Hi Gary: I just wanted to point out if I may that while TM for Buddhists may not be God centered, for my faith it very much is. For us, it was a method given to us directly by God for realization of Him in ourselves and in the world around us. We do know that there are certain physical aspects that can be harmful if done without proper guidance, and some aspects can be harmful psychologically if one progresses beyond their capabilities. As for demonic possession, I respect the Christian wariness of that, however, we do not believe that a jivatman can be owned by anything but God. For instance, knowing that I am a jivatman, I know that I belong to God and knowing this, I should never act out of fear.
Your cautions for Christian may be very valid, and I respect that. For atheists I think TM can be a very good practice as well, because being an atheist doesn’t necessarily make one non-spiritual, and certainly one doesn’t even have to consider themselves to be spiritual to desire and be entitled happiness and love.
So anyway, you are not wrong, and have cited good advice for Christians. I just wanted to point out that there are other faiths or non-faiths involved. As always, it’s good to hear from you!
Your friend,
Sufjon
My friend, I would be very cautious in your assurance that you are a
jivatman. There is no stronger, riskier, or more compelling spiritual delusion than the assurance that one is already a saint. One of the holiest Christian saints, a Desert Father who spent his life in the wilderness (I forget which one at the moment

) repenting of his sins said on his deathbed “Truly I say to you, I have only begun to repent”. Even the greatest saints, ones who have already acheived
theosis in this life (as the Church proclaims that we can), are by virtue of that fact all the more aware of the danger of sin and temptation. If you are in the state of grace, then God whose presence you say you are aware of (through his energies, in terms of my theology; through
atman, in terms of yours) will never sin nor be touched by sin, but your individual soul (
jiva, or
hamsa) is
maya and therefore subject to temptation. In other words, “Love God, and do what you will” - but make sure that you are always loving God and not yourself!
A number of groups in the Christian tradition (such as the Quietists, and various groups of Quakers) have taught that they have reached a state of sinlessness, and been rejected by the orthodox tradition as heretical.
Here is the Christian teaching on such meditation techniques as TM and yoga: Before the Fall of man, because we were illumined by the divine energies (“in the state of grace”, to use Roman Catholic terminology) we naturally had intercourse and communion with the angels as our natural and fitting environment and habitat. At the Fall, due to sin our natural companions became the demons, and so God protected us by closing us off from intercourse with the spiritual realm. If and when preternatural phenomena like clairvoyance are real (something which as a scientist - I was just accepted into a Ph.D. program in theoretical astrophysics - I am sceptical of but cannot deny, and which as a man I find probable due to empirical experience), they are due to the left-over effects of what we enjoyed before the ancestral sin. Practices such as yoga and TM try to break open the “seals” implanted in our souls protecting us from spiritual influences we are not prepared for - I would say these seals are what Hindus call the chakras - and as such can be dangerous.
These seals or chakras need to be opened in order for someone to accept divine grace, because the divine energies are spiritual influences no less than demonic influences and temptations. (For a Christian, if my attempt to understand both Hindu and Christian psychology in terms of each other is correct, then the chakras are opened by divine grace, organically and in accord with the measure of grace present in the soul.) It is laudable and beautiful, therefore, that Hindus will spend their lives striving to open them, since the aim of yoga (if I am not confusing things) is to release and open up the body to the divine energy. In reality this cannot be done by force, without God granting his grace to us, since finite man (
jiva) cannot control or attain the Infinite God on his own strength. But Christianity was not revealed to India, and the Incarnation had not happened for thousands of years while people were trying their best to attain God through yoga - and in lieu of having Christ and the sacraments, trying to reach God with what you have is the next best thing one can do. For this reason yoga is probably the safest done authentically in its proper context - combined with prayer, as a spiritual discipline, rather than just an exercise. But as Christians we know how to pray as God has taught us, and it would not be appropriate to engage in Hindu forms of prayer.
Zen from my understanding isn’t a spiritual discipline in the same sense - it’s a perfectly safe and beneficial psychological and mental exercise. But I don’t really know enough about it to judge.
AntiTheist of course is not going to agree with me on any of this, because he is an atheist and I am a Christian.