Hatha Yoga, The Coiled Serpent & Undiscerning Christians
Hatha Yoga, The Coiled Serpent & Undiscerning Christians
Hatha Yoga, The Coiled Serpent & Undiscerning Christians
A great many people today are practising yoga, specifically the kind known as Hatha
Yoga. They are doing so, they claim, purely for its alleged health benefits and not for
any religious or philosophical reason. As a result many Bible-believing Christians
have taken up Hatha yoga on the understanding that, if it is treated simply as a set of
physical exercises, it will have absolutely no effect on their spiritual life. But they are
wrong.
The information in this brochure will show why they are deceived and why yoga (of
any kind) is not just incompatible with Biblical Christianity, but hostile to it.
What is yoga?
Yoga lies at the heart of Hinduism. It comprises a number of physical postures
(asanas) which are held for a set period, during which time the practitioner engages
in meditation (dhyana), usually with the use of a mantra, and breathes in a prescribed
way (pranayama). There are at least seven systems of yoga, of which Hatha yoga is
one. Every system has the same goal, namely to bring the subject into a state of union
with the so-called Divine Consciousness.
Accordingly, the word yoga means 'yoked' or joined together in perfect union. The
yogi is striving to become one with Brahm, the Hindu godhead. He believes that each
person is in essence a divine being who has not yet awoken to his divinity. The
purpose of yoga is to awaken this dormant divinity and free the practitioner from
bondage, both to the physical body and to the endless cycle of reincarnation.
It is impossible to separate the various physical aspects of yoga from the philosophy
in which they are embedded. The yogi believes that all life is maya, an illusion, and
that only through the disciplines of yoga, both mental and physical, can he transcend
the illusion and experience enlightenment (moksha). The various techniques that he
uses are designed primarily to slow down all of his bodily processes and enter as far
as he can into a disembodied state. The more he disengages from the reality around
him, the less he is subject to maya or illusion. Thus, in a real sense, he is simulating
death. His goal is perfect stillness, complete emptiness, the total submergence of 'self'
in the great Universal Self. He also believes that his yogic disciplines break down and
dissipate his karma, the compendium of unresolved past actions, both in this life and
in previous lives, that are supposedly holding him prisoner in his physical body.
Is this Biblical?
Now pause for a moment. How much of this is in agreement with Biblical
Christianity? The yogi believes that both the universe and his body are an illusion,
that he is basically divine, that all human conduct is governed by the unforgiving
mechanism known as karma, that the soul reincarnates again and again in accordance
with its karma, and that man saves himself by dissolving his karma, transcending the
veil of maya, and entering into conscious union with the great Universal Self (which
Buddhists call the Void).
The Bible teaches loudly and clearly! that, not only is all of this completely false,
but that it is dangerous. Man is not divine. Creation is not an illusion. Soul does not
reincarnate. Sin is not karma. God is not inside man, waiting to be found. And man
cannot save himself!
The yogi in his vanity believes all of Satan's lies.
How, then, can a Christian expect to eat at the same table and not be affected?
The whole philosophy of yoga is built on the belief that the human body is an illusion
produced by maya. This means that, by using these postures, the individual is
subscribing one way or another to the philosophy that underpins them otherwise she
(most western practitioners are female) wouldn't be attending a yoga class. The fact
that she may dismiss the philosophy as irrelevant or incidental doesn't make any
difference.
Hindu Missionaries
Westerners may be surprised to know that Hinduism has its missionaries. They
generally spread their religious beliefs in the same way through yoga. They know,
and have demonstrated thousands of times in practice, that if they can get a westerner
to take up yoga for its alleged health benefits (or for relaxation), they can fill his mind
with a broad range of religious ideas that he would otherwise reject. Westerners
naively absorb these ideas, despite their pantheism and their blatantly unbiblical
content.
Yoga involves spending a set period of time alone every day in an introverted state.
The practitioner empties her mind and remains unnaturally still, as though imitating a
corpse. She may enter a light trance which in turn will affect the way she perceives
her daily life. It should hardly be surprising, therefore, that many regular practitioners
of Hatha yoga drift gradually into the paganism of the New Age movement.
Christians who indulge in this foolishness are putting themselves in harm's way. They
have rejected the peace and joy that is found only in Christ and have placed their trust
instead in the idolatrous practices of eastern mysticism. Rather than praying to the
LORD and rejoicing in their salvation, they have chosen instead to behave like
corpses and enter the Void.
Of course, most yoga instructors in the West neglect to mention any of this. They
deny that their brand of yoga has a psychic dimension or that it can open practitioners
to unwanted super-natural influences.
________________________
Jeremy James
Ireland
February 6, 2016
For further information visit www.zephaniah.eu
Copyright Jeremy James 2016