BUDDHISM AND CHRISTIANITY
New interest has recently been awakened
in old controversies concerning the relations of Christianity
and Buddhism. The so-called Theosophists and
Esoteric Buddhists are reviving exploded arguments
against Christianity as means of supporting their
crude theories. The charge of German sceptics,
that Christianity borrowed largely from Buddhism, is
made once more the special stock in trade of these
new and fanatical organizations. To this end
books, tracts, and leaflets are scattered broadcast,
and especially in the United States and Great Britain.
Professor Max Mueller says, in a recent
article published in Longman’s New Review:
“Who has not suffered lately from Theosophy and
Esoteric Buddhism? Journals are full of it, novels
overflow with it, and one is flooded with private
and confidential letters to ask what it all really
means. Many people, no doubt, are much distressed
in their minds when they are told that Christianity
is but a second edition of Buddhism. ’Is
it really true?’ they ask. ’Why did
you not tell us all this before? Surely, you
must have known it, and were only afraid to tell it.’
Then follow other questions: ’Does Buddhism
really count more believers than any other religion?’
’Is Buddhism really older than Christianity,
and does it really contain many things which are found
in the Bible?’” And the learned professor
proceeds to show that there is no evidence that Christianity
has borrowed from Buddhism. In this country these
same ideas are perhaps more widely circulated than
in England. They are subsidizing the powerful
agency of the secular press, particularly the Sunday
newspapers, and thousands of the people are confronting
these puzzling questions. There is occasion,
therefore, for a careful and candid review of Buddhism
by all leaders of thought and defenders of truth.
In the brief time allotted me, I can
only call attention to a few salient points of a general
character. In the outset, a distinction should
be drawn between Buddhist history and Buddhist legend,
for just at this point the danger of misrepresentation
lies. It is true that the Buddha lived before
the time of Christ, and therefore anything of the
nature of real biography must be of an earlier date
than the teachings of Jesus; but whether the legends
antedate His life and doctrines is quite another question.
The Buddhist apologists all assume that they do, and
it is upon the legends that most of the alleged parallelisms
in the two records are based. How, then, shall
we draw the line between history and legend?
The concensus of the best scholarship accepts those
traditions in which the northern and southern Buddhist
records agree, which the Council of Patna, B.C. 242,
adopted as canonical, and which are in themselves
credible and consistent with the teachings of Gautama
himself. According to this standard of authority
Gautama was born about the sixth century B.C., as
the son and heir of a rajah of the Sakya tribe of
Aryans, living about eighty miles north by northwest
of Benares. His mother, the principal wife of
Kajah Suddhodana, had lived many years without offspring,
and she died not long after the birth of this her
only son, Siddartha. In his youth he was married
and surrounded by all the allurements and pleasures
of an Oriental court. He, too, appears to have
remained without an heir till he was twenty-nine years
of age, when, upon the birth of a son, certain morbid
tendencies came to a climax, and he left his palace
secretly and sought true comfort in a life of asceticism.
For six years he tried diligently the resources of
Hindu self-mortification, but becoming exhausted by
his austerities, almost unto death, he abandoned that
mode of life, having apparently become atheistic.
He renounced the idea of merit-making as a means of
spiritual attainment, and he was sorely tempted, no
doubt, to return to his former life of ease.
But he withstood the temptation and resolved to forego
earthly pleasure, and teach mankind what he conceived
to be the way of life, through self-control.
He had tried pleasure; next he had tried extreme asceticism;
he now struck out what he called “The Middle
Path,” as between self-indulgence on the one
hand, and extreme bodily mortification as a thing
of merit on the other. This middle ground still
demanded abstinence as favorable to the highest mental
and moral conditions, but it was not carried to such
extremes as to weaken the body or the mind, or impair
the fullest operation of every faculty.
There can be no doubt that Gautama’s
relinquishment of Hinduism marked a great and most
trying crisis. It involved the loss of all confidence
in him on the part of his disciples, for when he began
again to take necessary food they all forsook him
as a failure. It was while sitting under the
shade of an Indian fig-tree (Boddhi-tree) that this
struggle occurred and his victory was gained.
There his future course was resolved upon; there was
the real birth-place of Buddhism as a system.
He thenceforth began to preach the law, or what he
regarded as the way of self-emancipation, and therefore
the way of life. He first sought his five followers,
who had abandoned him, and succeeded in winning them
back. He gathered at length a company of about
sixty disciples, whom he trained and sent forth as
teachers of his new doctrines. Yet, still influenced
by the old Hindu notions of the religious life, he
formed his disciples into an order of mendicants,
and in due time he established an order of nuns.
It was when Gautama rose up from his
meditation and his high resolve under the Bo-tree,
that he began his career as “The Enlightened.”
He was now a Buddha, and claimed to have attained
Nirvana. All that has been written of his having
left his palace with the purpose of becoming a saviour
of mankind, is the sheer assumption of the later legends
and their apologists. Buddhism was an after-thought,
only reached after six years of bootless asceticism.
There is no evidence that when Siddartha left his
palace he had any thought of benefiting anybody but
himself. He entered upon the life of the recluse
with the same motives and aims that have influenced
thousands of other monks and anchorets of all lands
and ages some of them princes like himself.
Nevertheless, for the noble decision which was finally
reached we give him high credit. It seems to
have been one of the noblest victories ever gained
by man over lower impulses and desires. The passions
of youth were not yet dead within him; worldly ambition
may be supposed to have been still in force; but he
chose the part of a missionary to his fellow-men, and
there is no evidence that he ever swerved from his
purpose. He had won a great victory over himself,
and that fact constituted a secret of great power.
Gautama was about thirty-five years of age when he
became a Buddha, and for forty-five years after that
he lived to preach his doctrines and to establish
the monastic institution which has survived to our
time. He died a natural death from indigestion
at the age of eighty greatly venerated
by his disciples, and the centre of what had already
become a wide-spread system in a large district of
India.
The legends of Buddhism are a very
different thing from the brief sketch which I have
given, and which is based upon the earlier Buddhist
literature. These sprang up after Gautama’s
death, and their growth extended through many centuries many
centuries even of the Christian era. The legends
divide the life of the Buddha into three periods:
1. That of his pre-existent state. That
part of his life which extended from his birth to
his enlightenment under the Bo-tre. The forty-five
years of his Buddhaship. The legends have no more
difficulty in dealing with the particular experiences
of the pre-existent states than in enriching and adorning
the incidents of his earthly life; and both are doubtless
about equally authentic.
Gautama discarded the idea of a divine
revelation; he rejected the authority of the Védas
totally. He denied that he was divine, but distinctly
claimed to be a plain and earnest man. All that
he knew, he had discovered by insight and self-conquest.
To assume that he was pre-existently divine and omniscient
subverts the whole theory of his so-called “discovery,”
and is at variance with the idea of a personal conquest.
The chief emphasis and force of his teachings lay in
the assumption that he did simply what other men might
do; for his mission was that of a teacher and exempler
merely. He was a saviour only in that he taught
men how to save themselves.
The pre-existent states are set forth
in the “Jatakas,” or Birth Stories of
Ceylon, which represent him as having been born five
hundred and thirty times after he became a Bodisat
(a predestined Buddha). As a specimen of his
varied experience while becoming fitted for Buddaship,
we read that he was born eighty-three times as an ascetic,
fifty-eight as a monarch, forty-three as a deva, twenty-four
as a Brahman, eighteen as an ape; as a deer ten, an
elephant six, a lion ten; at least once each as a
thief, a gambler, a frog, a hare, a snipe. He
was also embodied in a tree. But as a Bodisat
he could not be born in hell, nor as vermin, nor as
a woman! Says Spence Hardy, with a touch of irony:
“He could descend no lower than a snipe.”
Northern legends represent Buddha
as having “incarnated” for the purpose
of bringing relief to a distressed world. He was
miraculously conceived his mother’s
side in the form of a white elephant. All nature
manifested its joy on the occasion. The ocean
bloomed with flowers; all beings from many worlds
showed their wonder and sympathy. Many miracles
were wrought even during his childhood, and every part
of his career was filled with marvels. At his
temptation under the Bo-tree, Mara (Satan) came to
him mounted on an elephant sixteen miles high and surrounded
by an encircling army of demons eleven miles deep.
Finding him proof against his blandishments, he hurled
mountains of rocks against him, and assailed him with
fire and smoke and ashes and filth all of
which became as zéphyrs on his cheek or as presents
of fragrant flowers. Last of all, he sent his
three daughters to seduce him. Their blandishments
are set forth at great length in the “Romantic
Legend.”
In the Northern Buddhist literature embracing
both the “Romantic Legend" and the “Lalita
Vistara” many incidents of Buddha’s
childhood are given which show a seeming coincidence
with the life of Christ. It is claimed that his
birth was heralded by angelic hosts, that an aged
sage received him into his arms and blessed him, that
he was taken to the temple for consecration, that
a jealous ruler sought to destroy him, that in his
boyhood he astonished the doctors by his wisdom, that
he was baptized, or at least took a bath, that he was
tempted, transfigured, and finally received up into
heaven. These will be noticed farther on; it
is only necessary to say here that the legends giving
these details are first at variance with the early
canonical history, and second, that they are of such
later dates as to place most of them probably within
the Christian era.
The Four Peculiar and Characteristic
Doctrines of Buddhism.
1. Its peculiar conception of
the sou. Its doctrine of Trishna and Upadan. Its theory of Kharm. Its doctrine
of Nirvana.
1. The Skandas, five in number,
constitute in their interaction what all others than
Buddhists regard as the soul. They consist of
material properties; the senses; abstract ideas; tendencies
or propensities; and the mental powers. The soul
is the result of the combined action of these, as
the flame of a candle proceeds from the combustion
of its constituent elements. The flame is never
the same for two consecutive moments. It seems
to have a perpetuated identity, but that is only an
illusion, and the same unreality pertains to the soul.
It is only a succession of thoughts, emotions, and
conscious experiences. We are not the same that
we were an hour ago. In fact, there is no such
thing as being there is only a constant
becoming. We are ever passing from one
point to another throughout our life; and this is true
of all beings and all things in the universe.
How it is that the succession of experiences is treasured
up in memory is not made clear. This is a most
subtle doctrine, and it has many points of contact
with various speculations of modern times. It
has also a plausible side when viewed in the light
of experience, but its gaps and inconsistencies are
fatal, as must be seen when it is thoroughly examined.
2. The second of the cardinal
doctrines is that of Trishna. Trishna is that
inborn element of desire whose tendency is to lead
men into evil. So far, it is a misfortune or
a form of original sin. Whatever it may have
of the nature of guilt hangs upon the issues of a previous
life. Upadana is a further stage in the same
development. It is Trishna ripened into intense
craving by our own choice and our own action.
It then becomes uncontrollable and is clearly a matter
of guilt. Now, the momentum of this Upadana is
such that it cannot be arrested by death. Like
the demons of Gadara it must again become incarnate,
even though it should enter the body of a brute.
And this transitional something, this restless moral
or immoral force which must work out its natural results
somehow and somewhere, and that in embodied form projects
into future being a residuum which is known as Kharma.
3. What, then, is Kharma?
Literally it means “the doing.” It
is a man’s record, involving the consequences
and liabilities of his acts. It is a score which
must be settled. A question naturally arises,
how the record of a soul can survive when the soul
itself has been “blown out.” The
illustration of the candle does not quite meet the
case. If the flame were something which when
blown out immediately seized upon some other substance
in which the work of combustion proceeded, it would
come nearer to a parallel. One candle may light
another before itself is extinguished, but it does
not do it by an inherent necessity. But this
flame of the soul, this Kharma, must enter some other
body of god, or man, or beast.
Again, the question arises, How can
responsibility be transferred from one to another?
How can the heavy load of a man’s sin be laid
upon some new-born infant, while the departing sinner
has himself no further concern in his evil Kharma,
but sinks into non-existence the moment his “conformations”
are touched with dissolution? Buddhism acknowledges
a mystery here; no real explanation can be given,
and none seems to have been attempted by Buddhist
writers. To be consistent, Gautama, in denying
the existence of God and of the soul as an entity,
should have taught the materialistic doctrine of annihilation.
This, however, he could not do in the face of that
deep-rooted idea of transmigration which had taken
entire possession of the Hindu mind. Gautama was
compelled therefore to bridge a most illogical chasm
as best he could. Kharma without a soul to cling
to is something in the air. It alights like some
winged seed upon a new-born set of Skandas with its
luckless boon of ill desert, and it involves the fatal
inconsistency of investing with permanent character
that which is itself impermanent.
But the question may be asked, “Do
we not admit a similar principle when we speak of
a man’s influence as something that survives
him?” We answer, “No.” Influence
is a simple radiation of impressions. A man may
leave an influence which men are free to accept or
not, but it is quite a different thing if he leaves
upon a successor the moral liabilities of a bankrupt
character. Gautama’s own Kharma, for example,
ceased to exist upon his entering Nirvana; there was
no re-birth; but his influence lives forever, and
has extended to millions of his fellow-men.
The injustice involved in the doctrine
of Kharma is startling. The new-born soul that
inherits its unsettled score has no memory or consciousness
that connects it with himself; it is not heredity;
it is not his father’s character that invests
him. This Kharma may have crossed the ocean from
the death-bed of some unknown man of another race.
The doctrine is the more astonishing when we consider
that no Supreme Being is recognized as claiming this
retribution. There is no God; it is a vague law
of eternal justice, a law without a law-giver or a
judge. There can therefore be no pardon, no commutation
of sentence, no such thing as divine pity or help.
The only way in which one can disentangle himself
is by breaking forever the connection between spirit
and matter which binds him with the shackles of conscious
being.
4. Nirvana. No doctrine
of Buddhism has been so much in dispute as this.
It has been widely maintained that Nirvana means extinction.
But T.W. Rhys Davids and others have held that
it is “the destruction of malice, passion, and
delusion,” and that it may be attained in this
life. The definition is quoted from comparatively
recent Pali translations. Gautama, therefore,
reached Nirvana forty-five years before his death.
It is claimed, however, that insomuch as it cuts off
Kharma, or re-birth, it involves entire extinction
of being upon the dissolution of the body. It
is held by still others that Nirvana is a return to
the original and all-pervading Boddhi-essence.
This theory, which is really a concession to the Brahmanical
doctrine of absorption into the infinite Brahma, has
a wide following among the modern Buddhists in China
and Japan. It is a form of Buddhist pantheism.
As to the teaching of Gautama on this
subject, Professor Max Mueller, while admitting that
the meta-physicians who followed the great teacher
plainly taught that the entire personal entity of an
arhat (an enlightened one) would become extinct upon
the death of the body, yet reasons, in his lecture
on Buddhistic Nihilism, that the Buddha himself could
not have taught a doctrine so disheartening. At
the same time he quotes the learned and judicial Bishop
Bigandet as declaring, after years of study and observation
in Burmah, that such is the doctrine ascribed to the
great teacher by his own disciples. Gautama is
quoted as closing one of his sermons in these words:
“Mendicants, that which binds the teacher to
existence is cut off, but his body still remains.
While his body still remains he shall be seen by gods
and men, but after the termination of life, upon the
dissolution of the body, neither gods nor men shall
see him.” T.W. Rhys Davids expresses
the doctrine of Nirvana tersely and correctly when
he says: “Utter death, with no new life
to follow, is, then, a result of, but it is not, Nirvana."
Professor Oldenberg suggests, with much plausibility,
that the Buddha was more reticent in regard to the
doctrine of final extinction in the later periods
of his life; that the depressing doctrine had been
found a stumbling-block, and that he came to assume
an agnostic position on the question. In his
“Buddha," Professor Oldenberg, partly in
answer to the grounds taken by Professor Max Mueller
in his lecture on Buddhistic Nihilism, has very fully
discussed the question whether the ego survives in
Nirvana in any sense. He claims that certain new
translations of Pali texts have given important evidence
on the subject, and he sums up with the apparent conclusion
that the Buddha, moved by the depressing influence
which the grim doctrine of Nirvana, in the sense of
extinction, was producing upon his disciples, assumed
a position of reticence as to whether the ego survives
or not. The venerable Malukya is
said to have plied the Master with questions.
“Does the perfect Buddha live on beyond death,
or does he not? It pleases me not that all this
should remain unanswered, and I do not think it right.
May it please the Master to answer me if he can.
But when anyone does not understand a matter, then
a straightforward man says, ’I do not know that.’”
The Buddha replies somewhat evasively that he has not
undertaken to decide such questions, because they
are not for spiritual edification.
The question, What is Nirvana? has
been the object of more extensive discussion than
its importance demands. Practically, the millions
of Buddhists are not concerned with the question.
They find no attraction in either view. They
desire neither extinction nor unconscious absorption
into the Boddhi essence (or Brahm). What they
anticipate is an improved transmigration, a better
birth. The more devout may indulge the hope that
their next life will be spent in one of the Buddhist
heavens; others may aspire to be men of high position
and influence. The real heaven to which the average
Buddhist looks forward is apt to be something very
much after his own heart, or at least something indicated
by the estimate which he himself places upon his own
character and life. There may be many transmigrations
awaiting him, but he is chiefly concerned for the
next in order. The very last object to excite
his interest is that far-off shadow called Nirvana.
In estimating the conflict of Christianity
with Buddhism we must not take counsel merely of our
own sense of the absurdity of Gautama’s teachings;
we are to remember that in Christian lands society
is made up of all kinds of people; that outside of
the Christian Church there are thousands, and even
millions, who, with respect to faith, are in utter
chaos and darkness. The Church therefore cannot
view this subject from its own stand-point merely.
Let us glance at certain features of Buddhism which
render it welcome to various classes of men who dwell
among us in Western lands. First of all, the system
commends itself to many by its intense individualism.
Paul’s figure of the various parts of the human
frame as illustrating the body of Christ, mutual in
the interdependence of all its members, would be wholly
out of place in Buddhism. Even the Buddhist monks
are so many units of introverted self-righteousness.
And individualism differently applied is the characteristic
of our age, and therefore a bond of sympathy is supplied.
“Every man for himself,” appeals to modern
society in many ways.
Again, Gautama magnified the human
intellect and the power of the human will. “O
Ananda,” he said, “be lamps unto yourselves;
depend upon no other.” He claimed to have
thought out, and thought through every problem of
existence, to have penetrated every secret of human
nature in the present, and in the life to come, and
his example was commended to all, that they might
follow in their measure. So also our transcendental
philosophers have glorified the powers and possibilities
of humanity, and have made genius superior to saintliness.
There are tens of thousands who in this respect believe
in a religion of humanity, and who worship, if they
worship at all, the goddess of reason. All such
have a natural affinity for Buddhism.
Another point in common between this
system and the spirit of our age is its broad humanitarianism beneficence
to the lower grades of life. When love transcends
the bounds of the human family it does not rise up
toward God, it descends toward the lower orders of
the animal world. “Show pity toward everything
that exists,” is its motto, and the insect and
the worm hold a larger relative place in the Buddhist
than in the Christian view. The question “Are
ye not of more value than many sparrows?” might
be doubtful in the Buddhist estimate, for the teacher
himself, in his pre-existent states, had often been
incarnate in inferior creatures. It is by no
means conceded that Jesus, in asking his disciples
this question, had less pity for the sparrows than
the Buddha, or that his beneficence was less thoughtful
of the meanest thing that glides through the air or
creeps upon the earth; but the spirit of Christianity
is more discriminating, and its love rises up to heaven,
where, beginning with God, it descends through every
grade of being.
Yet it is quite in accordance with
the spirit and aim of thousands to magnify the charity
that confines itself to bodily wants and distresses,
to sneer at the relief which religion may bring to
the far greater anguish of the spirit, and to look
upon love and loyalty to God as superstition.
Is it any wonder that such persons have a warm side
toward Buddhism? Again, this system has certain
points in common with our modern evolution theories.
It is unscientific enough certainly in its speculations,
but it gets on without creatorship or divine superintendence,
and believes in the inflexible reign of law, though
without a law-giver. It assigns long ages to the
process of creation, if we may call it creation, and
in development through cycles it sees little necessity
for the work of God.
It can also join hands cordially with
many social theories of the day. The pessimism
of Buddhists, ancient or modern, finds great sympathy
in the crowded populations of the Western as well
as the Eastern world. And, almost as a rule,
Esoteric Buddhism, American Buddhism, Neo-Buddhism,
or whatever we may call it, is a cave of Adullam to
which all types of religious apostates and social
malcontents resort. The thousands who have made
shipwreck of faith, who have become soured at the
unequal allotments of Providence, who have learned
to hate all who are above them and more prosperous
than they, are just in the state of mind to take delight
in Buddha’s sermon at Kapilavastu, as rehearsed
by Sir Edwin Arnold. There all beings met gods,
devas, men, beasts of the field, and fowls of the
air to make common cause against the relentless
fate that rules the world, and to bewail the sufferings
and death which fill the great charnel-house of existence,
while Buddha voiced their common complaint and stood
before them as the only pitying friend that the universe
had found. It was the first great Communist meeting
of which we have any record. The wronged and suffering
universe was there, and all
“took
the promise of his piteous speech,
So that their lives, prisoned in
the shape of ape,
Tiger or deer, shagged bear, jackal
or wolf,
Foul-feeding kite, pearled dove
or peacock gemmed,
Squat toad or speckled serpent,
lizard, bat,
Yea, or fish fanning the river waves,
Touched meekly at the skirts of
brotherhood
With man, who hath less innocence
than these:
And in mute gladness knew their
bondage broke
Whilst Buddha spoke these things
before the king.”
There was no mention of sin, but only
of universal misfortune!
In contrast with the deep shadows
of a brooding and all-embracing pessimism like this,
we need only to hint at that glow of hope and joy
with which the Sun of Righteousness has flooded the
world, and the fatherly love and compassion with which
the Old Testament and the New are replete, the divine
plan of redemption, the psalms of praise and thanksgiving,
the pity of Christ’s words and acts, and his
invitations to the weary and heavy-laden. In
one view it is strange that pessimism should have
comfort in the fellowship of pessimism, but so it is;
there is luxury even in the sympathy of hate, and
so Buddhist pessimism is a welcome guest among us,
though our Communistic querulousness is more bitter.
Once more, Buddhist occultism has
found congenial fellowship in American spiritualism.
Of late we hear less of spirit-rappings and far more
of Theosophy. But this is only the same crude
system with other names, and rendered more respectable
by the cast-off garments of old Indian philosophy.
There is a disposition in the more intellectual circles
to assume a degree of disdain toward the crudeness
of spiritualism and its vulgar familiarity with departed
spirits, who must ever be disturbed by its beck and
call; but it is confidently expected that the thousands,
nay, as some say, millions, of American spiritualists
will gladly welcome the name and the creed of Buddha.
It will be idle therefore to assume that the old sleepy
system of Gautama has no chance in this wide-awake
republic of the West.
I have already called attention to
the special tactics of Buddhists just now in claiming
that Christianity, having been of later origin, has
borrowed its principal facts and its teachings.
Let us examine the charge. It is a real tribute
to the character of Christ that so many sects of false
religionists have in all ages claimed Him either as
a follower or as an incarnation of their respective
deities. Others have acknowledged his teachings
as belonging to their particular style and grade.
The bitter and scathing calumny of Celsus, in
the first centuries of our era, did not prevent numerous
attempts to prove the identity of Christ’s teachings
with some of the most popular philosophies of the
heathen world. Porphyry claimed that many of
Christ’s virtues were copied from Pythagoras.
With like concession Mohammedanism included Jesus
as one of the six great prophets, and confessedly
the only sinless one among them all. Many a fanatic
in the successive centuries has claimed to be a new
incarnation of the Son of God. Hindus have named
Him as an incarnation of Vishnu for the Western, as
was Krishna for the Eastern World. As was indicated
in the opening of this lecture, the Theosophists are
making special claim to Him, and are reviving
the threadbare theory that He was a follower of Buddha.
So strong an effort is made to prove
that Christianity has borrowed both its divine leader
and its essential doctrines from India, that a moment’s
attention may well be given to the question here.
One allegation is that the Evangelists copied the
Buddhist history and legends in their account of Christ’s
early life. Another is that the leaders of the
Alexandrian Church worked over the gospel story at
a later day, having felt more fully the influence
of India at that great commercial centre. The
two theories are inconsistent with each other, and
both are inconsistent with the assumption that Christ
Himself was a Buddhist, and taught the Buddhist doctrines,
since this supposition would have obviated the need
of any manipulation or fraud at any point.
In replying as briefly as possible
I shall endeavor to cover both allegations. In
strong contrast with these cheap assertions of Alexandrian
corruption and plagiarism is the frank admission of
such keen critics as Renan, Weiss, Volkmar, Schenkel,
and Hitzig, that the gospel record as we
have it, was written during a generation in which
some of the companions of Jesus still lived. Renan
says of Mark’s Gospel that “it is full
of minute observations, coming doubtless from an eye-witness,”
and he asserts that Matthew, Mark, and Luke were written
“in substantially their present form by the men
whose names they bear.” These Gospels were
the work of men who knew Jesus. Matthew was one
of the Twelve; John in his Epistle speaks of himself
as an eye-witness. They were written in a historic
age and were open to challenge. They were nowhere
contradicted in contemporary history. They fit
their environment.
How is it with the authenticity of
Buddhist literature? Oldenberg says, “For
the when of things men of India have never had
a proper organ,” and Max Mueller declares to
the same effect, that “the idea of a faithful,
literal translation seems altogether foreign to Oriental
minds.” He also informs us that there is
not a single manuscript in India which is a thousand
years old, and scarcely one that can claim five hundred
years. For centuries after Gautama’s time
nothing was written; all was transmitted by word of
mouth. Buddhists themselves say that the Pali
canonical texts were written about 88 B.C.
Any fair comparison of the two histories
should confine itself to the writings which are regarded
as canonical respectively, and whose dates can be
fixed. No more importance should be attached to
the later Buddhist legends than to the “Apocryphal
Gospels,” or to the absurd “Christian
Legends” which appeared in the middle ages.
The Buddhist Canon was adopted by the Council of Patna
242 B.C. The legends which are generally compared
with the canonical story of Christ are not included
in that Canon, or at most very few of them. They
are drawn from certain poetical books written much
later, and holding about the same relation to the
Buddhist Canon that the “Paradise Lost”
and “Paradise Regained” of Milton bear
to the scriptures of the Old and New Testaments.
Who would think of quoting “Paradise Lost”
in any sober comparison of Biblical truth with the
teachings of other religions?
Even the canonical literature, that
which is supposed to contain the true history and
teachings of Buddha, is far from authoritative, owing
to the acknowledged habit acknowledged even
by the author of the “Dhammapada” of adding
commentaries, notes, etc., to original teachings.
Not only was this common among Buddhist writers, but
even more surprising liberties were taken with the
narrative. For example: The legend describing
Buddha’s leave-taking of his harem is clearly
borrowed from an earlier story of Yasa, a wealthy
young householder of Benares, who, becoming disgusted
with his harem, left his sleeping dancing girls and
fled to the Buddha for instruction. Davids and
Oldenberg, in translating this legend from the “Mahavagga,”
say in a note, “A well-known incident in the
life of Buddha has evidently been shaped after the
model of this story;” and they declare that “nowhere
in the ‘Pali Pitakas’ is this scene of
Buddha’s leave-taking mentioned.”
As another evidence of the way in
which fact and fiction have been mixed and manipulated
for a purpose, one of the legends, which has often
been presented as a parallel to the story of Christ,
represents the Buddha as repelling the temptation
of Mara by quoting texts of “scripture,”
and the scripture referred to was the “Dhammapada.”
But the “Dhammapada” was compiled hundreds
of years after Buddha’s death. Besides,
there were no “scriptures” of any kind
in his day, for nothing was written till two or three
centuries later; and worse still, Buddha is made to
quote his own subsequent teachings; for the “Dhammapada”
claims to consist of the sacred words of the “enlightened
one.” Most of the legends of Buddhism were
wholly written after the beginning of the Christian
era, and it cannot be shown that any were written
in their present form until two or three centuries
of that era had elapsed. T.W. Rhys Davids
says of the “Lalita Vistara” which contains
a very large proportion of them, and one form of which
is said to have been translated into Chinese in the
first century A.D., “that there is no real proof
that it existed in its present form before the year
600 A.D.” The “Romantic Legend”
cannot be traced farther back than the third century
A.D. Oldenberg says: “No biography
of Buddha has come down to us from ancient times, from
the age of the Pali texts, and we can safely say that
no such biography was in existence then.”
Beal declares that the Buddhist legend, as found in
the various Epics of Nepaul, Thibet, and China, “is
not framed after any Indian model of any date,
but is to be found worked out, so to speak, among
northern peoples, who were ignorant of, or indifferent
to, the pedantic stories of the Brahmáns.
In the southern and primitive records the terms of
the legend are wanting. Buddha is not born of a
royal family; he is not tempted before his enlightenment;
he works no miracles, and he is not a Universal Saviour.”
The chances are decidedly that if
any borrowing has been done it was on the side of
Buddhism. It has been asserted that thirty thousand
Buddhist monks from Alexandria once visited Ceylon
on the occasion of a great festival. This is
absurd on the face of it; but that a Christian colony
settled in Malabar at a very early period is attested
by the presence of thousands of their followers even
to this day.
In discussing the specific charge
of copying Buddhist legends in the gospel narratives,
we are met at the threshold by insurmountable improbabilities.
To some of these I ask a moment’s attention.
I shall not take the time to discuss in detail the
alleged parallels which are paraded as proofs.
To anyone who understands the spirit of Judaism and
its attitude toward heathenism of all kinds, it is
simply inconceivable that the Christian disciples,
whose aim it was to propagate the faith of their Master
in a Jewish community, should have borrowed old Indian
legends, which, by the terms of the supposition, must
have been widely known as such. And Buddhist
apologists must admit that it is a little strange
that the Scribes and Pharisees, who were intelligent,
and as alert as they were bitter, should never have
exposed this transparent plagiarism. The great
concern of the Apostles was to prove to Jews and Gentiles
that Jesus was the Christ of Old Testament prophecy.
The whole drift of their preaching and their epistles
went to show that the gospel history rested squarely
and uncompromisingly on a Jewish basis. Peter
and John, Stephen and Paul, constantly “reasoned
with the Jews out of their own Scriptures.”
How unspeakably absurd is the notion that they were
trying to palm off on those keen Pharisees a Messiah
who, though in the outset at Nazareth he publicly
traced his commission to Old Testament prophecy, was
all the while copying an atheistic philosopher of
India!
It is equally inconceivable that the
Christian fathers should have copied Buddhism.
They resisted Persian mysticism as the work of the
Devil, and it was in that mysticism, if anywhere, that
Buddhist influence existed in the Levant. Whoever
has read Tertullian’s withering condemnation
of Marcion may judge how far the fathers of the Church
favored the hérésies of the East. Augustine
had himself been a Manichean mystic, and when after
his conversion he became the great theologian of the
Church, he must have known whether the teachings of
the Buddha were being palmed off on the Christian
world. The great leaders of that age were men
of thorough scholarship and of the deepest moral earnestness.
Many of them gave up their possessions and devoted
their lives to the promotion of the truths which they
professed. Scores of them sealed their faith
by martyr deaths.
But even if we were to accept the
flippant allegation that they were all impostors,
yet we should be met by an equally insurmountable difficulty
in the utter silence of the able and bitter assailants
of Christianity in the first two or three centuries.
Celsus prepared himself for his well-known attack
on Christianity with the utmost care, searching history,
philosophy, and every known religion from which he
could derive an argument against the Christian faith.
Why did he not strike at the very
root of the matter by exposing those stupid plagiarists
who were attempting to play off upon the intelligence
of the Roman world a clumsy imitation of the far-famed
Buddha? It was the very kind of thing that the
enemies of Christianity wanted. Why should the
adroit Porphyry attempt to work up a few mere scraps
of resemblance from the life of Pythagoras, when all
he had to do was to lay his hand upon familiar legends
which afforded an abundance of the very thing in demand?
Again, it is to be remembered that
Christianity has always been restrictive and opposed
to admixtures with other systems. It repelled
the Neo-Platonism of Alexandria, and it fought for
two or three centuries against Gnosticism, Manichaeism,
and similar hérésies: and the assumption,
in the face of all this, that the Christian Church
went out of its way to copy Indian Buddhism, must
be due either to gross ignorance or to reckless misrepresentation.
On the other hand, it is in accordance with the very
genius of Buddhism to borrow. It has absorbed
every indigenous superstition and entered into partnership
with every local religious system, from the Devil
Worship of Burmah and Ceylon to the Taouism of China
and the Shinto of Japan. In its long-continued
contact with Christianity it has changed from the original
atheism of Gautama to various forms of theism, and
in some of its sects, at least, from a stanch insistance
on self-help alone to an out-and-out doctrine of salvation
by faith. This is true of the Shin and Yodo
sects of Japan. From recognizing no God at all
at first, Buddhism had, by the seventh century A.D.,
a veritable Trinity, with attributes resembling those
of the Triune God of the Christians, and by the tenth
century it had five trinities with One Supreme Adi-Buddha
over them all. Everyone may judge for himself
whether these later interpolations of the system were
borrowed from the New Testament Trinity, which had
been proclaimed through all the East ten centuries
before. Buddhism is still absorbing foreign elements
through the aid of its various apologists. Sir
Edwin Arnold has greatly added to the force of its
legend by the Christian phrases and Christian conceptions
which he has read into it. Toward the close of
the “Light of Asia” he also introduces
into the Buddha’s sermon at Kapilavastu the
teachings of Herbert Spencer and others of our own
time.
But altogether the most stupendous
improbability lies against the whole assumption that
Christ and his followers based their “essential
doctrines” on the teachings of the Buddha.
The early Buddhism was atheistic: this is the
common verdict of Davids, Childers, Sir Monier Williams,
Kellogg, and many others. The Buddha declared
that “without cause and unknown is the life
of man in this world,” and he recognized no
higher being to whom he owed reverence. “The
Buddhist Catechism,” by Subhadra, shows that
modern Buddhism has no recognition of God.
It says : “Buddhism
teaches the reign of perfect goodness and wisdom without
a personal God, continuance of individuality without
an immortal soul, eternal happiness without a local
heaven, the way of salvation without a vicarious saviour,
redemption worked out by each one himself without
any prayers, sacrifices, and penances, without the
ministry of ordained priests, without the intercession
of saints, without divine mercy.”
And then, by way of authentication, it adds:
“These, and many others which have become the
fundamental doctrines of the Buddhist religion, were
recognized by the Buddha in the night of his enlightenment
under the Boddhi-tree.” And yet we are told
that this is the system which Christ and his followers
copied. Compare this passage with the Lord’s
Prayer, or with the discourse upon the lilies, and
its lesson of trust in God the Father of all!
I appeal not merely to Christian men, but to any
man who has brains and common-sense, was there ever
so preposterous an attempt to establish an identity
of doctrines?
But what is the evidence found in
the legends themselves? Several leading Oriental
scholars, and men not at all biased in favor of Christianity,
have carefully examined the subject, and have decided
that there is no connection whatever. Professor
Seydel, of Leipsic, who has given the most scientific
plea for the so-called coincidences, of which he claims
there are fifty-one, has classified them as: 1,
Those which may have been merely accidental, having
arisen from similar causes, and not necessarily implying
any borrowing on either side; 2, those which seem
to have been borrowed from the one narrative or the
other; and 3, those which he thinks were clearly copied
by the Christian writers. In this last class
he names but five out of fifty-one.
Kuenen, who has little bias in favor
of Christianity, and who has made a very thorough
examination of Seydel’s parallels, has completely
refuted these five. And speaking of the whole
question he says: “I think we may safely
affirm that we must abstain from assigning to Buddhism
the smallest direct influence on the origin of Christianity.”
He also says of similar theories of de Bunsen:
“A single instance is enough to teach us that
inventive fancy plays the chief part in them."
Rhys Davids, whom Subhadra’s
“Buddhist Catechism” approves as the chief
exponent of Buddhism, says on the same subject:
“I can find no evidence of any actual or direct
communication of these ideas common to Buddhism and
Christianity from the East to the West.”
Oldenberg denies their early date, and Beal denies
them an Indian origin of any date.
Contrasts between Buddhism and Christianity.
Rhys Davids has pointed out the fact
that, while Buddhism in some points is more nearly
allied to Christianity than any other system, yet in
others it is the farthest possible from it in its spirit
and its tendency. If we strike out those ethical
principles which, to a large extent, are the common
heritage of mankind, revealed in the understanding
and the conscience, we shall find in what remains an
almost total contrariety to the Christian faith.
To give a few examples only.
1. Christ taught the existence
and glory of God as Supreme, the Creator and Father,
the righteous Judge. His supreme mission to reconcile
all men to God was the key-note of all His ministry.
By His teaching the hearts of men are lifted up above
all earthly conceptions to the worship of infinite
purity, and to the comforting assurance of more than
a father’s care and love. Buddhism, on
the contrary, knows nothing of God, offers no heavenly
incentive, no divine help. Leading scholars are
agreed that, whatever it may be now, the original orthodox
Buddhism was essentially atheistic. It despised
the idea of divine help, and taught men to rely upon
themselves. While, therefore, Buddhism never rose
above the level of earthly resources, and contemplated
only lower orders of being, Christianity begins with
God as supreme, to be worshipped and loved with all
the heart, mind, and strength, while our neighbors
are to be loved as ourselves.
2. Christ represented Himself
as having pre-existed from the foundation of the world,
as having been equal with God in the glory of heaven,
all of which He resigned that He might enter upon
the humiliation of our earthly state, and raise us
up to eternal life. He distinctly claimed oneness
and equality with the Father. Buddha claimed no
such antecedent glory; he spoke of himself as a man
merely; the whole aim of his teaching was to show
in himself what every man might accomplish. Later
legends ascribe to him a sort of pre-existence, in
which five hundred and thirty successive lives were
passed, sometimes as a man, sometimes as a god, many
times as an animal. But even these claims were
not made by Buddha himself except so far
as was implied by the common doctrine of transmigration.
Furthermore, in relation to the alleged
pre-existences, according to strict Buddhist doctrine
it was not really he who had gone before, it was only
a Kharma or character that had exchanged hands many
times before it could be taken up by the real and
conscious Buddha born upon the earth. Still further,
even after the beginning of his earthly life he lived
for many years in what, according to his own teaching,
was heinous sin, all of which is fatal to the theory
of pre-existent holiness.
3. Christ is a real Saviour;
His atonement claimed to be a complete ransom from
the penalty of sin, and by His teaching and example,
and by the power of the Holy Spirit, He overcomes
the power of sin itself, transforming the soul into
His own image. Buddha, on the other hand, did
not claim to achieve salvation for any except himself,
though Mr. Arnold and others constantly use such terms
as “help” and “salvation.”
Nothing of the kind is claimed by the early Buddhist
doctrines; they plainly declare that purity and impurity
belong to one’s self, and that no one can purify
another.
4. Christ emphatically declared
Himself a helper, even in this life: “Come
unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and
I will give you rest.” He promised also
to send his Spirit as a comforter, as a supporter
of his disciples’ faith, as a guide and teacher,
at all times caring for their need; in whatever exigency
his grace would be sufficient for them. On the
contrary, Buddha taught his followers that no power
in heaven or earth could help them; the victory must
be their own. “How can we hope to amend
a life,” says Bishop Carpenter, “which
is radically bad, by the aid of a system which teaches
that man’s highest aim should be to escape from
life? All that has been said against the ascetic
and non-worldly attitude of Christianity might be urged
with additional force against Buddhism. It is
full of the strong, sweet, pathetic compassion which
looks upon life with eyes full of tears, but only
to turn them away from it again, as from an unsolved
and insoluble riddle.” And he substantiates
his position by quoting Reville and Oldenberg.
Reville reaches this similar conclusion: “Buddhism,
born on the domain of polytheism, has fought against
it, not by rising above nature in subordinating it
to a single sovereign spirit, but by reproving nature
in principle, and condemning life itself as an evil
and a misfortune. Buddhism does not measure itself
against this or that abuse, does not further the development
or reformation of society, either directly or indirectly,
for the very simple reason that it turns away from
the world on principle.”
Oldenberg, one of the most thorough
of Pali scholars, says: “For the lower
order of the people, for those born to toil in manual
labor, hardened by the struggle for existence, the
announcement of the connection of misery with all
forms of existence was not made, nor was the dialectic
of the law of the painful concatenation of causes and
effects calculated to satisfy ‘the poor in spirit.’
’To the wise belongeth this law,’ it is
said, ‘not to the foolish.’ Very unlike
the work of that Man who ’suffered little children
to come unto Him, for of such is the kingdom of God.’
For children, and those who are like children, the
arms of Buddha are not opened.”
5. Christ and his disciples set
before men the highest motives of life. The great
end of man was to love God supremely, and one’s
neighbor as himself. Every true disciple was
to consider himself an almoner and dispenser of the
divine goodness to his race. It was this that
inspired the sublime devotion of Paul and of thousands
since his time. It is the secret principle of
all the noblest deeds of men. Gautama had no such
high and unselfish aim. He found no inspiring
motive above the level of humanity. His system
concentrates all thought and effort on one’s
own life virtually on the attainment of
utter indifference to all things else. The early
zeal of Gautama and his followers in preaching to their
fellow-men was inconsistent with the plain doctrines
taught at a later day. If in any case there were
those who, like Paul, burned with desire to save their
fellow-men, all we can say is, they were better than
their creed. Such was the spirit of the Gospel,
rather than the idle and useless torpor of the Buddhist
order. “Here, according to Buddhists,”
says Spence Hardy, “is a mere code of proprieties,
an occasional opiate, a plan for being free from discomfort,
a system for personal profit.” Buddhism
certainly taught the repression of human activity and
influence. Instead of saying, “Let your
light so shine before men that they, seeing your good
works, may glorify your Father who is in heaven,”
or “Work while the day lasts,” it said,
“If thou keepest thyself silent as a broken
gong, thou hast attained Nirvana.” “To
wander about like the rhinoceros alone,” was
enjoined as the pathway of true wisdom.
6. Christ taught that life, though
attended with fearful alternatives, is a glorious
birthright, with boundless possibilities and promise
of good to ourselves and others. Buddhism makes
life an evil which it is the supreme end of man to
conquer and cut off from the disaster of re-birth.
Christianity opens a path of usefulness, holiness,
and happiness in this life, and a career of triumph
and glory in the endless ages to come. Both Buddhism
and Hinduism are worse than other pessimistic systems
in their fearful law of entailment through countless
transmigrations, each of which must be a struggle.
7. Christ, according to the New
Testament, “ever liveth to make intercession
for us,” and the Holy Spirit represents Him constantly
as an ever-living power in the world, to regenerate,
save, and bless. But Buddha is dead, and his
very existence is a thing of the past. Only traditions
and the influence of his example can help men in the
struggle of life. Said Buddha to his disciples:
“As a flame blown by violence goes out and cannot
be reckoned, even so a Buddha delivered from name
and body disappears and cannot be reckoned as existing.”
Again, he said to his Order, “Mendicants, that
which binds the Teacher (himself) is cut off, but
his body still remains. While this body shall
remain he will be seen by gods and men, but after
the termination of life, upon the dissolution of the
body, neither gods nor men shall see him.”
8. Christ taught the sacredness
of the human body. “Know ye not that your
body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you?”
said His great Apostle. But Buddhism says:
“As men deposit filth upon a dungheap and depart
regretting nothing, wanting nothing, so will I depart
leaving this body filled with vile vapors.”
Christ and His disciples taught the triumphant resurrection
of the body in spiritual form and purity after His
own image. The Buddhist forsakes utterly and forever
the deserted, cast-off mortality, while still he looks
only for another habitation equally mortal and corruptible,
and possibly that of a lower animal. Thus, through
all these lines of contrast, and many others that might
be named, there appear light and life and blessedness
on the one hand, and gloom and desolation on the other.
The gloomy nature of Buddhism is well
expressed in Hardy’s “Legends and Theories
of Buddhism” as follows: “The system
of Buddhism is humiliating, cheerless, man-marring,
soul-crushing. It tells me that I am not a reality,
that I have no soul. It tells me that there is
no unalloyed happiness, no plenitude of enjoyment,
no perfect unbroken peace in the possession of any
being whatever, from the highest to the lowest, in
any world. It tells me that I may live myriads
of millions of ages, and that not in any of those
ages, nor in any portion of any age, can I be free
from apprehension as to the future, until I attain
to a state of unconsciousness; and that in order to
arrive at this consummation I must turn away from
all that is pleasant, or lovely, or instructive, or
elevating, or sublime. It tells me by voices ever
repeated, like the ceaseless sound of the sea-wave
on the shore, that I shall be subject to sorrow, impermanence,
and unreality so long as I exist, and yet that I cannot
cease to exist, nor for countless ages to come, as
I can only attain nirvana in the time of a Supreme
Buddha. In my distress I ask for the sympathy
of an all-wise and all-powerful friend. But I
am mocked instead by the semblance of relief, and am
told to look to Buddha, who has ceased to exist; to
the Dharma that never was in existence, and to the
Sangha, the members of which are real existences,
but like myself are partakers of sorrow and sin.”
How shall we measure the contrast
between all this and the ecstacies of Christian hope,
which in various forms are expressed in the Epistles
of Paul; the expected crown of righteousness, the
eternal weight of glory; heirship with Christ in an
endless inheritance; the house not made with hands;
the General Assembly of the first born? Even in
the midst of earthly sorrows and persécutions
he could say, “Nay, in all things we are more
than conquerors through Him that loved us. For
I am persuaded that neither death, nor life, nor angels,
nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present,
nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any
other creature, shall be able to separate us from the
love of God which is in Christ Jesus, our Lord.”