I recently had to discuss in an online class my opinion of yoga and whether it is ok or not for Christians to do it. Just about every other post said that it is not wrong for Christians to do yoga, but I disagree. I had gotten some good feedback about the post, so why not throw it up on my blog right?? Enjoy!
Yoga is in itself evil, ungodly, satanic, and against the gospel of Christ. Christians forget that you cannot separate the physical aspect of yoga from the spiritual, because in yoga the purpose of the physical is to open up the spiritual. The physical motions and techniques are learned and mastered because they are trying to dig deeper into the spiritual. The spiritual aspect of yoga is for the person to look inside one’s self for inner beauty and worth. The practice has many ties to the new age movement, which finds its foundation in eastern Hinduism.
The Christian who says, “I like yoga, I just think it’s bad to go into the spiritual stuff” is making a self contradicting claim. It’s like saying, “I love chocolate doughnuts, without the doughnuts. But the chocolate is really good.” Obviously this person does not like chocolate doughnuts, because one of the key aspects of the thing itself is not liked. In the same way, yoga without the spiritual is not yoga; it is glorified stretching. Stretching is not evil, it is good. Christians ought to be good stewards of their bodies. But when we say we like yoga for the stretching aspect, we ought to say we like to stretch… because that is what we are doing.
It is the purpose of this blog to stimulate thought in believers in Christ toward thinking critically about their faith. I do not believe that believing in Jesus means we must have "blind faith," I believe that we can have confident assurance and reason to believe in a God who will do what He says He will do! Will you believe that with me?
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Sunday, April 15, 2012
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
The Hunger Games, a critique of its worldview
Confession, I have a slight addiction to trends. And because
of this, my interest was peaked when The Hunger Games started getting tons of
attention. Naturally over the Grace University Choir Tour… I read the first
book. Some of my friends read the whole series that weekend, but I have
somewhat of a life still (Sorry guys).
Here is my critique from the standpoint of a Christian
worldview. I have been hearing a lot of Christians somewhat divided over this
subject; is the message good? What themes are contrary to Christ? Is it just
another evil Harry Potter?
The premise of “the kids have to kill each other” freaks
most Christians out. The problem is, that is not the point of the movie. I also
saw one review from a Christian position saying that this book promoted the
type of oppressive and evil government that was in the book/movie. Once again, this
is not the point.
We need a clear understanding that the story follows Katniss
Everdeen, and from her perspective and thought process she has a very clear
sense of morality. She knows the games are evil, that the government is
basically promoting communism, having to break the law to survive is wrong but
necessary. She hates the idea of having to kill her fellow “tributes,” she
hates that she is just another pawn in the government’s plan to “keep peace.”
There are, admittedly, a few parts in the book where Katniss
is naked. But this, I think, helps develop the moral decline of the Capital.
The Capital forces her to get undressed so they can “make her pretty” to their
standards. The author Suzanne Collins does a great job getting inside her head
and revealing how dehumanizing the experience is. She feels the makeup artists
are saying she does not have worth until they give her a “beautiful” body.
The Capital is a perfect representation of America right
now. In my mind, the clothes and style of the people of the Capital is no less ridiculous
that where we are at as a culture right now. Looking at artists such as Nicki Minaj,
Ke$ha, and Katy Parry… I would say we are not far behind the world of The
Hunger Games in regards to style and morality.
I neither think the book wrong to read (provided that the
age of the person reading is old enough for themes of violence and moral
decline) nor the story evil. I thoroughly enjoyed the book, have read the
second, and am starting the third.
Christians cannot simply separate themselves from culture
and hope that they will keep themselves or their children safe from ideas. Whether
they like it or not, ideas will be heard. My warning to parents: in regards to
this series and other series, is that their kids may know that the book has bad
themes but not know why. Teaching your children to think critically about the
world’s ideas is far more valuable than telling them something is wrong with no
reason for it.
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