adrianwarnock.com Adrian Warnock
This Site:

Favorite Sites:



Saturday, March 27, 2004

Meditation Vs Prayer


A reader of my blog wrote

Dr. Warnock,

I was hoping you might be able to give me a little insight into a
difficult issue my wife is facing at work. She enjoys her job, though the atmosphere of the place has a distinct New Age flavor (aroma therapy, soothing music, etc.). She is, of course, accustomed to working in a non-Christian environment, so she goes about her day not imposing her beliefs on anyone but also not compromising herself.

One thing, though, rubs her the wrong way terribly. Every morning, the staff meet to discuss the day's business, then they close the meeting with a "meditation." It works almost exactly like a group prayer, but they don't call it prayer and they certainly don't pray to the one true God. Her bosses insist that it is clinically therapeutic in nature, and in no way religious. We know knowledgeable Christians and knowledgeable therapists, but no one who can see the issue from both perspectives and offer a trained opinion. I thought of you since you're a Christian psychiatrist. Maybe, as I said, you might have some insight.

The meditation takes the form of asking how peoples days were, finding a focus for meditation such as images from nature or a finding a positive feature of onself. Then people are asked to state a feeling that everyone can relate to as a focus.

My wife is uncomfortable with it, but she decided that she could use
the time to pray to God without interfering with others' meditation.
The problem is that the staff take it in turns to lead the meditation,
something she doesn't feel she can do without committing sacrilege.

Looking objectively at the protocol on paper, neither of us see
anything particularly evil about it. Each step taken alone is fairly
innocuous. Nothing wrong with focusing on an emotion, nothing wrong with ringing a chime, nothing wrong with sharing feelings with a group, etc. Put together, though, along with the New Age atmosphere (though New Age philosophy is never explicitly stated and sometimes explicitly denied) and an executive director with something of a god complex, it feels wrong.

My wife's professional colleagues don't understand her religious
perspective, and her Christian friends (including me) don't understand the clinical perspective. Do you have any thoughts that might help?


My reply
You raise a fascinating issue, which Christians will disagree on.

We must remember that meditation is a Christian discipline that the world has taken on and corrupted.

To be honest, in some of these situations Christians are uncomfortable mainly because they are not happy simply sitting in quietness.

The bible says �Be still, and know that I am God" Ps 46:10. In our hurry and bustle of trying to serve God and others we find being still to be rather threatening.

Meditation can take many forms. What you describe sounds harmless enough. Biblical medication involves filling the mind with truth, and focusing on God. Some sorts of nonchristian meditation asks you to empty your mind. That to me is always unhelpful, and potentially dangerous. Remember what Jesus said about a house that gets swept clean? (Lk 11:24-26).

Clearly also, any kind of meditation that is in any way religious in its context would not be acceptable to a Christian. But if no worship is going on, no emptying of the minds, and no mantras/chants I suspect that most Christians will have little problem with it.


But at the end of the day, the bible is clear that whateve is not of faith is sin (Ro 14:23) If you feel uncomfortable, dont be pushed into doing something.

More Headlines From This Blog
Back to homepage or visit the archive pages April 2003  May 2003  June 2003  July 2003  August 2003  September 2003  October 2003  November 2003  December 2003  January 2004  February 2004  March 2004  April 2004  May 2004  June 2004  July 2004  August 2004  September 2004  October 2004  November 2004  December 2004  January 2005  February 2005  March 2005  April 2005  May 2005  June 2005  July 2005  August 2005  September 2005  October 2005  November 2005  December 2005  January 2006  February 2006  March 2006  April 2006  May 2006  June 2006  July 2006  August 2006  September 2006  October 2006  November 2006  December 2006  January 2007  February 2007  March 2007  April 2007  May 2007  June 2007  July 2007  August 2007  September 2007  October 2007  November 2007  December 2007  January 2008  February 2008  March 2008  April 2008  May 2008  June 2008  July 2008  August 2008 

25% Off Logos Bible Software

Add to Google Reader / Homepage

Subscribe via RSS feed or enter your email address here:

My Library

ADRIAN'S LINKS

In partnership with the Jollyblogger


WARNIE AWARD WINNERS


Reformed Charismatic Blogs

Other Links


BUY the Electronic Edition

YOUR ADVERT HERE


MY INTERVIEWS


Sermons on the Web


Previous Posts

Associated with

Small print

Opinions expressed in this blog are Adrian Warnock's alone, and do not represent the views of his church, employer or anyone else for that matter!

Material is often provided for your research purposes rather than as an endorsement. We ask you to report anything you see here or on a linked site that you feel may be inappropriate or may inadvertently breach copyright to adrian.warnock@gmail.com.

Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No-Derivs 2.0 England & Wales License.

ESV
Unless otherwise indicated, all bible quotations are from The English Standard Version © 2001, Crossway Bibles. Used by permission. All rights reserved. See my ESV Interview for more information

Services by:

Christianity Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory

Powered by Blogger