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Why I Teach and Practice
by Joanne Wohlmuth
I teach an early morning class for Christians wanting to
practice yoga. Recently, a dear friend and yoga student of
mine who has attended many of my classes asked, “What
do you feel the difference is between Christian yoga and the
regular yoga we do?” I could tell by the sound of her
voice that she was somewhat puzzled, perhaps unconvinced,
that there was or ought to be a difference at all. I promised
her that we would chat; in the meantime, I proceeded to ponder
over why practicing yoga in a Christian context has made such
a difference in my life.
First, I needed to explain to her that we are not practicing
Christian yoga, but simply are Christians practicing yoga.
Yoga is yoga. It needn’t be Christianized, made feminine,
nor change color or ethnicity to suit its audience. Yoga is
neutral and therefore it can benefit any who practice it,
be that person a Christian, a woman, a black person or an
Asian. The intention of yoga is to open us up to the possibility
of union with God.
I was invited, or should I say challenged, to initiate a
yoga class that would encourage Christians to come and practice
yoga. “You could teach this wonderful science,”
I was told, “with full devotion and commitment to your
faith, and without the need to hold back.” These words
made immediate sense to me, and I needed no further convincing
to commence such a class.
I have been practicing yoga for 31 years, and have been teaching
for 29 of those 31 years. I lived in a yoga ashram where I
took a Sanskrit name. I followed the guru and I committed
myself to the establishment and running of a yoga center in
my country (Bermuda) for more than 20 years. I trained others
to become yoga teachers because I believe it is a beneficial
practice. In short, like many other long-term practitioners
of yoga, I have run the gamut, sunk my heart and soul into
this work. I have learned a lot about yoga for which I am
grateful. What I did not know or learn was how to integrate
it into my faith practice as a Christian. Hence as my practice
of yoga wore on, my appreciation for “that good old
time religion” which was in my bones and had lived in
the flesh and bones of my ancestors long before I arrived,
wore off.
As a long-term yoga practitioner I never stopped being a
Christian. I have valued the practice of yoga and meditation
deeply for the peace and experience of God’s nearness
it gives me. After spending time and attending workshops with
Fr. Tom Ryan, I found the piece that had eluded me both in
the church and on the yoga mat, that lone puzzle piece for
which I had been searching for many, many years. I just needed
to bring the points of connection between the two to greater
clarity so as to integrate the two harmoniously in my own
lived experience. I have always been convinced that practicing
yoga made me a better Christian, and now I feel I can better
articulate it and share it with others as well.
So now I practice and teach with a new commitment both to
yoga and to my Christian faith. When I first began teaching
yoga, I felt that what I was blessed to receive I was duty
bond to share as a gift to others. I continue to believe that,
and will share it with others, like my long-time Christian
friend, or the recent young adult female student who entered
the class and said, “I am a Christian and I love to
practice yoga. I am looking for a class that honors both parts
of who I am.”
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