Because spirituality requires intentions.
True. It does. And I think a high percentage in the Church would agree that intention has a lot to do with many things.
I believe that intention is not enough. Intention is a kind of common-good excuse.
Because…Our Lord said that it is our external words and actions, the things that come out of us (this more than just intention), that serve to reflect what is in our hearts. Maybe this is what St. Paul meant about being ready for solid food!
Maybe if we have good intentions then this will be obvious, but actually, this does not
always follow. There is a saying I do not like, but I think it is relevant, and so I will use it:
'The road to Hell is paved with good intentions.’ I AM NOT saying this is the case with Yoga as an absolute, but I am using that well-known saying to show that intentions need to be educated for the individual to do more than serve oneself and that this is already fairly common knowledge…
i.e:- DISCERNMENT!
Better than that saying - as I said, I don’t like that saying, and I don’t whole-heartedly agree with it, for the
most part - is to deepen and widen it, by saying: ‘The
road to Hell is paved by not following up on our best intentions.’
This then puts the onus back on to making sure our intentions, before acting upon them, are properly considered.
I would call this: praying and allowing oneself to be guided. Rather than being led by one’s own deeply embedded issues.
This saying is then not about control, or “focus”, it is about
letting go.
One other thing. Even if you disagree and believe that intentions are everything then your argument still doesn’t stand as solid. Because, if intentions are everything ( and even if they are not) then one could do with realisng that sitting there in prayer, simply and quietly, is enough, without need for major external effort. If it is in the intention then we are already on our Way.
If it is all about intention or more than that then intention as an argument is not enough to support extreme action for
effective (don’t particularl like that word, but still…) praying.
There is an argument you could use against this last assertion but I am not going to say it for you!
