This article provides a basic
introduction to Buddhism. It seeks to
describe the central beliefs and practices of Buddhism at both a formal and
popular level, and to outline the central features of the historical development
of Buddhism. It aims to help the reader
to be at ease in discussing the Christian faith with a Buddhist.
Buddhism began in India about 500
years before the birth of Christ.
Buddhism, unlike Hinduism, can point to a specific founder. However, in Buddhism, like so many other
religions, fanciful stories arose concerning events in the life of the founder,
Siddhartha Gautama (fifth century BC).
Buddha wrote nothing, and the
writings that have come down to us date from about 150 years after his death. By the time these texts came out, division
had already appeared within Buddhism.
Early Buddhism was confined
largely to India and is usually referred to as Theravada Buddhism. Later Buddhism, which became very popular
outside India (notable in China and Japan), became known as Mahayana Buddhism.
The adaptability and developing character of Buddhism accounts for its
extraordinary variety, which makes the task of characterizing an ‘essence’ of
Buddhism remarkably difficult. Buddhism
has become woven into the texture of the social and political life of Buddhist
countries.
The cornerstone of Buddhist
philosophy is the view that all life is suffering. Everyone is subject to the traumas of birth, sickness,
decrepitude and death; to what they most dread (an incurable disease or an
ineradicable personal weakness), as well as separation from what they
love. The cause of suffering is desire
– specifically the desire of the body and the desire for personal fulfillment. Happiness can be achieved only if these
desires are overcome, and this requires following the ‘eight-fold path’. By following this path the Buddhist aims to
attain nirvana, a condition beyond the limits of mind and feelings, a state of
bliss.
The continued existence of
Buddhism for over 2,500 years, constitutes a very deep challenge to the
Christian church. Buddhism has come to
be more familiar to the Western world in recent years. Its impact can be felt, for instance in the
conversion to Buddhism among Westerners.
There are radical differences
between Buddhism and Christianity that make any attempt at reconciliation
between the two faiths impossible. The
Buddhist worldview is basically monistic.
The existence of a personal creator and Lord is denied. The world operates by natural power and law,
not by divine command.
Historical Introduction
The man who was to become Buddha,
‘the Enlightened One’, was born about 560 BC, the son of a small rajah in
northeast India. His personal name was
Siddhartha, and his family name Gautama.
He and his family were Hindus by religion.
There was supposedly a prophecy
given at the time of his birth by a sage at his father’s court. The prophecy said that the child would
become a great kind if he stayed at home, but if he decided to leave home, he would
become a savior for mankind. One day
Siddhartha informed his father that he wished to see the world. This excursion would forever change his
life, for it was during this journey that he saw ‘the four passing sights’:
- The first troubling sight Siddhartha saw was that of
a decrepit old man. When
Siddhartha asked what had happened to this man, he was told that the man
was old, as everyone some day would become.
- Later he met a sick man and was told that all people
were liable to be sick and suffer pain like that individual.
- He then saw a funeral procession with a corpse on its
way to cremation, the followers weeping bitterly. When he asked what that meant,
Siddhartha was informed that it was the way of life, for sooner or later
both prince and pauper would have to die.
- The last sight was that of a monk begging for
food. The tranquil look on the
beggar’s face convinced Siddhartha that this type of life was for
him. Immediately he left the palace
and his family in search of enlightenment. The former prince, now a beggar, spent his time wandering
from place to place seeking wisdom.
Unsatisfied by the truths taught in the Hindu scriptures, he became
discouraged but continued on his quest.
He tried asceticism but this gave him no peace. The fateful day in his life came while
he was meditating beneath a fig tree.
Buddha’s Enlightenment
Deep in meditation, he reached
the highest degree of God-consciousness, known as nirvana. He supposedly stayed under the fig tree for
seven days. After that, the fig tree
was called the bodhi, or the bo tree, the tree of wisdom. The truths he learned he would now impart to
the world, no longer as Siddhartha Gautama, but as the Buddha, the Enlightened
One. The Indian people, disillusioned
with Hinduism, listened intently to Buddha’s teaching. By the time of Buddha’s death, at the age of
80, his teachings had become a strong force in India.
Buddha made a diagnosis of
suffering, to which Buddhists give the name of the Four Noble Truths.
The Four Noble Truths
- Everything in life is subject to suffering and
frustration.
- The cause of this suffering and disease is desire –
craving, lust, attachment to people and things, even to life itself.
- To escape from suffering, men must crush all desire
and craving, and break all the chains of attachment.
- The way to do this is by following the Noble
Eight-fold Path. This alone can
lead to nirvana, the ultimate goal of all Buddhist teaching.
The Noble Eight-fold Path
- Right belief:
recognition and understanding of the Four Noble Truths.
- Right intention:
the disciple sets himself to the single-minded pursuit of the goal
and makes this his aim.
- Right speech:
watching one’s words and seeking to avoid deceptive and
uncharitable speech, idle chatter and gossip.
- Right action:
avoidance of wrongdoing; behavior to be motivated by selflessness
and charity.
- Right livelihood:
not following an occupation which would cause harm to other beings.
- Right effort:
patient striving to prevent and eliminate evil impulses and to
foster and develop good ones.
- Right mindfulness:
seeking self-awareness through steady attention to thoughts,
feelings and actions.
- Right concentration:
combines with right effort and right mindfulness in the spiritual
discipline which enables the disciple to overcome all that holds him back
in his search for nirvana.
Buddhist Precepts
There are five precepts taught by
Buddhism that all Buddhists should follow:
- Kill no living thing (including insects)
- Do not steal
- Do not commit adultery
- Tell no lies
- Do not drink intoxicants or take drugs
The two main divisions of
Buddhism are Theravada Buddhism and Mahayana Buddhism:
Theravada // Mahayana
Man
as an individual // Man as involved with others
Man
stands alone (salvation
by self-effort) // Man not alone (salvation by grace)
Key
virtue: wisdom // Key virtue: compassion
Religion: a full-time job (primarily
for monks) // Religion: relevant to life (primarily for laymen)
Buddha: a saint // Buddha: a savior
Shuns
metaphysics // Elaborates metaphysics
Shuns
ritual // Includes
ritual
Confines
prayer to meditation // Includes petitionary
prayer
Nirvana
A key concept in Buddhism is
nirvana. There are different aspects of
the concept of nirvana:
- Nirvana is the negation of attachment and suffering.
- Nirvana is the one thing that is not caused by
anything else.
- Nirvana as the Absolute Truth cannot be adequately
expressed in words.
- However, the term (nirvana) implies that there is a
goal to be reached and that this goal surpasses anything experienced in
this world of conventional understanding.
Buddhist Scriptures
In Theravada Buddhism there are
three groups of writings considered to be sacred scripture, known as the ‘Three
Baskets’, (Tripitaka):
- The ‘discipline basket’ contains rules for the higher
class of Buddhists.
- The ‘teaching basket’ contains the discourses of the
Buddha.
- The ‘metaphysical basket’ contains Buddhist theology.
The total volume of these three
groups of writings is about eleven times larger than the Bible.
In Mahayana Buddhism the
scriptures are much more voluminous.
There are no clear limits to the Mahayana ‘canon’.
The Essence of Buddhism
- To cease from all sin
- To get virtue
- To purify the heart
Buddhism and Christianity
There are fundamental differences
between Buddhism and Christianity that prevent reconciliation between the two
faiths.
- The Buddhist worldview is basically monistic. The existence of a personal creator and
Lord is denied. The world operates
by natural power and law, not divine command.
- Buddhism denies the existence of a personal God. There are those who deify the Buddha
but along with him they worship other gods. The Scriptures make it clear that not only does a personal
God exist, but he is to be the only object of worship.
- There is no such thing in Buddhism as sin against a
supreme being. In Christianity sin
is ultimately sin against God although sinful actions also affect man and
his world. Accordingly man needs a
savior to deliver him from his sins.
- According to Buddhist belief man is worthless, having
only temporary existence. In
Christianity man is of infinite worth, made in the image of God, and will
exist eternally. Man’s body is a
hindrance to the Buddhist while to the Christian it is an instrument to
glorify God.
- Another problem with Buddhism is the many forms it
takes. Consequently there is a
wide variety of belief in the different sects with much that is
contradictory.
With these and other differences,
it can be seen readily that any harmonization of the two religions simply is
not possible.
Sharing the Gospel with Your Buddhist Friend
- Make contact and make friends with a Buddhist, and
seek to understand the form of Buddhism to which he adheres.
- Seek to understand how Buddhism affects your Buddhist
friend’s everyday life, worldview, attitudes and values (popular
Buddhism).
- Avoid dead-end discussion/arguments at a
philosophical level. Seek to build
bridges not barriers with your friend.
- Present your Buddhist friend with a Bible. Ask him, if he were to believe in the
God you know personally, what sort of God he would want to believe
in. Point him through Scripture
verses to the character of God.
- Offer to study the Gospel of Mark with your Buddhist
friend, especially passages of Jesus’ encounters with people. Ask him to prepare for subsequent
studies by reading the passage, noting down questions, or things he does
not understand, or things that impress him.
- Continue to pray for your Buddhist friend and to show
him the love of Christ.
Dr. Lesley Francis,
a New Zealander, has had a long association with the student movements of East
Asia, and is the author of Winds of Change in China (OMF Books, 1985).
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Edward Conze, ‘Buddhism: The Mahayana’ in R C Zaehner (ed), A
Concise Encyclopedia of Living Faiths (London: Hutchinson, 3rd edn, 1977)
Christmas Humphreys, Buddhism
(Harmondsworth, England: Pelican Books,
1951)
The World’s Religions: A Lion Handbook (Oxford, England: Lion Publishing, paperback edn, 1988)