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The wiki article has a different definition for Hatha:So now that you are part of this thread you know now that the yoga postures are called asanas. You now have an understanding that the yoga asanas (positions) are recognized as the main tool to realizing these secrets. willed experience, they only occur spontaneously. Clearly, the willful act to practice any of the asanas is predictably dangerous for ones body, mind and soul.
Contemplation is a gaze of faith, fixed on Jesus
The term Hatha Yoga has been commonly used to describe the practice of asana (poses).
Hatha Yoga asanas is a catalyst to the awakening of the two energies. Asanas positions are aimed to harmonize and purify the body systems and focus the mind in preparation for more advanced chakra and kundalini practices.
The meaning of Hatha, broken up as Ha + Tha. “Ha” means Ida nadi - moon principle. or and “Tha” means Pingala Nadi - sun principle.
So Hatha Yoga asanas practices results in balancing the entire nervous system. The basic purpose of Hatha Yoga is to purify the Ida and Pingala Nadis and then uniting these 2 forces with the third Psychic Nadi Sushumna, which carries Kundalini at Ajna Chakra (eyebrow center).
- Nadi means psychic passage of energy .
- Hatha means balance of Ida and Pingala Nadis, or balancing of mental energy of Ida and Vital energy of Pingala Nadi.
Yoga asanas is incompatible with Catholicism
First Thessalonians 5:21-22 teaches that it is the responsibility of every Catholic to be discerning: “But examine everything carefully; hold fast to that which is good; abstain from every form of evil.”
In the New Testament, discernment is not optional for the believer-it is required.
Failure to distinguish between truth and error leaves the Catholic subject to all manner of false teaching. False teaching then leads to an unbiblical mindset, which results in unfruitful and disobedient living-a certain recipe for compromise.
Unfortunately, discernment is an area where most Catholics stumble.
The word haṭha (lit. ‘stubbornness’) denotes a system of physical techniques supplementary to a broad conception of yoga.