Tag Archives: yoga

New Age Doctor Shamans | Christian Research Network by Marsha West

By Marcia Montenegro, Christian Answers for the New Age

This is an updated post on some New Age doctors that CANA has warned about in the past (see the many resources listed at the end). What I and others have observed over the years is that health care has become infected with New Age and occult practices that initially were seen as alien but have now mainstreamed. Some practices are outright energy healing, like Reiki, while others are based on belief in these energies but appear more conventional. Shamanism has come to the health field, both in the culture and in the church, and the doctors examined here are part of that influence.

The Doctors

One of these doctors is Dr. Mehmet Oz who admits he is a follower of Emmanuel Swedenborg, grandfather of the New Thought movement, which was foundational to the New Age as well as propping up much of the pseudo-scientific healing practices today.

Another doctor is Dr. Daniel Amen who promotes and teaches an esoteric Hindu mediation technique and what is known in Hinduism as tantric sex.

A third doctor is Mark Hyman who works with Deepak Chopra and embraced a form of non-medicine called Functional Medicine based on spiritual beliefs and pseudo-science.

There is also Dr. Mercola, promoter of New Age practices and his own supplements, follower of conspiracy theories, and slavish fan of a spirit that comes via a psychic-channeler.

The last one is Dr. Andrew Weil, a New Age enthusiast of psychotropic plants.

These doctors are New Agers or embrace and promote New Age concepts. There are many more, not to mention the non-medical practitioners such as chiropractors, the naturopaths, and “natural healers” who are rooted in New Age thinking.

From Dr. Amen to Hinduism

Dr. Amen, a professing Christian, recommends in his book, “Making a Good Brain Great,” a Hindu meditation called Kirtan Kriya. A New Age blog at https://tinyurl.com/bddk435f discusses this favorably, and in this short video at https://shorturl.at/hnmr9 a woman thanks Dr. Amen for Kirtan Kriya and she demonstrates it.

The Kirtan Kriya meditation is based on the five alleged “primal” sounds, sa-ta-na-ma-aa which are repeated over and over again in a sort of chant, at first aloud, then whispered and, finally, silently:

SA is birth, the beginning, infinity, the totality of everything that ever was, is, or will be.

TA is life, existence, and creativity which manifests from infinity.

NA is death, change, and the transformation of consciousness.

MA is rebirth, regeneration, and resurrection which allows us to consciously experience the joy of the infinite. (From blog at https://tinyurl.com/bddk435f).

This video provides evidence of the nature of this meditation; I do not recommend watching this beyond 4 minutes or so:

https://tinyurl.com/yywaw6vw.

Such meditations are designed to induce altered states, making the mind more suggestible. The man in the video is a Sikh but is teaching Hindu beliefs.

Occult beliefs and purposes also undergird this meditation, with four fingers allegedly arousing within the meditator energies represented by the sun and the planets Jupiter, Saturn, and Mercury (astrology) correlating with those fingers.

Moreover, Dr. Amen partnered with “advanced certified Tantra educator” and trantric sex expert, T. J. Bartel, to produce a CD series, “Create More Passion Tonight.” Tantric sex is the use of kundalini energy in sexual relations. Tantric sex is a part of Hindu spiritual practice, it is not just physical. To engage in this is not only to pervert the use of the gift of sex, but it brings in a spiritual element alien to God. These ideas are also in Amen’s book, “The Brain In Love.”

There are numerous self-help books by Dr. Amen such as “Memory Rescue,” “Making Your Brain Great,” “You, Happier,” “The End of Mental Illness,” and even “Stone of Remembrance: Healing Scriptures for Your Mind, Body, and Soul.” The latter would certainly give Christians the impression that Amen bases his views and life on Scripture, which has been demonstrated to not be true.

The spate of self-help books (there are many more) is a sign of someone responding the self-help pulse of the nation. Self-help books are popular because people tend to want quick solutions and believe these authors, most of whom are New Thought, New Age, or have the Human Potential/psychological angle.

Enter Dr. Mercola

And now a warning on a New Age purveyor of pseudo-science and conspiracy theories and slavish follower of a psychic-channeler, Dr Mercola.

The Daniel Plan website has a video of Dr. Joseph Mercola, an osteopath who promotes his products on a huge website, talking about a breathing technique, which he got from New Age Dr. Andrew Weil (much more on Weil below). Due to his legal problems, Mercola closed down his website so that it is only accessible to paying subscribers.

I suspected Mercola for years as New Age because of his promotion of New Age practices and his embrace of conspiracy theories. He is deceptive and New Age (this goes for others such as Gregg Braden, Josh Axe, and Joe Dispenza, all of whom dispense New Age pseudo-science and all of whom CANA has warned about; please see links to CANA posts at the end). Mercola has promoted the occult healing practice, EFT (Emotional Freedom Technique), also called Tapping, on his website as well as the New Age fad of Grounding/Earthing.

Mercola’s description of this breathing exercise is on the Daniel Plan site: https://tinyurl.com/yyqvmwjd. Mercola’s reference to putting the tongue behind the teeth reminded me of what I learned as a New Ager on Hindu meditation. And sure enough, this technique does indicate Hindu origin and belief in manipulating an internal energy force. He got this from New Age doctor Dr. Andrew Weil.

Information has come out about Dr. Mercola’s long time consultations with a channeler-psychic who claims to channel a spirit called Bahlon. Mercola is captivated by what Bahlon tells him and wants his advice. The video reveals a very dark side of Mercola (which does not surprise me): https://tinyurl.com/r8zv4wnz

Also see these articles about Mercola and the psychic at https://tinyurl.com/5hzwpbc9 and https://tinyurl.com/5hzwpbc9.

First Let’s Talk Prana

On the website of the New Age publisher Sounds True, we find this information about Dr. Weil:

“To learn the art of healthy breathing, Dr. Weil turned to Eastern traditions, including yoga, which view the breath as a vital link to the prana, or energy of the universe. In easy-to-follow language, he explains the secret of breathwork’s power over your health, and its remarkable ability to influence —and even reprogram — the nervous system.” From https://tinyurl.com/y4ul3bpz

I have known ever since I was in the New Age that Dr. Weil is New Age. So let’s talk about prana.

>>Prana: The Divine Breath

The breathing techniques and exercises called Pranayama, Yoga Nidra, and other forms of it are not a physical practice like breathing exercises done by singers or swimmers. Breathing exercises based on Hindu beliefs in prana, the “divine breath of the universe” – a type of life force — are done to manipulate prana and invisible forces in the body which are a part of Hindu views of the non-physical “spiritual body,” concepts also found in the New Age and alternative “healing.”

These concepts are found in Yoga, Hindu meditation, Hindu and New Age breathing techniques, and other esoteric practices.

As yoga scholar George Feuerstein puts it:

“Prana is like a knife which he [the student of yoga] carefully employs to operate on his own mind, to cut out the malicious thoughts and feelings in order to pierce through to higher levels of consciousness.” (George Feuerstein and Jeanine Miller, The Essence of Yoga, [Rochester, VT: First Inner Traditions, 1998], 111).

Prana is “the cosmic breath” and “man has moved away from this original rhythm of the universe,” but pranayama “endeavors to restore the primal rhythm and cosmic harmony as manifested in man, the microcosm,” (Feuerstein, 26).

Iyengar, a revered Yoga teacher in India who helped to initiate the spread of Yoga in the U.S., advises that “if you can control the breath, you can control the mind,” but he also cautions that pranayama must be practiced cautiously because

“…it can make you or mar you. If your heart beat is uneven, fear sets in and death may be near at hand.” (B. K.S. Iyengar, The Tree of Yoga,[Boston: Shambhala, 1988], 128).

According to Iyengar, inhalation allows contact with the “cosmic breath” while exhalation expels toxins and is “the expulsion of ego,” the goal being to “reach a single mind” so that you are ready for meditation (Iyengar, 130). (This inhale-exhale that was adopted by the New Age seeped into the church in the form of breath prayers).

Why does this breathing “achieve high levels of health?” No basis is offered for that view, and that is because there is none! It is based on the spiritual principles of prana. Prana-based breathing exercises are common among followers of Hindu, New Age and occult practices.

Not only does Weil buy into prana, but he is a proponent of the use of psychoactive substances.

Dr. Andrew Weil and Psychedelics

Dr. Andrew Weil, known as an integrative physician (which means the use of pagan spirituality in medicine), explored the use of plants with psychedelic properties in the 1970s and has been a strong proponent of this. He terms this “natural.” As pointed out before in CANA posts, “natural” almost always means the use of New Age or pagan spiritual beliefs and rejection of researched fact-based treatments.

The description of Weil’s book, “The Marriage of the Sun and Moon,” states:

“Believing that the distinctions made between mind and body and self and non-self are unnatural separations, Weil explores the nature of the unconscious mind in its relation to ordinary consciousness.”

This book is about psychoactive “natural” substances, i.e., psychedelic plants. The “marriage” of the sun and moon is imagery from Hinduism as well as other non-Christian beliefs, often used to indicate a unity of opposites, which is a philosophy found in many pagan religions.

Weil is fully immersed in New Age beliefs, so to use breathing techniques recommended from Weil is foolish and to follow anyone who uses Weil as a source is foolish. The “natural” label also covers psychedelic drugs and Hindu breathing practices.

Dr. Oz, Mediums, and the Angels of Swedenborg

Dr. Oz has publicly acknowledged that he is a follower of Emmanuel Swedenborg (1688-1772), who is considered the grandfather of the New Thought Movement. Swedenborg, who outwardly adhered to Christianity, soon began to deny essentials of the faith after claiming messages from beings he considered to be good angels. This led him to found a “new Christianity,” and a church which still exists today. Helen Keller was a member of this church and Dr. Oz has stated his wife is a member (as well as being a Reiki master).

Dr. Oz has shown not only openness to but acceptance of mediums and psychics. He had medium Teresa Caputo on his show and commended her. On Jan. 17, 2014, psychic/medium and author Rebecca Rosen was a guest (<a>http://www.doctoroz.com/…/does-belief-angels-have-power…</a>). Rosen first gave Dr. Oz a reading, including information about a dead relative, with Dr. Oz verifying her information. She advised him to get in touch with his guides — his angels. The psychic/medium then went into the audience to give readings.

Dr. Oz asked Rosen how we get in touch with our angels and how do they help us. Rosen replied that you must trust your feelings: “If it feels like it’s divine, it probably is,” she told him and the audience.

The first step is prayer where you “ask the angels to come in.” Next is meditation where you quiet “the mind chatter” so that you can receive “divine guidance.” Lastly, “Trust yourself.” Trust divine guidance when something “pops into your head.” (Please note she used the ever-increasing popular Buddhist phrase for thinking, “mind chatter”). These are techniques psychics and New Agers use to receive information from beyond natural sources and to make the mind open for receiving it, or for contacting “guides.”

Dr. Oz has promoted energy healing on his TV program with a Reiki healer, and his wife is a Reiki master (see interview with Lisa Oz at https://tinyurl.com/y28xpc4t) . Dr. Oz recommends “energy medicine” and Reiki in this 1 min. 45 second clip at https://tinyurl.com/y3b46vz7.

Since Dr. Oz admits he is a follower of Emmanuel Swedenborg, the original angel whisperer, this is no surprise, but it is a danger signal that his advice should not be trusted. Sadly, he is in charge of a government health office.

Dr. Mark Hyman, Promoter of New Age

When we get to Dr. Mark Hyman, the news is no better. Dr. Hyman practices “Functional Medicine” which is just another, though more deceptive term, for “complementary, “integrative,” or other term for the use of spiritually based alternatives. The spirituality is usually disguised with big words that sound scienc-y and impressive. Most people are unaware of, or they don’t care about, the spiritual principles underlying the “alternatives.”

At a 2015 talk at the Univ. of MD School of Medicine Center for Integrative Medicine, Dr. Hyman referred to treating “mind, body, and spirit.” The spiritual aspect of this kind of “medicine” is very strong but it is not related to God. In the first 3 minutes of the talk, there were references to several Yoga practitioners being present and to a Qigong session which had just ended. Qigong is occultic, involving the manipulation of a life force, or life energy. (See CANA article on Chi).

More tellingly, Dr. Hyman speaks at New Age conferences like the Chopra Center, as well as others and often collaborates with Chopra. At one time, Hyman was highlighted on the Chopra Center website but now, as the founder of the UltraWellness Center has his own enterprise (Chopra’s is called the Center for Wellbeing; “wellness” is a New Age term). This is not something most doctors would be proud of, but for New Age doctors, it’s a win. Hyman’s willingness to be closely associated with Deepak Chopra should be warning enough just on its own.

The “functional” label is just another iteration of holistic-alternative-complementary-integrative, which means it includes concepts and treatments based on spiritual beliefs and traditions (Eastern, New Age, indigenous-shamanistic), with pseudoscience used to make it seem credible. I would not take my dog to a functional doctor (or vet, if they exist, and they probably do).

From Doctors to Shamans to Deception

Doctors like Dr. Amen, who endorses and practices an esoteric Hindu mediation, and Dr. Mercola, who promotes and teaches a New Age view of the body and “energy” via the sham New Age EFT (Emotional Freedom Technique, also called Tapping) and lately admits to consulting a channeler-psychic, pull people into dangerous waters. Rather than guiding people to health, this draws people to spiritual and health deception.

Since I first wrote on this, the practice of Tapping has mainstreamed, even being done and defended by Christians; new age views of energy, vibrations, and frequencies have become more accepted, and New Age concepts of the body are no longer viewed suspiciously. It is alarming to me to have watched the speed at which New Age deception has invaded the culture and the church. Getting the New Age in via the avenue of health, usually under the code term “Wellness,” has been a clever strategy on the part of the enemy because it worked.

Shamanism has arrived as a “holistic” and “natural” health practice. In actuality, shamanism is demonic sorcery. Sorcery is all about natural.

Christians can be deceived, as the New Testament warnings to early Christians and to Christians today attest. The New Age is fluid and subtle, using familiar terms but redefining their meanings, thus drawing people into a spiritually, as well as possibly a physically, dangerous realm. Remember that deception works because it appears helpful and beneficial.

“But I am afraid that just as Eve was deceived by the serpent’s cunning, your minds may somehow be led astray.”

2 Corinthians 11:3

RESOURCES

*CANA Articles/Posts

Tapping

http://bit.ly/2YTMrbS

Gregg Braden

http://bit.ly/2t8ql7u

Joe Dispenza and Quantum Quackery

http://bit.ly/2rpTJ8w

Josh Axe

http://bit.ly/2tvgyZt

Anthony William and His Angels

https://tinyurl.com/36ef9tpd

Put chi, breath, healing in search box at https://www.christiananswersnewage.com/ to see CANA articles on those topics

  • Other Sources

Conference talk on The Daniel Plan from Janice Lyons of CINAM (Current Issues In Alternative Medicine) at 2015 EMNR Conference

https://tinyurl.com/y2vv7ztq

“The Daniel Plan” by Marsha West

https://tinyurl.com/y2xkcq7d

“Dr. Mercola: Visionary or Quack?” in The Chicago Magazine

https://tinyurl.com/7gn2uuw

*Critiques of Daniel Amen

Dr. Amen’s gimmicky controversial brain scan programs have no credible support. See https://tinyurl.com/yyguzykq

“Dr. Amen charges patients thousands of dollars to inject them with radioactive compounds and show them pretty colored pictures of their brains without any credible evidence that it adds to the diagnostic or treatment processes,” wrote Dr. Harriet Hall, a former Air Force flight surgeon and a prominent blogger on medical questions.” From https://tinyurl.com/tzfheq7

“SPECT imaging uses an injected radioisotope to measure blood flow in different areas of the brain. Amen is exposing patients to radiation and charging them big bucks because his personal experience has convinced him SPECT is useful. So far, he has failed to convince the rest of the scientific medical community.” See

https://tinyurl.com/ycmz7v6v

Women of Grace on Dr. Amen

https://shorturl.at/k1efx

*Critiques of Dr. Oz (The following are just a few of numerous critiques)

“The Operator,” an in-depth perceptive look at Dr. Oz in The New Yorker

http://nyr.kr/W5c2Y0

“Dr. Oz tried to make it seem as though doctors are afraid of the controversy, because it will result in professional criticism. He accused me (he spent a lot of time arguing against straw men of his own creation) of not wanting to discuss so-called alternative medicine, either professionally or with my patients.

Here is where being a skeptic who deals with a wide range of issues comes in handy. We get the same exact nonsense from believers in alien visitation, psychic phenomena, ghosts, or whatever – they naively and self-servingly assume that anyone who disagrees with them must be afraid of something. The reality is we are just interested in the truth. With respect to medicine, we want to do our professional due diligence to make sure that the treatments we recommend to our patients are based upon the best scientific evidence available.” From https://tinyurl.com/yyq3aal9

https://tinyurl.com/hsf8agd

https://tinyurl.com/y6r9ybj7

*Critiques of Mark Hyman and Andrew Weil

Dr. Mark Hyman and the New Age in Health Care

https://tinyurl.com/y5qrebef

Evaluations/Critiques of Andrew Weil

“Andrew Weil, Shaman, M.D.”

https://tinyurl.com/y4yvtk2p

Surprise, Surprise! Dr. Andrew Weil Doesn’t Like Evidence-Based

Medicine

https://tinyurl.com/y3nzm9pc

Christian articles on Swedenborg

From CARM

https://tinyurl.com/y67cyjr8

From Watchman Fellowship

https://tinyurl.com/yxgmjtus

“Once you see Jesus as a teacher of enlightenment, faith changes its focus. You don’t need to have faith in the Messiah or his mission. Instead, you have faith in the vision of higher consciousness.” From “The Third Jesus” by Deepak Chopra (See CANA article on this book at https://tinyurl.com/3ww5dwsw

This post at https://tinyurl.com/2jzf5seu

This article is posted on Facebook here (20+) Facebook

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Source: New Age Doctor Shamans

Warning: Stay Away from “YogaFaith”—So-Called Christian Yoga | From the Lighthouse

YogaFaith is an organization that has been around for more than a decade that teaches and promotes what they call “Christian Yoga.” However, as Lighthouse Trails has shown for many years, there is no such thing as Christian Yoga. It’s an oxymoron because the two terms are diametrically opposed to each other.

A number of years ago, we read an article by a Hindu professor (of Hindu University of America) titled “Yoga Renamed is Still Hindu.” In the article, Professor Subhas Tiwari stated:

The simple, immutable fact is that yoga originated from the Vedic or Hindu culture. Its techniques were not adopted by Hinduism, but originated from it. . . . Efforts to separate yoga from its spiritual center reveal ignorance of the goal of yoga. . . . If this attempt to co-opt yoga into their (Christians) own tradition continues, in several decades of incessantly spinning the untruth as truth through re-labelings such as “Christian yoga,” who will know that yoga is–or was–part of Hindu culture?

After reading that article, we e-mailed Dr. Tiwari and received a response from him. He gave us permission to share some of it with our readers:

Hello and Namaste,

Namaste is a universal Hindu greeting which recognizes and bows to that Divinity within you.

Mantra and its practice is a core component in Hinduism. The language of Sanskrit which predates any and all languages known to humanity, and which hasn’t evolved and became something other than what it has been from its inception, forms the oldest mantra, the first cosmic sound of OM (aum). One of the four sacred spiritual scriptures the Vedas, the Sama Veda is written in chants. The written forms of the Veda are pegged at 3500 to 5000+ BCE. (They are recited all over the world among Hindus exactly as they have been handed down). . . .

Hinduism and its offshoot spiritual traditions, Buddhism, Jainism, Sikkhism, have never chosen the path which states that we are superior to everyone else and therefore deserve to engage in crusades and conversionism on global scale. That would be incongruent to our core belief tenets which holds all creatures are part of the Divine creation, and equal in the eyes of that divine parent. The moment we lose sight or consciously choose to believe and behave otherwise means we are acting from a place of limitation, superiority, arrogance and according to Vedanta, from a place of individual and global ignorance, avidya. Imagine any religious or spiritual tradition which defines its strength based on converting that which is already divine in nature, and the audacity to claim that they are doing the work of that Divine? There is only one Divine.

Sincere Regards, Subhas

Professor Tiwari set the record straight. There is no such thing as “Christian” Yoga, even though a fast-growing number of Christian’s, especially Christian women, are involved in “Christian Yoga” classes through organizations such as YogaFaith.

Nearly twenty years ago, we posted a portion of an article titled “There Is No Christian Yoga” written by Yogi Baba Prem, who is a Hindu Yogi, a Vedavisharada trained in the traditional gurukural system. In his article, he stated:

It was quite astonishing to see on the flyer “Christian Yoga! This Thursday night. . . .” I could feel the wheels spinning in my brain. “Christian Yoga,” I thought. Now while Christians can practice yoga, I am not aware of any Christian teachings about yoga. Yoga is not a Judeo/Christian word! It is not a part of the Roman Catholic teachings and certainly not a part of protestant teachings. It is not found within the King James Version of the Bible. It is a Hindu word, or more correctly a Sanskrit word from the Vedic civilization. So how did we get “Christian Yoga”? (source)

Yoga is like a “gateway drug” because it can lead to more intense forms of occultic New Age meditation; and tragically, a growing number of Christians (and churches) are engaging in Yoga practices. If you know someone who is practicing “Christian Yoga” or any other Yoga activity, we encourage you to ask him or her to read the material Lighthouse Trails has provided, warning about Yoga. Two of our authors, Chris Lawson and Ray Yungen, have written excellent booklets on Yoga. These may be purchased inexpensively or can be printed for free from this site:

“YOGA and Christianity – Are They Compatible?” by Chris Lawson

YOGA: Exercise or Religion—Does it Matter? by Ray Yungen

We also have a database on Yoga with over 100 articles and reports. And if you have never watched Caryl Productions documentary called Yoga Uncoiled, we encourage you to do so. Caryl Matrisciana, who was raised in India and later became deeply involved in the New Age movement (before becoming a Christian believer) leaves no room for question in her film that “Christian Yoga” is a New Age practice and a great deception. Her film can be watched on YouTube for free or purchased as a DVD.

Incidentally, it’s worth noting that YogaFaith founder and lead trainer Michelle Thielen presented an online class in 2023 called “The Enneagram for Spiritual Formation.” Both of those practices (Enneagram and Spiritual Formation) are frequently addressed at Lighthouse Trails because of their New Age/occultic roots. Thielen has also been quoted in an article in Yoga Journal that was promoting Yoga in public schools. Thielen stated: “Sometimes I just have to scratch my head. . . . I’m like, “Christians, are you not reading your Bible? Because meditation is in there.” So is chanting, mudras, and even some of the yoga postures.”


(Image is from the cover of Chris Lawson’s booklet, Yoga and Christianity – Are They Compatible?

The New Age is Infiltrating Public Schools | IFA

The New Age isn’t just targeting adults anymore. This esoteric movement, rooted in paganism, has crept its way into our nation’s educational system. With promises of stress relief, behavior management and healing, the New Age practices of smudging and yoga are being extolled as a new hope for America’s troubled youth.

Join the community of Monthly Ministry Partners and help IFA provide prayer resources to other intercessors.

Proponents of these New Age practices will point to the fact that today’s students suffer from anxiety, academic stress, attention disorders, emotional imbalances and abuse. Therefore, there’s a great need to alleviate these issues through strategies such as mindfulness, meditation and focused breathing.

There’s no denying that children in our schools are in need of healing from anxiety, stress, and a myriad of traumas. But before prescribing smudging and yoga as a “cure-all,” one must carefully consider the pagan roots of these New Age practices. Moreover, what will impressionable youth be taught to accept and integrate into their lives?

What is Smudging?

Smudging is a ritual that imitates a Native American ceremony where “sacred plants” such as cedar, sage, sweetgrass or tobacco are placed into a container and then ignited with a wooden match. An Indigenous awareness website explains, “The flames are then gently blown out and the smoke, which heals the mind, heart and body, is wafted over the person, either by hand or with an eagle feather. The person being smudged pulls the smoke to them and gently inhales the smoke. The ashes traditionally are returned to Mother Earth by disposing them outside on bare soil – it is believed that the negative thoughts and feelings have been absorbed by the ashes. A person can smudge themselves, or, someone can lead a smudge by holding the container and directing the smoke over others.”

Minnesota Schools Allow Smudging

In 2023 a bill was introduced in Minnesota by Senator Mary Kunesh that would permit Indigenous students to smudge in Minnesota public schools under staff supervision. In 2024, this bill passed the Minnesota Senate as part of an omnibus education policy bill. Prior to the introduction of this bill (S.F. 2998), a policy had been implemented in the St. Paul Public School system which allows individual or group smudging in school buildings when conducted under the directed supervision of an appropriate school district staff member.

Smudging is considered a form of prayer which can promote mindfulness as “another form of meditation.” One of the goals of burning various medicinal plants is to cleanse oneself, and to connect with one’s inner spirit, as well as the Creator.

Supporters of this practice believe the ritual can help students stay calm by clearing the air of negative energies and removing barriers to learning. Smudging can be done before the school day begins, during lunch, prior to a meeting, or before a test or stressful event. How often and where it’s done, is up to each school and its administrators. Minnesota has a prohibition on the use of tobacco products in its public schools, but an exception has been made for American Indian ceremonial practices.

After the St. Paul Public Schools voted unanimously to support smudging in classrooms in 2022, Senator Mary Kunesh, a descendent of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe said, “We found a spot for our LGTBQ students to join and come together in our schools. We found a spot for Muslim students to have a quiet moment to pray throughout the day. Now, we are sitting here with an opportunity to extend the opportunity for our Native kids here in Saint Paul. As you heard, smudging isn’t a traditional practice — it’s something that is intentional and mindful to settle our minds — that’s the intention of this policy.”

Smudging and the Occult

The New Age movement, which borrows its practices from many cultures and religions, considers smudging to be an important part of cleansing one’s aura (internal energy field), or a way to deter “bad vibes” and spirits. The smoke from the “sacred plants” are touted as a method to drive away evil. Psychics, witches and those who practice the occult assert that smudging removes “unwanted influences” and protects them from spiritual and psychic attacks. It is also touted as a way to open a person’s eyes and ears to the spirit world.

While burning sage or other plants is not inherently good or bad, it’s the intent behind the practice that matters. When it comes to smudging in schools, this practice draws students into a pagan ritual that’s actually a form of idolatry. They are taught that “sacred smoke” can drive out bad energies, memories and feelings, when the truth is that only God can heal their wounds. The smoke becomes the idol that cleanses and saves, rather than the blood of Jesus. Satan and his demons cannot be driven away by sage or other medicinal plants. God, however, can guard us from evil.

2 Thessalonians 3:3, NLT, says, But the Lord is faithful. He will strengthen you and guard you from the evil one.

Teaching students to put their trust in a ritual in order to find peace or healing is contrary to God’s will. Instead, Jesus asks us to put our trust in Him alone, allowing Him to drive out sin and evil.  

Yoga in the Schools

While allowing students to smudge in schools is a more recent development, the integration of yoga into the educational system has been going on much longer. Millions of people in the United States practice yoga and this number continues to grow. Dr. Laurette Willis, founder of PraiseMoves Fitness, warns that yoga is “the missionary arm of Hinduism and New Age Spirituality.”

Yoga 4 Classrooms is an organization which helps schools integrate yoga into their learning environment. Their website explains that Yoga 4 Classrooms “empowers school communities with mindful strategies that are easy to learn and implement in a few minutes or less in a typical classroom space,” by providing resources and training for teachers and administrators.

One school in Des Moines, Iowa uses Yoga 4 Classrooms to help them plan their day. The students of Edmunds Elementary start their mornings with yoga-based movement and mindful meditations that “prepare them for learning time.” To date, Yoga 4 Classrooms “has been implemented in more than 60,000 classrooms, reaching over 1,200,000 students worldwide.”

Many schools offer after school programs that teach yoga, or in some cases, it can be made into a specials class like Art or P.E. One teacher integrates yoga by posting a wall of pockets in the “calm down” corner of her classroom. Each pocket is labeled with the desired outcome and contains a card with instructions for a yoga pose. No matter what yoga program is used, however, breathing and focused meditation are key components.

Is Yoga Simply Breathing and Stretching?

While many parents and educators might think that the poses and breathing exercises of yoga are harmless and not tied to a religious practice, the truth is that yoga’s foundation comes from pantheism, which elevates the worship of everything as god. The word yoga is derived from the Sanskrit root yuj, which means “to yoke” or “to unite.” The question is, what is one uniting with?

Swami Vishnudevananda, one of the movement’s most influential leaders, explains that yoga “prescribes physical methods to begin…so that the student can manipulate the mind more easily as he advances, attaining communication with one’s higher self.”

George P. Alexander is a Christian believer who grew up in India, which is considered the birthplace of yoga. He reveals that yoga poses are “offerings to the 330 million Hindu gods,” and thus, each pose is an act of worship. Westerners believe they are exercising and breathing, but “to a Hindu, yoga is the outward physical expression of a deep spiritual belief. You cannot separate one from the other.”

It’s essential to note that Hinduism, a religion that forms the backbone of yoga, teaches that the human body contains a dormant serpentine force (Kundalini spirit) that is coiled up at the base of the human spine. Through exercise (such as yoga), meditation and focused chanting, one can release this force, opening the third eye. This will allow a person to tap into universal consciousness.

How Do We Respond?

Smudging and yoga are rooted in pagan traditions, yet they are both being celebrated and promoted in the public schools. The children in America are facing more problems than ever, but instead of turning to Jesus Christ, they are being catapulted toward New Age practices that can open doors to the occult.

Intercessors, the time to pray is now. It’s important that parents, grandparents and guardians are aware of what’s going on in their local schools so they warn their loved ones of any programs or classes that encourage rituals and practices which are not biblical. Oftentimes, teachers and administrators are simply looking for ways to help their students and they are unaware that activities (such as smudging and yoga) have occult/New Age connections. You can gently educate them and pray that they will be open to hearing the truth. Additionally, you can attend school board meetings and maintain contact with legislators in your state, so you can voice your concerns about these kinds of issues.

Lord Jesus, our students do not need to rely on rituals, ceremonies, yoga poses or “mindfulness” in order to cope with the difficulties of this world. Instead, we pray that students would put their hope and trust in You. Ultimately, this will bring the peace and healing that our youth need.

Have you seen yoga, smudging or other New Age practices in your local schools? As Christians, how should we respond when we see this happening?

Angela Rodriguez is an author, blogger and former teacher who studies the historical and biblical connections between Israel and the United States. You can visit her blogs at 67owls.com and 100trumpets.com. She is also the author of Psalm 91Under the Wings of Jesus and Hallelujah’s Great RidePhoto Credit: Shubham Sharan on Unsplash.

Source: https://ifapray.org/blog/the-new-age-is-infiltrating-public-schools/