Response from A Christian reflection on the New Age, and the official document from the Vatican. (They do not open in a new window).
Note: New Age is defined by the Vatican as "ancient Egyptian occult practices, Cabbalism, early Christian gnosticism, Sufism, the lore of the Druids, Celtic Christianity, mediaeval alchemy, Renaissance hermeticism, Zen Buddhism, Yoga and so on...(and) is not, properly speaking, a religion, but it is interested in what is called 'divine'...(with a) preference for Eastern or pre-Christian religions". This article will be using yoga as the subject when addressing the New Age movement.
I became a yogi before I became a Christian. And though I am now trying to become the best Catholic, a saint really, I don't want to turn my back on Eastern approaches to God, though I no longer practice yoga in any religious way. The Vatican accuses people like me of cherry-picking, but I know that I am true, and that there is no harm in growing as a physical and spiritual entity through both avenues. That said, New Age is very much closer on the side of the anti-Christ than not, and it has taken me years to learn how to balance what is outside of Christ, to bring me closer to Christ.
I started yoga strictly as a cross-trainer for dance, and I was only looking for something inexpensive, while being entirely oblivious to any sort of teaching. I found a class that ran for 10 weeks or so at a middle school that is supported through Toronto Parks and Recs. I sat in a dirty lunch room, completely disillusioned with what I assumed yoga was after seeing Madonna endorse it. I will never forget my future spiritual teacher telling us, "you have no idea what you signed up for". I then began the rest of my life.
Kundalini yoga taught me how to feel better about God through learning to be compassionate, through clarity, through strengthening my intuition by the training of mysticism; it taught me how to sit and meditate, which now helps with my Christian prayer life, it taught me about living holistically and to be a part of the environment, not against it; it even taught me to bless my food and to give thanks! It truly served my deepest and neglected spiritual needs, so after I achieved my desired flexibility, I stayed. I even went into teacher training; but it was there that I became Christian-bound, through no real choice of my own, but through God's.
It is important to note, that while I can understand why yoga is attracting so many people, I did not come from a church, so my eagerness might have been more susceptible to yogic philosophies than someone who is rooted in a Christian background.
Though I have heard for years that the body itself retains memories, I only realized during the recent Advent that the asanas (postures) in yoga heal our bodies on the unconscious level, because when we experience distress, our bodies store that information forever, even if we don’t always physically experience pain at that moment of burden. So asanas are specifically designed to release that stored up pain, in hope that when practiced honestly, we might release from our own limitations and become something greater than we are. And when we finish with a meditation and centre ourselves after the yoga (this is at least how it is practiced in kundalini), God will speak to us: he will give us clues to what we are seeking.
With my desire to practice yoga, and my desire to be a mystic in the Church, I am interested in what the Vatican says about the New Age worldview. Below are points that the Church documents against yoga, with my response.
Argument: Yoga is an “either/or” system - that we must choose between Christ or Aquarian (Age of Aquarius).
Response: I too once believed that it was either yoga or Jesus. This either/or teaching does seem to be a problem in that yoga is supposed to be of healing and reconciliation, however there is overt opposition to the Abrahamic religions, mostly Christianity, probably because a huge percentage of practitioners are (or were) Christians who feel (or felt) disconnected from God. Yoga teaches that secrets kept hidden for millennia will be revealed in the Age of Aquarius, (which is a move from the Age of Pisces, the sign of the fish (Jesus). But of course, Jesus said that all which is hidden will come to light as well.
Argument: New Age involves spiritual masters, and quotes Luke 16.13 which states that man can not have two masters.
Response: The very next sentence in this passage, in that same verse, clearly demonstrates that Jesus was talking about money! "You cannot be the slave of both God and of money." I find it discouraging and disingenuous to assume that we do not know better of the teaching.
Argument: i) New Age teaches a connection (or being “in tune”) with nature, ii) which blurs the lines between good and evil.
Response: i) Being in tune with nature is essential in winning God's praise, for he created a symbiotic world that requires our respect, and it's really for our own benefit.
ii) Yoga does in fact blur the lines between good and evil. In yoga we are taught that we are all-good, which of course makes us feel wonderful, but in truth, this is a dishonest teaching (and possibly even a technique used to attract us). Yoga does downplay our bad choices, and those choices such as murder, rape, sadism, and funding war while our neighbours starve, are beyond making "mistakes" - they are demonic. However yoga rejects Satan, and instead teaches that we need to release from our dualistic nature, which is a false teaching, for we are dual - life is a constant struggle of choosing good over bad.
Argument: Yoga gives tools to improve our way of life through self healing, which states that we have the power within ourselves, and thus do not need God's grace.
Response: I do not believe that yoga denies God, however the pantheistic belief in yoga does suggest that we are not dependent on his mercy. As in the Vatican's concern with the blurring of boundaries, there is also concern as to who or what God is in the New Age movement, possibly because it is an eclectic mix of belief systems that has furthermore been Westernized, and is still not defined as a religion. Since there is constant reference to divinity, there should be boundaries. Who are we in communion with? We should know this.
Argument: (copy and pasted from Wikipedia)
* Credence is given to the mediation of various spiritual entities
* Humans are assumed capable of ascending to invisible higher spheres
* A "perennial knowledge” pre-dates and is superior to all religions and cultures
* People are encouraged to follow enlightened masters.
Response: I will simply state here, and welcome argument, that this is identical to Christianity.
Argument: Yoga teaches that God is in us, and that we are one with God - that we have a divine "spark".
Response: Catholicism teaches that we once had immortality, but that we lost it when our first parents sinned in the Garden of Eden (ie. we lost our inheritance). God then came to us in the form of Jesus, to establish the sacrament of baptism, which washes away the Original Sin, re-opening our connection to God, and life everlasting.
Argument: Yoga teaches that God is in us, and that we are one with God - that we have a divine "spark".
Response: Catholicism teaches that we once had immortality, but that we lost it when our first parents sinned in the Garden of Eden (ie. we lost our inheritance). God then came to us in the form of Jesus, to establish the sacrament of baptism, which washes away the Original Sin, re-opening our connection to God, and life everlasting.
In closing, the real problem that the Vatican is facing, is that Christians are leaving their faith to pursue paganism, and that is concerning to the bride of Christ (the Church). People who are spiritually weak are leaving the Light of Christ to dabble in the occult, and that is dangerous.
But with yogis who can remain true to the Christ, we can still aspire to be as perfect as our Father in heaven, because yoga can be a tool to cultivate the gift of discernment, as given by the Holy Spirit, and help to release us from the evil that keeps us from righteousness. As the Vatican hopes might happen, it is possible that in response to the New Age movement, we can effectively spread the Good News once more, and I think, even better than before!
But with yogis who can remain true to the Christ, we can still aspire to be as perfect as our Father in heaven, because yoga can be a tool to cultivate the gift of discernment, as given by the Holy Spirit, and help to release us from the evil that keeps us from righteousness. As the Vatican hopes might happen, it is possible that in response to the New Age movement, we can effectively spread the Good News once more, and I think, even better than before!
St. John of the Cross, pray for us.
I'm not sure if people are leaving Christianity to practice paganism; it seems, to me at least, people are becoming more secular and non-religious, if not completely agnostic or atheists. These concerns the Church posits and you respond to are the type of questions I asked of myself, the brotherhood and priesthood before I decided to walk away from the Church. I could not reconcile what the Church taught with how I saw the world - or, to be more precise, the world was as it was at the time and I saw the Church was lost. It still is today, in my opinion. The Church is far too rigid in doctrine and is too ferocious against change. Perhaps that's changing now that the science of this world is undeniable and they have no answers for them without changing doctrine. Where the Church once believed in Adam and Eve, it's now a mostly parable next to the weight of science's proof of the universe's creation. There are no stories outside of Kabbalah that fit with the narrative of creation science provides.
ReplyDeleteI left the Church and placed my faith in independent belief in divinity because I could not see God in the Church any longer. The Church itself does much good in this world but it also haunts mankind and judges it too far. The either/or arguments against Yoga seem to be the weakest - God gave us the power to heal ourselves in many ways save magic itself. As long as you do not pray to other gods, I see no harm, only nitpicking for the sake of the Church's survival against public movements away from it.
Pagan in the sense that there are many gods (such as ourselves), which is appealing to the Christian who has been taught that not only is God on the outside, but also that we lost connection to him out of an act of evil, where we must amend our relationship with him. But yes, I don’t think they are meaning to return to ancient faiths and practices, but rather that yoga is very liberating, both physically and spiritually. The real problem I think that the Church is experiencing is not so much that people are not certain in proclaiming the Christ, for I believe that even honest Christians have difficulty doing that (which is why we pray for the human virtue of courage, and the theological virtue of faith, amongst others), but rather that people are attending a Sunday yoga class, instead of Mass.
ReplyDeleteBut yes, looking at my experience on MySpace, there seemed to be at least half atheist or agnostic posters (or people acting as such), and about no yogis/New Agers, less a few people that took a class here and there and were somewhat interested in its philosophies.
Though I was loosely raised a Christian, I did (and still do) have a fear of the Lord, which I believe is common, even confusingly desired, and considered one of the seven gifts that is bestowed upon us when baptized (though I, for reasons I still do not understand, feared Jesus when I was a child, far before I was baptized). When a person practices yoga under a teacher, they are told that they are Good, that God loves them, and that he never was severed from us, but rather he’s been inside us all the time; this is a very comforting and reassuring teaching.
I agree that the “either/or” argument is the weakest, and I think that it is an accusation based on fear. Albeit, there is a lack of reconciliation in both faiths: yogis are taught that the Abrahmic religions are wrong, even evil (in a roundabout way - a yogi does not use those words, especially the latter), and the Abrahamic religions (though I should really only speak for what I know best, which is Christianity) teach that yoga is blasphemous, because it denies all glory to God, in glorifying God’s creation instead.