is this true?
yoga
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04-24-2008, 07:46 PM
I heard the Roman Catholic Church condemns yoga (I am not blaming her)
is this true?
04-25-2008, 05:42 AM
05-07-2008, 08:22 PM
Not according to our diocese in Sacramento California.,
May 3, 2008 Yoga course begins May 15
05-08-2008, 12:41 AM
I think we should meditate on the holy mysteries of our faith rather than the ticks and tocks of our bodies.
05-10-2008, 02:58 PM
I don't practice yoga, I would not advice anyone else to do it either...
05-10-2008, 07:57 PM
DJMitch Wrote:http://www.magisterium.net/yoga.htm A Fr. Hardon piece. I'll have to read this one. He was one of a dying breed of Jesuits. I have wondered about this though. Where does one draw the line at taking things (i.e., adapting) from pagans? After all, even St. Augustine drank from the Neoplatonists' cup (as, perhaps many early Church Fathers resortd to pagan concepts).
05-13-2008, 01:44 PM
You can find another article if you go here, click the table of contents and scroll down until you find the article(s) on yoga.
05-13-2008, 01:47 PM
Yogurt is gross.
I've condemned it for years.
05-13-2008, 02:32 PM
Uh-oh! Be careful of how you're sitting and breathing in your chair right now! I heard pagans used to breathe in and out while they sat down! Sorry, but the idea that breathing and stretching in certain ways can have a negative impact on a Catholic soul is laughable to me. Unless you consciously make the movements for the reasons the pagans did...you aren't practicing paganism. If Yoga requires the spiritual aspect, then most Westerners aren't practicing Yoga, but borrowing the stretching and breathing methods from it and calling it Yoga.
06-09-2008, 06:30 PM
The articles linked to are useful, but need to be understood in connection with Hinduism. Yoga, in Eastern understanding, is an eightfold path to spiritual enlightenment, if I remember correctly (search yoga on wiki and scroll down to Yoga Sutras of Patanjali). Only one of those "limbs" or what-have-you is about physical postures, which is supposed to teach dicipline (St. Paul compares the Christian life to a race, so why not other endurance sports?) and improve concentration (helpful for prayer, taxes, childrearing etc, no?). My sense is that the system is condemned as a whole, rather than the postures themselves, particularly the belief that this "path" will lead you to a pantheistic "merging" with God.
I don't see why a Catholic couldn't use the postures (asana-yoga) to stay in shape, relax, etc. in order to better fulfill his or her duties in his or her state of life, given a modest environment and a strictly physical (ie not "spiritual") instructor leading. |
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