
HOW PRAYER ACCELERATES THE TREATMENT OF THE SICK
Your Lord says, "Call on Me and I will answer
you. Those who are too proud to worship Me will enter Hell abject."
(Qur'an, 40:60)
According
to the Qur'an, prayer, meaning "calling, giving expression, requesting,
seeking help," is a person's turning sincerely to Allah, and seeking
help from Him, the Almighty, the Compassionate and Merciful, in
the knowledge that he is a dependent being. Illness is one of those
instances when a person feels this dependence most and draws closer
to Allah. Furthermore, sickness is a test, devised in His Wisdom,
that takes place by His Will, and is a warning to remind people
of the transience and imperfection of this life, and is also a source
of recompense in the Hereafter for the patient and submissive.
Those without faith, on the other hand, imagine that the way to
recovery is through doctors, medicines or the advanced technological
capabilities of modern science. They never pause to think that it
is Allah Who causes their physical system to function when they
are in good health, or Who creates the healing medicines and doctors
when they are ill. Many turn only to Allah when they arrive at the
opinion that doctors and medicines are inadequate. People in such
situations seek help only from Allah, realising that only He can
free them from their difficulty. Allah has revealed this mindset
in a verse:
When harm touches man, he calls on Us, lying
on his side or sitting down or standing up. Then when We remove
the harm from him he carries on as if he had never called on Us
when the harm first touched him. In that way We make what they
have done appear good to the profligate. (Qur'an, 10:12)
The fact is, however, that even in good health, or without tribulations
or other difficulties, a person must pray and give thanks to Allah
for the comforts, good health and all the other blessings He has
imparted.
One very important aspect of prayer is this: In addition to praying
out loud, it is also important for a person to make every effort
to pray through his or her deeds. Prayer by action means doing everything
possible to attain a certain wish. For example, in addition to praying,
a sick person may also have to visit an expert doctor, use medicines
that will be of benefit, and receive hospital treatment if necessary,
or some other form of special care. Because, Allah has linked everything
that happens in this world to specific causes. Everything in the
world and in the universe happens in accordance with these causes.
Therefore, the individual must take the requisite measures in accordance
with these causes, and yet await the outcome from Allah, with humility,
submission and patience, in the knowledge that it is He Who brings
about their results.
The positive effect of faith and prayer on the sick and the way
these accelerate treatment is a matter that has attracted the attention
of and is recommended by doctors. Under the heading "God and Health:
Is Religion Good Medicine? Why Science Is Starting to Believe,"
the 10 November, 2003, edition of the famous magazine Newsweek
took the curative effect of religion as its cover story. It reported
that faith in God raised people's morale and helped them recover
more easily, and that science had also begun to believe that people
with religious faith recover more easily and quickly. According
to a Newsweek survey, 72% of Americans say they believe
that praying can cure someone and that prayer facilitates recovery.
Research in Great Britain and the USA has also concluded that prayer
reduces patients' symptoms and accelerates the recovery process.
According to research conducted at Michigan University, depression
and stress are observed to lesser extent in the devout. And, according
to findings at Rush University in Chicago, the early death rate
among people who worship and pray regularly is some 25% lower than
in those with no religious convictions. Another study conducted
on 750 people, who underwent angiocardiography, proved scientifically
the "curative power of prayer." It was established that the death
rate among heart patients who prayed decreased by 30% within a year
after their operations.
Examples of the prayers mentioned in the Qur'an are:
And Ayyub when he called out to his Lord, "Great
harm has afflicted me and You are the Most Merciful of the merciful,"
We responded to him and removed from him the harm which was afflicting
him and restored his family to him, and the same again with them,
as a mercy direct from Us and a Reminder to all worshippers. (Qur'an,
21:83)
And Dhu'n-Nun [Yunus] when he left in anger and
thought We would not punish him. He called out in the pitch darkness:
"There is no god but You! Glory be to You! Truly I have been one
of the wrongdoers." We responded to him and rescued him from his
grief. That is how We rescue the believers. (Qur'an, 21:87-88)
And Zakariyya when he called out to his Lord,
"My Lord, do not leave me on my own, though You are the Best of
Inheritors." We responded to him and gave him Yahya, restoring
for him his wife's fertility. They outdid one another in good
actions, calling out to Us in yearning and in awe, and humbling
themselves to Us. (Qur'an, 21:89-90)
Nuh called out to Us and what an excellent Responder
We are! (Qur'an, 37:75)
As has already been stated, prayer must not only be for alleviation
of sickness, or other mundane problems. A sincere believer must
always pray to Allah and accept whatever comes from Him. The fact
that the benefits of prayer revealed in many verses of the Qur'an
are now being recognised scientifically, once again reveals the
miraculous nature of the Qur'an.
If My servants ask you about Me, I am near. I
answer the call of the caller when he calls on Me. They should
therefore respond to Me and believe in Me so that hopefully they
will be rightly guided. (Qur'an, 2:186)
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