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Editorial
November/December, 1986
Volume 21, Number 6
Yoga is defined as a "mystic discipline by which one
seeks to achieve liberation of the self, and union with the supreme
spirit, through intense concentration, deep meditation, and practices
involving prescribed postures, controlled breathing, and so forth"
(Webster's New World Dictionary/1980). Thirty years
ago most people in our communities would not even have been able
to pronounce words like "yoga," "reincarnation,"
and "mantra," because they were relatively unknown.
Today, yoga practitioners include senators, nuns, ministers,
and rock stars who practice their exercises in YMCA centers,
public schools, health spas, and church buildings. Most assume
yoga to be nothing more than an exotic way to achieve a beautiful
body.
Surveys indicate that today 23% of all Americans believe in
reincarnation (Time, September 10, 1984). That
is, more and more people believe that they previously (before
this life) existed in other forms, and that after this life,
they will again appear in yet another form. The Time writer says,
"Reincarnation is alive and well in Hollywood." Glenn
Ford thinks he was once a Christian martyr eaten by a lion. Loretta
Lynn believes she was a Cherokee princess who served as a mistress
to a king. Shirley MacLaine is sure she was a prostitute who
was later beheaded. Sylvester Stallone believes that he may have
been a monkey in Guatemala in his previous life.
One of the underlying principles of the yoga philosophy is
the belief that humanity (like the rest of creation) is an extension
of god (ultimate reality) and that human beings share its nature.
The aim of getting involved in various trances and concentrated
meditation exercises is to eventually become one with the ultimate
reality (god) by achieving release from the endless cycles of
birth and rebirth. This is the traditional intent of yoga, as
well as the goal of some of the diet, exercise, and massage therapies
that are prominent today. Many of the methods are inherited from
the Eastern religions. Some may argue that most Westerners derive
benefits from yoga without becoming entangled in pagan theological
premises, but there is a subtle tendency to become involved in
yoga's deeper stages which are distinctly religious in nature.
The book Out on a Limb, written by Shirley MacLaine
and published in 1983, describes her transformation from being
an agnostic to becoming a believer in the spirit realm. MacLaine's
second book, Dancing in the Light (1985), was on
the New York Times Bestseller List for many months.
A writer in Christianity Today (May 16, 1986) describes
the book as being more like "rushing into the dark."
He says, "The journey carries (MacLaine) along into a daily
exercise of yoga, the use of crystals for spiritual power, the
chanting of Hindu mantras, (and) the use of various past-life
recall experiences." In her first book, MacLaine is told
by the spirits that we are all co-creators with God. In her second
book, she understands that each individual human being is God.
Shirley MacLaine insists that if all of us would believe that
"Everyone is God," this world would be a much happier
and healthier place. The Christianity Today writer
concludes by saying, "MacLaine presents Hindu philosophy
and various occult practices in a seductive manner ... (and)
those experiences will be further felt by the general public
in the autumn of 1986" -- because there is tentatively scheduled
for November, 1986, a five-hour made-for-TV movie series to be
aired on the ABC network -- a series which is based on MacLaine's
books. This is sure to have an impact on multitudes of people.
The growing belief in reincarnation and the increasing experimentation
with yoga (and related concepts) is part of an attempt to remove
death's sting -- not by pointing to Christ's substitutionary
atonement and His bodily resurrection -- but by denying death's
reality and ruling out the possibility of God's judgment. The
genuine Christian knows that faith in the saving power of the
blood of Christ (Romans 5:8) can bring true union with God and
with His will. Peace with God does not come through release from
participation in the endless cycles of reincarnation. (Most of
us, when encountering some new setting in life, have had thoughts
that we may have seen a certain street, or met a certain person,
or eaten a particular food before -- when indeed we never had
such an experience in the past. Many places look alike; many
people look alike; surely such strange thoughts are merely the
imagination at work).
Yoga implies pantheism (that all is God) because human beings
are a mere extension of the ultimate reality. Yoga ignores the
sin nature (the Fall in Genesis 3) because alienation caused
by sinful rebellion against God is not the fundamental problem
of the human family. Yoga describes salvation as the healing
of humanity's problems. It is achieved when people become aware
of their oneness with all living things and through intense concentration
and deep meditation are released from the endless cycles of birth
and death and rebirth .
Those who advocate yoga are certainly to be admired for their
devotion to maintaining healthy bodies. Too many in our churches
are consuming inordinate amounts of coffee, sweets, and soft
drink. Such persons will find some immediate physical benefits
in yoga. Care of our physical bodies is important, but not at
the risk of aligning ourselves with pagan principles! The popularity
of yoga presents a difficult challenge to Christians who ought
to make their bodies a welcome place for the Holy Spirit to reside
(1 Corinthians 3:16-17; 6:19-20).
The article featured in this issue of the BRF WITNESS
takes a closer look at yoga and the implications of some of the
ideas undergirding it.
--Harold S. Martin
What's Wrong With Taking a
Yoga Class?
by Steve Wagoner
The physical fitness craze is sweeping the country. With more
leisure time, people are spending much time exercising, jogging,
swimming, and the like. But amid all this activity, many are
turning to yoga, not realizing the spiritual implications of
such a move. Many celebrities and movie stars have given glowing
testimonials concerning yoga. Soma schools have incorporated
yoga classes into their curriculum. America's fascination with
yoga has grown faster than our knowledge of its dangers.
Let us begin examining the dangers of involvement with yoga
by looking at some of yoga's basic presuppositions. Yoga has
its roots in Eastern religion (Hinduism), and therefore teaches
that "all reality is one." Every system of yoga seeks
to merge the self (samkhya) with Atman (or god--the true self).
But Atman is not the God of Christianity. In the systems of yoga,
god is part of the problem, for "god" is impersonal,
changeable, and lacks a sufficiently high vantage point to give
solutions to the problems he is also embroiled in. The Hindu
gods remind us of the gods of Greek mythology in some respects.
HUMAN BEINGS CANNOT MERGE WITH THE TRUE GOD
From a Christian perspective, man is either able to merge
with God, or he is not. He is either the creature, or the Creator.
He cannot be both. This makes a significant difference when one
builds a system of ethics, especially if a person is willing
to believe that man can achieve union with God by his own efforts.
The creature-Creator distinction, bridged by the Cross and Resurrection
events in Christianity, are important not only for liberation
from the power of sin, but for redemption as well. From the Bible's
point of view, we cannot come before God by our own unassisted
efforts, much less merge with Him. Otherwise we make the work
and resurrection of Christ sheer folly. This fact alone sets
up enormous differences between Christian thought and yoga at
the outset -- but let us continue.
PHYSICAL CONCENTRATION CANNOT CHANGE THE INNER BEING
A basic tenet in yoga is that there are different levels,
or stages, of being that a person must move through before he
can finally yoke the ego with the ultimate self (or god), which
is said to be its "true nature." To do this requires
mystic and ascetic practice, usually involving the discipline
of prescribed postures, controlled breathing, voluntary sense
deprivation, and intense, complete concentration upon something
(such as a mantra) -- in order to establish identity of consciousness
with the object of concentration (dharana). After intense contemplation,
whereby one finally "sees through" that object to its
essence (dhyana), one supposedly arrives at a trance-like state
(samadhi), which is called the most intense energy level. In
this state, it is claimed, the self is merged with "ultimate
reality."
Stories of yogis who can change their brain waves to unconscious
patterns at will, or cause the heart to voluntarily stop, have
been documented to support the contention that yoga provides
one means for controlling the body and mind. It should be borne
in mind, however, that some who have become involved in yoga
have reported having had demonic experiences of a frightening
nature. The end is not always what is sought; hence the contention
that this is spiritual openness with religious significance --
a risky science of playing with the inner man.
SELF-CONQUEST CANNOT BRING ETERNAL SALVATION
In yoga, an individual's own mind constitutes his source of
yogic power. Self-conquest is therefore to be achieved by "knowing
one's own mind," which to many persons in Western societies
sounds noble. But the problem is this: By the time one meets
up with power in meditation, the reason is left behind. You have
no way of knowing if the overwhelming and demanding power which
you have experienced means you are good or evil. The idea is
to give yourself to it and see what happens! Then you go back
to the Hindu Vedas to read about what god you have experienced.
But the Vedas tell of gods who can promise anything, and then
turn on you with unpredictable viciousness and furious abrupt
changes. There is risk involved here that has much spiritual
significance (compare Exodus 20:3; Ephesians 6:12; 1 Corinthians
10:18-21). Anyone who delves into yoga very far, knows that the
gods are where the power is. One discovers at length that some
yogis have power to control their bodies, often in spectacular
ways, but only because they have surrendered themselves to another
power.
If yogic meditators have lower blood lactate, or consume less
oxygen during meditation, their problems are still waiting for
them when they come out of their trance. Life must be lived between
experiences, and it is this "space" between experiences
that proves to be a problem for the yogic meditator. The key
to the problem lies not in technique, but in humble dependency
on Jesus Christ and His mercy, and on being led and empowered
by the Holy Spirit. The yogic meditator is not apt to appreciate
such a perspective, because it makes his "heroic efforts"
to merge with god look quite foolish. After all, consider the
years of intense self-discipline and the large outlay of cash
(you didn't think yoga was free, did you)) required to achieve
union with the "ultimate self." The Good News is that
we don't have to go through all that. The price has been paid
for our salvation. Through the blood of Jesus Christ we have
bold access into God's presence at any time (Hebrews 10:19-22).
ECSTATIC EXPERIENCES CANNOT REPLACE GENUINE SELF CONTROL
One big problem with yoga is that by the time one meets up
with some power, his reason has been left behind. The yogic meditator
leaves knowledge for meditation, and meditation for detachment,
and doesn't know who (or what) he is submitting to. Frequently
the god will promise divinity and power in exchange for complete
surrender to its power. Does this sound anything like Satan's
temptation of Jesus in the wilderness (Matthew 4:8 & 9)?
One of the means by which we are to discern the difference
between the true prophets of God and false prophets, is by means
of self-control. "The spirits of the prophets are subject
to the prophets" (1 Corinthians 14:32). In other words,
those who truly have come before God and speak His words, remain
in full possession of their rational faculties, with their self-control
left in tact. Self-control is one fruit of the Holy Spirit (Galatians
5:23). Christian prayer leaves us with our wits so that we can
tell if it is God working, or some other spiritual counterfeit.
Implicit in the notion that we can unify ourselves with God,
is the concept that we can also unify ourselves with Satan. Hence,
the warnings of the early Church Fathers about seeking visions,
external sensations, soul travel, or other ecstatic experiences
that have the earmarks of delusion, and the potential of demonic
invitation.
THE GLORY OF THE CREATOR MUST NOT BE GIVEN TO THE CREATURE
In yoga, body and soul are equated, since all reality is viewed
as one. Not only is man god, but so is everything else -- which
amounts to full-blown pantheism. It says, "That rock is
god; I am god; etc." Is this exchanging the glory of the
Creator for that of the creature (Romans 1:23)) The view that
all reality is one -- surely creates a low view of God, and an
absurdly high view of man.
Yoga also encourages the use of a "mantra" in meditation.
Few realize just what a mantra is. Mantras evolved from the left
Tantric Vehicle School of Buddhism, whose pathetic adherents
erotically attempted union with the cosmos, were involved in
ritual murders, and ate excrement to try for magical power. As
John Weldon and Zola LeVitt warn in their book, The Transcendental
Explosion, present-day mantras often are, in fact, names
of Hindu gods. Did not our God say, "Thou shalt have no
other gods before me" (Exodus 20:3)7
When the Christian prays, he should not seek an experience.
Instead, prayer involves praise to Jesus (our Mediator with God),
cleansing the mind, putting to death the ego or personal desire
-- in such a way as to emphasize personal dependency on Christ
and His mercy. Purity of heart and being receptive to the Holy
Spirit by emptying the self (Philippians 2:5-13) are central
factors. Prayer involves an affirmation of one's sinfulness (unlikely
in yogic practice) that one might also find forgiveness (again,
unlikely in yoga). This stands in marked contrast with yogic
meditation, where one's troubles are still waiting for the meditator
when he comes out of his trance, and perhaps are compounded by
the encouragement of demonic activity and indifferent escapism
.
Paul and the other apostles saw that the power of Christian
meditation lay in praying systematically and frequently (Acts
6:4; 1 Thessalonians 5:17).
Paul knew that true meditation is a matter of the heart --
not a mere technique nor a mouthing of words. Prayer is a joining
of the Spirit: "I shall may with the Spirit and ... with
the mind also" (1 Corinthians 14:15).
Steve Wagoner was pastor of the
Eden Church of the Brethren (Northern Ohio District), and the
Broadfording Church of the Brethren (Mid Atlantic District).
Editor's Addendum.
Some say, "But Isn't meditation a good thing? After all,
the First Psalm encourages meditation in the Word of God."
But there is a difference between engaging in yoga meditation
exercises end meditating on the Scriptures! The yoga meditation
seeks to turn off all thoughts; Bible meditation seeks to activate
the mind into a deeper commitment to the Lord. The chief goal
of yoga is to achieve a union between the individual and the
Absolute. The chief goal of Christian meditation is to use our
minds to perform God's will more perfectly.
--H.S.M.
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