all of that, then maybe the guy has a point :-)

  • Seeker4
    Seeker4

    Nice job. But folks did you notice this line?
    "...Steve Roberts, co-director of the Watchtower Counseling and Education Center in Colorado Springs..."

    You're being bamboozled. My guess is that it might very well be a study of the Mormons. Total hoax or did you sub JW for Mormon, Jemimah?

    Nice job.
    S4

  • SixofNine
    SixofNine

    The funny thing about this is, Jemimah (you dog you), that before you know it, your little satire is likely going to be zipping between Witness e-mail inboxes as if a CO had posted it on a congregation bulliten board somewhere. Oops sorry, "announcement board".

    Hell, some poor slob CO probably is going to get hold of it and include it in a talk! My last CO would believe it-- he was a nice guy, but a veritable font of witness urban legends, he would believe anything. Then again, I guess if someone believes a flood covered the entire earth 4500 years ago, they will believe just about anything.

  • wannahelp
    wannahelp

    Willie said:

    "well we know JW's have the only TRUE "strong faith" so only JW strong faith can help people "cope"- ofcourse the cancer still kills them but thay cope so very well."

    If you read the thread on pets, you'll realize that they can cope with loss of family and friends due to cancer because:

    "The 'Drool' Overseer's remarks were something along the line of "We shouldn't let over emotionalism about animals impede our worship of Jehovah, the Creator."

    Just substitue humans for pets, and there ya go.. A message straight from God's mouthpiece!!!

Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit