Our Mission

We are a non-profit organization that values and honors the intersections of yoga philosophy and Christian theology. Through study, embodied spiritual practices and spiritual friendship, CPY answers the longing of Christ-centered people to grow towards a contemplative life.

To learn more about our response to the diversity in Christian faith and how that fits into CPY’s vision and mission, read Unity in Diversity: Yoga’s gift to the Ecumenical Community.

Our Vision

We envision a time when, through the deep transformative power of Christ, Christians practicing yoga and contemplative prayer make a significant contribution to healing the divides in our lives and in our world.

Our Name and Logo

Our phrasing of “Christians Practicing Yoga” is very intentional. After a long discussion about semantics, the phrase “Christians Practicing Yoga” was our first choice. 

Why? 

Simply put, “Christians Practicing Yoga” reflects best who we are. We are Christians who practice and often teach yoga. Some of us teach yoga with an explicitly Christian focus in class, some of us don’t, and some of us do both. Some of us call it Christian Yoga, others of us adamantly do not. The phrase “Christians Practicing Yoga” is an umbrella for all of these versions. Read on for more about our name…

Our logo features both a labryinth and a lotus. For us, these images integrate Christianity and yoga—just as our organization strives to do. Learn more about the logo.

We recognized that ‘Christian yoga’ is a descriptive phrase that raises more questions than it answers, and runs the risk of creating the impression that we are co-opting yoga and retro-fitting it in Christian terms, failing to respect its own integrity on its own terms.

To avoid such an impression, many in our network choose not to describe their teaching and classes as ‘Christian yoga’, while others, recognizing its liability, continue to use it for lack of something better. The terminological ambiguities make clear that a concise language is not there yet enabling Christians who practice yoga to convey to others that what they are doing is integral to their life of faith and not outside of it.
— Fr. Tom Ryan, CSP

Perspectives on Christian Unity

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