Note that I've pieced this story together from multiple postings, so I'm the one at fault if it's at all disjointed. I tried to fit things together without actually changing anything John wrote:
I am a musician who was hired for a five night gig which turned out to be a healing evangelist. I played for half-an-hour per night, then left the “show” to eat, returning to collect my gear at the end of the evening. That meant that I was in a position to observe the goings on for twenty minutes or so each evening while I waited for it to end.
"Okay, so how does an event like this unfold?" I wondered, very nervous after being let in only forty-five minutes ahead of the audience, to set up our gear and do our sound checks.
It began with the local pastor introducing the "healer" and calling out that "god loves a willing giver" so as to get the money collection going. The "healer" then came over to us to ask us to play a song while people dance and gave money. He asked something like " Can you play Dum do wo do sunshine god, whoa, yes lord?"
That was the point where I was thinking this was going to be a gig like no other. Just to mention that I have studied violin for 45 years, classical, bluegrass, country, jazz. But. No. No don't know that song. Anyway we hacked something together with a little rhythm to it.
After that the "healer" just starts to do a John Edward kind of thing, calling out really obvious concerns in this manner: "I can feel that someone here has family troubles".
When he has about twenty people all standing at the front of the hall he starts going along to them, one after another, staring at them closely, yelling really loudly at them and pushing them, in many cases they fall right back. Right back into the arms of the fortuitously positioned ushers.
The first night I thought it was a pure entertainment for those involved. There seems to be a general amusement at the goings on. For example the "healer" would call out: "I feel that there is someone out there who can't sleep!" Even easier was when he would call for those who had "family problems" or "concerns for a loved one".
The thing is, that first night, I thought of the evening's events as being the very definition of theatre: "the willing suspension of disbelief". It seemed like fun, an amusement, everyone laughed when he said things like: "Sell your house" or "throw away your diabetes medication".
I never dreamed anyone would take it seriously. ... Really it was all so funny, and everyone was just cracking up throughout the evening. Really having what looked to me to be a lot of fun.
But John decided to get some phone numbers and check back with a few of the believers to see if they felt they'd really been healed.
My follow up focused on six believers and their outcomes over a six month period. With contact initiated by me at 30 days, 90 days and 180 days.
My six case studies had the following afflictions: 2 people with diabetes, one with cancer, one wheelchair bound with arthritis, and two with undiagnosed conditions - one with a sore shoulder, one with problems sleeping.
I asked each of them the following questions:
Did you observe, or feel any changes during the healing?
Did you follow the advice, or direction given by the "healer"?
Do you believe you were healed?
If yes to the above question is there any medical evidence of healing?
Do you believe anyone else was healed?
I wanted only yes and no questions to keep it as simple as possible.
Summary:
After one month 4 of 6 respondents claimed to having been healed.
After three months, only the cancer patient claimed to have been cured. Quote: "My doctor told me it's a miracle, there is no medical explanation for my complete recovery!"
After six months, not one subject claimed that they were healed. However most respondents claimed that OTHER people had been healed.
The only person who claimed to have medical evidence is now in his last days, succumbing to various cancers throughout his body.
What can I say? It's perfectly natural that people in pain hope for a miracle cure. And it's not surprising that most of them might think there's some improvement after that elaborate charade.
Partly, that's due to the placebo effect, and partly because illnesses regularly have ups and downs. As this tragic story shows, even cancer goes into spontaneous remission on occasion, though that doesn't always last.
And yet, though none of these people were cured by this faith healer, they all thought that other people had been healed. I wish John had asked them if they'd go again, or recommend the faith healer to others. I suspect that they would.
Believe it or not I originally had 7 questions and trimmed it to 5, (still being a total of ninety questions over the six month period). The two questions I trimmed off were: Would you go again? and would you recommend the faith healer to others? !!!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteJohn Palmer
I have always had a long-time "squick" for faith healing and other practices. Mostly because it's not any different (and a lot less honest) than the psychic/mystic/pagan equivalents, and a feel that denying this just makes the person doing the denying look incredibly stupid to me.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Rena, for my new word of the day. I had to google "squick." :)
ReplyDeleteBut yes, I agree that it's appropriate here.