| Question:
How do you harmonize it with Christian prayer? Rituals? Philosophy?
There is a misconception that yoga is an Eastern religion.
It is not, although it has been closely associated with Hinduism,
Buddhism, and Jainism. Yoga is a practical spiritual discipline,
a systematic program for peaceful living with fuller awareness,
and a tremendous tool for spiritual growth offered as a gift
to the world by India. When a person’s heart is open
to the richness, beauty and power of another tradition, it
not only brings respect and understanding of the other, but
it produces a meaningful deepening of one’s own relationship
with God.
Traditional yoga offers people the opportunity to deepen
their own faith by allowing them to connect to their nature
which by design is open to God. In yoga the spiritual
is experienced by cultivating awareness and using awareness
to explore the subtle dimensions of our being.
For example, students might be encouraged to develop their
awareness by connecting with the sensations in their bodies,
by connecting with their breath, and by noting any emotions
or thoughts that arise as they practice asana. This is yoga.
As they begin to connect with their bodies, they might be
invited to enter into the deep stillness within the body-mind.
It is in this inner stillness that we open ourselves to the
presence of God and the movement of the Holy Spirit within
the heart and mind.
As Christian teachers, we employ a variety of methods in
praying through our whole being. Some use affirmations drawn
from scripture while holding a pose. Others “embody”
classic prayers like the Our Father in posture sequences,
and still others develop posture flows to inspiring song prayers
as a way of offering thanksgiving, making intercession, and
glorifying God in and through our bodies. The methods vary,
but the original and underlying inspiration remains the same:
to work with yoga as a spiritual path for all and as a way
of opening to God. For Christians, that path goes to God through
Jesus Christ, guided by the indwelling Spirit. For others,
the path will lead to their understanding of Divinity or Supreme
Being or Absolute.
Bernadette Latin
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