Yoga has evolved over time from ancient texts to a global practice that provides physical and mental benefits. While society emphasizes outward success, the fast pace of modern life makes it difficult to prioritize wellness. Yoga addresses this by strengthening the body with poses, and calming the mind with meditation and breathing exercises. However, yoga's true spiritual significance is in uniting the soul with God - its ultimate goal is spiritual fulfillment rather than just physical fitness. When practiced under proper guidance, yoga can be a way of life that leads to spiritual success.
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The spiritual significance of yoga
1. The Spiritual Significance of Yoga
From being the subject of Maharishi Patanjalis well-known
treatise to having its own international day (June 21), yoga has
certainly come a long way. Yogic practices have traveled across
time and transcended barriers of culture, race, and religion to
provide an effective solution for healthy and stress-free living.
What makes yoga popular is exactly this universal appeal it is
a one-stop shop for most of your physical and mental needs.
Our society is driven largely by external attributes, such as
body image and corporate success. There is a powerful
sense of validation attached with both of these things.
Certainly, one needs an able body and a calm mind to face
all the challenges that a successful career entails. However,
todays fast-paced lifestyle has made it harder to address
ones physical and mental wellness. We work long hours,
consume meals irregularly, and barely exercise. Additionally, the internal push to meet deadlines for fear of losing
that next big opportunity looms ever steadily on the horizon, causing stress. This prolonged stress has been proven
to cause a host of problems, ranging from hypertension to strokes and heart disease.
Enter yoga.
Physically speaking, yogic poses or Asanas are powerful ways to cultivate muscular strength, flexibility, and
cardiovascular fitness. An added incentive is the lean, toned physique that contributes to ones physical
attractiveness. Anybody can do yoga at their personal pace. Meditation and breathing exercises that are part of
yogic practices are proven powerful antidotes to stressful situations, owing to their visible effect on body
physiology. In modern times, many businesses and health experts recommend mindfulness and meditative
practices to boost productivity and performance. Yoga equips you to focus and relax at the same time, making it a
powerful tool for those pursuing demanding careers. It is not hard to see why yoga is so appealing from the
perspective of material satisfaction.
However, yoga is much more than a mere tool for physical and mental wellness. Yoga transcends the body and
mind into the realm of the soul. The Sanskrit word Yog denotes union of the soul with God in fact, there is no
such word asyoga in Sanskrit terminology. Uniting the soul with God is upheld as the goal of human life by the
Vedas. To attain this goal one needs to use the body and the mind for spiritual practice or Sadhana. Physical
exercise, rest, mental relaxation, and proper diet are all essential for maintaining the body and mind as the vehicles
for spiritual advancement. One cannot, after all, perform spiritual practice with a weak constitution.
The Bhagavad Gita states:
Yuktahara-viharasya yukta-cheshtasya karnasu
Yukta-svapnavobodhasya yogo bhavati duhkha-ha
Bhagavad Gita 6.17
But those who are temperate in eating and recreation, balanced in work, and regulated in sleep, can mitigate all
sorrows by practicing Yog.
With such an esoteric spiritual significance, Yog is far from being just the physical drill that it has come to
symbolize. When practiced under the proper guidance of a realized master, it is a way of life that ultimately leads
to spiritual success and eternal happiness. Physical and mental wellness are just byproducts.
Jagadguru Shri Kripaluji Maharaj mentions in his work Radha Govind Geet:
Hari ka viyogi jiva Govind Radhey, Sancho yoga soi jo hari se milade.
Hari se milave na jo Govind Radhey, vaha yoga yoga na kuyoga batade
True Yog is that which unites a soul separated from God, with God;
All else is just the opposite of Yog
Source: JKyog.org