Yoga's unholy wars: How The Christians Stole Yoga From The Hindu's
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Pastor Dale Morgan
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Dec 22, 2010, 4:08:02 PM12/22/10
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Perilous
Times, False Religions, False gods
Yoga's unholy wars: How The Christians Stole Yoga From The
Hindu's
The yoga industry is under assault from religious critics, Hindu
and Christian. But are the objections theological – or financial?
o Stewart J Lawrence
o guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 22 December 2010 16.00 GMT
yoga hinduism Sun salute: yoga practitioners on Santa Monica
beach, California. According to a 2004 report, 15.5 million
Americans practise yoga. Photograph: Alamy
Once again, a burgeoning controversy is engulfing the American
yoga world – the sprawling exercise-cum-enlightenment industry
that has steadily captured the hearts and minds of Americans with
its promise of a buff bod and a fast track to Nirvana. The last
time we checked in on the nation's "wellness practice of choice",
which claims a whopping $6bn in annual revenues, dwarfing martial
arts and massage combined, the movement – or rather, industry –
was divided over the "naked yoga" trend and accusations of using
sex to sell classes.
Now, though, it's not sex, but religion that threatens to knock
the yoga world off balance. Religious fundamentalists – Christians
on one side, Hindus on the other – say they've had enough of
yoga's impact on their respective faiths – and their adherents'
wallets. Sinners, they reckon, even relatively affluent yoga
devotees, have only so much disposable income available for
church- or temple-building, especially now when Americans face
slow recovery from a historically deep recession.
And, the complaint goes, if Americans keep spending most of their
precious "tithings" on $30 yoga classes, $300 workshops, and
exotic $3,000 retreats, how will we keep the lights in our temples
and mega-churches on?
Albert Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary, and a leading Christian theologian, fired the first shot
in the new holy war against American yoga last September, when he
wrote a blistering article, virtually denouncing the practice as
the work of the devil, and warning adherents not to attend yoga
classes, whose postures and breathing exercises, he believes, are
inseparable from the Hindu cosmos, and dangerously antithetical to
Christianity.
It was not long before Mohler's fundamentalist views received some
surprising confirmation from Hindus. In November, a small but
vocal and fairly influential group of transplanted American
Hindus, who are grouped around the Hindu-American Foundation
(HAF), launched a "Take Back Yoga" movement to try to draw
attention to what they agree are the deeply Hindu and Indian
religious roots of yoga, which, they feel, the industry has
jettisoned in order to sell yoga to secular mainstream. The
controversy reached such a pitch that HAF and its claims were even
featured in a front-page story in the New York Times.
And just when you thought things couldn't get any weirder or more
overblown, Deepak Chopra, the New Age pop-philosopher and author
who has charmed millions of bored and restless suburbanites with
his workshops, has recently offered his services as a kind of
freelance "referee" to the current dispute. Chopra, who's no
theologian but happens to be Indian, challenges the claims of HAF,
arguing that yoga actually predates Hinduism and, though
originating in his homeland, cannot be properly "owned" by any one
religious tradition. He's joined in that critique by the American
Yoga Association, which points to a multitude of yoga religious
blends, including a Jewish variant, "Torah-Yoga", as well as
"Christian Yoga", the latter also a critique of the claims of
Mohler and his fellow fundamentalists.
Many of these yoga blends largely adapt the yoga postures – and
the underlying yoga theology – to their own religious traditions.
For example, some Christian yoga practitioners have redesignated
"Salute to the Sun", a popular yoga posture that some religious
critics claim is too "paganistic", as "Salute to the Son". Some of
their classes also feature Christian hymns and mix the classic
yoga postures with "non-denominational" stretching techniques.
Of course, Hindu-Christian squabbling over yoga is not new. While
not widely reported, evangelical Christian groups in small-town
America have been trying for years to have yoga banned from
public-school gym classes, and indeed, from any publicly supported
facility, on the implied principle that yoga constitutes a
religion, and tax dollars should not be used to support its
activities. And when conflicts have threatened to get ugly, yogis
have usually offered to strip any vestiges of Hindu religiosity
from their class offerings, so as not to offend other, more
traditional religious sensibilities.
But the intervention by Mohler, HAF and Chopra have forced this
simmering, under-the-radar religious dispute out into the open – a
clear indication of just how far-reaching yoga's impact as a
grassroots movement – and a prospective financial threat to
organised religions – is becoming. Mohler's cudgel is likely to be
taken up by other mainstream Christian denominations (even though
Sarah Palin, one of America's most visible and popular Christian
personalities, is a known yoga practitioner).
So, where does this leave mainstream secular yoga practitioners
who, if they can tell the difference between a "Downward-Facing
Dog" and a "Dolphin" pose, almost certainly couldn't pronounce
their names in Sanskrit? Just when they thought they'd found a
congenial, gently spiritual refuge from the rage of organised
religion's more zealous adherents, the latter have arrived to
disturb their karma.