Vinyasa Yoga – Flowing into the Serpent’s Rhythm
Introduction: What Is Vinyasa Yoga?
Vinyasa Yoga is often referred to as "flow yoga"—a dynamic sequence of movements synchronized with breath. On the surface, it appears to be a graceful, artistic dance meant for exercise and stress relief. But this continuous flow is not merely physical; it is a spiritual rhythm crafted to align the practitioner with cosmic energies and occult consciousness. In Sanskrit, “Vinyasa” means “to place in a special way,” often referring to the deliberate positioning of body, breath, and spirit. But the question arises—placed before whom?
The answer lies in the hidden purpose of this system: to guide the practitioner into a trance state that breaks the natural soul-body boundaries and opens inner gateways to serpent-based spiritual energies.
Origins and Hidden Spiritual Purpose
Vinyasa Yoga evolved from Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga, which was codified by Krishna Pattabhi Jois, a student of Tirumalai Krishnamacharya. Jois claimed to receive spiritual insight from ancient texts and divine visitations. He taught that movement and breath created a “moving meditation” that allows the prana (life force) to flow freely, breaking mental resistance and opening the sushumna nadi (central spiritual channel).
This style is rooted in Tantric energy maps, where the body becomes a moving altar, and the practitioner becomes a living offering in motion.
The Flow: What Happens in a Vinyasa Class?
Each class cycles through:
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Surya Namaskar (Sun Salutations) – A literal worship sequence to Surya, the Hindu sun god.
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Asana Sequences – Fluid movement into poses like Warrior, Cobra, Upward/Downward Dog, each embodying spiritual meanings.
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Pranayama (Breath Techniques) – Designed to induce trance and unlock spiritual gates.
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Meditation/Savasana – Ends with spiritual surrender and activation of subtle body systems.
Unlike Hatha Yoga, which is static, Vinyasa uses motion to entrain the nervous system, break cognitive resistance, and usher in altered states of consciousness.
Occult Symbolism of the Flow and Rhythm
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Trance Induction – Constant movement paired with regulated breath creates a hypnotic state, suppressing rational thinking and welcoming spiritual infiltration.
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Energy Flow – The uninterrupted flow mimics the movement of Kundalini, the coiled serpent energy believed to reside at the base of the spine.
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Sun Salutations – These series pay homage to the sun god. It is ritual bowing, embedding Hindu cosmology into each movement.
“They worshipped the sun toward the east.” — Ezekiel 8:16 (a practice God called abominable)
Main Poses (Asanas) in Vinyasa and Their Hidden Meanings
Pose Name | Sanskrit | Spiritual Symbolism | Demon/Deity Connection |
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Sun Salutation | Surya Namaskar | Morning worship to Surya | Surya (Sun god) |
Cobra Pose | Bhujangasana | Awakens Kundalini | Nagas (serpent spirits) |
Warrior Poses | Virabhadrasana | Story of Shiva’s wrath | Virabhadra (fierce spirit of Shiva) |
Upward Dog | Urdhva Mukha Svanasana | Opening heart, chest | Psychic heart opening |
Child’s Pose | Balasana | Submission before deities | Humble offering posture |
Each pose forms part of a ritual choreography to invite energy alignment with false gods and demonic spirits.
Chants, Mantras, and Breathwork
Breath as Invocation
In Vinyasa, Ujjayi breathing (victorious breath) is used to generate internal heat and rhythm. This breath is meant to activate internal pranic winds—spiritual currents associated with Tantric entities.
Common Mantras Used
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Om Namah Shivaya – Salutation to Shiva, the god of destruction and rebirth.
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So Hum – “I am that” – a declaration of self-deification.
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Lokah Samastah Sukhino Bhavantu – “May all beings be happy” – aligning the heart to pantheistic unity.
“You shall not invoke the names of other gods, nor let them be heard on your lips.” — Exodus 23:13
Chakra Manipulation Through Flow
Vinyasa, with its seamless transitions, targets the chakra system progressively:
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Muladhara (Root) – Grounding energy through contact with the earth.
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Svadhisthana (Sacral) – Opened through hip-opening flows and sensual movement.
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Manipura (Solar Plexus) – Strength-based poses activate pride and self-will.
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Anahata (Heart) – Backbends and heart-openers foster emotional vulnerability to deception.
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Ajna & Sahasrara (Third Eye & Crown) – Final meditations awaken occult vision and cosmic merging.
Spiritual Implications: Flowing with the Wrong Spirit
Vinyasa’s goal is spiritual immersion—but not with the Holy Spirit. The sequence becomes a channeling dance, attracting:
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Serpent spirits (via spine-based flows)
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Nature spirits (through elemental themes)
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Hindu deities (via ritual motions and mantras)
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Trance spirits (induced through breath and repetition)
The body becomes a moving altar, the breath becomes incense, and the practitioner becomes the sacrifice.
Biblical Contrast: Spirit-led Worship vs. Serpent-led Flow
Practice | Vinyasa Yoga | Holy Spirit Worship |
---|---|---|
Breath | Ujjayi – Occult activation | Ruach – Breath of God (Gen 2:7) |
Movement | Flow to open chakras | Dance of worship to glorify God (2 Sam 6:14) |
Focus | Inner energy, trance | Christ-centered adoration |
Goal | Union with cosmic force | Intimacy with the Living God |
Layman’s Warning: Beware the Flow
If you've taken part in Vinyasa Yoga—even casually—you may have entered a spiritual system designed to bind you to the rhythms of another kingdom. Each movement, breath, and chant is an invitation, not a neutral action. You may have unknowingly opened doors to spiritual manipulation.
“Be sober-minded; be watchful. Your adversary the devil prowls around like a roaring lion.” — 1 Peter 5:8
Repent. Renounce. Seek deliverance. The grace of Jesus is powerful enough to cleanse every unholy ritual.
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