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Buddhism
Buddhism
Pat Zukeran
For centuries, Buddhism has been the dominant religion of the
Eastern world. Today it remains the predominant religion in China,
Japan, Korea, and much of southeast Asia. With the rise of the
Asian population in the U.S., Buddhism has made a tremendous impact
in the United States. Presently, there are over 300,000 Buddhists
in the U.S. It remains the dominant religion in the state of Hawaii
and many prominent Americans have accepted this religion, including
the former governor of California, Jerry Brown.(1)
The Origin of Buddhism
Buddhism began as an offspring of Hinduism in the country of India.
The founder was Siddhartha Gautama. It is not easy to give an
accurate historical account of the life of Gautama, since no
biography was recorded until hundreds of years after his death.
Today, much of his life story is clouded in myths and legends which
arose after his death. Even the best historians of our day have
several different--and even contradictory--accounts of Gautama's
life.
Siddhartha Gautama was born in approximately 560 B.C. in northern
India. His father Suddhodana was the ruler over a district near the
Himalayas which is today the country of Nepal. Suddhodana sheltered
his son from the outside world and confined him to the palace where
he surrounded Gautama with pleasures and wealth. Despite his
father's efforts, Gautama one day saw the darker side of life on a
trip he took outside the palace walls.
He saw four things that forever changed his life: an old man, a
sick man, a dead man, and a beggar. Deeply distressed by the
suffering he saw, he decided to leave the luxury of palace life and
begin a quest to find the answer to the problem of pain and human
suffering.
Gautama left his family and traveled the country seeking wisdom. He
studied the Hindu scriptures under Brahmin priests, but became
disillusioned with the teachings of Hinduism. He then devoted
himself to a life of extreme asceticism in the jungle. Legend has
it that he eventually learned to exist on one grain of rice a day
which reduced his body to a skeleton. He soon concluded, however,
that asceticism did not lead to peace and self realization but
merely weakened the mind and body.
Gautama eventually turned to a life of meditation. While deep in
meditation under a fig tree known as the Bohdi tree
(meaning, "tree of wisdom"), Gautama experienced the highest degree
of God-consciousness called Nirvana. Gautama then became
known as Buddha, the "enlightened one." He believed he had
found the answers to the questions of pain and suffering. His
message now needed to be proclaimed to the whole world.
As he began his teaching ministry, he gained a quick audience with
the people of India since many had become disillusioned with
Hinduism. By the time of his death at age 80, Buddhism had become
a major force in India. Three centuries later it had spread to all
of Asia. Buddha never claimed to be deity but rather a "way-
shower." However, seven hundred years later, followers of Buddha
began to worship him as deity.(2)
The Way of Salvation
The question Gautama, the founder of Buddhism, sought to answer
was, Why is there pain and suffering? Also, he held to the Hindu
belief of reincarnation: after death one returns to earthly life in
a higher or lower form of life according to his good or bad deeds.
This belief prompted a second question that needed to be answered,
How does one break this rebirth cycle? The basic teachings of
Buddhism, therefore, focus on what Gautama believed to be the
answer to these questions. These basic tenants are found in the
Four Noble Truths and the Eight-fold Path. Let us begin with the
Four Noble Truths.
The First Noble Truth is that there is pain and suffering in the
world. Gautama realized that pain and suffering are omnipresent in
all of nature and human life. To exist means we will all encounter
suffering. Birth is painful and so is death. Sickness and old age
are painful. Throughout life, all living things encounter
suffering.
The Second Noble Truth relates to the cause of suffering. Gautama
believed the root cause of suffering is desire. It is the craving
for wealth, happiness, and other forms of selfish enjoyment which
cause suffering. These cravings can never be satisfied for they are
rooted in ignorance.
The Third Noble Truth is the end of all suffering. Suffering will
cease when a person can rid himself of all desires.
The Fourth Noble Truth is the extinguishing of all desire by
following the eight-fold path. "The eight-fold path is a system of
therapy designed to develop habits which will release people from
the restrictions caused by ignorance and craving."(3)
Here are the eight steps in following the eight-fold path. The
first is the Right Views. One must accept the four noble truths.
Step two is the Right Resolve. One must renounce all desires and
any thoughts like lust, bitterness, and cruelty. He must harm no
living creature. Step three is the Right Speech. One must speak
only truth. There can be no lying, slander, or vain talk. Step four
is the Right Behavior. One must abstain from sexual immorality,
stealing, and all killing.
Step five is the Right Occupation. One must work in an occupation
that benefits others and harms no one. Step six is the Right
Effort. One must seek to eliminate any evil qualities within and
prevent any new ones from arising. One should seek to attain good
and moral qualities and develop those already possessed. Seek to
grow in maturity and perfection until universal love is attained.
Step seven is the Right Contemplation. One must be observant,
contemplative, and free of desire and sorrow. The eighth is the
Right Meditation. After freeing oneself of all desires and evil, a
person must concentrate his efforts in meditation so that he can
overcome any sensation of pleasure or pain and enter a state of
transcending consciousness and attain a state of perfection.
Buddhists believe that through self effort one can attain the state
of peace and eternal bliss called Nirvana.
Karma, Samsara, and Nirvana
Three important concepts in understanding Buddhism are
karma, Samsara, and Nirvana.
Karma refers to the law of cause and effect in a person's
life, reaping what one has sown. Buddhists believe that every
person must go through a process of birth and rebirth until he
reaches the state of nirvana in which he breaks this cycle.
According to the law of karma, "You are what you are and do what
you do, as a result of what you were and did in a previous
incarnation, which in turn was the inevitable outcome of what you
were and did in still earlier incarnations."(4) For a Buddhist,
what one will be in the next life depends on one's actions in this
present life. Buddha believed, unlike Hinduism, that a person can
break the rebirth cycle no matter what class he is born into.
The second key concept to understand is the law of Samsara
or Transmigration. This is one of the most perplexing and
difficult concepts in Buddhism to understand. The law of Samsara
holds that everything is in a birth and rebirth cycle. Buddha
taught that people do not have individual souls. The existence of
an individual self or ego is an illusion. There is no eternal
substance of a person which goes through the rebirth cycle. What is
it then that goes through the cycle if not the individual soul?
What goes through the rebirth cycle is only a set of feelings,
impressions, present moments, and the karma that is passed on. "In
other words, as one process leads to another, ... so one's human
personality in one existence is the direct cause of the type of
individuality which appears in the next."(5) The new individual in
the next life will not be exactly the same person, but there will
be several similarities. Just how close in identity they will be,
Buddha did not define.
The third key concept is Nirvana. The term means "the
blowing out" of existence. Nirvana is very different from the
Christian concept of heaven. Nirvana is not a place like heaven but
rather a state of being. What exactly it is, Buddha never really
articulated.
Nirvana is an eternal state of being. It is the state in which the
law of karma, and the rebirth cycle come to an end. It is the end
of suffering, a state where there are no desires and the individual
consciousness comes to an end. Although to our Western minds this
may sound like annihilation, Buddhists would object to such a
notion. Gautama never gave an exact description of Nirvana, but his
closest reply was this. "There is disciples, a condition, where
there is neither earth nor water, neither air nor light, neither
limitless space, nor limitless time, neither any kind of being,
neither ideation nor non-ideation, neither this world nor that
world. There is neither arising nor passing-away, nor dying,
neither cause nor effect, neither change nor standstill."(6)
Although no Buddhist really understands the condition of Nirvana,
it is their eternal hope.
God and Buddhism
It may have occurred to the reader that in our discussion thus far
no mention has been made of God or an eternal deity. It is clear
that Gautama, the founder of Buddhism, did not claim to be divine.
He claimed to be the one to point the way to Nirvana, but it was up
to each individual to find his own way there.
The concept of a personal God does not fit into the Buddhist system
of religion. Today there are many sects of Buddhism. Many differ in
their concept of the divine and of Buddha. In general, Buddhists
are pantheistic in their view of God. Many view God as an
impersonal force which is made up of all living things and holds
the universe together.
Here are what some of the most prominent of scholars say of the
Buddhist view of God. Dr. John Noss states, "there is no sovereign
Person in the heavens holding all together in unity, there is only
the ultimate impersonal unity of being itself, whose peace enfolds
the individual self when it ceases to call itself 'I' and dissolves
in the featureless purity of Nirvana, as a drop of spray is merged
in its mother sea."(7)
Here is what the late Dr. Suzuki, one of the greatest teachers of
Zen Buddhism, says about his concept of God: "If God after making
the world puts Himself outside it, He is no longer God. If He
separates Himself from the world or wants to separate Himself, He
is not God. The world is not the world when it is separated from
God. God must be in the world and the world in God."(8)
Since Buddhism in general does not believe in a personal God or
divine being, it does not have worship, praying, or praising of a
divine being. It offers no form of redemption, forgiveness,
heavenly hope, or final judgment. Buddhism is, therefore, more of
a moral philosophy, an ethical way of life.
Professor Kraemer describes the Buddhist system as "a non-theistic
ethical discipline, a system of self training, anthropocentric,
stressing ethics and mind-culture to the exclusion of theology."(9)
Since Gautama's death, many sects have developed within Buddhism.
Many of these sects differ in many fundamental ways and comparing
them to one another is like comparing two separate religions. Many
sects have developed their own unique concept of God. Some are
pantheistic in their view of God. Others are atheistic. Still
others have developed a polytheistic system of gods. Some have
combined pantheism and polytheism. Several sects have elevated
Gautama (or Buddha) to the level of a savior or divine being
although it is clear he never claimed to be a deity. Other sects
have combined some of the doctrines of God from other religions
with Buddhism.
Since Buddha never emphasized his concept of the divine, Buddhism
is left with some life's deepest questions unanswered, questions
such as the origin of the universe and the purpose of man's
existence.
A Comparative Study of Christianity and Buddhism
It is quite clear that Christianity and Buddhism differ from one
another in fundamental ways. Some sects of Buddhism have tried to
synchronize the two together. However, the two are so different,
they cannot both be right at the same time, nor can the two be
blended together. Here is a comparison of these two religions.
Much of the Buddhist scriptures and sayings attributed to Gautama
were written about four hundred years after his death. By the time
they were written, Buddhism had split into many sects. What do we
have then? Even the best scholars are not sure of the accuracy
of the Buddhist scriptures. In Christianity, however, we have an
accurate historical account written by eyewitnesses to Jesus and
the events surrounding His life.
The two differ in their concept of God. For Buddhists in general,
the Absolute does not play a vital role in daily living. Gautama
said little about his concept of God. Buddha denied the existence
of a personal God but was monistic in his view of the Absolute as
an impersonal force made up of all living things. The Bible teaches
of a God who rules the universe, and cares for man in a personal
way. Psalm 46:10 states, "Be still and know that I am God. I will
be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted among the earth."
It is clear that Buddha never claimed to be deity. Although several
sects have elevated him to athe status of a god, he clearly claimed
to be only the way-shower to Nirvana. Jesus, however, claimed to be
God and not simply a way-shower but instead the only way to eternal
life. Jesus said in John 14:6, "I am the way, the truth, and the
life. No one comes to the Father except through me." John 1:1 also
states, "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God,
and the Word was God."
There is another clear distinction between these two religions.
Buddhism offers neither assurance of forgiveness or eternal life.
Buddhists hope to enter into the state of Nirvana, but there is no
clear, objective proof or teaching on what occurs beyond the grave.
Even Buddha himself was not certain what lay beyond death. He left
no clear teaching on Nirvana or eternity. What he did leave are
philosophical speculations. Today the body of Buddha lies in a
grave in Kusinara, at the foot of the Himalaya Mountains. The facts
of life after death still remain an unsolved mystery in Buddhism.
In Christianity we have One who amazed His audience because He
taught eternal truths with authority. His authority came from the
fact that He existed before creation, and He proved His claims by
rising from the dead. The Resurrection of Jesus Christ is a proven
fact of history and clearly demonstrates Christ's authority over
sin and death. When witnessing to a Buddhist, ask him this: "Do you
have tangible proof of what occurs after death?" All the Buddhist
has is hope in a teaching Buddha was not sure of. As Christians, we
have a certain hope in a risen Savior. There is no guessing what
happens beyond the grave because Christ alone has conquered the
grave.
© 1994 Probe Ministries
Notes
1. Walter Martin, Kingdom of the Cults (Minneapolis:
Bethany House 1985), p. 261.
2. Kenneth Boa, Cults, World Religions, and the Occult
(Wheaton: Victor Books, (1977) p. 35.
3. Ibid. p. 32.
4. Davis Taylor and Clark Offner, The World's Religions,
Norman Anderson, ed. (Grand Rapids: InterVarsity, 1975), p. 174.
5. John Noss, Man's Religions (New York: Macmillan Company,
1968), p. 182.
6. Taylor & Offner, p. 177.
7. Noss, p. 183.
8. D. T. Suzuki, The Field of Zen (London: The Buddhist
Society, 1969), p. 16.
9. Taylor & Offner, p. 177.
Bibliography
Anderson, Norman. The World's Religions. Grand Rapids:
InterVarsity, 1991.
Boa, Kenneth. Cults, World Religions, and the Occult. Wheaton: Victor Books, 1977.
Gard, Richard. Buddhism. New York: George Braziller,
1962.
Martin, Walter. The Kingdom of the Cults.
Minneapolis: Bethany House, 1985.
_____ The New Cults. Ventura: Regal Books, 1980.
McDowell, Josh and Don Stewart. Handbook of Today's Religions. San
Bernadino: Here's Life, 1982.
Noss, John. Man's Religions. New York: Macmillan
Company, 1968.
Parrinder, Geoffrey. World Religions From Ancient History to the Present. New
York: Facts on File, 1971.
Suzuki, D.T. The Field of Zen. London: Harper and Row,
1969.
_____ The Gospel According to Zen. New York: Mentor Books, 1970.