The truth is that purported
similarities between Buddhism and Christianity are
only apparent or surface. For example, many have
claimed a similarity between Jesus Christ’s saving
role in Christianity and the Bodhisattva’s savior
role as given in later Buddhism. But these roles are
entirely contradictory. In Christianity,
"Christ died for our sins" (1 Cor. 15:3).
This means He saves us from the penalty of our sins
by taking God’s judgment of sin in His own Person.
Jesus paid the penalty of sin (death) for sinners by
dying in their place. Thus, He offers a free gift of
salvation to anyone simply for believing and
accepting what He has done on their behalf (Jn.
3:16). The central ideas involved in Christ’s
saving role—God’s holiness, propitiatory
atonement, forgiveness of sin, salvation as a free
gift of God’s grace through faith in Christ, etc.,
are all foreign to Buddhism.
The Bodhisattva’s role of savior
is thus entirely different than that of Christ’s.
The Bodhisattva has no concern with sin in an
ultimate sense, only with the end of suffering. He
has no concept of God’s wrath against sin or the
need for a propitiatory atonement. He has no belief
in an infinite personal God who created men and
women in His image. He has no belief in a loving God
who freely forgives sinners. His only sacrifice is
his postponement of entering nirvana so that he can
help others find Buddhist enlightenment. Having
achieved self-perfection, the Bodhisattva could freely
enter nirvana at death. Instead, he chooses to
reincarnate again to help others attain their own
self-perfection and nirvana more quickly.
Thus, those who argue there is an
essential similarity between Buddhist and Christian
concepts of savior are wrong. In fact, at their
core, Buddhism and Christianity are irreconcilable,
as far removed as the East and West. Indeed,
virtually every major Christian doctrine is denied
in Buddhism and vice versa. We would therefore
suggest that a merging of the two traditions results
in a disservice to both.
For their part, Buddhists have
long recognized the differences between the two
faiths. The knowledgeable Buddhist is aware that the
doctrines and teachings of biblical Christianity are
an enemy rather than a friend, for Christian faith
openly teaches those things which Buddhists
reject as mere ignorance and/or as spiritual
hindrances; further Christianity openly opposes
those things which Buddhism endorses an essential
for genuine enlightenment.
For example, Christianity is
interwoven with the monotheistic grandeur of an
infinite, personal God (Jn. 17:3; Isa. 43:10-11,
44:6); Buddhism is agnostic and practically
speaking, atheistic (or in later form,
polytheistic).
In Christianity, its central
teaching involves the absolute necessity for belief
in Jesus Christ as personal Savior from sin (Jn.
14:6; Acts 4:12; I Tim. 2:5-6); Buddhism has no
Savior from sin and even in the Mahayana tradition,
as we have seen, the savior concepts are quite
dissimilar.
Christianity stresses salvation by
grace through faith alone (Jn. 3:16; Eph. 2:8-9);
Buddhism stresses enlightenment by works through
meditative practices that seek the alleviation of
"ignorance" and desire.
Christianity promises forgiveness
of all sin now (Col. 2:13; Eph. 1:7) and the
eventual elimination of sin and suffering for all
eternity (Rev. 21:3-4). On the other hand, Buddhism,
since it holds there is no God to offend, promises
not the forgiveness and eradication of sin, but
rather the elimination of suffering (eventually) and
the ultimate eradication of the individual.
Wherever we look philosophically,
we see the contrasts between these faiths.
Christianity stresses salvation from sin, not from
life itself (1 Jn. 2:2). Christianity exalts
personal existence as innately good, since man was
created in God’s image, and promises eternal life
and fellowship with a personal God (Gen. 1:26, 31;
Rev. 21:3-4). Christianity has a distinctly defined
teaching in the afterlife (heaven or hell, e.g., Mt.
25:46; Rev. 20:10-15). It promises eternal
immortality for man as man—but perfected in every
way (Rev. 21:3-4).
On the other hand, Buddhism
teaches reincarnation, and has only a mercurial
nirvana wherein man no longer remains man or, where,
in Mahayana, there exists temporary heavens or hells
and the final "deification" of
"man" through a merging with the ultimate
pantheistic-cosmic Buddha nature. But Christianity
denies that reincarnation is a valid belief, based
on the fact of Christ’s propitiatory atonement for
sin. In other words, if Christ died to forgive all
sin, there is no reason for a person to pay the
penalty for their own sin ("karma") over
many lifetimes (Col. 2:13; Heb. 9:27; 10:10, 14;
Eph. 1:7).
Consider further contrasts.
Biblical Christianity rejects pagan mysticism and
all occultism (e.g., Deut. 18:9-12); Buddhism
accepts or actively endorses them.
In Christianity life itself is
good and given honor and meaning; in Buddhism one
finds it difficult to deny that life is ultimately
not worth living—for life and suffering are
inseparable. Thus, in Christianity, Jesus Christ
came that men "might have life and have it more
abundantly" (Jn. 10:10); in Buddhism, Buddha
came that men might simply rid themselves of
personal existence.
In Christianity, God will either
glorify or punish the spirit of man (Jn. 5:28-29);
in Buddhism no spirit exists to be glorified or
punished. In Christianity, absolute morality is a
central theme (Eph. 1:4), in Buddhism it is
secondary or peripheral.
Buddhism is essentially
humanistic, stressing man’s self-achievement.
Christianity is essentially theistic, stressing God’s
self-revelation and gracious initiative on behalf of
man’s helpless moral and spiritual condition.
Thus, in Buddhism man alone is the author of
salvation; Christianity sees this as an absolute
impossibility because innately, man has no power to
save himself (Eph. 2:8-9; Titus 3:5).
We could go on, but suffice it to
say the form of romantic humanism that inspires
liberal religionists to see basic
similarities in the two faiths is no more than
wishful thinking. It is not utterly surprising,
however, that Western religious humanists would
promote Buddhism, for in both systems man is the
measure of all things (a god of sorts), even if in
the latter the end result is a form of personal
self-annihilation. But to the extent both are
humanistic, they compass the antithesis of
Christianity, whose goal is to glorify God and not
man (Jer. 17:5; Jude 24-25).
As far as knowing and glorifying
God is concerned, this is unimportant and irrelevant
to Buddhists. But biblically, to the extent God is
ignored or opposed, to that extent man must
correspondingly suffer. Here we see the ultimate
irony of Buddhism: in ignoring God, Buddhists feel
they can escape suffering; in fact this will only
perpetuate it forever. This is the real tragedy of
Buddhism, especially of so-called Christian
Buddhism. The very means to escape suffering (true
faith in the biblical Christ) is rejected in favor
of a self-salvation which can only result in eternal
suffering (Mt. 25:46; Rev. 20:10-15).
Footnotes:
16. Masaharu Anesaki,
"How Christianity Appeals to a Japanese
Buddhist," in David W. McKain (ed.), Christianity:
Some Non-Christian Appraisals, (Westport, CT:
Greenwood Press, 1976), pp. 102-103.
17. D.T. Suzuki,
"Mysticism: Christian and Buddhist," in
McKain (ed.), p. 111.