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What
does practicing religiously mean?
Letter to the editor of Martial Arts Professional
Magazine
I
enjoyed the column and offer my perspective on it.
We can teach martial sport or martial science, but to teach martial
arts, we must first acknowledge the origin of martial arts. Most
practitioners agree that China, more specifically the Shaolin Temple
in the Hunan Province, is the birthplace of martial arts. Bodidharma,
the founder of martial arts, incorporated a physical discipline
into a spiritual path. martial techniques and meditation as a path
to higher states of awareness and understanding is the deepest purpose
of martial arts. Like it or not, our practice has spiritual roots.
Spiritual development is as much a part of martial arts as holding
your breath is to going under water.
So the question is, why would we decide not to teach the real goal
of martial arts? The answer is that teaching punches and kicks is
less offensive. Customers come to us for self-defense and to get
into shape. They workout and get in shape, as well as learn how
to fight. When we play it safe, no one is offended, and we make
money. The problem is that our customers never become students of
the martial arts. A real student of the martial arts must see their
practice as more than simply punches and kicks.
I found it interesting that in the same issue of Martial Arts Professional
Billy Blanks was quoted as saying, "Jesus Christ was a perfect person
and they crucified him. I'm a man born into sin. What do you think
they're going to do to me?" It seems that a "Christian" religious
overtone is acceptable, but an eastern overtone is immediately questioned.
The martial arts do not have "Christian" roots, but they
do have spiritual roots.
I feel that it may be necessary to make a distinction between spiritual
development and religion. My students work on spiritual development
but they practice many different religions. They are encouraged
to study what they believe, and then to follow that faith to the
best of their ability. With over 400 students, the largest percentage
of our students are Christian, but many are Muslims, Hindus, Jews,
Buddhists, Taoists, and a handful of agnostics and atheists. Historically,
we have seen great martial artists from many disciplines that all
followed different religious beliefs. Bodidharma, Chang San- Feng,
Ueshiba, Funakoshi, Kano-Judo. All of these great masters were believed
to be in their prime in their later years of life. Usually, no athlete
is in his or her physical prime after the age of sixty or more.
However, each of these great masters clearly understood that the
practice of martial arts is a mental and spiritual discipline as
well as a physical discipline. Each master achieved greatness within
their art, because they mastered their minds and their bodies. All
of these great masters viewed the art as sacred, although they had
different religious convictions.
When we teach the truth, there will be certain individuals that
will be offended. People have quit our programs because we bow,
meditate, and the most ridiculous, because we count in a foreign
language. On the other hand, so many others have had their lives
influenced and improved because I teach the deepest philosophical
and spiritual aspects of the practice. Society is starving for a
deeper reason to practice, and I believe that they want and deserve
the truth.
Respectfully yours,
Sifu Robert Brown
Change
Image, Not Programs
We must change the public perception from one of fighting and self-defense
to a path for living healthy and creating satisfying lives, which
is the epitome of martial arts. If our society understood how profoundly
their lives would be affected through the practice of martial arts,
I don't believe that we would have to chase the market, but rather
the market would truly chase us.
Letter to the editor of Martial Arts Professional
Magazine
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