• Welcome to Tamil Brahmins forums.

    You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our Free Brahmin Community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.

Prayer Is Useless, and Has a Downside

The idea of God, master of the universe, that intervenes at the plea of prayer is logically not possible. Natures laws are always true and does not make exceptions. Mr Sangom made such cases more forcefully and I agree with his views

It is one thing for a scripture to teach right behavior for peace and harmony. It is another thing for that God to intervene and lay out laws via some messenger as to how life has to be lived. These conflict with other beliefs and even conflict with laws of state.

All these beliefs driven by religions of the world are the cause of major wars and destruction.

I have no issues with Bhakthi as described in the Bhaja Govindam thread to the extent I understand.
 
I am a firm believer in Brahman, Advaita philosophy.
I am a member of Chinmaya Mission and past chairman of the Hindu Temple.
I used to debate with Mr. Sangom, (who I respected for his knowledge) when he used to claim that he was a nastika.

This post is not anti-Hinduism alone, as this charade is practiced across all religions.



While the main purpose of prayer may be to help others, it never demonstrably does that. Prayers benefit only those believers who say or hear them. Prayer gives them comfort. It lets them think they have some control over a situation that may be out of their hands. It’s the last resort of people who have run out of ideas, and the first resort of people who never bothered to think about how they could actually fix the problem at hand.This is not harmless. There’s a very real downside to praying. It lulls believers into a false sense of accomplishment. We cannot solve our problems – much less the world’s – through prayer. We often see people with good intentions praying for victims in the wake of a tragedy, but prayer is useless without action, and those actions make the prayers irrelevant. To paraphrase the great Robert Green Ingersoll, hands that help are far better than lips that pray.

I have no problem with “prayer” as an act of meditation. In fact, many atheists can tell you the benefit of silent self-reflection. The delusion occurs when you think someone else is hearing your thoughts and acting on them.

When it comes down to it, prayer is illogical, even in religious terms. If God has a plan, why try to thwart it? If God can be swayed by prayers, what kind of God would allow the horrors we see in the world? And if two devout believers pray for different things, how does God choose the winner? (I'm sure the San Antonio Spurs would love to know the answer to that.)

Prayer is nothing but a powerful placebo. We’d all be better off accepting that.

I fully agree that We need to know who we are And who is God to whom we are praying and the relationship that exists between the two to get the full benefits of prayer.
It is impossible to deny the power of prayers and results are proportional to the faith the subject brings to the table. Now, faith itself is pooh pooches by the intelligentsia as a tool of the week and lazy. But matter of fact Faith is such a powerful instrument that it takes a lot of work to develop it.

I simply could not pray despite knowing its value as long as I did not know the answers to the questions I listed above. Now I enjoy my prayers. Not only that. The quality of my demands has tremendously transformed. I'm now praying more for the intangible gifts such as humility and love. I'm instantly replied to with a powerful dash of love. Would you believe. Everyone can and should do it.
 
I fully agree that We need to know who we are And who is God to whom we are praying and the relationship that exists between the two to get the full benefits of prayer.
It is impossible to deny the power of prayers and results are proportional to the faith the subject brings to the table. Now, faith itself is pooh pooches by the intelligentsia as a tool of the week and lazy. But matter of fact Faith is such a powerful instrument that it takes a lot of work to develop it.

I simply could not pray despite knowing its value as long as I did not know the answers to the questions I listed above. Now I enjoy my prayers. Not only that. The quality of my demands has tremendously transformed. I'm now praying more for the intangible gifts such as humility and love. I'm instantly replied to with a powerful dash of love. Would you believe. Everyone can and should do it.

I too once upon a time seeked answers but only when I didnt have questions i actually started to pray.
I dont ask anything but just accept what is destined for me.
 
I am a firm believer in Brahman, Advaita philosophy.
I am a member of Chinmaya Mission and past chairman of the Hindu Temple.
I used to debate with Mr. Sangom, (who I respected for his knowledge) when he used to claim that he was a nastika.

This post is not anti-Hinduism alone, as this charade is practiced across all religions.



While the main purpose of prayer may be to help others, it never demonstrably does that. Prayers benefit only those believers who say or hear them. Prayer gives them comfort. It lets them think they have some control over a situation that may be out of their hands. It’s the last resort of people who have run out of ideas, and the first resort of people who never bothered to think about how they could actually fix the problem at hand.This is not harmless. There’s a very real downside to praying. It lulls believers into a false sense of accomplishment. We cannot solve our problems – much less the world’s – through prayer. We often see people with good intentions praying for victims in the wake of a tragedy, but prayer is useless without action, and those actions make the prayers irrelevant. To paraphrase the great Robert Green Ingersoll, hands that help are far better than lips that pray.

I have no problem with “prayer” as an act of meditation. In fact, many atheists can tell you the benefit of silent self-reflection. The delusion occurs when you think someone else is hearing your thoughts and acting on them.

When it comes down to it, prayer is illogical, even in religious terms. If God has a plan, why try to thwart it? If God can be swayed by prayers, what kind of God would allow the horrors we see in the world? And if two devout believers pray for different things, how does God choose the winner? (I'm sure the San Antonio Spurs would love to know the answer to that.)

Prayer is nothing but a powerful placebo. We’d all be better off accepting that.

Even if it is a placebo, it is the best alternative when you feel helpless. No use in quoting Ingersol or any other athiests. It is often said "More things are wrought by prayer"
 
I too once upon a time seeked answers but only when I didnt have questions i actually started to pray.
I dont ask anything but just accept what is destined for me.
There is no destiny - it is imaginations of religion - contribution of Islam
There is no free will either - Imagination of religion - contribution of Christianity

Just be in the present moment - no need to worry or accept anything
 
Even if it is a placebo, it is the best alternative when you feel helpless. No use in quoting Ingersol or any other athiests. It is often said "More things are wrought by prayer"

I am not arguing against prayer for self-satisfaction.
What I am saying is that prayer for more material benefits, Health, world pease, etc.
 

Latest ads

Back
Top