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In the beginning, God breathed life into Adam, setting a powerful precedent for the life-giving nature of breath itself. Breathwork, the practice of intentionally deepening and focusing on the breath, has gained attention for its profound physical and mental benefits, yet it also holds deep spiritual significance, especially for believers. Throughout scripture, breath symbolizes not only life but the Holy Spirit, God's sustaining presence within us. This article explores how we can integrate biblical principles with breathwork, reconnecting us to the natural, restorative rhythms God designed. Rediscovering deep, intentional breathing invites us to reduce stress, strengthen our bodies, and cultivate a heart aligned with God’s peace, one breath at a time.
While the Bible doesn't explicitly mention deep breathing exercises for health, it does emphasize the importance of breath and the role of God's Spirit in giving life. Breath in Scripture is often associated with God's life-giving power, which can symbolically connect to the practice of deep breathing for health and well-being. Here are some relevant verses:
These passages can serve as a spiritual foundation for caring for one's breath and, by extension, one's health.
Scholars and rabbis also say the letters “YHWH” represent breathing sounds or aspirated consonants. When pronounced in proper Hebrew, without vowels, it sounds like breathing: YH (inhale), WH (exhale). A baby's first cry, their first breath, literally speaks the name of God which makes the name of God your first word too!
Babies naturally breathe deeply, especially during sleep. Babies typically use diaphragmatic breathing, also known as belly breathing, where their abdomen rises and falls with each breath. This type of deep breathing is the most efficient and natural way to breathe, as it engages the diaphragm fully and allows for maximum oxygen intake. This is how God designed us to breathe, before the world’s influence took hold.
Some key points about how babies breathe include:
In adults, deep diaphragmatic breathing can often become restricted by stress, poor posture, or habits developed over time, leading to more shallow, chest breathing. This is why techniques like deep breathing exercises are encouraged to return to a more natural and efficient way of breathing, similar to how babies naturally breathe.
Babies breathe deeply and naturally using their diaphragms, but as they grow into children and adults, several factors contribute to the shift toward more shallow chest breathing. Here are the reasons why this change happens and what typically causes the transition:
When Does the Shift Happen?
The transition from deep diaphragmatic breathing to more shallow chest breathing typically happens gradually during childhood and adolescence. There isn't a specific age when it occurs, but it often begins when children start attending school, sitting for long periods, and facing social and emotional pressures. By adulthood, shallow breathing has become habitual for many, often without conscious awareness.
How to Relearn Deep Breathing
By becoming more conscious of our breathing and relearning how to engage the diaphragm, we can restore the natural, efficient breathing patterns we were born with. As adults, it’s possible to retrain the body to return to deep, diaphragmatic breathing through practices like:
Deep breathing exercises, as a formal practice, appear to have origins in various ancient traditions, particularly in Eastern spiritual and health systems. While people have always breathed deeply during physical exertion or relaxation, formal techniques emerged in several key cultures:
One of the earliest and most influential origins of deep breathing practices comes from ancient India. In yoga, a core component is "Pranayama," which refers to breath control. "Prana" means life force or energy, and "yama" means control. Practitioners believed that by controlling the breath, they could influence both physical health and mental states. Various pranayama techniques include deep diaphragmatic breathing, alternate nostril breathing, and rhythmic breathing, but they were always attached to contorting your body into a certain position and holding your hands in specific ways called mudra’s. It was never just breathwork alone. Yogi’s also believed their spiritual practice of yoga and pranayama could yoke them to their gods, that they could become god-like, and they could access the spiritual realm through these practices too.
In China, deep breathing exercises are integral to practices like Qigong and Tai Chi, which date back thousands of years. These systems emphasize cultivating "Qi" or life energy, and breath is considered the primary way to circulate and balance this energy within the body. The Chinese believed that proper breathing could enhance physical health, longevity, and spiritual clarity, and that certain techniques could also help them to access the spiritual realm.
In both Buddhist and Hindu traditions, breathing exercises are central to meditation practices, often used to focus the mind, reduce stress, and enter deeper states of consciousness. In Buddhism, particularly in mindfulness meditation (such as Anapanasati), attention is placed on the breath to calm the mind and divine information by accessing a spiritual realm. Meditation when used in this way is designed to empty your mind and body, so you can have a spiritual experience. The bible teaches us that we are meant to be completely filled with the Holy Spirit, and when we are empty vessels we are open to demonic oppression.
Ancient Greek philosophers like Hippocrates and Galen also wrote about the importance of breath in maintaining health. They recognized that controlled breathing could help balance bodily systems and improve mental focus. However, formalized deep breathing techniques were not as extensively developed in the West as in Eastern traditions. Hippocrates focused on the health benefits of breathing exercises and neglected any spiritual aspect of it which is why his methods were, to put it simply, just breathing deeply. He did not have any crazy techniques that forced you to contort your body into weird and uncomfortable positions.
Various indigenous cultures worldwide also have deep breathing practices connected to healing and spiritual rituals. For example, some Native American and shamanic traditions incorporate deep, rhythmic breathing into ceremonies aimed at connecting with the spiritual realm or inducing altered states of consciousness.
In more recent centuries, these ancient practices have influenced modern techniques, including some types of progressive muscle relaxation, diaphragmatic breathing in stress reduction, and therapeutic breathing exercises used in psychology and medicine. Western approaches like the Buteyko method (for asthma and respiratory health) and Holotropic Breathwork have roots in these older traditions, adapted for contemporary wellness and psychological healing. As a Christian you need to be vigilant about the type of breathwork you partake in if it is offered through various, seemingly innocuous, therapies.
Much of the breathwork we see today stems from these eastern philosophies, rebranded and marketed to the western world as casual stress relief practices. Some breathwork techniques, like Holotropic Breathwork, even mimic hallucinatory drugs to evoke psychoactive experiences similar to the effects of DMT and LSD. But these practices are far from casual, or beneficial, and as Christians we should not be partaking in them.
Satan would not waste his time with something that didn’t work, or had no use or purpose. He seems to have taken a very keen interest in breathwork, because he has woven it into every other false religion. Satan can’t create anything new, he can only counterfeit God’s truth. If he has gone to such lengths to counterfeit breathwork, it means there must be a biblical truth behind it. What all of those other religions have in common is that they use breathwork to access the spiritual realm.
Biblically speaking, our God resides in the Third Heaven, while the Second Heaven is the spiritual realm where demons reside. By practicing breathwork in these counterfeit ways, people are illegally accessing the Second Heaven and I believe this gives demons legal rights over you. From my time in the occult I can tell you first hand that the more I accessed the spiritual realm, the more suffering I endured in life. It is something I had to deeply repent of, and praise Jesus He delivered me from it.
Deep breathing exercises offer a wide range of documented physical, mental, and emotional benefits. Here are some of the key benefits supported by research:
These benefits illustrate why deep breathing exercises are often incorporated into natural health practices, mental health therapies, and physical wellness routines.
While the Bible does not specifically instruct on how to perform deep breathing exercises, many biblical principles can guide your approach to it. You can incorporate scripture, prayer, and gratitude while performing deep breathing exercises to cultivate both physical and spiritual well-being.
Here’s a simple way to approach deep breathing exercises from a biblical perspective:
Begin by inviting God's presence, acknowledging that breath is a gift from Him. This is about your heart posture being directed to worship the Lord. It has absolutely nothing to do with your physical posture, which is the complete opposite of eastern philosophies! You do not have to contort your body into weird positions, just sit or stand comfortably, and direct your focus to God.
Scripture Focus:
As you prepare to breathe deeply, center your thoughts on God’s presence and allow yourself to be still, calming your body and mind.
Slowly inhale through your nose for a count of 7, filling your lungs fully. Use your diaphragm and breathe deeply so that your whole belly expands, rather than just your chest/lungs.
Meditate on Scripture:
As you breathe in, reflect on how each breath is a gift from God, a reminder of His life-giving Spirit within you.
Gently hold your breath for a count of 7, resting in the peace of God’s presence.
Scripture Focus:
This brief pause represents waiting on the Lord and trusting Him in every moment that His promise (reflected as the next breath) is just a moment away.
Exhale slowly and fully through your mouth for a count of 7. You belly should contract flat, all the way in as if your were squeezing your abdominal muscles tightly.
Meditate on Scripture:
As you exhale, release any tension, anxiety, or worries to God, trusting Him with your burdens.
Continue this pattern of breathing for several minutes, allowing each breath to become an act of gratitude, prayer and worship. You can silently thank God for His provision, reflect on His goodness, or meditate on more verses as you continue breathing so that you are filled with His Word and the Holy Spirit.
Example: Combining Breathing with Prayer
This practice can help align you with God's peace, providing not only physical relaxation but also a moment of spiritual nourishment.
Let’s take it one step further.
By practicing deep breathing in this way, you’re returning to breathing the way God designed you to breathe before you were tainted by the world! You’re following His original design, in a way that promotes health and healing. It’s not a counterfeit, it’s the real thing.
Genesis 2 tells us that God breathed life into Adam’s nostrils, and you’re breathing in through your nose to reflect that. With every inhale and exhale, you’re speaking the sounds of the name of God – YH-WH. You’re literally worshipping the Lord with every breath, and the deeper each breath, the louder the worship! That is fulfilling Psalm 150:6 by praising the Lord with your breath, and by worshipping God in this way His promise of health and healing is fulfilled with each breath that you take. Just like in Ezekial 37:5-6, the extra oxygen brings healing to weary bones, illness, and disease.
Biochemist Otto Heinrich Warburg, a prominent cell biologist of the 20th century, identified excessive acidity in the body as the underlying factor in cancer development. Warburg studied the way tumors metabolize and how cells respire, noting that cancer cells can survive in environments with a lower pH, sometimes as low as 6.0, due to lactic acid and increased CO2 levels.
Warburg believed in a strong link between pH levels and oxygen availability: a higher pH, or an alkaline state, increases oxygen concentration, while a lower pH, or an acidic state, reduces it, making oxygen essential for cellular health. In 1931, he received the Nobel Prize in Medicine for his groundbreaking research. As the director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute (now the Max Planck Institute) for Cell Physiology in Berlin, he focused on tumor metabolism and the respiration of cancer cells.
In his lectures, Dr. Warburg emphasized, "Cancerous tissues are acidic, whereas healthy tissues are alkaline," explaining that an abundance of H+ ions results in acidity, whereas an excess of OH- ions produces alkalinity. His book, The Metabolism of Tumours, established that cancer consistently involves two conditions: acidosis and a shortage of oxygen. He famously stated, "Lack of oxygen and acidosis are two sides of the same coin." He observed that, "All normal cells require oxygen, but cancer cells can live without it." Warburg warned that if a cell is deprived of 35% of its oxygen for 48 hours, it could become cancerous.
Dr. Warburg concluded that oxygen deficiency, which leads to an acidic body environment, is the primary cause of cancer. He also discovered that cancer cells are anaerobic, meaning they do not use oxygen, and cannot survive in highly oxygenated, alkaline conditions which means deep breathing exercises to increase oxygen levels is one of the greatest protocols you can do for cellular health.
Now that's modern science confirming God’s truth!
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