AP/ October 7, 2010, 11:05 AM

Southern Baptist Leader: Yoga Isn't Christian

A Southern Baptist leader who is calling for Christians to avoid yoga and its spiritual attachments is getting plenty of pushback from enthusiasts who defend the ancient practice.

Southern Baptist Seminary President Albert Mohler says the stretching and meditative discipline derived from Eastern religions is not a Christian pathway to God.

Mohler said he objects to "the idea that the body is a vehicle for reaching consciousness with the divine."

"That's just not Christianity," Mohler told The Associated Press.

Mohler said feedback has come through e-mail and comments on blogs and other websites since he wrote an essay to address questions about yoga he has heard for years.

"I'm really surprised by the depth of the commitment to yoga found on the part of many who identify as Christians," Mohler said.

Yoga fans say their numbers have been growing in the U.S. A 2008 study by the Yoga Journal put the number at 15.8 million, or nearly 7 percent of adults. About 6.7 percent of American adults are Southern Baptists, according to a 2007 survey by the Pew Research Center Forum on Religion & Public Life.

Mohler argued in his online essay last month that Christians who practice yoga "must either deny the reality of what yoga represents or fail to see the contradictions between their Christian commitments and their embrace of yoga."

He said his view is "not an eccentric Christian position."

Other Christian leaders have said practicing yoga is incompatible with the teachings of Jesus. Pat Robertson has called the chanting and other spiritual components that go along with yoga "really spooky." California megachurch pastor John MacArthur called yoga a "false religion." Muslim clerics have banned Muslims from practicing yoga in Egypt, Malaysia and Indonesia, citing similar concerns.

Yoga proponents say the wide-ranging discipline, which originated in India, offers physical and mental healing through stretching poses and concentration.

"Lots of people come to yoga because they are often in chronic pain. Others come because they think it's a nice workout," said Allison Terracio, who runs the Infinite Bliss studio in Louisville.

And some yoga studios have made the techniques more palatable for Christians by removing the chanting and associations to eastern religions, namely Hinduism and its multiple deities.

Stephanie Dillon, who has injected Christian themes into her studio in Louisville, said yoga brought her closer to her Christian faith, which had faded after college and service in the Army.

"What I found is that it opened my spirit, it renewed my spirituality," Dillon said. "That happened first and then I went back to church." Dillon attends Southeast Christian Church in Louisville and says many evangelical Christians from the church attend her yoga classes.

She said she prayed on the question of whether to mix yoga and Christianity before opening her studio, PM Yoga, where she discusses her relationship with Jesus during classes.

"My objection (to Mohler's view) personally is that I feel that yoga enhances a person's spirituality," Dillon said. "I don't like to look at religion from a law standpoint but a relationship standpoint, a relationship with Jesus Christ specifically."

Mohler wrote the essay after reading "The Subtle Body," where author Stefanie Syman traces the history of yoga in America. Syman noted the growing popularity of yoga in the U.S. by pointing out that first lady Michelle Obama has added it to the festivities at the annual White House Easter Egg Roll on the front lawn.

Mohler said many people have written him to say they're simply doing exercises and forgoing yoga's eastern mysticism and meditation.

"My response to that would be simple and straightforward: You're just not doing yoga," Mohler said.


© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
95 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
sane_thinking says:
1 " stretching and meditative discipline derived from Eastern religions is not a Christian pathway to God." I thought Christianity is also an Eastern religion and did not originate in Laguna Beach California!
2. "yoga a "false religion." Yoga (actually it is called Yog which means addition or union the opposite being Bi-yog which means subtraction or separation) is not a religion. Better study before making comments.
3. Usually people chant the mantra "AUM" from which came the word Amen and from Amen came the word Ameen. All are same!
4. As far as deities are concerned Hindus also believe in one GOD. Christians go to church to worship. They believe in sacred buildings but they cannot believe in sacred images! What a contradiction!
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
doyourresearch says:
All you have to do is research...and the truth behind yoga will become obvious.

http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Diet/story?id=1445934&page=1
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
flowrpowr says:
So God doesn't like yoga?
crazy ol bugger
reply
flowrpowr replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Wait a sec...maybe he doesn't like yogurt. Preacher didn't hear him right.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
thesevenveils says:
Yoga isn't Christian. Neither is gymnastics, cheer leading, golf, football and NASCAR.
So what's the big deal?
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
kansas1946 says:
Southern Baptist Seminary President Albert Mohler says the stretching and meditative discipline derived from Eastern religions is not a Christian pathway to God.
***********************************

And just how exactly would you know that, Mr. Mohler. Do you speak for God, have you sat down and had a little face-to-face with God. You don't know any more about what the pathway to God is that any Joe Schmoe who can read. People are pretty pathetic if they can't make their own decisions regarding sprituality. We can all read the Bible. I have never understood why folks think they need to hover around in a building, listen to some ranting fool tell you what to think, and then pay him/her for it. There is not a danged word in the Bible about Yoga, or anything like it, so how does this fool know if it should be avoided. Good Grief, I am sick of these fools.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
rockcutr says:
I think this dude read the comic book version of the Bible. Hate and fear are things Christ often refered to as a NO NO....Yet, here is Mohler..claiming that an exersise with no doctrine, dogma or charasmatic leader is a thing to fear. More wrong thinking from the misguided and uneducated. Forgive them Father for they have no forgiveness in their stone cold hearts.
It is nice that these people speak up from time to time. Just to let folks know how not to be. What a blessing.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Nikki266 says:
If anyone is spooky its pat robertson. I think these peope are afraid people will find out about eastern religions and quit the church. How come they are not worried about actual sins christians commit. Hypocriteso
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
WillowSunstar says:
People like this are one reason I am now agnostic. If someone wants to lose weight, why stand in their way of finding an exercise they like? And, you can simply do the stretches if you want to.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
kamsack50 says:
Don't fall for the CBS ploy. They're just anti-spirituality and drawing up any news they can to make you believe all spirituality is terrible so you can become a slave to the control of secular humanism.
reply
P0ST1ING_AWAY replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Can the B. S. The only entity trying to enslave anyone is MoronGelical christianity. MoronGelical christians are America's equivalent of the Taliban.
WillowSunstar replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Secular humanism controls no one. Certainly not like the Republicans-in-name-only Christians like this guy.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
nomossonmyrocks says:
Neither is being judgemental.
reply
See all 95 Comments