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Guru's book claims Jesus practised yoga
Sydney Morning Herald ^ | December 18, 2004 | Teresa Watanabe

Posted on 12/18/2004 5:54:58 PM PST by nickcarraway

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To: nickcarraway

Boy, everybody sure wants a piece of Jesus, don't they?


41 posted on 12/18/2004 11:54:18 PM PST by fire_eye (Once you've pulled his pin, Mr. Hand Grenade is no longer your friend!)
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To: muawiyah
Yoga is also great exercise. People who tell you it's a fast doorway to the occult are full of it. There is, in fact, no doorway to the occult since it simply doesn't exist.

That's no less a dogmatic statement than his that yoga positions are tributes to obscure deities.

Yoga may indeed be "great exercise," but the fact remains that by its nature, it cannot solely be healthful and athletic -- its practice calls upon the participant to buy into its inherent mysticism.

As a Christian, I prefer Pilates, which doesn't ask you to adopt elements of a religion you reject.

42 posted on 12/18/2004 11:58:30 PM PST by L.N. Smithee (Liberals love minorities...as long as they stay in their place. Ask Ted Rall. Ask Harry Reid.)
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To: L.N. Smithee

I disagree. You can practice yoga postures - certainly at the simple "I need to stretch" - without buying into ANY of its mysticism.

In martial arts, some debate the tie between the religious training once associated with it & its pure atheletic movements. Most would agree it depends on how you wish to learn it - some will only teach it associated with its religious roots (meaning no Christian can accept learning there), while others divorce it from its religious past and teach it simply as self-defense/sport.

I believe Christians should understand yoga and oriental martial arts have a religious root, and that some teachers will teach religion under the guise of physical fitness. But it is wrong to say I cannot learn, say, judo without buying into oriental philosophy (religion).

I joked earlier about watching the video only to check out the cute girl - truth is, when I follow the stretching, I see good improvement in my flexibility. As taught in the video I've got, there is NO - zero, nada - religous overtones. Just "Bend over holding the chair edge thus, keep your back straight and slowly move your shoulders..."


43 posted on 12/19/2004 12:25:42 AM PST by Mr Rogers
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To: sinanju

I've heard of the guy. A painter too. He got around a lot same as Gurdjieff. We must give him credit


44 posted on 12/19/2004 3:40:57 AM PST by dennisw (Help put the "Ch" back in Chanukah)
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To: Indie
"Sheesh, I hold a black in Kenpo and my son in TKD. I guess we're satanic too."

My 2nd dan is in hapkido but I haven't got to the devil worship stuff yet either. Maybe 3rd dan ;-)

45 posted on 12/19/2004 6:49:31 AM PST by muir_redwoods
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To: sinanju
This Roerich sounds like a contemporary of Madame Blavatsky..

Possible linkage there?

46 posted on 12/19/2004 9:16:06 AM PST by Drammach (Freedom; not just a job, it's an adventure..)
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To: Drammach
There may have been an alternative concerning Mary Magdelene and moving to Europe with their child, ( the whole Bible Code thing..) but I may be imagining that.. ( I have seen that story too many times to trust my memory on where I saw it first...)

Wow! Then did he and Trinity pilot a spaceship into the mainframe to confront the machines and free humanity from the Matrix?

Just kidding. Sorry. Couldn't help myself.

47 posted on 12/19/2004 9:25:06 AM PST by wizardoz
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To: nickcarraway
Actually, the Magi were the priests of the Parthian Empire, which was distinctly Persian rather than Indian. They held the right to name the kings of the Parthians, which is why Herod and the rest of Jerusalem got nervous when they showed up asking for "He who is born King of the Jews." They thought the Parthians, the Romans' largest rival, were trying to stir up a border incident. (The fact that the Magi wouldn't have come without a small army to protect them probably didn't help either.)

In all likelihood, these Magi were familiar with the prophet Daniel, who had been the head of their order at one time. They would have known the birth of the Messiah was close from his prophecy of the Seventy Weeks. I would imagine that either one of them received a prophecy concerning the star, or they had written prophecies of Daniel that have since been lost to us about the Messiah's birth star that led them to seek Him out in Israel when it appeared.

48 posted on 12/19/2004 9:30:46 AM PST by Buggman (Your failure to be informed does not make me a kook.)
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To: nickcarraway

Sounds like an Indo-Italian entree.

Just kidding - if my recollection serves, wasn't the good yogi the inspiration for Yes' Tales from Topographic Oceans?


49 posted on 12/19/2004 9:34:17 AM PST by P.O.E. (Thank you, Vets!)
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To: nickcarraway
Guru's book claims Jesus practised yoga"

Jesus was resurrected from the grave. He didn't need inventions of man to tell Him how to function.

50 posted on 12/19/2004 9:35:43 AM PST by patriot_wes
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To: sinanju

Thanks for the interesting story.


51 posted on 12/19/2004 12:15:03 PM PST by RightWhale (Destroy the dark; restore the light)
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To: nickcarraway

Satan never sleeps. He knows his time is fast running out.


52 posted on 12/19/2004 12:15:45 PM PST by O.C. - Old Cracker (When the cracker gets old, you wind up with Old Cracker. - O.C.)
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To: patriot_wes
Yoga is simply a very logical and effective exercise program. I can't say too much about meditation as it relates to yoga, because the former comes from the Buddhist tradition. Neither of the two disciplines are incompatible, and each should dovetail nicely with Christianity. Meditation is basically learning how to sit still. One doesn't "meditate" at all, but rather the opposite; one learns not to think for periods at a time in an effort to live in the present. At bottom, there is a logic to it all, indeed a supreme logic.
53 posted on 12/19/2004 3:39:08 PM PST by ashtanga
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To: ashtanga
"one learns not to think for periods at a time in an effort to live in the present."

just what we need, people teaching us not to think - but I guess that's why we would use the name of the Messiah and yoga in the same sentence!

54 posted on 12/19/2004 6:47:49 PM PST by patriot_wes
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To: Drammach

This link
- http://www.stephen-knapp.com/jesus_taught_bhaktiyoga.htm
outlines the specific types of yoga teachings Jesus learned and adapted to his teaching in the middle east.
Over a period of 15 years I studied a form of yoga, Raj Yoga (royal union), which includes an understanding of bhakti (worship) yoga and karma (action/consequence) yoga.
Having been raised in a christian household, over time I asked some of the senior yogis about Jesus abilities. Their answers provided a significant understanding for me.

To help people understand those answers here I first need to provide three of the principles of Raj Yoga regarding the soul, re-incarnation and karma, and I offer a small expansion to help understand each

1/ the nature and form of us, the soul - is an infintessimally small point of conscient light (re- the bible- this is how we're 'made in God's image' God being light) dwelling in the pineal gland of the brain (hence the hindu recognition with a bindi/dot in the middle of the forehead, where we, the soul, reside - also known as the third eye, or eye of spiritual knowledge).

2/Reincarnation. We the soul are eternal, taking birth after birth in a new body (no rocks, trees or animals note), 'selecting' our parents each time according to our and their karmic vibration at the time of conception.

3/ Karma - responsibility for our physical & spiritual actions as cause and effect. Jesus taught it as reaping what we sow. The modern description - we get back what we give out.


There are a number of particularly interesting things about Jesus and his role with regard to this.

Jesus was a seeker of spiritual truth, hence his travel and study of yoga in India. It was through spiritual study and practice of meditation he achieved the degree of enlightenment specific to him understanding his role and his karma. He knew his role in this birth, and his future. His inevitable role was to rectify his karma, which was not good (persecution by his own people, crucifixion), from previous births by teaching the sowing of the seeds of love and compassion toward eachother, and understanding the only liberation to achieve this comes through God.

His role came to prominence around age thirty (his saturn return for those who understand the astrological significance)when he hosted the pure, Christ soul for the three years of his teaching and performing miracles. Jesus knew he was the vessel, and that his karma was inevitable (he'd be sacrificed for the work of the Christ soul). Jesus was the soul who showed a human nature - anger, fear, sorrow. The Christ soul, so powerful and pure of vibration dis-ease was healed by 'touching the hem of his garment', ability to 'cheat' death, manipulate matter, etc, enabled Jesus to rectify his karma within the space of those three years. Both Jesus and the Christ soul are still here with us going through their individual incarnations - according to the law of reincarnation, and subject to the physical law, as we all are, known as entropy (increasing disorder of matter, decreasing purity of the soul).

What's to come is even more interesting, and we all have our 'take' on it according to the story tellers of our chosen religion. And the most profound thing within the cycle of time is, for us all, that our happiness is inevitable.


55 posted on 01/01/2005 9:51:59 AM PST by jungblood
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