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NEW
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The Influence of
Eastern Mysticism
By
Dave Hunt
(Occult Invasion, Harvest House, 1998) |
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There is a growing missionary spirit
in Hinduism.... A small army of yoga missionaries is ready to go to the
West. They may not call themselves Hindu, but Hindus know where yoga
came from and where it goes. — (From an editorial in Hinduism Today
titled "An Open Letter to Evangelicals," by its editor, Reverend
Palaniswami, a Hindu monk 1)
In 1974, Stanford Research Institute (now SRI), with funds from the
Charles F. Kettering Foundation, undertook a study to determine how
Western man could be deliberately turned into an Eastern
mystic/psychic. Directed by Willis W. Harman (who later became president
of Edgar Mitchell’s Institute of Noetic Sciences), the project was
called Changing Images of Man. The scientists involved sincerely
believed that a turn to Eastern mysticism was the only hope for human
survival. 2
The task of persuading the public to accept this new
direction fell to one of Dr. Harman’s friends and admirers, Marilyn
Ferguson. She fulfilled her assignment with the publication in 1980 of
her groundbreaking bestseller, The Aquarian Conspiracy. In it she
said:
A great, shuddering irrevocable shift is overtaking us... a new
mind, a turnabout in consciousness in critical numbers of individuals,
a network powerful enough to bring about radical change in our
culture.
This network—the Aquarian Conspiracy—has already enlisted the
minds, hearts and resources of some of our most advanced thinkers,
including Nobel laureate scientists, philosophers, statesmen,
celebrities... who are working to create a different kind of
society....
The [Eastern mystical] technologies for expanding and transforming
personal consciousness, once the secret of an elite, are now
generating massive change in every cultural institution—medicine,
politics, business, education, religion, and the family. 3
Eastern mysticism has penetrated every area of Western society.
Children’s comic books that once offered Charles Atlas courses in body
building now advertise courses in mind power, which teach how to control
the minds of others. Movies such as the Star Wars and Star
Trek series, TV series such as "Kung Fu," "Highway to Heaven," and
"Touched by an Angel," and TV cartoons by the dozens ("Mutant Ninja
Turtles," "Power Rangers, Masters of the Universe," etc.) have made
Eastern mysticism the normal way of thinking. Across America, YMCAs
offer classes in yoga, and churches of all denominations follow the
trend. According to Palaniswami, the editor of Hinduism Today,
yoga and other forms of Eastern meditation "were too sophisticated for
public consumption 30 years ago, but today they’re the hottest item on
the shelf." 4
Universities now offer courses in Yoga Psychology; Metaphysics, Hatha
Yoga, The Origins of Salem Witchcraft, Eckankar, Tarot Card Workshops,
Psychic Development and Techniques, Astrology, Self-Awareness Through
Self-Hypnosis, and similar subjects. A Washington Post article
about a Maryland grammar school was titled "Meditation Comes to the
Classroom," 5 while the Seattle Times reported that inmates at
Walla Walla State Penitentiary were learning "stress management" through
the regular practice of Hatha Yoga. 6
A nationally syndicated columnist wrote:
Instead of singing hymns, they’re sitting in the lotus position
chanting "omm" at America’s oldest school of theology [Harvard
Divinity School].
The Nave’s [school paper] calendar reminds students that March 20
is... "a special time to listen to the Buddha and meditate on the
perfection of enlightenment...." There’s no mention of Palm Sunday or
Passover, reflecting their insignificance at an institution where all
is venerated, save Western religion....
Harvard… is an elite institution, training the next generation of
mainline church leadership. Its degrees are passports to power in the
Protestant establishment....
Will the last graduating Christian please collect the Bibles and
turn out the lights?7
The Evangelists of Eastern Mysticism
How did this transformation overtake a "Christian"
America? The drug movement in the ’60s and ’70s opened the West to the
cosmic gospel of the invading Eastern gurus. Most Westerners find it
difficult to think of these smiling and bowing yogis, swamis, and lamas
as missionaries determined to win us with their mystic gospel. It
comes as a great surprise that the largest missionary organization in
the world is not Christian but Hindu—India’s Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP).
Yes, missionary organization. Twenty years ago,
in January 1979, at the VHP-sponsored second "World Congress on
Hinduism" in Allahabad, India (attended by about 60,000 delegates from
around the world), a speaker declared, "Our mission in the West has been
crowned with fantastic success. Hinduism is becoming the dominant world
religion and the end of Christianity has come near." By law, no
Christian missionary activity is allowed among Hindus in India, but
Hindus aggressively evangelize the West, and with great success. Among
the primary goals listed in VHP’s constitution are the following:
To establish an order of missionaries, both lay and initiate, [for]
the purpose of propagating dynamic Hinduism representing... various
faiths and denominations, including Buddhists, Jains, Sikhs, Lingayats,
etc. and to open, manage or assist seminaries or centers for spiritual
principles and practices of Hinduism... in all parts of the world…. 8
Interestingly, the 1979 World Hindu Conference was
chaired by the Dalai Lama, who publicly proclaims tolerance for all
religions. Hinduism and Buddhism infiltrate our society, government, and
even public schools as science, while Christianity is banned as a
religion.
Of all the gurus who have come to the West, none has
done more to establish the credibility of Eastern mysticism than Tenzin
Gyatso, the Dalai Lama, spiritual leader in exile of Tibet’s Gelugpa, or
Yellow sect, of Mahayana Buddhism. He claims to be the fourteenth
reincarnation of the original Dalai Lama, a god on earth with the power
to initiate others into their own godhood. Here we have again the
persistent occult theme of human deification echoing the serpent’s lie
in the Garden of Eden.
A Worldwide Deceit
As part of the most massive missionary effort in
history—aimed directly against Christianity—every guru who has come to
the West (from Maharishi Mahesh Yogi to Bhagwan Shri Rajneesh to Baba
Muktananda) was sent here by his guru specifically to win converts to
the Hindu/Buddhist pantheistic faith. Yogananda, for example, founder of
the Self-Realization Fellowship (SRF) and one of the forerunners of this
massive evangelism campaign, personally initiated more than 100,000
disciples into kriya yoga. Maharishi has initiated millions into
his TM brand of yoga. Yet the missionaries from the East all protest
that they are teaching the science of yoga, health, and higher
states of consciousness, not religion.
We can register no legitimate complaint against those
who seek to persuade others of what they sincerely believe to be
important truth. However, they should not lie about their product or
their purpose. And that is exactly what the gurus from the East have
done. "Yoga" is a Sanskrit word meaning to "yoke," and its aim is to
yoke with the Hindu concept of God through self-realization: to achieve
the enlightenment of realizing that atman, the individual soul,
is identical with Brahman, the universal soul—i.e., that one’s
true self is God. Yet yoga instructors solemnly swear that yoga has
nothing to do with religion, when in fact it is the very heart of
Hinduism.
The magnitude of the deceit is comparable to the Pope
claiming that, instead of heading a church, he represents a group of
nonreligious scientists. India has banned foreign missionaries since
shortly after it gained independence. All the while, India’s
missionaries travel the world converting millions to Hinduism and
Buddhism while protesting their tolerance for all religions and denying
the religious nature of their mission.
There has been much criticism, some of it no doubt
justified, of Western missionaries who have gone to Africa, China, and
India with the gospel of Jesus Christ and attempted to westernize other
cultures. That goal cannot be justified. Western culture is not
Christianity. In fairness, however, we must ask why there has been
little or no criticism of Buddhist, Hindu, and Muslim missionaries who
have aggressively pushed their religion and way of life upon an
unsuspecting Western world?
Notes:
1. Cited in Christianity Today, April 8,
1991, p. 64.
2. Copy of confidential report on file.
3. Marilyn Ferguson, The Aquarian Conspiracy:
Personal and Social Transformation in the 1980s (J. P. Tarcher,
1980), inside jacket.
4. Cited in Christianity Today, April 8,
1991, p. 64.
5. Washington Post, May 10, 1990.
6. Seattle Times, April 29, 1990.
7. Don Feder, "’Omm’ echoes from Harvard," in
Washington Times, April 4, 1994.
8. Johannes Aagaard, "Hinduism’s World Mission," in
Update, September 1992.
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