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The Gospel is
like a seed. God promised to grow the Gospel Seed in every cultural
soil!
My walk with
God brought me to a realization that my expressions of biblical
faith and spirituality are so much influenced by a Christianity
that has been contextualized in Wheaton, Illinois, USA. The Gospel
was planted in my heart, but the roots of the Gospel's seedling
were preserved in Western soil, delivered by Evangelical missionaries
to my family like a gift, wrapped in American flag.
I know it's
not possible to eliminate the Western soil in my culture. It's good
to be bi-cultural or multi-cultural. I like it the way I am!
At the same
time, I want to rediscover and enjoy the growing seed of the Gospel
in the Asian aspects of my heart.
T'ai Chi is
an aspect of my fertile Asian soil where the Gospel is growing!
T'AI CHI
AND CHINESES PHILOSOPHY
The term T'ai
Chi (spelled Taiji in Mainland China) literally means
"the Supreme Ultimate." It is a moving meditation developed originally
as forms of Chinese martial arts. These forms are gentle flowing
movements that are combined with deep breathing exercises in order
to develop an awareness of the inner energy of the body and of the
energy pervading the universe. Many of these forms were copied from
the natural movements of animals and birds.
T'ai Chi
Chuan (or Taijiquan) means Supreme Ultimate Force. Force
(literally means "fist") refers to the discipline or way of achieving
the Supreme Ultimate. It also refers to the combat power of this
discipline when used as a form of martial arts.
There are many
Tai Chi styles and forms. I practice the Yang Style as taught by
my teacher or si fu--Mr. Kam Pong of Richmond, British Columbia--who
traces his Yang Style lineage to Master Cheng Man Ching.
The concept
of Chi (another Chinese character which means "energy," or "life
force,") governs the whole practice and discipline of T'ai Chi.
Here's a good explanation of what chi is, and its relationship with
T'ai Chi:
"In Chinese
philosophy and medicine there exists the concept of chi, a vital
force that animates the body. One of the avowed aims of Tai Chi
is to foster the circulation of this chi within the body, the belief
being that by doing so the health and vitality of the person are
enhanced. This chi circulates in patterns that are closely related
to the nervous and vascular system and thus the notion is closely
connected with that of the practice of acupuncture and other oriental
healing arts.
Another aim
of Tai Chi is to foster a calm and tranquil mind, focused on the
precise execution of these exercises. Learning to do them correctly
provides a practical avenue for learning about such things as balance,
alignment, fine-scale motor control, rhythm of movement, the genesis
of movement from the body's vital center, and so on. Thus the practice
of Tai Chi can in some measure contribute to being able to better
stand, walk, move, run, etc. in other spheres of life as well. Many
practitioners notice benefits in terms of correcting poor postural,
alignment or movement patterns, which can contribute to tension,
or injury. Furthermore the meditative nature of the exercises is
calming and relaxing in and of itself.
Because the
Tai Chi movements have their origins in the martial arts, practicing
them does have some martial applications. In a two-person exercise
called push-hands Tai Chi principles are developed in terms of being
sensitive to and responsive of another person's chi or vital energy.
It is also an opportunity to employ some of the martial aspects
of Tai Chi in a kind of slow-tempo combat. Long-time practitioners
of Tai Chi who are so-inclined can become very adept at martial
arts. The emphasis in Tai Chi is on being able to channel potentially
destructive energy (in the form of a kick or a punch) away from
one in a manner that will dissipate the energy or send it in a direction
where it is no longer a danger. [Source: The Chi and T'ai Chi. A
lecture by Master Shiu Pak Lee]"
The structure
of T'ai Chi is based on the theory of Yin-Yang, a pair of mutually
complementary forces that act continuously, without cessation, in
this universe. This Chinese view of reality and way of life can
be applied to anything, but here we are interested in its relationship
to the art of T'ai Chi. The dark part of the circle is called Yin.
Yin represents negativeness, passiveness, gentleness, insubstantiality,
femaleness, moon, darkness, night, etc. The other complementary
part of the circle is Yang, which represents positiveness, activeness,
firmness, substantiality, maleness, sun, brightness, day, etc.
Here's what
my Chinese Philosophy professor, Zao Yu Lan, say about Yin-Yang:
"The common
mistake most people make is to identify this Yin-Yang symbol, T'ai-Chi,
as dualistic--that is Yang being the opposite of Yin, and vice versa.
As long as we separate this "oneness" into two, we won't achieve
realization. Actually, all things have their complementary part;
it is only in the human mind and his perception that they are being
separated into opposites. The sun is not the opposite of the moon,
as they complement and are interdependent on each other, and we
cannot survive without either of them. In a similar way, a male
is but the complement of the female; for without the male, how on
earth do we know there is female, or vice versa.
The 'oneness'
of Yin-Yang is necessary in life. If a person riding a bicycle wishes
to go somewhere, he cannot pump on both the pedals at the same time
or not pumping on them at all. In order to move forward, he has
to pump one pedal and release the other. So the movement of going
forward requires this "oneness" of pumping and releasing. Pumping
then is the result of releasing, and vice versa; each being the
cause of the other.
In the Yin-Yang
symbol there is a bright spot on the dark part, and dark spot on
the bright one. This is to illustrate the balance in life, for nothing
can survive long by going to either extreme, be it negativeness
or positiveness. Therefore, firmness must be concealed in gentleness,
and gentleness firmness, and that is why Chinese arts practitioners
must be pliable as spring. Notice that the stiffest tree is most
easily cracked, while the bamboo will bend with the wind. So in
martial arts, or any other Chinese arts, one must be gentle yet
not giving away completely; be firm yet not hard, and even if he
is strong, he should guard it with softness and tenderness. For
if there is no softness in firmness, he is not strong; in a similar
way, if one has firmness concealed in softness, no one can break
through his defense. This principle of moderation provides a best
means of preserving oneself, for since we accept this existence
of the oneness (Yin-Yang) in everything, and do not treat it dualistically,
we thus secure a state of tranquility by remaining detached and
not inclining to either extreme. Even if we do incline on one extreme,
be it negative or positive, we will flow with it in order to control
it. This flowing with it without clinging is the true way to get
rid of it.
When the movements
in Yin-Yang flow into extremes, reaction sets in. For when Yang
goes to the extreme, it changes to Yin; and when Yin (activated
by Yang) goes to the extreme, it returns back to Yang (that is why
each one is the result and cause of the other.) For example, when
one works to the extreme, he becomes tired and has to rest (from
Yang to Yin). This incessant changing of Yin/Yang is always continuous."
The application
of the theory of Yin-Yang in T'ai Chi is known as the Law of Harmony,
in which one should be in harmony with, and not against the force
of the opponent and other factors of, the natural environment.
T'ai Chi.
Chi. Yin-Yang. All these concepts are part of Taoism. In a very
real sense one can consider Tai Chi Chuan to be a physical expression
and manifestation of the principles and philosophy of Taoism. The
Tao (literally means "the Way") is the creative principle of Chinese
religion manifest in the eternal continuity of Yin-Yang. The Tao
is the equilibrium or balance pervading the Yin-Yang cosmos. But
the Tao is beyond all descriptions. "The Tao that can be named is
not The Tao."
MY IDEA OF
THEOLOGICAL CONTEXTUALIZATION
I do not buy
anything in the world's religions and cultures that are contrary
to God's revealed Word. While respecting all religions and cultures,
my knowledge and experience of God and Reality happened with my
encounter with the person of Jesus of Nazareth. I believe that a
healthy dialogue with other religions starts with honesty with,
and authenticity of, one's understanding of life and reality. There
are truth-claims between religions that cannot be syncretized. That's
why I can't be a syncretist even though I find it to be an easier
way to avoid the challenges of a pluralistic world. Syncretists
presume to be objective, outsider assessors of truth-claims based
on a modernistic, meta-standard of truth. I do not buy into syncretism
because it is another form of religious and cultural imperialism.
I had the privilege
of interacting with various religious leaders around the world.
I learned that there are many elements in other cultures and religions
that are in harmony with God's revealed Word. Many of them can be
transformed for the glory of God. Paul found this also when he communicated
the Gospel to the Hellenistic world, taking the religious and cultural
terms of the Greco-Roman world and filling them with Christian content.
I see cultures
and religions as soils where the Gospel Seed can be planted. The
values of the Gospel--such as life, love, justice, peace, mercy,
compassion, etc.--are also the aspirations of most religions and
cultures. The beauty and truth of Jesus Christ must then be planted
in the spirit of authenticity, community and humility. The person
and character of Jesus Christ will bring out the best in their spiritual
and cultural aspirations until each nation reaches the glory and
purity of their culture (Rev. 21:22-27).
UNDERSTANDING
THE TAO IN THE LIGHT OF CHRIST
The Tao (the
Way) has been a mystery to the Chinese people for millennia. However,
in Christ, the secret of the Tao has been revealed. Jesus Christ
is the Tao, the Truth and the Life (John 14:6). He is the Tao made
flesh. "In the beginning was the Tao, and the Tao was with God,
and the Tao was God" (John 1:1, Chinese Bible).
In Christ, the
Tao can be described and can be named as a human being who lived
within space and time. Human beings like me can relate with the
Great Tao! But as the Tao that is beyond the Tao, the pre-incarnate
Christ, the Second Person of the Eternal Holy Trinity, is beyond
human comprehension, description and imagination. I can relate with
the Incarnate Tao but at the same time, I must remain humble to
bow down before the Infinite Tao who is beyond my finite comprehension
and imagination.
This is why
I remain faithful to Christ as True God and True Human Being.
My love for
Christ, while being faithful to God's revealed Word, can be expressed
beyond the Western constructs of Christianity.
UNDERSTANDING
THE YIN-YANG IN THE CONTEXT OF GOD'S CREATION
The Yin-Yang
is the picture of the universe. God, the Creator, is separate from
the Yin-Yang Creation. The literal meaning of holy is "separate."
God, the Creator, is holy or separate from the Divine Yin-Yang Creation.
Every time I
read the first three chapters of Genesis with my Asian perspective,
I see the harmony of the Yin and the Yang in God's creation. Even
before the Fall, there was order and there was chaos. There was
light and there was darkness. There was the sun and there was the
moon. Human beings were designed as male and female. God's assessment
to this Yin-Yang creation was "good." After the male and female
human beings were created, God assessed everything as "very good."
And even before sin entered the world, there was the tree of the
knowledge of good and evil.
Then sin, literally
"missing the mark," entered God's creation. Human beings chose to
miss the mark, or disobey, the standard of the Creator. The universe
and humanity experienced the Fall. The Yin-Yang creation was corrupted
by sin. This corruption resulted to death, which literally means
"separation." Sin caused separation and alienation between God,
human beings, and nature. Sin brought disharmony in the Yin-Yang
universe.
Christ, the
Great Tao, entered the world and began the process of re-harmonizing
the relationship between God, human beings, and nature. This re-harmonization
process in the universe opened the way towards peace, welfare, and
wellness in the whole creation. This is called shalom in Hebrew
or salam in Arabic. Jesus Christ, the Great Tao, is the Prince of
Shalom (Isaiah 9:6).
The Great Tao
brings harmony in the whole Yin-Yang universe! (Colossians 1:15-20)
UNDERSTANDING
THE CHI IN THE CONTEXT OF GOD'S BREATH OF LIFE
I understand
chi as the biblical Breath of Life as indicated in the Hebrew Bible.
Animals have the Breath of Life or nefesh chaya (Genesis
1:30). Nefesh means "soul, living being, life, self, person,
desire, appetite, emotion, and passion." Chaya is an adjective
meaning "alive or living."
Human beings
were created by God from the dust of the ground (in a sense we're
one with the Earth) and were breathed the Breath of Life or nishmat
chayyim (Genesis 2:7). N'shama means "breath of God as
hot wind kindling a flame; as destroying wind; as cold wind producing
ice; as creative, giving breath to human beings." It also means
"God's breath in human beings; it is a characteristic of our humanity."
Chayyim is the plural of chaya.
God described
all creatures under heaven as having the Breath of Life or ruach
chayyim (Genesis 6:17). The word ruach means "breath,
wind, spirit." This term is also used in Genesis 1:2 in reference
to the Ruach or Spirit of God who was "hovering over the waters."
The Greek New
Testament is consistent with the Hebrew Bible in its understanding
of the Breath of Life. The first Adam, according to the Apostle
Paul, became a Living Being or eis psuchein zousan. Included
among the many meanings of psuchei are the concepts of "breath of
life, soul life, and life-principle." Zaou means "living,"
the root word for the terms "zoo" or "zoology." The second Adam,
Christ, became a life-giving spirit or pneuma zouopoioun.
Pneuma means "breath, life, spirit, soul." Zouopoieou
means "to make alive, to give life to." (1 Corinthians 15:45)
The term Breath
of Life or pneuma zoueis was also used in the story of God's
Two Witnesses. These two men prophesied for God in the midst of
opposition from the majority of the world's population. When they
were finished testifying for God, they were attacked, overpowered,
and were killed. "But after the three and a half days a breath of
life from God entered them, and they stood on their feet..." (Revelation
11:11) Zouei means "of life."
When the Bible
uses the term Breath of Life, I understand it to mean:
* God's Spirit
or Wind that hovers over the whole creation
* God's breath
as hot wind kindling a flame, energizing all living creatures
* God's life
that has been breathed into all living things
* God's life-spirit
that was breathed into the nostrils of the dust-formed humanity,
and as a consequence, we became living, self-conscious, physical-spiritual
beings
* God's life-giving-Spirit
in Christ to bring new life to human beings
* God's life-spirit
that resurrects the dead
The
chi is an Asian perception of God's breath of life into human beings
and over all creation. Because of sin, there exists alienation between
God, human beings, and nature. Although God's breath of life has
been observed by Chinese wisdom, it remained mysterious and vague.
God's revealed
Word provides a clearer picture of God's breath of life in the universe.
This breath of life can be experienced anew through the life-giving
Spirit of Christ.
UNDERSTANDING
T'AI CHI IN THE CONTEXT OF GOD'S SELF DISCLOSURE
T'ai Chi Chuan
is a life-time discipline to reach or to become one with the Supreme
Ultimate. In Taoism, the Supreme Ultimate is beyond description,
cannot be named, neither personal nor creator.
In Christian
Theology, we also refer to God as ineffable--that is, indescribable,
beyond words, inexpressible, unutterable, unspeakable. But God chose
to disclose the Divine Self in the person of Jesus Christ.
In Christ, the
Supreme Ultimate can be known, not exhaustively but relationally,
through the power of God's Spirit. We now know that the Supreme
Ultimate is God--the Creator of the Yin-Yang universe.
The practice
of T'ai Chi is a sincere Taoist effort to seek harmony with the
Supreme Ultimate. In Christ, the Supreme Ultimate mercifully and
graciously chose to respond to the serious T'ai Chi practitioners'
search for harmony. Through the Great Tao, the Supreme Ultimate
intervened in human history and became peace, wellness, welfare,
harmony to us.
My T'ai Chi
exercise and discipline bring holistic healing in my relationship
with God, with others, with myself, and with nature.
* When I allow
the Holy Spirit to fill me with the Divine Presence and Power, I
experience harmony with God.
* When my heart
and mind go beyond my selfish desires, God fills my being with the
desire to help meet the needs of other people, locally and globally;
that harmonizes me with others!
* When I let
go of my attachments to people and things, I let go of my own idolatries;
then I experience how to be an empty vessel to be refilled with
God's desire for my being!
* When I allow
God to fill me with the Divine Breath of Life, I experience the
reality that I share life with other living creatures; that harmonizes
me with nature!
I practice T'ai
Chi every day to be in harmony with the Supreme Ultimate, to express
my love and obedience to the Great Tao, and to allow God's Holy
Chi to energize me.
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