F
friardchips
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Or catch.Ya, I think the Pope has bigger fish to fry.
Or catch.Ya, I think the Pope has bigger fish to fry.
I’m not disagreeing with any of this.ARGHHHHH.The benefits come from stretching! Most all exercise increases flexibility and circulation but it does NOT have as its final goal euphoria and a dissolution of the personality.
Personally I think a lot of the hype behind yoga is driven by motives of profit. Literally millions of dollars on classes, clothes,mats and books. I also think many in the west are deluded into thinking it is some kind of shortcut to spiritual perfection.
According to Patanjali who codified it in Yoga Sutra, yoga was a methodical effort to ATTAIN PERFECTION, through the control of the different elements of human nature, physical and psychical. - See he admits it too,
To clarify something,the bishop said yoga could be an OCCASSION of sin probably if one adopts the spiritual and pantheistic views which would be considered heretical to a Catholic.He is speaking the truth.
Zed pointed out and added that yoga was the repository of something basic in the human soul and psyche. - Now yoga is a “repository”?I thought you guys said it was just stretching muahaha
Well, not quite.According to Patanjali who codified it in Yoga Sutra, yoga was a methodical effort to ATTAIN PERFECTION, through the control of the different elements of human nature, physical and psychical. - See he admits it too,![]()
It is not being avoided because of being pagan but because of the spiritual dangers of falling into the philosophy of yoga which is pantheistic and polytheistic. The purpose of attaining this so called spiritual perfection and kundalini power is to avoid being reincarnated.If one must avoid Hatha Yoga because it is pagan then one also must avoid these other Yoga practices described by Patanjali as the first and second steps of Yoga:
2.30
Non-injury or non-harming (ahimsa),
truthfulness (satya),
abstention from stealing (asteya),
walking in awareness of the highest reality (brahmacharya),
and non-possessiveness or non-grasping with the senses (aparigraha)
are the five yamas, or codes of self-regulation or restraint, and are the first of the eight steps of Yoga.
(ahimsa satya asteya brahmacharya aparigraha yama)
2.32 Cleanliness and purity of body and mind (shaucha),
an attitude of contentment (santosha),
ascesis or training of the senses (tapas),
self-study and reflection on sacred words (svadhyaya),
and an attitude of letting go into one’s source (ishvarapranidhana)
are the observances or practices of self-training (niyamas), and are the second rung on the ladder of Yoga.
(shaucha santosha tapah svadhyaya ishvarapranidhana niyamah)
2.38 When walking in the awareness of the highest reality (brahmacharya) is firmly established, then a great strength, capacity, or vitality (virya) is acquired.
(brahmacharya pratisthayam virya labhah)
2.30 Self-restraint in actions includes abstention
from violence,
from falsehoods,
from stealing,
from sexual engagements, and
from acceptance of gifts.
2.32 The fixed observances are
cleanliness,
contentment,
austerity,
study and
persevering devotion to God.
2.38 When one is confirmed in celibacy, spiritual vigor is gained.
But “bad karma” is a way of saying “bad actions do something bad to you,” which is a perfectly sound observation regardless of reincarnation. I don’t think that the belief in reincarnation (in the sense of being reborn in another body in this world, though that’s not the only form of reincarnation) is as central as you are claiming. I’ve met a devout Hindu who said that reincarnation wasn’t particularly important to her spirituality at all.This belief in karma and its impact on future rebirths is at the heart of basic ethical sensibilities in Hinduism and in all the other religions that affirm it. People should do good actions and avoid bad actions so as to not accumulate bad karma to themselves.
You could argue just as well that the Christian belief in heaven or hell means that Christian ethics have nothing to do with compassion or loving God or neighbor but are just about “fire insurance.”This has nothing to do with compassion or loving God or neighbor but just a futile way of trying to avoid being reincarnated as something inferior.
I respect and share that perspective, but many Christians don’t. I often hear people say things like “if there were no heaven or hell, there would be no point living morally” or even, in Catholic circles, “if justification by faith were true, then why not just go out and sin all you like?”Christians do good works not because they fear hell but because they love God and in in their fellow man a reflection of God.
The waters of baptism cleanse us of original sin and join us to the body of Christ.
Untrue. In devotional Hinduism, there are conversion accounts in which wicked sinners were cleansed and transformed in a moment through repentance and faith in an avatar of Vishnu.There is nothing in Hinduism comparable to baptism or faith
Certainly effort is important. But the goal of effort is to transcend what we experience as the “self.”because it is about self.You become your own god.There is no room for a personal Savior because you are supposedly your own savior.
No. Reincarnation is unknowable and is not part of Catholic faith. I practice the spiritual aspects of yoga (and by the way I mean more the yamas and niyames…truth, nonviolence etc. than the asanas) because they are consistent with Catholic fairh. I would hope we all practice them.It is not being avoided because of being pagan but because of the spiritual dangers of falling into the philosophy of yoga which is pantheistic and polytheistic. The purpose of attaining this so called spiritual perfection and kundalini power is to avoid being reincarnated.
Most all religions stress everything you stated but they do not do so to avoid being reincarnated but because they love God.
So are you saying you practice the spiritual aspects of yoga and are trying to stop your cycle of reincarnation?
Very clear post, Edwin. and this transcendence of self’ I see as being very much like the dying to self Jesus talked about.Certainly effort is important. But the goal of effort is to transcend what we experience as the “self.”
Edwin
You missed my point on baptism,Jesus said you must be born of water and the Spirit. This occurs at baptism and is very necessary in Christianity. We die to ourselves and rise as new children in Christ. Baptism is not a symbol but a reality, proven when Jesus submitted to John baptising Him though technically he did not need to repent of anything,But “bad karma” is a way of saying “bad actions do something bad to you,” which is a perfectly sound observation regardless of reincarnation. I don’t think that the belief in reincarnation (in the sense of being reborn in another body in this world, though that’s not the only form of reincarnation) is as central as you are claiming. I’ve met a devout Hindu who said that reincarnation wasn’t particularly important to her spirituality at all.
Christians believe in karma too–as we sow, so shall we reap.
You could argue just as well that the Christian belief in heaven or hell means that Christian ethics have nothing to do with compassion or loving God or neighbor but are just about “fire insurance.”
Furthermore, in both Christianity and Hinduism the relationship between ethics and salvation is complicated and varies from one variant of the tradition to another. In Christianity, we have the concepts of original sin, grace, and forgiveness. These mess with ethics particularly strongly in evangelical Protestantism, but they complicate things across the board. Some Hindus have accused Christianity of being unethical because of our belief in forgiveness, but Hinduism also messes with ethics. Ethics in Hinduism pertains to dharma, which operates in the world of “maya.” Moksha–liberation from maya–in a sense transcends ethics. (That’s why you get the minority tradition of “left-handed tantrism,” which engages in taboo acts in order to transcend all dichotomies and escape maya.) It isn’t something you earn by doing good deeds. Good deeds will get you a better rebirth–but not ultimate union with God, unless they are done with a mind fixed on God as described in the Bhagavad-Gita.
And, of course, the above vastly oversimplifies the diversity of Hinduism.
I respect and share that perspective, but many Christians don’t. I often hear people say things like “if there were no heaven or hell, there would be no point living morally” or even, in Catholic circles, “if justification by faith were true, then why not just go out and sin all you like?”
Untrue. In devotional Hinduism, there are conversion accounts in which wicked sinners were cleansed and transformed in a moment through repentance and faith in an avatar of Vishnu.
Certainly effort is important. But the goal of effort is to transcend what we experience as the “self.”
Edwin
Can any sinner have a true conversion without the Holy Trinity regardless of the particular faith. In other words isn’t God present, and in fact the provider of grace, at every true conversion?You missed my point on baptism,Jesus said you must be born of water and the Spirit. This occurs at baptism and is very necessary in Christianity. We die to ourselves and rise as new children in Christ. Baptism is not a symbol but a reality, proven when Jesus submitted to John baptising Him though technically he did not need to repent of anything,
In the instant of Baptism all three members of the Holy Trinity were present. Jesus,the HOly Spirit as a dove.and God the Father by His voice. This is very significant and there is no parallel in any other faith.
That is a valid point.Can any sinner have a true conversion without the Holy Trinity regardless of the particular faith. In other words isn’t God present, and in fact the provider of grace, at every true conversion?
Baptism is not a symbol but a reality…
Hi. If so, what is “true conversion”?Can any sinner have a true conversion without the Holy Trinity regardless of the particular faith…isn’t God present,…the provider of grace, at every true conversion?
How about turning from vice and selfishness to virtue and charity for the love of God?Hi. If so, what is “true conversion”?
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Do you think then that all conversions are all “true conversions”, that all conversions are to the same depth of conversion, and all contain the same relevance and meaning?How about turning from vice and selfishness to virtue and charity for the love of God?
There are many kinds of conversion: To Catholicism, Christianity, Judaism, Islam, etc. Certainly as Catholics we see with our bias and believe we have the best. But there is intellectual conversion and there is conversion of the heart. “True conversion” must involve the heart and love that leads to a change in life. Of course “True conversion” is just a term for this disussion.Do you think then that all conversions are all “true conversions”, that all conversions are to the same depth of conversion, and all contain the same relevance and meaning?
As Catholic we are shown and offered the chance to walk The Way, The Truth and The Life.There are many kinds of conversion: To Catholicism, Christianity, Judaism, Islam, etc. **Certainly as Catholics we see with our bias **and believe we have the best. But there is intellectual conversion and there is conversion of the heart. “True conversion” must involve the heart and love that leads to a change in life. Of course “True conversion” is just a term for this disussion.
Yes. That is what we believe.As Catholic we are shown and offered the chance to walk The Way, The Truth and The Life.
So, with this understanding then, you also realise that the Bible is absolutely specific, and not at all ambiguous, about what constitutes, or rather, who IS, The Way, The Truth and The Life.Yes. That is what we believe.
Of course.So, with this understanding then, you also realise that the Bible is absolutely specific, and not at all ambiguous, about what constitutes, or rather, who IS, The Way, The Truth and The Life.