J
jilly4ski
Guest
The body is too high in priority in the process, IMHO. It is as if saying: “this position is what allows me to reach our Creator.” All solid Christian references will tell you that it is not the position that brings about communcation. The Christian posture is simple so as to not be making the body position a priority over the prayer itself.
It would have been helpful if the Vatican had elaborated a bit more on this subject as I don’t want to suggest that individuals are not reaching our Creator but I think on the whole an increase in Christians praying as we have been taught rather than dabbling in “unknown” quantities is surely wise.
No, don’t see that you have made a good point, in response to my points. Specifically, I addressed at which angle the head is positioned during yoga, despite my objections of its relevance. As we have determined by you skating the issue, the tilt of one’s head is irrelevant to who you are worshiping. I also addressed the issue of doing yoga “while” praying, and you promptly dismissed that as well.I don’t see that at all. I answered the questions regarding CCC when it spoke about the “great non-Christian Eastern religions” and invited argument (apart from the last time because I was tired of repeating myself). No one kept in with that line of argument so I let it go eventually.
And I have just again put forward two pretty reasonable points in recent posts - one (again) concerning the Pope’s words and what he might have meant (to Contarini) and also one to jilly4ski and Christofirst regarding body positions in prayer, and I also mentioned the importance of checking sources to Michael, so I don’t see how I have “tapdanced around” anything!
Now to your point about body positions. I will agree that the body is important in Catholicism, as we are body and soul and it is important to engage both while worshiping God. Hence why we use candles, incense, chant, song, and certain postures during Mass (the only time when our postures are actually dictated). But I won’t say that the complicated ritual of the Mass (specifically Eastern Catholic rites or the EF form are particularly simple. The priest’s, deacons, and servers movements are all highly prescribed and quite complicated. (Which direction they should look, where their hand are placed, etc,). Complexity or simplicity seem to be a false dichotomy that you have set up, that have no basis in fact. (As evidenced by the fact that yoga uses the hand folded position, as well as some very natural human/children’s poses). In fact one of the lovely things about Catholicism is that it allows for a wide variety of spirituality. Benedictines are not Carmelites and nether are Jesuits. The Rosary is not the chaplet of Divine Mercy and neither are the stations of the cross.
What you have failed to understand in this discussion is that it is not a particular position in yoga or even a routine of poses (like the sun salutations) that allow one to communicate with God (that is superstitious and already condemned in Catholicism), but rather it is the routine and discipline that one subjects one’s body to, (including fasting and meditation) that lets someone put themselves in the position to be most receptive to God’s word. Just like I can say that when I am in adoration I have put myself in a position to be most receptive to hear God. So people who have reached a meditative state through yoga can engage in prayer with God.