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Kan yu trust feng shui?
Gary Brady
Newspapers recently
reported the visit of feng shui expert Paul Darby to the notorious south
dressing room at Cardiff’s prestigious Millennium Stadium at the request of the
stadium’s owners. With Wembley out of action many important soccer matches have
been played in Cardiff and it has been noted that the team that occupies the
south dressing room almost invariably loses. In a bid ‘to counteract the static
energy’ that Mr Darby claimed was trapped there, he carried out various rituals
and recommended several further steps, seemingly to no avail.
Similarly, last year it
was reported that Hong Kong billionaire businessman Eric Hotung had decided to
sell the house he had bought for some six million dollars from Senator Edward
Kennedy in 1997. Why? Because he thought that the house suffered from bad
feng shui.
Chi
Developing in China within Taoism feng shui or kan yu
has been practised in various guises for over 2000
years. It was first used in regard to the siting of graves but was later taken
up with enthusiasm by Buddhist monks when siting their temples and more
generally by those siting new homes and towns.
Feng shui
(pronounced fong shwee or fung shway) is the popular name for the
practice of Kan Yu. Feng means wind and shui means water. In ancient
times a site was considered to be ‘lucky’ if it was sheltered from ill winds and
untamed waters. Kan is to do with time and Yu with place and so is
the study of a site with reference to a time factor.
Underlying the practice is the belief in
chi
or ki, an energy that is believed to be flowing through the universe on
certain lines. Chi can take both yin and yang (literally,
shade and light) forms and can attract both positive energy, sheng chi,
which moves along curved lines, or negative energy, sha chi, which moves
quickly in straight lines. (That is why straight pathways and similar features
are avoided). There are also three categories of chi: heavenly, earthly and
human, that further subdivide. The first includes meteorological and
astrological considerations, the third social and personal ones. The five
elements (earth, fire, water, air and metal) are also important.
Divination
Chi
is held to be the source of life and harmony in the world. As with many forms of
alternative healing the idea is that by means of various complex methods you can
achieve harmony with nature by certain means. In feng shui it is
positioning objects and structures such as buildings, rooms and their contents
and gardens in a way that is sympathetic to this flow leading to health, wealth
and prosperity. To do this divination is involved. Divination involves
gaining information by reading hidden meanings in ordinary things,
through spirit contact, or using tools. It is then an
animistic approach, a form of geomancy, designed to manipulate the forces of
nature to the advantage of the individual. It arose out of a desire for
harmony between the elements, nature, and man, in order to prevent disaster and
keep evil at bay in a world full of the unexpected.
In various forms
(there are at least two major
schools and many differences within these quite apart from various offshoots and
pseudo-practitioners) feng shui has become relatively popular in the west
since the 1970s. The way it meshes with many of the eastern and new age ideas
that are in the air has helped to popularise it. No doubt many have been
attracted at first by the way its practice can often be aesthetically pleasing. Some of the advice makes obvious sense – a
house should have ample sunlight and be well ventilated; avoid living by a
straight road with speeding vehicles; use comfortable dining chairs; have
a friendly fire in a cold room; balance the shapes and sizes of plants.
Among the cures for problematic chi are
the use of mirrors, wind chimes, certain plants and hexagrams. Also sometimes
recommended are statues of a black tortoise, a blue dragon, a white tiger and a
crane or heron. These can all look very attractive.
However, the philosophy is built on a fundamentally flawed view of the universe
and many people are not only paying good money for very poor advice but by
believing these lies are endangering their immortal souls. It is not only a
tedious, burdensome, unscientific and potentially expensive viewpoint that has
no guarantee of success even on its own basis but is also fundamentally flawed
in its whole outlook.
The Prince of Peace
The truth is that this world is not controlled by
impersonal forces. There are impersonal forces, of course, such as wind and
electricity. However, none of it is at the mercy of luck or fortune. All of it
is in the safe hands of the personal God who controls all things, the God
revealed to us in Scripture and who is pleased to have all his fullness dwell in
the person of the Lord Jesus Christ. A mere force cannot bring peace or harmony
to anyone. The Prince of Peace, however, can bring reconciliation with an
offended God who is full of wrath against us not because we happen to live in a
certain place or were born at a certain time but because we have broken his law.
He can bring us into a perfect relationship with the Creator of the universe if
we will simply trust in him.
Further, all forms of
divination are strongly condemned in Scripture (see for example Deuteronomy 18:
10-12). The Lord wants us rather to turn to his Word and to the Christ revealed
there. We must put our trust in him not in some supposed harmony brought about
by various pieces of pagan mumbo-jumbo and sorcery. In the end, feng shui
cannot deal with our real problems and it cannot satisfy our spiritual longings.
It cannot provide forgiveness and it cannot bring us to God. When we meet those
who are enamoured of this particular form of superstition we must do what we can
to alert them to the underlying philosophy and seek to show them its emptiness.
May God help us to introduce the to the Saviour, the one who can give them real
harmony – with God himself in Christ. If they are interested in power in this
universe they need to know about the power that raised Jesus Christ from the
dead and that is now at work in the lives of believers to raise them from their
sins to be with the Lord forever.
In compiling this article I have been greatly helped
by various websites and in particular by an essay by Marcia Montenegro at
http://www.Cana.userworld.com
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