Now I know what some of you might be thinking. "Occult? Oh come on now.
Aren't we over reacting just a little bit? Yoga is just exercise."
Really?
Who told you that?
A yoga instructor?
Have you ever looked into it?
It has become a disturbing trend as of late for me to witness just how many
proclaiming Christians are unaware of the true nature of yoga and what it really
means and represents.
Think back to a sunny Saturday afternoon. You're sitting in your living room
when you notice out the window, two young men wearing black ties and white
shirts, and going door to door with a black book in their hand.
Yep, you guessed it, Mormons.
You silently watch from your window as they pause for a moment at each of
your neighbor's homes and then your heart beat quickens as you see them now turn
up your own driveway. The two young men are clean cut, nice looking and appear
quite respectable.
The door bell rings.
You open the door hesitantly and greet them with a smile. You listen to their
best evangelistic efforts, but express to them that you yourself are a
Christian, and that our belief system and theirs do not mix. You might converse
back and forth with the young men, but in the end they go their way, and you
stay in your Christian way. (Hopefully)
So how did you do in the face of a false religion? Even if you had a chance
to share the gospel with them, it was clear to you that what they believed was
different then what Christianity teaches. Perhaps you were prepared and you knew
that Mormons believe in a different Jesus, a different salvation and that they
are a cult. In any case you just experienced an evangelistic effort of the
enemy. You just met two apostles of perdition - two missionaries of that old
serpent the devil. And he's up to his old tricks again, when through these two
young men you heard the echoes of the words, "Did God really say?"
(Gen 3:1)
Relieved that you got through your ordeal with the Mormons, and perhaps even
satisfied that you countered their arguments and planted the seeds of truth in
their lives, you now pat yourself on the back for not being caught up in some
false religion and that you have the discernment to recognize false evangelists
when you see them.
Or can you?
Over the past few decades a missionary arm of another false religion has been
allowed to waltz into our society unchecked by the Church; unchecked by those
who should know better, and those who should be warning others of the dangers
and definitely not partaking in this idolatry with their fellow man.
If one takes the time to study Yoga, it becomes apparent that it is, in fact,
the major missionary arm of Hinduism and the New Age movement in North America.
There are a surprising number of Hindu influences in our North American culture.
Many of these go unchecked or even unnoticed by the Christian Church. For
instance:
- The concept of reincarnation (Hollywood loves this one)
- Centering and contemplative prayer (Well supported by proponents of the
Emerging Church)
- Karma (has worked its way into our daily conversation)
- Being 'One with God' (Oprah loves this one)
- Avatar (a common reference on the internet for a representation of an
internet user either through icon or name)
- The fame and reverence of the Dalai Lama in modern times.
Hinduism encompasses a wide variety of religious beliefs, and has been
influential in the foundations of other religions, such as Buddhism and the New
Age Movement and spin-off religions.
Hindus are very tolerant of other religions, because they believe that all
paths eventually lead to God - because ALL is God.
Some Major Teachings of Hinduism
The Law of Karma
The Law of Karma is a guiding principal of Hinduism and is the law of cause
and effect, in which each individual creates his own destiny through his
thoughts, words and deeds. If we do a good deed, then we will in turn receive
positive consequences or blessings. Bad actions or deeds will have the opposite
effect. Essentially it is the old adage, "What goes around, comes
around".
Often the Law of Karma isn't accounted for in this life, but it impacts your
future life. It traps individuals in a cycle of reincarnation, each successive
life better or worse dependent on your karmic performance of the previous life.
Those who built up bad karma may be born into a lower caste (class) or even as
an animal or an insect. It may take many more lifetimes of suffering before they
are again born as humans.
Selfless acts and thoughts as well as devotions to the Hindu god(s) help one
to be reborn at a higher level.
A Hindu's condition of suffering helps them to atone for the evil they have
committed in their previous life. For this reason, charity is almost unheard of
in the religion. If someone is downtrodden, it may be more beneficial to leave
them be, as their suffering state may give birth to a better life for them next
time around. To ease their suffering now, might in fact hinder their chances at
a better life next time. (You can see why there aren't many prosperity preachers
in Hinduism.)
The process of successive reincarnated lifetimes is called transmigration.
Transmigration
Transmigration is passing of the soul at death into a new body or new form of
being. Transmigration and reincarnation (the soul's rebirth in a new body) are
roughly the same. Transmigration occurs until a soul reaches the perfect state
of nirvana, or one with god.
Nirvana
Nirvana is the supreme state free from suffering and individual existence. It
is a state often referred to as "self realization" or "god
realization". It's the ultimate religious goal of all Hindus. The
attainment of Nirvana breaks the otherwise endless rebirth cycle of
transmigration. Hindus call this nirvana "eternal bliss". However, no
one can describe in words what nirvana is. It can only be experienced
directly.
The Concept of God in Hinduism
Hinduism is monotheistic - sort of. It recognizes one supreme deity known as
Brahman, or ultimate reality. Brahman is the universe and all it contains.
Essentially, god is everything, and everything is god, a belief that is known as
pantheism. To take the concept further - If 'everything' is god, then that would
include you and me. Unlike Christianity, Hinduism has no concept of a personal
and knowable God, who is separate from his creation. To a Hindu, Brahman is
simply all that exists.
To really confuse the issue, Hinduism also has a polytheistic side. It
includes aspects of worship of multiple deities (although they are all
considered manifestations of the one ultimate reality). Brahman is personalized
as three separate entities: Brahma (the Creator), Vishnu (the Preserver), and
Shiva (the Destroyer). Most Hindus also worship Krishna and Rama, two of
Vishnu's ten incarnations, or avatars. In addition to these major gods
(incarnations of Brahman), forces of nature, animals, and humans can all be
deified, giving Hindus a pantheon of 330 million gods and goddesses to
worship.
Does Hinduism Recognize Jesus?
Not the Jesus of the Bible. Not the true Jesus. Hindus are very happy to
consider Jesus to be one of the many avatars or incarnations of the impersonal
Brahman, however, they do not accept Christ as the ONLY incarnation of God. In
no sense does Hinduism recognize Jesus as the unique Son of God, Co-equal,
Co-eternal and Co-reigning within the Triune Godhead of the Bible.
Sin and Salvation in Hinduism
There is no concept of Sin against a Holy God in Hinduism. To a Hindu, man's
biggest problem is his ignorance that he is in fact 'god' himself.
In Hinduism, since Brahman is all that exists, everything else is ultimately
an illusion. Our material world, physical bodies, and our personal existence are
all illusions. In essence our ignorance in Hinduism is equivalent to the
"fall of man". We have forgotten that we are part of Brahman, and have
attached ourselves to the desires of individual self. It is these desires and
their consequences that bring suffering, and that subject us to the Law of
Karma.
Although there is no concept of 'salvation', the goal is to remove the karmic
debt and end the cycle of rebirths. When one overcomes their ignorance of their
own divinity and a detachment from self (an illusion), the individual can be
released from personal existence and disappear into the impersonal Brahman. This
'liberation' from the wheel of life is called moksha or nirvana as
we mentioned before. Freed from their physical, personal existence, individuals
also become free from all pain and suffering, and become like a single star
within all the universe that is Brahman.
There are three paths to achieve this liberation from the wheel of
life.
- The Way of Works: Liberation can be obtained through social and religious
obligations.
- The Way of Devotion:
- This is the most popular way, and includes acts of worship to any of the
numerous gods and/or avatars.
- Whether in a home or in a temple, worship is primarily done individually
rather than as a congregation. Most Hindus worship daily through offerings,
rituals, and prayers. Prayer or worship is considered to be an integral part
of the Hindu way of living. The chanting of mantras is the most popular form
of worship in Hinduism
- The Way of Knowledge: This way attempts to reach a higher consciousness
until one finally realizes his identity (or lack of identity) within
Brahman. This is achieved through study of philosophical writings, yoga and
deep meditation.
Yoga and Hinduism
As just mentioned, yoga is one of the 'Ways of Knowledge'. Yoga is one of the
classic systems of Hindu philosophy that practices certain disciplines to
achieve freedom from the limitations of the flesh and lead to the fulfillment of
knowledge. The goal of yoga is not to achieve peace within, channeling, or the
working of miracles, but the acquirement of knowledge. In fact, the yoga
doctrine insists that physical and mental training should be used only as a
means to spiritual needs.
Yoga practice forms a ladder to perfect knowledge through eight stages:
self-control, religious observance, postures, regulation of the breath,
restraint of the senses, steadying of the mind, meditation, and profound
contemplation.
The philosophy and practice of yoga have been primary tools of Hindu
missionaries to North America since Indian priest and mystic Swami Vivekananda
introduced yoga to the West at the World's Fair in 1893 in Chicago.
Swami Vivekananda is attributed with the idea of combining the theory of
"evolution of the soul" with his teachings of Hinduism. Instead of
working out one's karma by becoming a grasshopper, lizard or human in progressive
lives, he taught an 'evolution of the soul' whereby the individual continues in
an evolutionary process to 'manifest the god within' - from slime to divine.
This new brand of Hinduism was undoubtedly born because it was thought that
North American's would not buy into the traditional Hindu concepts of
reincarnation. It would seem that pride has always plagued us North Americans.
Not many westerners could imagine they would ever come back as a lower form of
life.
Another fellow of interest is Paramahansa Yogananda. Another Hindu
missionary, this time in 1920 he was welcomed warmly by elite circles of that
day. He started the Self-Realization Fellowship in Los Angeles which still
exists today. He chose to demonstrate that yoga was completely compatible with
Christianity. Wearing a cross, he came to America with a Hindu religious text,
the Bhagavad Gita, in one hand and the Bible in the other. He reasoned
that yoga was the binding force that could connect all religions together. He
wrote a book titled, "The Second Coming of Christ: The Resurrection of
the Christ Within You". Essentially it was Yogi Paramahansa's
commentary on the four Gospels, or as the cover of the book reads, "A
Revolutionary commentary on the original teachings of Jesus"
Now let's stop right there.
Right now for any evangelical Christian who seeks truly after the heart and
mind of God, warning bells should be ringing loudly in our heads. What on earth
would a Hindu guru have to reveal about the teachings of Jesus.
Was it not Jude who warned us to keep to the original faith?
"Beloved, while I was very diligent to write to
you concerning our common salvation, I found it necessary to write to you
exhorting you to contend earnestly for the faith which was once for all
delivered to the saints." Jud 1:3
Take careful note of Jude's words, 'was once for all'.
The implications of these words are that the canon is closed. There is no
special revelation beyond those that the bore the approval of the apostles. Any
teaching, new or old, must align itself perfectly with Scripture, or that
teaching is deemed false. God is not the author of confusion. He invented
language and wanted us to understand His Word as delivered.
"Knowing this first, that no prophecy of Scripture
is of any private interpretation, for prophecy never came by the will of man,
but holy men of God spoke as they were moved by the Holy Spirit." - 2 Peter
1:20-21
How unfortunate it is that the modern Church does not recognize this most
essential fact.
Christians and Yoga
A September 5th, 2005 issue of Time Magazine, featured a quote from
Subhas Tiwari, a professor of yoga philosophy and mediation at the Hindu
University of America in Orlando, Florida. Mr Tiwari says plainly within that
article, "Yoga is Hinduism".1
So if the yoga experts know this to be true, and will profess it to be so, why do
so many who profess to be Christians, deny this essential and baseline fact?
My friends, Christian yoga, is as ludicrous as saying a Christian Hindu, or a
Christian Buddhist. There is no such thing.
The following except is from an article posted at Christianity today by Sarah
E. Pavlik, and it recounts an experience she had in her first Yoga class.
"Once in the class, I scanned the room, curious as to what type of
people take yoga. The class was comprised of an unlikely bunch: hefty,
construction crew-type men, white-haired grandmas, and people such as me,
wearing Nikes and t-shirts. I didn't spot any lime-green hair, or a single
pierced nose. Suddenly my attention was drawn to the front of the room. There
she was, the instructor-a bit larger than I expected. She looked nothing like
those leotard-clad yoga instructors on TV. Her wiry blonde hair blended with
her wire-rimmed glasses, giving her an all-around bland appearance. She spoke
softly but with intimidating authority.
"Take off your shoes and socks," she said with a whisper.
Reluctantly I removed them, hoping nobody else in the room could smell my
feet. She explained that we needed to be barefoot so we could sink our feet
into the earth. Funny, this earth looked a lot like carpet to me. But I
complied, imagining my feet squishing into the soft, fertile ground.
"Now we need to get acquainted with our breath. Americans generally
breathe through their mouths and miss the benefits of breathing fully,"
she informed us. I forced the air in and out, trying to make friends with my
breath. It felt good.
"Yoga is thousands of years old, and as of late, has been accepted
by modern medicine as a remedy for back pain and stress reduction," she
said between breaths. Thousands of years old? Accepted by the medical
community? It must be a good thing, I rationalized as I prepared to stretch.
We moved quickly into what she termed poses.
First I was a tree. Then she coaxed us into bending our limbs and
planting our right foot onto our inner thigh. That wasn't all that difficult
until she asked us to squat and twist our torso 90 degrees. She called it the
"twisted chair." How appropriate. I looked like a pretzel in blue
sweatpants.
Next we began "sun salutations." With our hands raised over
our heads, we quickly dropped them to our feet. Finally, we brought our entire
bodies to the floor, prostrate. It was obvious this was an ancient form of sun
worship. Now not only was my body contorting, my mind was too. God's first
commandment to not have any other gods before him sprang to mind. I was
getting uncomfortable.
After several repetitions of sun salutations, she brought us back into
"mountain pose." I glanced at the clock and was shocked to see all
but five minutes of the hour-long class had slipped by. It was time for the
relaxation exercise. My muscles were ready, but my spirit was a bit more
cautious.
I lay down on the carpeted earth. She encouraged us to shut our eyes and
go to our quiet place. Being a mother of two boys, I wasn't sure if such a
place existed, so I decided heaven would be my quiet place. "It's time to
let go of the stresses of the world, your job, your home, your deadlines, and
just be at peace," the instructor said soothingly. The twing-twang of the
music seemed to blend with everyone's breathing. Then she instructed us to
start squeezing the muscles in our toes, then our feet, on up our legs,
abdomen, and finally our faces. What a sight we all must have been lying
there, our bodies rigid and our faces forced into Jim Carrey-like contortions.
"Now fall back into the earth," our instructor commanded. We
repeated this bizarre exercise about three times, and then, the instructor
told us to come back into our body.
It was not a happy reunion. My body ached from the wicked chair-or was
is it the twisted chair? And my spirit was out of sorts. Scenes of saluting
the sun and leaving my body played in my mind as I drove home. Would I be able
to stay in yoga without compromising my Christian beliefs? I wondered." 2
Sun worship?
What about the other poses?
With some research under my belt, I'm sure many readers would be surprised to
realize that the yoga postures are offerings to the 330 million Hindu gods
(manifestations of Brahman). As you perform the yoga poses, you are in essence
worshipping a false god(s).
The second commandment reads,
"You shall not make for yourself a carved
image-any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth
beneath, or that is in the water under the earth; you shall not bow down to them
nor serve them. For I, the LORD your God, am a jealous God, visiting the
iniquity of the fathers upon the children to the third and fourth generations of
those who hate Me," - Exodus 20:4-5
And the Apostle Paul would say to us,
"I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies
of God, that you present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God…"
- Romans 12:1
Note also from the Christianity Today article quoted above that the
author mentions, "come back into our body?" Leaving our bodies and
going to our quiet place? I wonder who checks in, while the yoga student checks
out?
Yoga means "union" or "yoked" in Sanskrit. "Union
and yoked with what?", you might ask. Well, as mentioned earlier, it is one
of the ways of knowledge to become in union with Brahman. As yoga is an arm of
Hinduism, its ultimate goal is to help you reach union with Brahman, your higher
self, god, or the universe, depending on your interpretation of 'god in us'.
The practice of yoga, the positions and breathing prepares the body for the
occult changes that will arouse the coiled power (kundalini) at the base of
spine. This power can travel up the spine passing through the chakras to the top
of your head (Crown Chakra). It is the ultimate goal for the kundalini (Coiled
or Serpent Power) to reach the brain. The "OM" which is repeated over
and over again is to empty the mind of thought so that a new spirit can enter.
What kind of spirits? I'm sure you guessed it from the words 'serpent' power.
(Rev 20:2)
Swami Narayananda describes some of the possibilities:
"These hot currents that reach the brain center heat the brain,
make the mind fickle, bring insomnia, brain disorder, insanity and incurable
diseases. For the hot currents keep the mind wide awake and if a person does
not know how to check the currents and to bring down the partly risen
kundalini shakti to safer centers, one suffers terribly and it may ruin the
whole life of a person or lead one to insanity. This is why we see many become
insane, many get brain defects, and many others get some incurable diseases
after deep sorrow." 3
Gopi Krishna, founder of one of the many kundalini research centers, records
his own experience:
"It was variable for many years, painful, obsessive, even
phantasmic. I have passed through almost all the stages of different
mediumistic, psychotic, and other types of mind; for some time I was hovering
between sanity and insanity." 4
I have personally heard reports and read documentation of yoga participants
experiencing some or even all of the following as a result of their seemingly
harmless 'exercise' program: Fear, uncontrollable laughing or weeping, intervals
of ecstasy, tremors, spasms, and violent shaking. In some cases the guru or
instructor can impart these manifestations in mass, to his/her students, leaving
them writhing on the floor helpless.
We must ask the question again. When someone takes part in yoga (union), with
what are they becoming in union with?
New-Age techniques almost always involve some form of meditation that is to
bring you into a state of peace, enlightenment, open the door of physic
knowledge, and promise extraordinary power. But this power is an illusion of
self-worship. It is occult and very dangerous because the spirit you invite is a
demonic one. You are NOT uniting with a higher-spirit, an ascended master or a
spirit-guide. Instead you are uniting with a counterfeit spirit who is delighted
to deceive you into thinking it is a positive force, but in truth it is demonic
and an abomination to God.
"There shall not be found among you anyone who
makes his son or his daughter pass through the fire, or one who practices
witchcraft, or a soothsayer, or one who interprets omens, or a sorcerer, or one
who conjures spells, or a medium, or a spiritist, or one who calls up the dead.
For all who do these things are an abomination to the LORD…" -
Deuteronomy 18:10-12
At its roots, yoga and Hinduism teach that the self is God. In
Christianity, one denies self. The differences are polar opposites and cannot be
reconciled.
"Then He said to them all, "If anyone desires
to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow
Me." - Luke 9:23
A Christian should not and can not take part in something so distasteful to
God whom we profess to love. Even if one removes the spiritual aspects of yoga
(which evidence would suggest is impossible) and fools themselves into thinking
it's only exercise, the truth of the matter is that regardless of your intent,
to the outside world you look like you are condoning yoga - all aspects of it.
Your actions could very well be a stumbling block to others and causing others
to fall into the trap of occultism, new-ageism and idolatry.
"For if anyone sees you who have knowledge eating
in an idol's temple, will not the conscience of him who is weak be emboldened to
eat those things offered to idols? And because of your knowledge shall the weak
brother perish, for whom Christ died? But when you thus sin against the
brethren, and wound their weak conscience, you sin against Christ." - 1
Colossians 8:10-12
We are to abstain from those things which could make our brother stumble. We
are to walk diligently in the world, but yet set apart from the world. We don't
desire the things of this world, but rather the things of the heaven. In my
opinion this would include those 'Christian' alternatives to yoga which are
popping up. True they may not be actually yoga in concept and teaching, yet they
still 'look' like yoga to an outside and unbelieving world. If the world sees a
Christian doing something that looks like yoga, they might therefore believe
that yoga is safe and condoned by the church, thereby falling into a trap that
leads to destruction.
Yoga is everywhere. It's on television, it's being taught in church
basements, at fitness centres and even in video games (a place Hinduism and
new-age thinking likes to hide as well). The very popular video game Wii Fit
contains elements of exercise that is very good for the fitness of an
individual, unfortunately it is also packaged with a plethora of yoga stretches
and poses to help obtain your fitness goals.
Within the very city where I
live there is a non-profit group called Yoga for Youth who's sole purpose is to
get yoga into all of the public schools as a regular program5 - and
it seems to be working. My kids report back to me the presence of yoga in
their physical education classes. My kids of course abstain, and have so far
been left un-harassed by their teachers, fellow students and school
administration, but I wonder for how long? Many of the Christian parents we talk
to, do not have any problems with their kids taking part in yoga at school -
after all, it's just exercise right? I wonder how long before our family's voice
will be deemed as one of an extreme minority whose petty intolerance to things
condemned by the Bible is outdated, and unconstitutional.
I hope this article has it least won some of you over to the reality that
yoga is occult and an abomination to God whom we profess to love.
It's time for the Church to stand up, dust off their swords and be counted
for truth and righteousness. Are we just going to continue to allow Satan to have a field
day in our public schools and communities, or are we going to let our voice
stand, and abstain from these types of activities and teachings? For every
community group that promotes occult activities, the Church could raise up a
valid and justified counter argument. However, it repeatedly remains silent.
Perhaps if abstinence and letters of concern were sent in response to these types of
programs, there would be far fewer of them permeating our society. I wonder if
the same would hold true to the television programming and other media venues
such as Hollywood? (A good subject for another article).
Christ spoke plainly, "But whoever denies Me
before men, him I will also deny before My Father who is in heaven." - Mat
10:33
And so I must ask the pertinent question…
Where is the Church today?
"And have no fellowship
with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather expose them. For it is
shameful even to speak of those things which are done by them in secret. But all
things that are exposed are made manifest by the light, for whatever makes
manifest is light. Therefore He says: "Awake, you who sleep, Arise from
the dead, And Christ will give you light." See then that you walk
circumspectly, not as fools but as wise, redeeming the time, because the
days are evil." - Ephesians 5:11-16
Until Next time,
Serve Your King.
J.R. Hall
Footnotes:
1. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1098937,00.html
2. http://www.christianitytoday.com/tcw/2001/sepoct/3.50.html
3. Swami Narayananda, "The Primal Power in Man", pg. 60
4. Gopi Krishna, "The Awakening", p. 124
5. "Yoga sesson goes Green", The Star Phoenix, July 27,2009
References:
1. Ray Comfort, "World Religions in a Nutshell: A Compact Guide to Reaching
Those of Other Faiths", 2008
Tags: abomination | Christian yoga | Christians | hindu | hinduism | new age | Yoga
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