I didn’t find this Pit-worthy, but it certainly is worth sharing with the (teeming) group. Yoga is, evidently, a terrible thing to engage in. There’s more, of course.
http://www.sgvtribune.com/Stories/0,1413,205%7E12220%7E992035,00.html
:rolleyes:
I didn’t find this Pit-worthy, but it certainly is worth sharing with the (teeming) group. Yoga is, evidently, a terrible thing to engage in. There’s more, of course.
http://www.sgvtribune.com/Stories/0,1413,205%7E12220%7E992035,00.html
:rolleyes:
I’m no longer surprised, I’m afraid. On the last church Women’s Retreat I went on, someone said they were leery of meditation because of what one might encounter while doing it. That’s one reason I left my church. Mind you, these were Episcopalians who were far from being Fundamentalists. The person who said that probably has no idea that I occasionally use meditation as a form of deep prayer and have during retreats.
This quote summed it up for me:
“These people” refers to people who consider yoga sinful and a gateway to another religion, so much so that someone would close a program which actually helps the poor.
Oh well. Different priorities, I suppose.
CJ
Why a gay man would want to teach at a fundamentalist christian school in the first place is beyond me.