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Pray with your Body
by Fr. Thomas Ryan, CSP
Yoga means "to yoke, to harmonize, to unite." Hatha
means "sun and moon," symbolizing the different polarities within the human person. Hatha yoga refers
to a series of stretching and breathing exercises that are used to harmonize body and spirit and orient
the whole person towards an experience of communion with the Divine. These exercises— yoga— were originally
designed to help people meditate better. Most people in the Western world have never gotten that message
about yoga.
Can Christians do yoga? Sure, and they can even bring their Christian faith to it and make it part
of their practice in the spiritual life. The exercises themselves are like the "hardware". By itself,
it's neutral and can receive many different kinds of software and be used in different ways. For example,
when a Christian brings his or her own faith understanding to it and employs these as a way to release
tension and stress from the body and calm the mind so that one can encounter Jesus with greater focus
of attention in meditation, yoga becomes an aid to Christian prayer.
Christian faith has the highest theology of the body amongst all world religions, but it also has
one of the lowest levels of actual physical practice. So when Christian theology meets a finely developed
physical practice like yoga or tai chi, it's a natural fit.
Where do we as Christians get such a high regard for our embodied nature? For starters, we believe
that God actually became flesh in the historical person of Jesus of Nazareth. In other words, human flesh
and bone and blood became the place that God chose to call home. Then, at the end of his life, Jesus didn't
shuck off his body as though it were a burden to be escaped from; he re-embraced it in the resurrection.
Notice how we always talk about the bodily resurrection of Jesus. And for good measure while we're at
it, take note that we always talk about Mary's bodily assumption into heaven.
Obviously, God holds our embodied spirits in very high regard. In heaven, Christian tradition holds, we
will have bodies.
So it only makes sense to learn how to relate to God now both in and through our bodies. Here's
a little embodied prayer to the Trinity that you can pray each morning when you get up.
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Steps for above
postures:
1) Inhale
and raise both arms forwards and upwards, as you look up, reaching
and stretching, expressing relationship with God, our Creator.
2) Then Exhale and lower the
arms out to the sides at shoulder level, with the palms up, to form a
cross. Hold them there and turn your attention to Jesus, our
Redeemer.
3)
The third person of the Trinity, the Hold Spirit or Sanctifier, we
experience both within us and among us. Inhale and bring your hands
inward towards the heart-center. Then exhale and reach forward, with
palms up in a receptive
position.
4) Finally, return the hands to a folded prayer position at your
breast.
This illustration and text is used with permission
from Paulist Press. Prayer of Mind and Body. Fr. Tom Ryan, CSP Paulist
Press, New York/Mahwah, NJ 1995]
If you'd like more information on how to relate your Christian
faith of yoga and meditation, see Prayer of Heart and Body: Meditation and Yoga as Christian Spiritual
Practice (Paulist Press, 2001), by Fr. Thomas Ryan, CSP or A New Christian Yoga (Cowley Publications,
1991) by Nancy Roth
To purchase these books click here
Fr. Thomas Ryan, CSP
Resurrection Christians believe that after Jesus died
he rose again from the dead and that his disciples experienced him in some kind of glorified and yet physical
way. We believe this is our ultimate destiny too.
Assumption
Catholic Christians believe that Mary at the moment of her
death was transported to heaven body and soul. In other words, she was the next after her son to experience
the transformed body of the kingdom of God. We believe this is the ultimate destiny of all of us at the
end of the world.
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