Dr. Pete Sulack writes:
I want to share something this week that sits right where faith and science meet.
Researchers gathered eighty-nine randomized controlled trials, the gold-standard kind, and asked a question I find fascinating: can calming the mind actually change the body’s immune system? The analysis was published last year, pulling together decades of research.
The finding: mind-body practices like meditation, prayerful stillness, and slow breathing measurably lowered inflammation and improved immune function. Not in theory. In bloodwork.
Here’s the mechanism, because it matters. When we live in chronic stress, the body floods with cortisol and adrenaline. Those hormones are useful in a real emergency. But when they never switch off, they quietly suppress the immune system. They lower the activity of your natural killer cells, the very cells whose job is to find and clear abnormal cells. They tilt the whole body toward inflammation.
So fear is not only a feeling. It has a chemistry. And that chemistry works against the terrain.
Here’s what moved me. The reverse is also true. In one clinical trial, patients who practiced just thirty minutes of guided stillness three times a week saw significant drops in C-reactive protein, one of the main markers of inflammation in the body. Thirty minutes. Three times a week.
For the audience reading this, I think this is some of the most hopeful science there is. You may not be able to control your diagnosis or your next scan. But you can decide whether your nervous system spends the whole day in a war it does not need to fight.
This is why faith has always been my first pillar, not my last. When Scripture says be anxious for nothing, that is not only spiritual comfort. Peace is medicine your body can read.
So here is your invitation today. Ten quiet minutes. Sit with a Psalm, or your breath, or simple gratitude. No phone. Let your shoulders drop. You are not wasting time. You are lowering inflammation and telling your body it is safe.
I’ll be praying for you today.
Standing with you,
Dr. Pete Sulack







