You keep missing the point for which I quoted Nostra Aetate. You have several times made the argument that yoga should be avoided because of its roots in Hinduism, because these roots make it a kind of “landing signal” for demons.
I have put forward this assertion, yet throughout the thread I have also suggested that I believe it is not likely for actual demonic attacks to happen every time.
One post does not contradict another but rather responds accordingly to each angle separately put up for debate.
Yoga, due to an uncertain premise in terms of its authority, is a reach for the
unknown, and within any ‘spiritual’ unknown there is the possibility of a “landing signal”. This is not
always going to surface when Yoga is practiced.
I tend to think of the Bible
rock metaphor in this instance.
That doesn’t seem to leave room for the idea that Hinduism is a “search for the divine” that should be respected.
I am separating the practice of worship from people’s desire to worship. Any religion is made up of those who practice it. If there were no people, there would be no religion. I could sum Hinduism up as a non-Christian Eastern belief system with certain practices used by a
peoples to worship their idea of what the divine being/s in their belief system might be. This is where separation comes in:
I respect that there might be divine truths within any belief system whilst acknowledging Christianity’s roots as THE revelation.
I respect the Hindu peoples reach for the divine without endorsing their belief system as the whole truth and whilst reserving my own assessment of the religion as a wide subject up for analysis.
I remain objectively *critical *of certain aspects of the practice, from a Christian perspective, when
Christians partake, and advocate, such practices of worship outside their own Christian belief, and I remain interested in any differences and
holy links between ours and their religion.
As a poster said earlier, evil is a perversion of God’s power. It is likely that at any point during the continuation of any ancient belief system which started out with the innate sense of a divine presence to be praised, Satan could influence stray-thinking that take people away from growing closer to the truth that if was to be shared in every area of the world, could
heal the world, i.e:- Jesus Christ and the Truth of His Resurrection from the dead.
Whether NA justifies participation in practices such as yoga is a separate issue. Certainly many Catholics understand it that way. I have also pointed out that “Bearer of the Water of Life” is talking, in a rather general way, about the “New Age movement,” and does not actually condemn the practice of yoga in particular.
“Bearer of the Water of Life” does mention
Yoga and *non-Christian Eastern religions * as both under
New Age, and suggests a resulting irony. It does
not endorse adopting Hindu ways of worshipping, and does not say the Hindu religion or its practices cannot be up for debate.
As far as I can see, the attitude of the Magisterium toward yoga and Eastern meditation is cautious and maybe even suspicious, but not totally forbidding.
If they are suspicious, do you not think they have reasons for being so. In this sense surely common sense prevails.
I am not claiming that the Magisterium has encouraged Catholics to practice yoga.
Exactly, yet people are still advocating it. This is what I meant earlier in the thread when I said about an “anything goes attitude” - if is not forbidden let’s dive right in - but to utilise our reasoning and discernment abilities is to act wisely.
I am arguing that the Magisterium, in a document far more authoritative than the one you prefer to cite,…
Considering that the Pope has echoed this document and taken it a step further by suggesting Yoga spiritual practice is really a no-no, suggests a lack of concrete belief in your post of the current infallibility of the Pope in all matters of
faith, morals and doctrines.
…has said that Christians should not reject what is good and holy in other religions, with spiritual practices being referred to in a general way that clearly does not exclude their being among these “good and holy” things.
There are good and holy things to be found in most areas of life, this does not say that we are to practice Hindu worship, make use of its practices, and it does not say that Hinduism contains the
whole truth! It wouldn’t say this because to do so would be to venture outside of theology. Also, the Magisterium does not contradict itself, for this reason.
Arguably there has been somewhat of a pull-back from this generous position, but it isn’t necessary to read it that way.
I note that you bring up the bugbear of “relativism,” which is irrelevant to anything I’ve said, and claim that practicing yoga constitutes renouncing the knowledge of God found fully in Christ. That is the point you need to establish. You can’t assume it.
Relativism is a real and dangerous threat, it always is, otherwise St. Peter would not have warned about dangerous paths of learning, as written in Acts two thousand years ago, when he spoke about progressive teaching/understanding, and St. Paul would not have warned about babbling like the Pagans do - to suggest that we can take on other non-R.C religious forms of worship is relativism and a very thin line from idol-worship if not indeed idol worship; to appreciate other peoples’ victories and struggles in their reach to understand the heavenly mysteries, and to understand where Christ might be present in some areas of non-Christian religions, is Christian.