Showing posts with label prayer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prayer. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Nurse suspended for offering to pray

Sad, Sad World... when a woman can get suspended from her job for offering to prayer, not saying a prayer, but just offering. If someone doesn't believe in the power of prayer, then simply decline. Why must the atheist require that everyone else to conform to their non-belief? Why is just offering offensive????

I had Lasik surgery on my eyes almost 8 years ago. The surgeon I went to was Jewish (I am not Jewish). He offered to pray before the surgery as this is something he prefers to do before all of his surgeries. He does many surgeries daily, and he's a very skilled and experienced surgeon, but none the less he relies on God for guidance, inspiration, and assistance. He told me that if a patient objects, then he won't pray. This was the first time a doctor had ever offered to do this for me. I was so touched and impressed. I appreciated the prayer as I had said many prayers in the morning (myself) before coming in for surgery. It didn't matter to me that he was Jewish (and not Christian). Should I have been offended because he offered me a "Jewish" prayer and I am a Christian and don't believe exactly the same as he does? I think not. That is just silly. You don't need to have exactly the same beliefs of every little religious detail to come together and pray for a common purpose. & If you don't believe in prayer (a difference of of belief), then should one be offended because someone offers to pray? I think not.

I don't smoke or drink. Yet, every time I go to a restaurant, the waiters or waitresses offer me wine. Should I be offended? Should those waiters/waitresses be suspended from work for offering me something that I don't believe in or use??? I think not. What a crazy world...


excerpts from World Net Daily: Woman offers to ask God's help to heal patient, gets suspended

"A Christian nurse in Britain may soon be fired for offering to pray for her patients' recovery.

Caroline Petrie has been suspended and faces disciplinary action because her employer claims she failed to show a "personal and professional commitment to equality and diversity" when she suggested the prayer, the London Telegraph reported.

Petrie, 45, a wife and mother of two, is a community nurse who works for North Somerset Primary Care Trust. As part of her job, she visits patients who are sick and elderly. Petrie said she never forced her Christian beliefs on any of her patients but simply asked if an elderly woman would appreciate the blessing.

"I simply couldn't believe that I have been suspended over this," she told the Telegraph. "I knew I hadn't done anything wrong. All I am trying to do is help my patients, many of whom want me to pray for them."

Petrie visited the elderly woman, a resident in Winscombe, North Somerset, in December.

"It was around lunchtime and I had spent about 20 to 25 minutes with her," the nurse said. "I had applied dressings to her legs and shortly before I left I said to her: 'Would you like me to pray for you?'"

The patient said, "No, thank you." ....

The nurse told the Telegraph that she has been a Christian since she was only 10 – following her mother's tragic death from breast cancer.

"My faith is very important to me," she said. ...

"My concern is for the person as a whole, not just their health," she said. "I was told not to force my faith on anyone but I could respond if patients themselves brought up the subject [of religion]."

In the most recent incident, the elderly woman claims she was not insulted by the gesture, but that she is concerned other patients might take offense."

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Praying for the New President

This is a really insightful article on how we can pray for our President Elect when we know he stands for and supports evil. This has been a hard one for me, Ed Vitagliano from OneNewsNow writes a beautiful explanation of what we Christians can and should do.
"Just what does it mean to pray for our leaders? In 1 Timothy 2:1-3 the Apostle Paul urges "that entreaties and prayer, petitions and thanksgivings, be made on behalf of all men, for kings and all who are in authority, in order that we may lead a tranquil and quiet life in all godliness and dignity. This is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior...." ...

...In December it was made public that president-elect Barack Obama had tapped Rick Warren, evangelical pastor of Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, California, to give the invocation at the inauguration on January 20 in the nation's capital.


A ruckus immediately broke out, as some Christians criticized Warren for even accepting the invitation. For example, in an open letter to the Saddleback pastor, WorldNetDaily founder Joseph Farah blistered Warren. Farah stated his "profound and abject revulsion" at the fact that Warren would be giving the inaugural invocation.

Farah said he believed it was the responsibility of Christian leaders to "stand up to leaders, like Nathan did to King David," and confront them with God's truth. Specifically Farah said that meant that Warren should be confronting Obama about the president-elect's unwavering support of abortion. ...

..."I'm sure you would not want to invoke God's blessing on the inauguration of a figure like Adolf Hitler, whose rise to power brought the destruction of millions of lives," Farah said.


Ah, the Hilter card. It's hard to top that one. (Even a Stalin card can't trump it.) But let's follow this argument. Obama is like Hitler because, while Hitler primarily slaughtered the Jews in the Holocaust, Obama's support for abortion is similarly evil.

Now I think the moral equivalency of the Holocaust and abortion is a good, defensible argument. Both objectified a category of human beings and then took horrifying steps to pursue their murder. The depths of evil connected to the Holocaust and abortion are equally difficult to comprehend.

However, Farah's argument contains a non sequitur. Just because one prays for Adolph Hitler does not mean the prayer is meant to "invoke God's blessing." One could, conceivably, pray for Hitler's conversion, or for God to prevent the man from carrying out his wicked plans.

Moreover, the Apostle Paul does not appear to restrict the command to pray for leaders in any way. He does not say, "Pray for good leaders, but not for bad leaders." In fact, one could make the argument that Christians have more reason to pray for wicked leaders than good ones.

Thus, it would be the content of the prayer that would be decisive on January 20. If Rick Warren asks God to give Barack Obama success in every endeavor – which would include Obama's quite clearly expressed plans to push both abortion and the gay agenda – then Warren would be wrong to do so.

But if Warren prays for God to give Barack Obama wisdom and compassion, if he asks God to protect Obama and his family from harm, if he prays for God to give the new president a heart that responds to the leading of the Holy Spirit, is that a wrong prayer?

The vicious Nero was emperor when Paul wrote 1 Timothy 2 – the same Nero, ironically, who, according to Christian tradition, ordered the execution of Paul and the Apostle Peter. If Paul could urge Christians to pray for Nero, then we can certainly pray for Barack Obama.

And so can Rick Warren."