Contemplative
Prayer and the Evangelical Church
By
Lighthouse Trails Publishing and Ray Yungen
There is a practice that is becoming more and
more popular within the evangelical church. It is called “contemplative prayer”
or “centering prayer.” Youth organizations and seminaries are particularly
drawn
to
this, thus impacting the Christian youth in this country. Furthermore, there
is a snowballing effect wherein contemplative prayer is being accepted and
endorsed by more and more evangelical leaders, often based not on their own
experience and understanding but, rather, on the word of other respected leaders
who in turn may not have fully researched this subject. I would like to address
four points, each with quotes from various published works.
I. A Distinct Connection Between New Age,
Eastern Religion, and the Occult, and Contemplative Prayer
First of all, New Agers, occultists and
those practicing Eastern religion regard contemplative prayer as part of their
own movement. The following excerpts are all from New Age, Eastern thought
and occultic books and magazines:
-
“Those who have practiced Transcendental Meditation
may be surprised to learn that Christianity has its own time-honored form
of mantra meditation. The technique, called ‘Centering Prayer’, draws on
the spiritual exercises of the Desert Fathers, the English devotional classic,
The Cloud of Unknowing, and the famous
Jesus Prayer.…” “Reliance on a mantric centering device has a
long history in the mystical canon of Christianity.” (1)
-
Contemplative
Living by Joan Duncan Oliver. An Omega Institute mind, body, spirit
book endorses several of the authors we are concerned about: Father Thomas
Keating, Thomas Merton, Henri Nouwen, Julian of Norwich, John of the Cross
and Teresa of Avila. Omega Institute is the nation’s largest holistic, New
Age learning center. (2)
-
“The meditation
of advanced occultists is identical with the prayer of advanced mystics:
it is no accident that both traditions use the same word for the highest
reaches of their respective activities” contemplation, page 6. “…occultism
is defined as the science of mystical evolution; it is the employment of
the hidden [i.e. occult] mystical faculties of man to discern the hidden
reality of nature, i.e. to see God as the all in all.” (3)
-
“Kundalini
has long been known in Taoist, Hindu, and Buddhist spirituality.” “Since
this energy [Kundalini energy] is also at work today in numerous persons
who are devoting themselves to contemplative prayer, this book is an important
contribution to the renewal of the Christian contemplative tradition.” (4)
II. Main Proponents of This Movement Have
Been Aligned With Eastern Religion
Secondly, major proponents of the contemplative
prayer movement have been or are aligned with Eastern religion. Henri Nouwen
and Thomas Merton, considered by many to be devout Christians, have intermingled
their form of Christianity with Zen, Buddhism and Sufism. In Henry Nouwen’s
own book, Pray to Live (pages 19
– 28) he describes Merton as being heavily influenced by Hindu monks.
-
Yoga
Journal Magazine; January/February by Michael Torris; 1999; “[Thomas]
Merton had encountered Zen Buddhism, Sufism, Taoism and Vedanta many years
prior to his Asian journey. Merton was able to uncover the stream where
the wisdom of East and West merge and flow together, beyond dogma, in the
depths of inner experience…. Merton
embraced the spiritual philosophies of the East and integrated this wisdom
into [his] own life through direct practice.”
-
Disciplines
For Christian Living by Thomas Ryan 1993; This excerpt written in the
Foreword by Henri Nouwen; page 2 - “…the author shows a wonderful openness
to the gifts of Buddhism, Hinduism and Moslem religion. He discovers their
great wisdom for the spiritual life of the Christian and does not hesitate
to bring that wisdom home.”
-
Spiritual
Friend by Tilden Edwards; page 18 and 19 - “This mystical stream (contemplative
prayer) is the Western bridge to Far Eastern spirituality…It is no accident
that the most active frontier between Christian and Eastern religions today
is between contemplative Christian monks and their Eastern equivalents.
Some forms of Eastern meditation informally have been incorporated or adapted
into the practice of many Christian monks, and increasingly by other Christians.”
III. Methods in Contemplative Prayer Are
Same As In Eastern Religion
The methods of contemplative prayer are
the same as those used in Eastern religion. According to The New Age Movement and The Biblical Worldview (1998 Eerdman’s Publishing),
meditation, chanting mantras, body disciplines, guided imagery, religious
mysticism, self-realization and atonement are all part of New Age and Eastern
practices.
-
Newsweek;
January 6, 1992; article called Talking
to God; page 44 - “The techniques Benson teaches – silence, appropriate
body posture and above all, emptying the mind through repetition of prayer
– have been the practices of mystics in all the great world religions. And
they form the basis on which most modern spiritual directors guide those
who want to draw closer to God.” “Silence is the language God speaks…says
Thomas Keating who taught ‘centering prayer’ to more than 31,000 people
last year. Keating suggests that those who pray repeat some ‘sacred word’,
like God or Jesus….”
-
The
Mystical Way: Silent Music and the Wounded Stag; by William Johnston;
1993; Foreword: “The twentieth century, which has seen so many revolutions,
is now witnessing the rise of a new mysticism within Christianity. …For
the new mysticism has learned much from the great religions of Asia. It
has felt the impact of yoga and Zen and the monasticism of Tibet. It pays
attention to posture and breathing; it knows about the music of the mantra
and the silence of samadhi.…” Then
page 336, “Now what I say of Zen is true also of Christian mysticism. It
also leads to an altered state of consciousness where all is one in God.”
-
Contemplation:
A Christian Path by Willigis Jager; 1994; page 31 - “Do not reflect
on the meaning of the word; thinking and reflecting must cease, as all mystical
writers insist.”
-
When
The Soul Listens: Finding Rest and Direction in Contemplative Prayer
by Jan Johnson; Page 93 - “The repetition (of a word or phrase) can in fact
be soothing and very freeing, helping us, as Nouwen says, ‘to empty out
our crowded interior life and create the quiet space where we can dwell
with God.’”
IV. Authors in the Evangelical Church Who
Have Latched Onto Contemplative Prayer
Some very popular authors in the evangelical
church have latched on to contemplative prayer as a way to go deeper with
God. Richard Foster and Brennan Manning hold workshops and speak in churches,
seminaries and youth gatherings all across the country.
-
Prayer: Finding The Heart’s True Home
by Richard Foster; Page 122 - “Christians…have developed two fundamental
expressions of Unceasing Prayer. The first…is usually called aspiratory
prayer or breath prayer. The most famous of the breath prayers is the Jesus Prayer. It is also possible to discover
your own individual breath prayer…Begin praying your breath prayer as often
as possible. On pages 156 – 159 Foster discusses contemplative prayer in
depth.
-
In
Celebration Of Discipline by Richard Foster 1998, Foster makes several
recommendations of books that are “helpful” to read. He heartily endorses
Tilden Edward’s book, Spiritual Friend.
Here are some quotes from that book: Page 18 and 19 – “This mystical stream
[contemplative prayer and other monastic traditions] is the Western bridge
to Far Eastern spirituality [and to that of Sufis Moslems…]; This exchange,
together with the more popular Eastern impact in the West through transcendental
meditation, Hatha Yoga, the martial arts, and through many available courses
on Eastern religions in universities, has aided a recent rediscovery of
Christian apophatic mystical tradition.…” Page 164 – “Thomas Merton in many ways helped
pave the way for recent serious Christian investigation of these potential
Eastern contributions.” Page 72 “The new ecumenism involved here is not
between Christian and Christian but between Christians and the grace of
other intuitively deep religious traditions.”
-
Signature
of Jesus by Brennan Manning; Page 218 – “A simple method of contemplative
prayer (often called centering prayer…) has four steps…choose a single sacred
word…repeat the sacred word inwardly, slowly, often.” Page 211 “During a conference on contemplative
prayer, the question was put to Thomas Merton: ‘How can we best help people
(not just Christians) to attain union with God?’ His answer was very clear.
‘We must tell them that they are already united with God. Contemplative
prayer is nothing other than coming into consciousness of what is already
there.’”
-
In Discipleship
Journal Issue 100 1997, page 78 in an interview, Brennan Manning recommends
William Shannon’s book, Silence on
Fire and Thomas Keating’s book on centering prayer, Open
Mind, Open Heart. In Silence on
Fire, Shannon blasts the Christian, Biblical God. Page 109, 110 - “This
is a typical patriarchal notion of God. He is the God of Noah who sees people
deep in sin, repents that He made them and resolves to destroy them. He
is the God of the desert who sends snakes to bite His people because they
murmured against Him. He is the God of David who practically decimates a
people…He is the God who exacts the last drop of blood from His Son, so
that His just anger, evoked by sin, may be appeased. This God whose moods
alternate between graciousness and fierce anger. This God does not exist.”
The Divine Center
It is important to note here that the purpose
of contemplative prayer is to enter an altered state of consciousness in order
to find one’s true self, thus finding God. This true self relates to the belief
that man is basically good. Christian proponents of contemplative prayer teach
that all human beings have a divine center and that all, not just born again
believers, should practice contemplative prayer.
-
Here
and Now by Henri Nouwen; Page 22 – “...the God who dwells in our inner
sanctuary is the same as the one who dwells in the inner sanctuary of each
human being.”
-
Streams
of Living Water by Richard Foster; 1998; Beginning of chapter two –
a quote by Thomas Kelly – “Deep within us all there is an amazing inner
sanctuary of the soul, a holy place, a Divine Center,….”
-
Celebration
of Discipline by Richard Foster; Page 2 – even people, “who have yet
to turn their lives over to Jesus Christ - can and should practice them.”
[Spiritual disciplines]
-
Abba’s
Child by Brennan Manning; Page 125 – “…if I find Christ, I will find
my true self and if I find my true self, I will find Christ.”
Scripture Warns
Matthew 15: 18,19 “But those things which proceed
out of the mouth come forth from the heart: and they defile the man. For out
of the heart proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts,
false witness, and blasphemies.”
Mark
7: 21,22 “For from
within, out of the heart of men, proceed evil thoughts, adulteries, fornications,
murders, thefts, covetousness, wickedness, deceit, lasciviousness, an evil
eye, blasphemy, pride, foolishness: All these evil things come from within,
and defile the man.”
The Bible
also clearly warns against repetitive prayer and also tells us we cannot find
God unmediated. Matthew 6:7 “And
when you pray, do not use vain repetitions as the heathen do. For they think
that they will be heard for their many words.” I
Timothy 2:5 “For there is one God and one Mediator between God and men,
the Man Christ Jesus.”
Conclusion
It is ironic that in this century more Christians
have died for their faith in other countries than have died in past centuries
combined. Many of these Christians have departed from Islam, Hinduism, or
Buddhism to meet their executioners. What would these martyrs of the faith
say to us if they could speak of our current western practice of intermingling
Christianity with Eastern religion and the occult? The Bible warns against such mixture: I Corinthians 10: 21, 22 “You cannot drink the cup of the Lord, and
the cup of devils; you cannot be partakers of the Lord’s table and of the
table of devils.
Jesus never taught His disciples techniques
to attain oneness with God, but rather spoke of Himself as the Way. In fact,
the entire New Testament was written
to dispute the idea that people can reach God through religious efforts and
reveal that Jesus Christ is the only answer. In conclusion, the contemplative
movement is founded on the following false premises:
-
The heart
of man is basically good and it has a divine center verses scripture telling
us that the heart of man is wicked – A DENIAL OF THE SIN NATURE.
-
Man can find
God through his own efforts regardless of what religion he has embraced
verses Jesus referred to Himself as the Way, the Truth, and the Life. –
A DENIAL OF THE ATONMENT.
-
God is delighted
by chanting and similar methods of meditative prayer verses Jesus saying
that He isn’t. – A DENIAL OF GOD’S PERSONAL NATURE.
With false premises as these the conclusions
can only be erroneous. The Bible
creates the proper understanding and balance of 1) man as sinful, 2) needing
a redeemer, 3) with whom he can have an abundant life.
In philosophy, every ‘argument’ must have a
premise and a conclusion, but if your premises are false, it will inevitably
lead you to a false conclusion.
Foot
Notes
(1)
As Above So Below: Paths to Spiritual
Renewal in Daily Life by Ronald S. Miller and the Editors of New Age Journal; 1992; Pages 52 & 53.
(2)
Contemplative Living by Joan Duncan
Oliver; 2000; Page 113.
(3)
The Mission of Mysticism by Richard
Kirby; 1979; Page 7.
(4
) Kundalini Energy and Christian Spirituality:
A Pathway to Growth and Healing by Philip St. Romain. 1995; This excerpt
is in the Foreword by Thomas Keating; Page 7.
Ray Yungen, author, speaker and research analyst
has studied religious movements and the contemplative prayer movement for the last twenty years. He is also
the author of A Time of Departing and For Many Shall Come In
My Name. He is available for radio and television interviews and for seminars,
conferences and college assemblies. His exuberance for life and his love for
Jesus Christ and for people are evident in his writing. Mr. Yungen resides
in Oregon.
For more information on the Contemplative Prayer
(i.e., Spiritual Formation) movement, see Lighthouse Trails Research at www.LightHouseTrailsResearch.com.