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Does God have a ‘dual nature’: both negative and positive, both darkness and light, both good and evil? In his teachings, Yogi Bhajan explained, “What is God? Is he six hands? Ten heads? Is he matter? Is he a body? No. He is cosmic energy: it prevails through everybody. All that we can feel, can know, or can imagine is God. His identity is Nam because he is Truth; that is why we call him Sat Nam [meaning either “True Name” or “Truth is his name”]. He is Yin-Yang; he is positive and negative. He is male, female. He is the Creator and his creation.”[1] In describing God as yin-yang, Yogi Bhajan was drawing from Taoism, the ancient religion of China. Tao means “way,” “path” or “eternal principle.” This religious system does not promote the concept of Ultimate Reality being a personal Creator. It teaches that there is a creative principle, an impersonal energy force that rules the universe. This ‘force’ contains both negative and positive attributes. It is both darkness and light, evil and good. Someone can yield to the negative side of this ‘cosmic force’ and become an evil person, filled with ‘darkness,’ who may exhibit destructive, occult powers. Another person can yield to the positive side of this ‘cosmic force’ and become a powerful, saintly person, filled with ‘light,’ who promotes good in this world. The source of the power remains the same. Both can be traced back to that formless, impersonal, cosmic energy identified in Taoism as Ultimate Reality. Congruent with this worldview, Yogi Bhajan taught that “in all darkness there is a light and in all light there is a darkness.”[2] There are valid applications of this principle, which could be reworded and made acceptable within the framework of any religion. For instance, in every good person there is potential for evil and in every evil person there is potential for good, just as the yin-yang symbol portrays. However, in many ways, especially its extreme application, the Taoist worldview departs from the biblical one. For instance, Yogi Bhajan taught “spirituality has three dimensions”: black, red or white (a reference to magic or witchcraft). Black witchcraft involves utilizing ‘cosmic energy’ for evil; red witchcraft involves utilizing ‘cosmic energy’ to manifest the miraculous, yet it draws attention to itself in an egotistical way. White witchcraft, or white magic, is the highest expression of the ‘universal energy force,’ causing a yielded person to “live humbly, universally, radiantly, truthfully, so that when one sees you, one sees God through you.”[3] Again, the source of all three ‘dimensions of spirituality’ is the same basic essence of life. It is referred to as prana in Hindu philosophy. It is called ch’i in Taoism and most martial arts groups. The modern day movie “Star Wars” and its sequels have popularized this view of duality in Ultimate Reality—with Darth Vader, the chief villain, yielding to the darkness (the negative side of the ‘Force’) and Luke Skywalker, the hero, yielding to the light (the positive side of the ‘Force’). The opposite, yet complementary forces of yin and yang are represented in the T’ai Ch’i diagram that follows. Evidence of this all-pervasive duality permeates the natural world. These terms identify the polarity of energies, yin being the negative and yang being the positive. Yet these opposites counterbalance one another. These two terms literally mean the “dark side” or the “sunny side” of a hill. When the diagram below is spun or rotated it appears to blend together into oneness at the center, illustrating the union of these opposites.
Since evidence for the yin-yang principle permeates the natural universe, it is often assumed in certain Far Eastern religions that this same duality exists within the Highest Principle that governs the universe. In God, therefore, characteristics must exist that are at opposite ends of the spectrum.
The Judeo-Christian view of God is quite different. The Old Testament
passage, Psalm 92:15, announces, “The Lord is upright…and there is NO
unrighteousness in him.” The New Testament verse, 1 John 1:5, explains, “God
is light and in him is NO darkness at all.” In the Lord Jesus Christ is
“life, and the life is the light of men.” (John 1:4) Satan is directly the opposite. His very
name means “hater” or “accuser.” This fallen angelic being is “the
destroyer,” “the prince of darkness”—the one who wielded the “power of
death” in this realm until Jesus’ great victory over the grave. (Hebrews
2:15) Satan is NOT a negative emanation of the divine Oversoul. Neither did
God author the evil resident in him. Rather, he is an individual entity who
willfully rebelled against God, who is an outcast from God’s presence, and who
is recognizably the adversary of the human race. He is the “thief” who comes
to “kill, steal and destroy.” As “the great Deceiver,” he and his
associate demons have succeeded in deceiving every person entering this world. (See
Isaiah 14:12-19, Ezekiel 28:12-19, John 10:10, 1 Peter 5:8, Revelation 12:9.)
Thankfully, through his death on the cross, Jesus cast Satan out of his
position as “the prince of this world” and reclaimed this exalted position
for himself. As the resurrected Savior, Jesus is now titled the “Prince of
life.” (John 12:31, Acts 3:15) He commissions his representatives in
this world to turn others from “darkness to light, and from the power of Satan
to God, that they might receive forgiveness of sins.” (Acts 26:18) The
wording of this passage of Scripture makes it clear that the “power of
Satan” is totally different from the “power of God,” and that human beings
are delivered from the former when they embrace the latter. The power of Satan
accompanies deception in this world and the perpetration of evil. The power of
God works in conjunction with the truth and the perpetration of righteousness.
They do NOT come from the same source. |
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