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Reiki: hablan los Obispos:Terapia NO Cristiana

 
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MensajePublicado: Lun Abr 13, 2009 5:55 pm    Asunto: Reiki: hablan los Obispos:Terapia NO Cristiana
Tema: Reiki: hablan los Obispos:Terapia NO Cristiana
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Los obispos de Estados Unidos declaran no cristiana la terapia Reiki
Denuncian su utilización en instituciones católicas



WASHINGTON, domingo, 10 abril 2009 (ZENIT.org).- El Reiki, medicina alternativa japonesa, carece de credibilidad científica y está fuera de la fe cristiana, haciéndola inaceptable para las instituciones sanitarias católicas, indicaba la Conferencia Episcopal de Estados Unidos.

El 29 de marzo, la Conferencia publicaba las "Directrices para la Evaluación del Reiki como Terapia Alternativa", desarrolladas por su comité doctrinal, presidido por el obispo de Bridgeport, Connecticut, Mons. William Lori, y aprobadas por el comité administrativo el viernes 28 de marzo.

El documento observa que "la Iglesia reconoce dos clases de curación: la curación por la gracia divina y la curación que utiliza los poderes de la naturaleza", que "no se excluyen una a otra".

El Reiki, sin embargo, "no encuentra apoyo ni en los descubrimientos de la ciencia natural ni en la fe cristiana", explicaba.

Las directrices indican que esta técnica de curación "fue inventada en Japón a finales del ochocientos por Mikao Usui, que estudiaba los textos budistas".

El documento añade: "Según las enseñanzas del Reiki, la enfermedad es causada por alguna clase de disfunción o desequilibrio en la ‘energía vital' de uno. Un médico Reiki efectúa la curación colocando sus manos en ciertas posiciones sobre el cuerpo del paciente para facilitar el flujo del Reiki, la ‘energía vital universal', del médico Reiki al paciente".


Curación espiritual

Explica más adelante que la terapia tiene algunos aspectos de religión, siendo "descrita como una clase de curación ‘espiritual'", con sus propios preceptos éticos o "forma de vida".

El Reiki "no ha sido aceptado por las comunidades científica y médica como una terapia eficaz", observaban las directrices. "Estudios científicos serios atestiguan que el Reiki carece de eficacia, así como de una explicación científica plausible sobre cómo pudiera llegar a ser eficaz".

Tampoco la fe puede ser la base de esta terapia, afirmaban los obispos, puesto que el Reiki es diferente de la "curación divina conocida por los cristianos".

Explicaban que "la diferencia radical se puede ver de forma inmediata en el hecho de que el poder de curación del médico Reiki está a disposición del ser humano". Para los cristianos, afirmaban, "el acceso a la curación divina se hace a través de la oración a Cristo como Señor y Salvador", mientras que el Reiki es una técnica que se transmite de "maestro" a alumno, un método que "según parece producirá los resultados previstos".


Problemas insolubles

Las directrices establecen: "Para un católico creer en la terapia Reiki presenta problemas insolubles. En términos de curación de la salud física propia o de los demás, emplear una técnica que no tiene apoyo científico - ni incluso verosimilitud - es, por lo general, imprudente".

A nivel espiritual, el documento indica que "existen peligros importantes". Y explica: "Para usar el Reiki habría que aceptar, al menos de forma implícita, elementos centrales de la visión del mundo que subyace tras la teoría Reiki, elementos que no pertenecen ni a la fe cristiana ni a la ciencia natural".

"Sin justificación ni de la fe cristiana ni de la ciencia natural, por tanto, un católico que ponga su confianza en el Reiki estaría actuando dentro del ámbito de la superstición, esa tierra de nadie que no es ni fe ni ciencia".

"La superstición corrompe el culto a Dios volviendo hacia una dirección falsa los sentimientos y la práctica religiosa. Aunque en ocasiones la gente cae en la superstición por ignorancia, es responsabilidad de todos los que enseñan en nombre de la Iglesia eliminar tal ignorancia tanto como les sea posible".

El documento concluye, "puesto que la terapia Reiki no es compatible ni con la enseñanza cristiana ni con la evidencia científica, no sería apropiado que instituciones católicas, como establecimientos sanitarios católicos y centros de retiros, o personas que representan a la Iglesia, como capellanes católicos, promuevan o proporcionen terapia Reiki".

En la red: Directrices: http://www.usccb.org/dpp/doctrine.htm




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MensajePublicado: Lun Abr 13, 2009 6:15 pm    Asunto:
Tema: Reiki: hablan los Obispos:Terapia NO Cristiana
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GUIDELINES FOR EVALUATING REIKI AS AN ALTERNATIVE THERAPY
Committee on Doctrine United States Conference of Catholic Bishops


1. From time to time questions have been raised about various alternative therapies that are often available in the United States. Bishops are sometimes asked, "What is the Church's position on such therapies?" The USCCB Committee on Doctrine has prepared this resource in
order to assist bishops in their responses.


I. HEALING BY DIVINE GRACE AND HEALING BY NATURAL POWERS
2. The Church recognizes two kinds of healing: healing by divine grace and healing that utilizes the powers of nature. As for the first, we can point to the ministry of Christ, who performed many physical healings and who commissioned his disciples to carry on that work. In fidelity to this commission, from the time of the Apostles the Church has interceded on behalf of the sick through the invocation of the name of the Lord Jesus, asking for healing through the power of the Holy Spirit, whether in the form of the sacramental laying on of hands and anointing with oil or of simple prayers for healing, which often include an appeal to the saints for
their aid. As for the second, the Church has never considered a plea for divine healing, which comes as a gift from God, to exclude recourse to natural means of healing through the practice of medicine.
1 Alongside her sacrament of healing and various prayers for healing, the Church has a ong history of caring for the sick through the use of natural means. The most obvious sign of this is the great number of Catholic hospitals that are found throughout our country.

1 See Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Instruction on Prayers for Healing (14 September 2000), I, 3:
"Obviously, recourse to prayer does not exclude, but rather encourages the use of effective natural means for
preserving and restoring health, as well as leading the Church's sons and daughters to care for the sick, to assist them
in body and spirit, and to seek to cure disease."
2
3. The two kinds of healing are not mutually exclusive. Because it is possible to be healed
by divine power does not mean that we should not use natural means at our disposal. It is not our decision whether or not God will heal someone by supernatural means. As the Catechism of the Catholic Church points out, the Holy Spirit sometimes gives to certain human beings "a
special charism of healing so as to make manifest the power of the grace of the risen Lord."2
This power of healing is not at human disposal, however, for "even the most intense prayers do
not always obtain the healing of all illnesses."3 Recourse to natural means of healing therefore remains entirely appropriate, as these are at human disposal. In fact, Christian charity demands
that we not neglect natural means of healing people who are ill.


II. REIKI AND HEALING
A) The Origins and Basic Characteristics of Reiki
4. Reiki is a technique of healing that was invented in Japan in the late 1800s by Mikao
Usui, who was studying Buddhist texts.4 According to Reiki teaching, illness is caused by some
kind of disruption or imbalance in one's "life energy." A Reiki practitioner effects healing by
placing his or her hands in certain positions on the patient's body in order to facilitate the flow of
Reiki, the "universal life energy," from the Reiki practitioner to the patient. There are numerous
designated hand positions for addressing different problems. Reiki proponents assert that the
practitioner is not the source of the healing energy, but merely a channel for it.5 To become a
Reiki practitioner, one must receive an "initiation" or "attunement" from a Reiki Master. This
2 Catechism, no. 1508.
3 Catechism, no. 1508.
4 It has also been claimed that he merely rediscovered an ancient Tibetan technique, but evidence for this claim is
lacking.
5 As we shall see below, however, distinctions between self, world, and God tend to collapse in Reiki thought.
Some Reiki teachers explain that one eventually reaches the realization that the self and the "universal life energy"
are one, "that we are universal life force and that everything is energy, including ourselves" (Libby Barnett and
Maggie Chambers with Susan Davidson, Reiki Energy Medicine: Bringing Healing Touch into Home, Hospital, and
Hospice [Rochester, Vt.: Healing Arts Press, 1996], p. 48; see also p. 102).
3
ceremony makes one "attuned" to the "universal life energy" and enables one to serve as a conduit for it. There are said to be three different levels of attunement (some teach that there are
four). At the higher levels, one can allegedly channel Reiki energy and effect healings at a distance, without physical contact.
B) Reiki as a Natural Means of Healing
5. Although Reiki proponents seem to agree that Reiki does not represent a religion of its own, but a technique that may be utilized by people from many religious traditions, it does have
several aspects of a religion. Reiki is frequently described as a "spiritual" kind of healing as opposed to the common medical procedures of healing using physical means. Much of the literature on Reiki is filled with references to God, the Goddess, the "divine healing power," and
the "divine mind." The life force energy is described as being directed by God, the "Higher Intelligence," or the "divine consciousness." Likewise, the various "attunements" which the
Reiki practitioner receives from a Reiki Master are accomplished through "sacred ceremonies"
that involve the manifestation and contemplation of certain "sacred symbols" (which have
traditionally been kept secret by Reiki Masters). Furthermore, Reiki is frequently described as a
"way of living," with a list of five "Reiki Precepts" stipulating proper ethical conduct.
6. Nevertheless, there are some Reiki practitioners, primarily nurses, who attempt to approach Reiki simply as a natural means of healing. Viewed as natural means of healing, however, Reiki becomes subject to the standards of natural science. It is true that there may be means of natural healing that have not yet been understood or recognized by science. The basic criteria for judging whether or not one should entrust oneself to any particular natural means of healing, however, remain those of science.
4
7. Judged according to these standards, Reiki lacks scientific credibility. It has not been
accepted by the scientific and medical communities as an effective therapy. Reputable scientific studies attesting to the efficacy of Reiki are lacking, as is a plausible scientific explanation as to how it could possibly be efficacious. The explanation of the efficacy of Reiki depends entirely
on a particular view of the world as permeated by this "universal life energy" (Reiki) that is subject to manipulation by human thought and will. Reiki practitioners claim that their training allows one to channel the "universal life energy" that is present in all things. This "universal life
energy," however, is unknown to natural science. As the presence of such energy has not been observed by means of natural science, the justification for these therapies necessarily must come
from something other than science.
C) Reiki and the Healing Power of Christ
8. Some people have attempted to identify Reiki with the divine healing known to Christians.6 They are mistaken. The radical difference can be immediately seen in the fact that
for the Reiki practitioner the healing power is at human disposal. Some teachers want to avoid this implication and argue that it is not the Reiki practitioner personally who effects the healing, but the Reiki energy directed by the divine consciousness. Nevertheless, the fact remains that for Christians the access to divine healing is by prayer to Christ as Lord and Savior, while the
essence of Reiki is not a prayer but a technique that is passed down from the "Reiki Master" to
the pupil, a technique that once mastered will reliably produce the anticipated results.7 Some practitioners attempt to Christianize Reiki by adding a prayer to Christ, but this does not affect
6 For example, see "Reiki and Christianity" at http://iarp.org/articles/Reiki_and_Christianity.htm
and "Christian Reiki" at http://areikihealer.tripod.com/christianreiki.html and the website www.christianreiki.org.
7 Reiki Masters offer courses of training with various levels of advancement, services for which the teachers require
significant financial remuneration. The pupil has the expectation and the Reiki Master gives the assurance that one's
investment of time and money will allow one to master a technique that will predictably produce results.
5
the essential nature of Reiki. For these reasons, Reiki and other similar therapeutic techniques cannot be identified with what Christians call healing by divine grace.
9. The difference between what Christians recognize as healing by divine grace and Reiki
therapy is also evident in the basic terms used by Reiki proponents to describe what happens in Reiki therapy, particularly that of "universal life energy." Neither the Scriptures nor the Christian tradition as a whole speak of the natural world as based on "universal life energy" that
is subject to manipulation by the natural human power of thought and will. In fact, this worldview has its origins in eastern religions and has a certain monist and pantheistic character, in that
distinctions among self, world, and God tend to fall away.8 We have already seen that Reiki practitioners are unable to differentiate clearly between divine healing power and power that is at
human disposal.


III. CONCLUSION
10. Reiki therapy finds no support either in the findings of natural science or in Christian
belief. For a Catholic to believe in Reiki therapy presents insoluble problems. In terms of caring
for one's physical health or the physical health of others, to employ a technique that has no
scientific support (or even plausibility) is generally not prudent.
11. In terms of caring for one's spiritual health, there are important dangers. To use Reiki
one would have to accept at least in an implicit way central elements of the worldview that
8 While this seems implicit in Reiki teaching, some proponents state explicitly that there is ultimately no distinction
between and the self and Reiki. "Alignment with your Self and being Reiki is an ongoing process. Willingness to
continuously engage in this process furthers your evolution and can lead to the sustained recognition and ultimate
experience that you are universal life force" (The Reiki Healing Connection [Libby Barnett, M.S.W.],
http://reikienergy.com/classes.htm, accessed 2/6/2008 [emphasis in original]). Diane Stein summarizes the meaning
of some of the "sacred symbols" used in Reiki attunements as: "The Goddess in me salutes the Goddess in you";
"Man and God becoming one" (Essential Reiki Teaching Manual: A Companion Guide for Reiki Healers [Berkeley,
Cal.: Crossing Press, 2007], pp. 129-31). Anne Charlish and Angela Robertshaw explain that the highest Reiki
attunement "marks a shift from the ego and self to a feeling of oneness with the universal life-force energy" (Secrets
of Reiki [New York, N.Y.: DK Publishing, 2001], p. 84).
6
undergirds Reiki theory, elements that belong neither to Christian faith nor to natural science.
Without justification either from Christian faith or natural science, however, a Catholic who puts
his or her trust in Reiki would be operating in the realm of superstition, the no-man's-land that is
neither faith nor science.9 Superstition corrupts one's worship of God by turning one's religious
feeling and practice in a false direction.10 While sometimes people fall into superstition through
ignorance, it is the responsibility of all who teach in the name of the Church to eliminate such
ignorance as much as possible.
12. Since Reiki therapy is not compatible with either Christian teaching or scientific
evidence, it would be inappropriate for Catholic institutions, such as Catholic health care
facilities and retreat centers, or persons representing the Church, such as Catholic chaplains, to
promote or to provide support for Reiki therapy.




Most Rev. William E. Lori (Chairman) Most Rev. John C. Nienstedt
Bishop of Bridgeport Archbishop of St. Paul and Minneapolis
Most Rev. Leonard P. Blair Most Rev. Arthur J. Serratelli
Bishop of Toledo Bishop of Paterson
Most Rev. José H. Gomez Most Rev. Allen H. Vigneron
Archbishop of San Antonio Bishop of Oakland
Most Rev. Robert J. McManus Most Rev. Donald W. Wuerl
Bishop of Worcester Archbishop of Washington
9 Some forms of Reiki teach of a need to appeal for the assistance of angelic beings or "Reiki spirit guides." This
introduces the further danger of exposure to malevolent forces or powers.
10 See Catechism, no. 2111; St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa theologiae II-II, q. 92, a. 1

Idea http://www.usccb.org/dpp/Evaluation_Guidelines_finaltext_2009-03.pdf
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MensajePublicado: Mar Abr 14, 2009 8:37 pm    Asunto:
Tema: Reiki: hablan los Obispos:Terapia NO Cristiana
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Usuaria X, gracias por la informacion.

Algo que me estuvo raro el otro dia que una persona me comento que tendrian una actividad sobre reiki en el Holy Trinity Monastery en Saint David, Arizona

Mirando la pagina web del monasterio me tope con esto:

-February 6, the 3HOAZ Yoga group from Phoenix has a 2 day teacher training program for 48 people.-

-March 13, Yoga Connection had a 2-day retreat for 20 people.-

-March 16, Jin Shin Jytsu had a 3-day silent retreat for 14 people.-

Ahi le comentare sobre este particular al Mons. Kicanas cuando lo vea.
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MensajePublicado: Mar Abr 14, 2009 8:55 pm    Asunto:
Tema: Reiki: hablan los Obispos:Terapia NO Cristiana
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LuisFerrer escribió:
Usuaria X, gracias por la informacion.

Algo que me estuvo raro el otro dia que una persona me comento que tendrian una actividad sobre reiki en el Holy Trinity Monastery en Saint David, Arizona

Mirando la pagina web del monasterio me tope con esto:

-February 6, the 3HOAZ Yoga group from Phoenix has a 2 day teacher training program for 48 people.-

-March 13, Yoga Connection had a 2-day retreat for 20 people.-

-March 16, Jin Shin Jytsu had a 3-day silent retreat for 14 people.-

Ahi le comentare sobre este particular al Mons. Kicanas cuando lo vea.

Dios santo, que horrible.
Dios los Bendiga.
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En estos tiempos se necesita mucho ingenio para cometer un pecado original
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MensajePublicado: Mar Abr 14, 2009 9:32 pm    Asunto:
Tema: Reiki: hablan los Obispos:Terapia NO Cristiana
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Hermano Luis Ferrer hola!!!, hola guitar !!! Very Happy

Luis, puedes y si te es posible Arrow imprimir el documento en Inglés y se lo puedes entregar

Que tristeza lo que vemos dentro de la Iglesia y quise abrir éste tema porque es mucha la resistencia de católicos a dejar el reiki y sobre todo dejar de confundir ....promoviéndolo como algo Cristiano y compatible con la Fé Católica y confundiendo con lo que es la verdadera Imposición de manos que nos habla la Escritura Sagrada, y encima lo promueven como la forma de curar de Nuestro Señor Jesucristo, es realmente horrendo.

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MensajePublicado: Mar Abr 14, 2009 9:37 pm    Asunto:
Tema: Reiki: hablan los Obispos:Terapia NO Cristiana
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LuisFerrer escribió:

Mirando la pagina web del monasterio me tope con esto:

-February 6, the 3HOAZ Yoga group from Phoenix has a 2 day teacher training program for 48 people.-

-March 13, Yoga Connection had a 2-day retreat for 20 people.-

-March 16, Jin Shin Jytsu had a 3-day silent retreat for 14 people.-

Ahi le comentare sobre este particular al Mons. Kicanas cuando lo vea.



Puedes también darle éste documento, específicamente por lo del Yoga y las técnicas orientales son 3 enlaces:

Introducción

1.- Modos erróneos de hacer oración

2.- Métodos psicofísicos-corporeos


Carta a los obispos de la Iglesia Católica sobre algunos aspectos de la meditación cristiana
Idea http://es.catholic.net/catequistasyevangelizadores/90/1915/articulo.php?id=32028

Muchísimas Gracias Luis
Dios te pague
Very Happy
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MensajePublicado: Mie Abr 15, 2009 2:25 am    Asunto:
Tema: Reiki: hablan los Obispos:Terapia NO Cristiana
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Usuaria X escribió:
LuisFerrer escribió:

Mirando la pagina web del monasterio me tope con esto:

-February 6, the 3HOAZ Yoga group from Phoenix has a 2 day teacher training program for 48 people.-

-March 13, Yoga Connection had a 2-day retreat for 20 people.-

-March 16, Jin Shin Jytsu had a 3-day silent retreat for 14 people.-

Ahi le comentare sobre este particular al Mons. Kicanas cuando lo vea.



Puedes también darle éste documento, específicamente por lo del Yoga y las técnicas orientales son 3 enlaces:

Introducción

1.- Modos erróneos de hacer oración

2.- Métodos psicofísicos-corporeos


Carta a los obispos de la Iglesia Católica sobre algunos aspectos de la meditación cristiana
Idea http://es.catholic.net/catequistasyevangelizadores/90/1915/articulo.php?id=32028

Muchísimas Gracias Luis
Dios te pague
Very Happy


Cuenta con eso. Que Dios y Nuestra Señora te bendigan tambien Smile
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guitarxtreme
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MensajePublicado: Mie Abr 15, 2009 3:17 am    Asunto:
Tema: Reiki: hablan los Obispos:Terapia NO Cristiana
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Haces bien al salvar a esas almas del sincretismo religioso, Luis. Dios te Bendiga.
Dios los Bendiga.
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MensajePublicado: Mie Abr 15, 2009 3:19 am    Asunto:
Tema: Reiki: hablan los Obispos:Terapia NO Cristiana
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Yo aqui no e visto alguna parroquia o algo donde hagan yoga.
Dios los Bendiga
PD: Hola hermana X.
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MensajePublicado: Mie Abr 15, 2009 4:00 am    Asunto:
Tema: Reiki: hablan los Obispos:Terapia NO Cristiana
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Luis
me uno a las palabras de nuestro hermano guitar, Dios te pague el bien que harás a muchas almas, ayudándo a combatir el error y enseñando la sana doctrina como dice la Escritura Sagrada.

.."Mas tú enseña lo que es conforme a la sana doctrina.." Tito 2,1

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MensajePublicado: Mie May 13, 2009 12:42 am    Asunto: Traducido al español
Tema: Reiki: hablan los Obispos:Terapia NO Cristiana
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Ya está publicada en Internet la traducción de este documento al castellano, por la Red Iberoamericana de Estudio de las Sectas:
http://info-ries.blogspot.com/2009/05/documento-de-los-obispos-de-eeuu-sobre.html
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MensajePublicado: Mie Jun 10, 2009 7:08 pm    Asunto:
Tema: Reiki: hablan los Obispos:Terapia NO Cristiana
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luis , Muchas Gracias !!

Very Happy
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