Showing posts with label Yoga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yoga. Show all posts

"Sacred Catholic Yoga" vs The School of Prayer

Also, the instructor’s website is loaded with New Age language and God, the “Great Spirit” is referred to as “her.”  But beyond this example, which isn’t particularly interesting, as faddish yoga is boringly ubiquitous these days, what is troubling is that it is indicative of a wider and deeper spiritual impoverishment at the parish level when it comes to everyday Catholics and their awareness of the Church’s time-honored patrimony and heritage on prayer and the spiritual life. Sincere, well-meaning individuals are looking for “spirituality” but don’t know where to turn for answers. So “Catholic Yoga” crops up to fill the void. We’re looking outside our own house when we have plenty of better resources inside to tap into. The problem is they’ve been boxed up and stored in the attic, long forgotten.
full article at Cream City Catholic

Bingo!  James nails it.

To really offer a Catholic alternative to Yoga, I think a monastic community needs to attach a martial art to true Catholic theology.  Having someone whom does not understand basic Christian philosophy lead the charge is worse than a waste of time, it's harmful.

Also:
Yoga & Reiki in Wisconsin Catholic hospitals
Fr. John Hardon SJ: Why is Yoga incompatible with Catholicism?

Sighting of a large influx of Catholic worshippers

From a friend
Look at all the pagans worshiping with Mother Church. This is a sign of hope.

The church in the background is St. James the Less Catholic Church in La Crosse.  Perhaps inadvertent during group Yoga was any worshiping of the one True God present in every Catholic church around the world.

Sobornost: Orthodox Statement on Yoga

Excerpt:
But what is yoga? The word yoga comes from the Sanskrit word yujwhich means to “unite”, meaning the union of the individual soul with the impersonal Absolute One of Hinduism (see P. Schreiner, Yoga: Wörterbuch des Christen-tums, 1995, p. 1376). This union is considered a liberation and redemption of mankind from karma, that is, from the consequences that result from our choices and actions in supposedly previous lives.

Moreover, concerning the term yoga, we must stress that it is used as a qualifying term of one of the six classical orthodox schools of Hindu philosophy (see H. Baer, ​​”Yoga”, in the Lexikon der Sekten, Sohdergruppen und Weltanschauungen, 7th Ed, 2001, pp. 1166-1174).

But is yoga exercise? Can one isolate the practical exercise from its religious content and background? Can one ignore the purpose for which it is used? Unquestionably no.

And what about the claim of various centers, institutes, schools, groups, journals and gyms, that present it as lacking a religious nature, alleging it to be a “scientific” psychosomatic practice, or a practice for a simple existence and spiritual self-knowledge? Without doubt these assertions are inaccurate. They oftentimes misinform and confuse using an extremely attractive vocabulary (see R. Hauth, (Hrsg), Kompaktlexikon Religionen, 1998, p. 366).
whole statement at Sobornost(not too long and worth the read)

Image

How not to prepare for Advent

Darkness of our inner depth

Do my fears and anxieties take over my decisions?
Do I allow others to help me in the darkness?

Do I look for the beauty and freedom of the darkness?

As seen at the entrance of Maria Angelorum chapel, by Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration in La Crosse.

Um, no thanks, I prefer the Light to the Darkness.  Another unfortunate consequence of their marriage to Reiki. 

Hand-coloured version of the anonymous wood engraving
known as the Flammarion woodcut (1888).

Yoga & Reiki in Wisconsin Catholic hospitals

Yoga is offered at professedly Catholic hospitals.

So what's the big deal?  Read Why is Yoga incompatible with Catholicism? by Fr. John Hardon, SJ

Marshfield Clinic:
Marshfield Clinic Cancer Care is proud to offer Yoga Classes! A Level 1 Certified Yoga Fit Instructor, who is also an Oncology Certified Nurse will be leading this class.

The class will be concentrating on the Hatha Yoga. This type of Yoga focuses on postures, breathing techniques, and meditation. The first class will start July 7th and go to August 11th.
Sacred Heart Eau Claire
The Center for Healthy Living’s MBSR course is based on the Stress Reduction Program founded in 1979 by Jon Kabat-Zinn, PhD, at the University of Massachusetts Medical School. The course includes elements of mindfulness meditation and yoga, mixed with group discussions and weekly assignments, to help you learn to see more clearly and relate more directly to the challenges in your life.
Yoga, a series of postures and controlled breathing exercises, is a popular means of stress reduction. The goal of yoga is to reach complete peacefulness in your body and mind.

The quiet, precise movements focus your mind less on your busy day and more on the moment as you move your body through poses that require balance and concentration. Yoga is a good means for stress reduction and relaxation.
And if Yoga isn't new age enough for you, you can try out Yoga's sister Reiki and find your "spirit guide" to lead you to become a Reiki master where you can heal people without the power of Christ the Healer.  This and more can all be yours at your Wisconsin Catholic Hospitals

Franciscan Skemp La Crosse - A Catholic Nun teaches the course.

Ministry Health Care - Stevens Point, Marshfield, Wabasha

St Nicholas Hospital - Sheboygan

The USCCB findings after studying Reiki is crystal clear. 
Since Reiki therapy is not compatible with either Christian teaching or scientific evidence, it would be inappropriate for Catholic institutions, such as Catholic health care facilities and retreat centers, or persons representing the Church, such as Catholic chaplains, to promote or to provide support for Reiki therapy.
-USCCB Guidelines on Reiki (pdf)

FSPA "Spirituality" Center celebrates 25 years of Buddhism

From Sunday's La Crosse Tribune
Inside these brick walls a businessman found life was about more than his career. A mother found balance amid a race to meet the demands of her kids, workplace and home. People for 25 years have found peace.

"From the minute you walk in the door there is a sense of calmness and a sense of people being present to what is happening at the moment - it seems like your blood pressure drops several points immediately," said Brad Sturm, president of Coulee Bank and chairman of the spirituality center board.

The Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration[who publicly supported taxpayer funded abortion] founded the Franciscan Spirituality Center [which has nothing to do with Franciscan spirituality] 25 years ago[that would put this at 1985..] in part of St. Rose Convent. Since then 246,000 people[almost 200 per week] have come through the doors, whether for retreats, relaxation, spiritual guidance, training to become spiritual directors or other programs hosted at the center. The center welcomed nearly 15,000 people last year - the most guests in a single year.

"They started it and said the Holy Spirit will guide us - and that's what happened," said Vince Hatt, director of the center. [Apparently He wasn't good enough.  They are now guided by their Reiki "spirit guide"]

The start

The Franciscan Sisters had a history of responding to needs in the community. In the late 1800s, they saw needs for health care and education and founded a hospital, which became Franciscan Skemp, and a school, which became Viterbo University. In the years leading up to 1985, they saw a need for spiritual formation, or the development of the whole person by tapping into one's spiritual needs. They needed a retreat center where they could train spiritual directors to guide people on a path to wholeness.  [History has shown the FSPA has done an incredible amount of good for this city and diocese.  The Spirituality Center could have filled a great need, but indeed is far from it]

People tend to think they are done with spirituality at confirmation, Hatt said. But as we grow older, we become more aware of our incompleteness and search for answers.[True]

"There is something incomplete about the human condition," Hatt said. "We believe that one is not complete until they have a relationship with a higher power[read Reiki] or the holy." [....right, so this must be a direct quote from St Francis while receiving the sacred stigmata]

The spiritual journey

The spirituality center helped Stephanie Swartz, mother and senior nursing consultant at Gundersen Lutheran, move out of the "fast lane" at a time when that style of living became a health crisis, she said.

Swartz said her life was tipping heavily out of balance. She drove her kids to activities, worked, cleaned the house and mowed the lawn, but never took a moment to slow down and be present.

"I come from a long line of women that take care of everyone and not themselves," she said.

She was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2002. It was a wake-up call and Swartz decided her journey to health would not only be medical, but spiritual. The center allowed her to take that journey with a community of like-minded people, she said. [Another great example of a person seeking the True Spirituality,  which the Franciscan Spirituality Center denied her]

The spirituality center is a place she can be "more of a human being rather than a human doing," she said.

"The spirituality center has been the beacon in the fog," she said. [too bad nobody turned the light on]

Now Swartz sets aside time for meditation and contemplation every day.  She is cancer free and is a resource to other women going through similar health challenges.

"I look at my life as a keel of a boat. If you are centered[centering prayer], so are the people you work with and your family," she said. "That is what transitions into being a good parent, wife, employee and leader."

Serving all

The spirituality center is dedicated to helping anyone find wholeness. Its broad vision has helped the center respond to the needs of the community as they arise, said Mary Kathryn Fogarty, FSPA, a former center director of 12 years.

"We are not sitting in an ivory tower thinking up something by ourselves," she said. "What is out there is inviting us to respond."

For example, the center has coordinated programs for people who are unemployed, experiencing depression and/or searching for their purpose in life. It has offered programs parishes typically don't, like classes on meditation[this is not Lexio Divina], yoga and weekend retreats. [St. Rose of Viterbo was well versed in yoga before her death at age 17]

"We had yoga[what this is all about] almost from the beginning and other things that some people are disturbed about and question today[we are called Christians, thank you very much], but they are programs we've found helpful," said Kathleen Kenkel, FSPA, the center's first director. "The focus is not only on Catholics or deeply religious people, but anyone that wants growth with a spiritual direction." [...Doesn't matter if that spiritual growth is positive or negative I guess]

[The kingdom of heaven is like unto a treasure hidden in a field. Which a man having found, hid it, and for joy thereof goeth, and selleth all that he hath, and buyeth that field. Again the kingdom of heaven is like to a merchant seeking good pearls. Who when he had found one pearl of great price, went his way, and sold all that he had, and bought it. -Matt 13 44-46 

Beth Erickson, a center board member, was initially attracted to the La Crosse women's writer's group at the center.

"This is a group of women who get together every two weeks and check their egos at the door," she said. "The atmosphere is transformational."

The writers' group has evolved to one that held its own conference, featuring author Kathleen Norris in March 2009. The conference, aimed at getting people to write for personal healing, drew more than 300 people from across the country, said Theresa Washburn, director of communications for the spirituality center.

"It's a place where we've grown, not just in writing skills, but in who we are and our confidence as women, writers and people," Erickson said.

Reaching out

The spirituality center today continues to be a mission of the FSPA[Hello Apostolic Visitation]. But it has evolved to include a broad cross section of the community extending well outside the convent walls. The board, originally all Franciscan Sisters, is now made up of 12 laypeople and three FSPA. [perhaps the FSPA is having some vocational troubles]

The center's spiritual direction preparation program - which initially trained a class of primarily Franciscan Sisters - now has 27 participants from all religious denominations and none are Franciscan Sisters, Hatt said. It's an in increasingly diverse, interfaith community of participants, he said.  [Ecumenicism at its best!]

"It is very much interfaith, which I love," Swartz said. "Although I grew up Catholic, I've learned a lot about spirituality in a global sense." [LOL, thee most telling statement in the article]

The center has reached out to more people. In the late 1990s, the center started a certificate in servant leadership to bring community leaders spiritual and psychological grounding. In 2008 the center, in collaboration with a local coalition of congregations working on justice issues, AMOS Inc., started a program to provide more supportive relationships for people recently released from jail.  [That is the same AMOS that partners with pro-abortion Center for Community Change and Gamaliel]

So, what will the center look like 10 years from now? "We don't know," Hatt said.  [Maybe add some Wicca spirituality? ]

"That's the beauty when you are open to possibilities," Fogarty said. "We can carry on the history of the Franciscan Sisters.[Hardly] We can respond to what we see as the needs of this time." [Responded to a real need, but a glass of sand will not quench anyones thirst, Buddist or Catholic]

-end of article

The USCCB findings after studying Reiki is crystal clear.  (Obviously the FSPA has already shown it does not acknowledge the authority of any bishop over their order)
Since Reiki therapy is not compatible with either Christian teaching or scientific evidence, it would be inappropriate for Catholic institutions, such as Catholic health care facilities and retreat centers, or persons representing the Church, such as Catholic chaplains, to promote or to provide support for Reiki therapy.
-USCCB Guidelines on Reiki (pdf)