The Yoga Lunchbox

Nourishing the Yoga Community since 2008

  • Home
  • About
    • Contact
    • Advertising
  • Yoga Articles
    • Starting
      • Foundations
      • Styles
      • Going to Class
      • Practices
      • Home Practice
      • Resources & Reviews
    • Deepening
      • Yoga & Parenting
      • Yoga & Relationships
      • Yoga & Life
      • Yoga & Healing
    • Teaching
      • Insights
      • Interviews
      • Training
      • Business
    • Awakening
      • Activism
      • The Process of Kundalini
      • The Process of Waking Up
      • KL’s Musings from the Mat
  • Yoga Videos
  • NZ Teacher Training
    • RSS
    • Youtube
    • Facebook
You are here: Home / Yoga Articles / Deepening • The Yoga of Life / What's Real Yoga & a Real Yogi? / What if yoga is like religion?

What if yoga is like religion?

August 20, 2010 by Melissa Billington 2 Comments

Is yoga a religion?

Is yoga a religion?

by guest author Melissa Billington, from MYOGA

For years I’ve seen the fear people have around Yoga, some claiming it’s a cult or a religion and refusing to take part because they would be seen by the upholders of their own religion as hypocritical or blasphemous.  Many yoga styles and schools are based in a religion and there is even Christian yoga.  While many more styles and schools stick to their claim that yoga is an art, a philosophy, and a science, but not a religion.

The word religion originates from “re- + ligāre  to bind, tie”  which is eerily close to the origin of the word yoga which is “(Hindi, from Sanskrit yoga), union, joining.”

And cult’s origins, according to one dictionary, are “L cultus  habitation, tilling, refinement, worship, equiv. to cul-,  var. s. of colere to inhabit, till, worship + -tus  suffix of v. action.” 

So what if yoga is like going to church, to service, to a ceremony of your religion?

For thousands of years people have been coerced, converted and killed in the name of religions that claim to be based on love, when really they were based in fear and guilt and pain.

Now people struggle to get to a yoga class because they know they will need to exorcise their own demons (no Deus ex Machina here) by facing themselves and developing a relationship to their own fear and guilt and pain.  But people manage to show up by reminding themselves of how good they’ll feel afterwards–they’ve experienced that “yoga high” of lightness of being and depth of connection to all that is.

It’s no wonder fundamentalists find yoga threatening—it removes the external control system and requires you to drive your own existence and to honour yourself, those around you and the wider web of the world we’re woven into.  Yoga requires you to take responsibility for yourself—from thought to word to action—to claim your “ability to respond,” while religion has so often required obedience to code and to an external authority.  Being an individual aware of how we’re all interconnected calls you to author your own life.

My conclusion?

Let’s embrace the similarities between yoga and religion by making prayers of peace with our bodies, minds and breath.

Let’s say the word Spirit and allow it to mean being Alive and Awake in this crazy world without getting caught up in the semantics of religious rights and wrongs.

Let’s have the courage to love ourselves and one another actively, which is, as far as I can tell, what every major religion has ever asked us to do anyway.  Or as the Youngbloods sang,

If you hear the song I sing,
You must understand
You hold the key to love and fear
All in your trembling hand
Just one key unlocks them both
It’s there at your command
C’mon people now,
Smile on your brother
Ev’rybody get together
Try and love one another right now
Right now
Right now!

Similar Articles You May Enjoy

  • Yoga trippy – an Indian viewpoint of Western Yoga

    an essay by guest author Ali Halle Tilley Yoga is an ancient practice, which can bring transformation and liberation to the disillusioned, disenfranchised masses[1] of the Technological Age by combining universal moral codes and postural sequences, with breathing and meditation techniques. One main challenge for yoga practiced in the West,…

  • Yoga trippy – an Indian viewpoint of Western Yoga

    an essay by guest author Ali Halle Tilley Yoga is an ancient practice, which can bring transformation and liberation to the disillusioned, disenfranchised masses[1] of the Technological Age by combining universal moral codes and postural sequences, with breathing and meditation techniques. One main challenge for yoga practiced in the West,…

  • Yoga trippy – an Indian viewpoint of Western Yoga

    an essay by guest author Ali Halle Tilley Yoga is an ancient practice, which can bring transformation and liberation to the disillusioned, disenfranchised masses[1] of the Technological Age by combining universal moral codes and postural sequences, with breathing and meditation techniques. One main challenge for yoga practiced in the West,…

Filed Under: What's Real Yoga & a Real Yogi? Tagged With: God, Melissa Billington, MYOGA, religion

About Melissa Billington

Melissa is what is called by Nichiren Buddhists a “fortune cookie,” a young child raised in the world of spirit, yoga, alternative wellness practices, healthy food & conscious living. This is fortunate now, but made her a bit of a freak ‘way back when!’ She’s been teaching yoga for more than a decade & in 2008 developed what has become MYOGA - freedom to unfold, its Seasonal Structure & the MYOGA Apprentice Programme (MAP).

Comments

  1. Peter says

    October 20, 2010 at 11:43 pm

    I am very much liking this lovely article!

    Reply
  2. Kara-Leah Grant says

    October 24, 2010 at 6:15 pm

    Hey Peter,

    Me too! I wish everybody could read it.

    Blessings,
    KL

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Peter Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro Theme Ham on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in