--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "WillyTex" <willy...@...> wrote:
>
> 
> 
> > > Don't get me started. I think yagyas are a 
> > > criminal rip-off...
> > >
> Main:
> > The TMO Yagya program...is the antithesis of 
> > the idea of personal evolution through personal
> > experience...
> >
> You might as well have Tibetan Buddhism banned
> and have the Dalai Lama arrested for fraud! 
> 
> Get a grip - every spiritual tradition has a 
> similar process for praying for the benefit of 
> the individual. 

How many others charge a fortune for the process?

How many others claim it's based on scientific 
principles?

Why don't MUM ever try to test whether it actually
works or not? Should be easy, simply find someone with
a chronic health problem and do a Marshy health yagya,
only $5,000. At that price they should be stunningly 
effective.

Feel free to write in and correct me with amazing 
stories but I think it's kidology pure and simple, 
I don't believe anyone ever got anything other than 
a feeling of satisfaction via a placebo effect from 
having yagyas done for them. And I know plenty who 
have coughed up untold thousands for the pleasure. 
Criminal.

 
> In fact, every act we perform is a 'yagya' - 
> it's just that when ritual acts are performed 
> from the transcendental level, the actions are 
> more in tune with Natural Law. 

We've all read the brochure, how about some evidence.
 
> Actions, in all cases, are not really performed 
> by individuals - actions are the result the 
> constituents of nature - the gunas. It just 
> *appears* to be a yagya based on the level of 
> perception of the recipient.
 
> The saturation point for teaching individuals 
> how to do 'TM' was probably reached back in the 
> 1970s. In this age, according to the Vedas, it
> is not possible for many people to practice 
> Yoga with much success - yoga is too esoteric.

Is this an excuse for something?


Reply via email to