Practicing meditation and yoga is not the same thing as practicing “Hinduism” and “Buddhism”.
The woman quoted in the article is gravely mistaken about Christian meditation; it is not about “clearing your mind”, but about reflecting on the things of God, and most particularly on the humanity of Christ. It’s sometimes asserted that because of the Church’s ecumenical efforts in turning to dialogue with the world, and so with the major religions of the world, we can now utilize the methods of some of those religions in approaching Christian prayer. The danger is – and there is a danger – that a syncretistic result of too quick an acceptance of Eastern methods will bring a consciousness that will actually dilute or obstruct progress in the spiritual life and that this error will be quite subtle, though no less harmful for its subtlety.
One is reminded of the sort of dialogue Our Lord Himself engaged in with the two disciples on the road to Emmaus. He approached them and asked questions, which gave them the opportunity to express what they understood and felt, and then He instructed them about the meaning of Scripture. He really did not learn anything new from them at all. The dialogue allowed Him to preach to them the Truth. Since the Church is the Body of Christ which continues His mission to teach all nations about ultimate reality and how to reach it, really the goal, the Church has the loving duty to relay to them the Good News and knowledge of the End or goal to be reaches and the essential means.
Hinduism and Buddhism teach nothing about the Trinitarian Revelation. The objection to this may be that these religions have something to teach regarding the means to that truth. But there is something missing here: There is an intrinsic connection between means and ends, e.g., in Buddhism there is an attempt at a solution to the experience of suffering; it sees the origin of suffering in all desires. The practical goal is therefore to eliminate all desires, and that can only be done by an active emptying of consciousness, of anything definite which could be desired; thus meditation as a method, because when in this state of consciousness of emptiness is attained then enlightenment as an awareness of ultimate reality indistinguishable from the practitioner’s awareness brings wisdom as the experience of the illusion of all that appears and the fullness of the cosmic energy behind the appearances.
It is obvious that there is a necessary relationship between the means and the end in such meditative emptying of consciousness of all definite beings. Along the way to such an experience of “wisdom” (which we might call an experience of being) there is possible the upsurge of the subconscious which must be faced by correct guides so that the practitioner does not “flip out”, as the vernacular has it.
Now the danger is not limited to such a weakness of psyche, but to the hostility of evil spirits, for WE know (or should know!) that the cosmos and the human arena is not neutral but practically and actually a battleground of good and evil; and that the most malevolent evil is damned spirits or fallen angels who have a certain control of cosmic laws, and that passivity of soul is precisely the condition which makes it easy for demonic molestation or worse! The demon having been driven out comes back with seven more to occupy the empty house, and the latter is worse than the former, as the Gospel warns us. And we know that this is not idle speculation regarding Hinduism and Buddhism where strong demonic elements persist alongside genuine human values. We know that generally speaking there has been an upsurge in our times of the demonic with the secularization and apostasy of our civilization as a whole; so it is almost playing with fire by naifs to pursue such methods.
St. John of the Cross provides little concrete methodology for practicing and maintaining this “clearing of the mind” of which the woman quotes speaks. Indeed! And there is a very good reason for that, as expressed in St. Teresa of Jesus’ statement that if you would desire supernatural contemplation you’d best cultivate the virtues! It is not in prayer that the self-emptying is to be pursued, but in the life of the will, i.e., in the virtues to be accomplished: denial of self is to be of the senses and passions and pride of mind, and this follows essentially from the goal, which is not union of consciousness with the energy of the cosmos behind all the definite manifestations seen as an illusion, but, rather union of love with the Trinity of Divine Persons dwelling within by grace, a union of wills. Self-emptying of the will of desires contrary to or besides the love of God is the task.
Prayer, active prayer, fosters this by placing before us the One Whom the heart desires, so that for His sake everything one does in one’s state of life is done first for the love of God. And this does not eliminate all other desires a la Buddhism; far from it. It orders the desires, especially for those whose vocation is to bring the love of Christ into the arena of family life and work. The acquired “contemplation” possible is thus the prayer of simplicity, in which all the particular desires of the affective faculty are gradually unified in a loving regard when one prays. And it is this state of acquired affective unity that is dried up by the passive purification of the senses and the approach of the supernaturally infused prayer of quiet. Thus there is an essential correlation of means to end in acquiring the prayer of simplicity, i.e, loving gaze of united affections available to our wills to love the One Lord.
continued. . .