spiritual bypass
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Author(s):  
Klára Kis ◽  
◽  

Abstract. Anger and Aggression in the Christian Cultural Behaviour. One of the typical pitfalls of the Christian practice of piety is the image of the Christian man born of high ideals. The inner image of the perfect Christian hides man’s true SELF. The incorporation of sin-oriented theology, shame, and self-infidelity shapes hiding strategies in Christians. This is the reason for disabling impermissible feelings such as anger and aggression. However, spiritual bypasses that offer a quick solution pose a serious threat to Christian communities. Keywords: anger, aggression, Christian community, ideal, spiritual bypass


Author(s):  
Chun-Shin Taylor ◽  
Jesse Fox ◽  
Everett L. Worthington ◽  
Loren Toussaint ◽  
Craig S. Cashwell

2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 178-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jesse Fox ◽  
Gabriela Picciotto ◽  
Craig S. Cashwell ◽  
Everett L. Worthington ◽  
Melissa J. Basso ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Loren Toussaint ◽  
Jesse Fox ◽  
Shanmukh Kamble ◽  
Everett L. Worthington ◽  
Craig S. Cashwell ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 227-245 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jesse Fox ◽  
Gabriela Picciotto

This paper attempts to correct the unwitting reliance of much transpersonal psychology upon Indian texts that were indigenously specific to sannyasins (nonhouseholder, monastics). This includes teachings from advaita vedanta, yoga, and many Buddhist schools on releasement from desire, the diminishing role of the ego, guardedness toward “the mellow-drama” of “worldly” life (as Ram Dass famously cast relational involvements). Some forty years of the unwitting over-application of such teachings to modern non-monastic lives has helped create an artificial split in transpersonal and East-West spirituality teachings involving “engaged/ embodied” and implied “un-engaged/un-embodied” spiritual paths. This article describes the value system and lifelong spiritual developmental path of the married householder (grihasthyin), where healthy ambition and egoic traits such as loyalty and lifelong commitment are emphasized en route to a balanced “ego-dissolution” and “ego-development” within the crucible of lifelong marriage, daily family life, and conscious aging. Thus, “spiritual bypass” issues are highly age-specific. Suggestions for a grihasthya-based marriage therapy are also described, drawing from forty-four years of clinical practice, as well as from the two-thousand-yearold Greco-Judeo-Christian soteriological (spiritually-healing) psychology based in admiration, gratitude, longing, apology, and forgiveness.


Author(s):  
Patrick McCartney

Global yoga has become exceptionally popular. The emic description of this global yoga network is often called Yogaland. This paper maps out some of the key topographical features of this metaphysical, social imaginary –scape, and situates the physical body of the global yoga practitioner within a complex entanglement of intersecting social, political, economic and theological ‘worlds’. This paper first explores how the concept of spiritual bypass effects a particular averted gaze towards problematic issues within Yogaland. This leads to the second part of the paper that discusses the fundamental nature of entanglement, which often involves being entangled in worlds the individual would not want, mean to be, or perhaps even be aware, exist. Therefore, this paper identifies ways in which global yoga participants are socialised through their neo-liberal subjectivities to unwittingly support, in an often banal way, a Hindu supremacist ideology; which, in turn, can lead to a type of ‘yoga fundamentalism’.


2017 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 333-354 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriela Picciotto ◽  
Jesse Fox ◽  
Félix Neto
Keyword(s):  

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