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Gary_Sheldrake
Guest
From Friardchips;
All the best,
Gary
‘Why is Yoga incompatible with Catholicism?
Good Morning Friardchips: The article you posted in reply to my post doesn’t actually address any of the points that I had made. Also, the article was written by a priest whose views and articles caused him to eventually be to banned from teaching at Jesuit institutions. That said, and without regard to the academic viability or moral intents of the author, it would be my great pleasure to take on Fr. Hardon’s points one by one.FATHER JOHN A. HARDON, S.J
This is incorrect. I might point out that it is perhaps this sort of mischaracterization of facts that caused Fr. Hardon to be discredited academically. The principle tenet of Hinduism is One God who created all things and while Abrahamic faiths call this God or Allah, The Hindus call it Brahman. Brahman is also part of a Trinity, and was said by Hindus to be so long before Christianity had the idea. Long before Christianity as a matter of fact. The difference between Hinduism and Christianity is that while many Christians have been taught to see God as being separate from us and accessible only through institutions, rites and ritual, Hindus believe that God is in all things, present everywhere and totally accessible. Many Christians believe this as well. The statement by Fr Hardon that Hinduism denies one infinite being is patently false.Yoga is incompatible with Catholicism because the best known practice of Hindu spirituality is Yoga. Inner Hinduism professes pantheism, which denies that there is only one infinite Being who created the world out of nothing.
Here Fr. Hardon characterizes one of the worlds great cultures as “uncultured.” I will call it was it is. Bigotry.This pantheistic Hinduism says to the multitude of uncultured believers who follow the ways of the gods that they will receive the reward of the gods. They will have brief tastes of heaven between successive rebirths on earth. But they will never be delivered from the wheel of existence with its illusory lives and deaths until they realize that only God exists and all else is illusion (Maya). **To achieve this liberation the principal way is by means of concentration and self control (yoga). **
You are welcome to point out in your own words (if you would) what the problem with any of these activities might be.Indian spirituality is perhaps best known by the practice of yoga, derived from the root yuj to unite or yoke, which in context means union with the Absolute. Numerous stages are distinguished in the upward progress toward the supreme end of identification: by means of knowledge with the deity; the practice of moral virtues and observance of ethical rules; bodily postures; control of internal and external senses; concentration of memory and meditationfinally terminating in total absorption (samadhi), when the seer stands in his own nature.
Again, you are welcome to point out in your own words (if you would) what the problem with any of these activities might be. Catholics shouldn’t meditate or breathe?Although the psychic element is far more important in yoga than the body, the latter is more characteristic of this method of Hindu liberation. Its purpose is to secure the best disposition of body for the purpose of meditation. The practice begins with a simple device for deep and slow breathing.
Please elaborate if you would on how purity of nerves is problematic for Catholics.Stopping the right nostril with the thumb, through the left nostril fill in air, according to capacity. Then without any interval, throw the air out through the right nostril, eject through the left, according to capacity. Practicing this three or five times at four hours of the day, before dawn, during midday, in the evening, and at midnight, in fifteen days or a month purity of the nerves is attained.
Anything whatsoever. Like Jesus, or Mary, or a toaster oven. In your own words, how is this problematic?After such preliminary exercises, more complicated practices are undertaken, but not without the guidance of a professional yogin, called guru. The meditative phase begins with fixing the mind on one object, which may be anything whatsoever, the sphere of the navel, the lotus of the heart, the light of the brain, the tip of the nose, the tip of the tongue, and such like parts of the body or also God, who on Hindu terms is the only real being who exists.
Trance is a pretty universal and common component of spiritual attainment and is not unknown to Catholicism. It is often associated with those who have attained a high level of spirituality.Gradually by sheer concentration of attention; the mind reaches a state of trance, where all mental activity stops and the consciousness rests in itself. The state of samadhi is the culmination of yoga and beyond it lies release. The life of the soul is not destroyed but is reduced to its unconscious and permanent essence.
All the best,
Gary