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APOLOGETICS |
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America Smiles on the Buddha -- Part 4
by
Dr. John Ankerberg, Dr. John Weldon |
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Talking with
Buddhists Clive Erricker,
a lecturer and prolific writer in the field of
religious studies with a special interest in
Buddhism, writes accurately of the Buddha when he
discusses what the Buddha did not claim:
Indeed, he did not even claim that his
teachings were a unique and original source of
wisdom;... [Citing John Bowker in Worlds of
Faith, 1983] Buddha always said, "Don’t take
what I’m saying [i.e., on my own authority], just
try to analyze as far as possible and see whether
what I’m saying makes sense or not. If it doesn’t
make sense, discard it. If it does make sense,
then pick it up." 28
In the material below, we will
employ the Buddha’s own admonition and see whether
or not what he taught "makes sense." If it does not,
we must also follow his admonition and discard his
teaching. To begin, let’s consider the following
statement by noted theologian J. I. Packer in light
of what we know about Buddhism so far:
God’s world is never friendly to those who
forget its Maker. The Buddhists, who link their
atheism with a thorough pessimism about life, are
to that extent correct. Without God, man loses his
bearings in this world. He cannot find them again
until he has found the One whose world it is. It
is natural that non-believers feel their existence
is pointless and miserable.... God made life, and
God alone can tell us its meaning. If we are to
make sense of life in this world, then, we must
know about God. And if we want to know about God,
we must turn to the Bible. 29
Buddhism, of course, rejects both
God and the Bible and thus finds itself in the
dilemma mentioned by Packer. So how do we attempt to
reach Buddhists who reject so much that is
Christian? By stressing what the Buddhist has no
possibility of rejecting: his creation in the image
of God and all this implies and involves.
Arguments against Buddhism
(historical, logical, theological) will not likely
persuade the convinced Buddhist, though they may be
effective with a recent Western convert to Buddhism.
They do, nevertheless, help the Christian to
emphasize the differences between Buddhism and
Christianity and to strengthen the Christian’s own
conviction as to the truth of his faith.
To begin, no one who enjoys life
and understands what Christianity offers can
logically think Buddhism offers more, not even
Buddhists. Christianity promises not just abundant
life now, but a specific kind of eternal life
forever. It offers a personal immortality in a
perfected state of existence where all suffering and
sin are forever vanquished and the redeemed exist
forever with a loving God who has promised they will
inherit all that is His. Buddhism only promises an
arduous, lengthy road toward personal non-existence
in a nebulous nirvana. In essence, Christianity
offers a gracious, instantaneous, free gift of
eternal life that Buddhism cannot offer.
Buddhism holds that this life in
the final sense is ultimately not worth living since
it is inseparable from suffering. But the core of
Christian teaching is that this life, even with its
suffering is eminently worth living. (See 1 Peter
4:19.) "Life" is the goal—for God exists, He
inhabits eternity and never changes, He is love and
He loves us. He died for us that we might have life
in a special way both now, and forever. He offers
salvation from sin, not from life itself. He offers
us an eternal heaven.
Thus, Jesus said He came that we
might have life and that more
abundantly (John 10:10). The Buddhist seeks to
"avoid" life. Jesus taught He would redeem
the personality, enrich it, and make it beautiful in
every way. Buddhism begins by stating the
personality is ultimately non-existent.
Consider the contrast provided by
Clive Erricker in comparing the Buddhist nirvana and
the Christian heaven: "There is a continuing
selfhood in heaven which Nirvana denies; there is a
tendency to understand heaven as a future state,
following on from earthly life, that Nirvana is not;
there is a belief that heaven is, at least to some
degree, understandable in earthly terms, whereas,
Nirvana is not even the opposite of Samsaric
existence. Samsaric existence entails the cessation
of everything. The problem we then have is that
Nirvana sounds dreadfully negative, as though
everything precious to us is denied and destroyed."
30
Erricker’s statements are true. Since the goal of
Buddhism is to destroy the individual person, an
illusion, everything precious to us as individuals
is indeed "denied and destroyed." But notice the
Buddhist response to this unlovely state of affairs:
"The Buddhist response to this is that speculation
of this kind is simply unhelpful." 31
In other words, Buddhist teaching does deny and
destroy all that is meaningful to human existence
but Buddhism has no answers as to the implications.
It merely retreats into its worldview declaring that
critical evaluation is "unhelpful."
Former Buddhist J. I. Yamamoto
observes: "My hunger and my thirst cannot be
satisfied in Buddhism because I know that the Buddha
neither created me nor offers for me to live forever
with him.... Beyond the Buddha is the void, and the
void does not answer the needs of my humanity."
32
As one Buddhist convert to Christianity remarked, "I
did not want nirvana. I wanted eternal life." Nor
would most people, one assumes, want nirvana.
But there is a deeper issue in
Buddhism that we must address, the real problem of
humanity and the implications of Eastern notions of
karmic "justice" and morality.
At this point, the Buddhist needs
to understand that the problem of humanity is much
deeper than ignorance or even suffering; the problem
is sin—rebellion against God and the absolute
necessity of forgiveness through Christ. The
Buddhist has never said that "nirvana is love"; love
is foreign to Buddhist ultimate reality and to its
gods. It is not just that the Buddhist has never
said God is love, but that he logically cannot
say it. Buddhist "love" is impersonal; it exists
without relationships. But if a God of love really
exists, why would one exchange this God for an
impersonal Reality or indifferent, and not
infrequently wrathful or evil
33
Buddhist deities?
The Buddhist needs to recognize
that his basic analysis of the human condition is
flawed, and in fact, far from accomplishing its
goal—the ending of suffering—has no real solution to
suffering.
To begin with, Buddha’s analysis
of the human condition was incomplete. His surface
perception was valid, that suffering was universal.
But his perception was not yet adequate. Why
was the man old? Why was the man sick? Why
was the beggar suffering? Why had the man
died? Buddhism rejects the possibility of separation
from God, human sin and a cursed world as
explanations for the condition of mankind. When
Buddha did seek an answer to the "whys," he
concluded falsely: that personal existence itself
was the cause of all suffering. Therefore the goal
is to annihilate personal existence. Yet in offering
so radical a solution as the destruction of
individual existence, Buddha clearly went too far.
Again, people don’t want to be annihilated, they
want to live forever, hopefully in a much better
place—exactly what Christianity offers.
Another error of the Buddha was to
assume that suffering is wholly evil. In rejecting
God, Buddha not only rejects God’s solution for
evil, but the knowledge that suffering can be also
something good (1 Pet. 2:20; 3:14, 17; 4:1, 16, 19;
5:10; Rom. 5:3-4; 8:34-39; Js. 1:2; 5:10). Men who
suffer often admit that suffering has made them
better persons in ways only it could. Even Jesus as
a man "learned obedience through the things He
suffered" (Heb. 5:8). The suffering of Jesus on the
cross, of course, became the salvation of the world
(1 Jn. 2:2).
In essence, Buddha was wrong on
most counts, at least theologically and
anthropologically: the existence of God, the problem
of humanity and the solution to the problem to name
a few. Again, individual existence is not the cause
of suffering, it is sin. Human extinction is not the
solution, it is redemption and immortality. A desire
for personal existence is not evil, nor is suffering
wholly bad.
Biblically, of course, there is
also a great deal that is predicated upon the
satisfaction of desires and the hope for personal
immortality. It is good and right to desire the
glory of God, personal salvation and sanctification,
love for others, eternal life, etc.). Consider just
a few biblical Scriptures which tells us that God
is there, that He is personal, that He is gracious
and that He desires we enjoy life. That God is good
to all men is indeed the scriptural testimony. God
desires that "none should perish" and that men
should "love life and see good days" (1 Pet. 3:10).
God "gives to all men generously and without
reproach" (Js. 1:5). In all past generations, God
"did good [to you] and gave you rains from heaven
and fruitful seasons, satisfying your hearts with
food and gladness" (Acts 14:17). "I know that there
is nothing better for men than to be happy and to do
good while they live. That everyone may eat and
drink, and find satisfaction in all his toil—this is
the gift of God "(Ecc. 3:12-13). Truly, "the earth
is full of the goodness of the Lord" (Ps. 33:5).
"The Lord is gracious and compassionate, slow to
anger and rich in love. The Lord is good to all; he
has compassion on all he has made…. The Lord is
faithful to all his promises and loving toward all
he has made. The Lord upholds all those who fall and
lifts up all who are bowed down... You open your
hand and satisfy the desires of every living thing"
(Ps. 145:8-9, 13-14,16).
Of course, while God is good and
loving, this is not necessarily true of men and it
is certainly not true of the devil and his demons.
These are the source of most evil and suffering in
the world.
To digress a moment, whenever
there are problems or tragedies in life and God does
not seem to be "kind and good," so to speak,
when we see famines or crime or evil governments or
natural disasters, we should not suspect God’s
goodness (e.g, See John Wenham, The Goodness of
God; C. S. Lewis, The Problem of Pain.)
These things result from a fallen natural order, our
sin, the devil, or the folly of men, not from God.
Either the greed and stupidity of men cause
calamities such as famines in Communist and
socialist regimes, or the evil done by dictators,
drug runners, etc., destroys thousands or millions
of lives. Sometimes evil reaches such proportions
God is literally forced by His own
righteousness to send judgment in various forms
through weather calamities, economic hardships, etc.
Of course, natural and social disasters are not
always the direct judgment of God, but if God did
not uphold His own holiness and punish evil, things
would be far worse than they are. As it is, God is
much more merciful and longsuffering than we deserve
and far more merciful and longsuffering to evil men
than most of us would be. Further, the Bible tells
us all men intuitively know God is good despite the
evil in the world (e.g., Rom. 1:18-21; 2:14-16;
3:4-6). If God were truly evil, there would
be no hope and the conditions of life and our sense
of things would be quite different. This is why we
never ask, "Why is there so much good in the world?"
It’s always, "Why is there so much evil in the
world?" We know that evil is the aberration in a
universe whose Ruler is good and righteous. (And in
fact, the evil that exists is not as prevalent as
suggested by our instantaneous, worldwide media
reporting and, again, it could be much worse were it
not for God’s restraining hand (2 Thess. 2:6-7) and
His common grace. On the other hand, things
generally are much worse than they need to be
because our culture rejects moral absolutes and our
children are raised in an environment of relativism
that can justify almost any behavior.
Next, if Buddhism does not solve
the problem of suffering even in this life; how can
there be a guarantee it will do so in the next life?
Ironically, due to karmic belief that says suffering
is inevitable due to misdeeds in a past life,
Buddhism may not only ignore the suffering of others
but, in another sense, actually perpetuate it.
Although given a Buddhist perspective, karma does
uphold a form of morality; in another sense karma
merely becomes the dispenser of pain. It justifies
the acts of the sin nature as inevitable. In an
ultimate sense, there are no victims and acts of
evil represent people "fulfilling" their karma.
Thus, it is a law of "justice" which ordains that
the murderer in this life be, e.g., murdered in the
next: a "justice" which perpetuates crime and evil
on the very pretension of satisfying justice. Karma,
unlike the Holy Spirit, does not sanctify; it
"justifies" the evil men do. It also camouflages the
reality of the Fall and sin. Sin is unavoidable,
because it is the result of our misdeeds in past
lives, the consequences of which we are not easily
capable of vanquishing. The sensuality and sorcery
of Tantrism, the crass materialism of Nichiren
Shoshu’s Buddhism, the pessimism of Buddhism
generally, each in their own manner induces pain and
difficulty into believer’s lives. In part, then
Buddhism itself perpetuates the very suffering it
seeks to alleviate. Buddhists may indeed reject God,
but it is still His universe in which they must
live.
And there are definite
consequences for suppressing the truth about God, a
truth that even Buddhists innately know (Rom.
1:18-32). To live contrary to the truth will only,
sooner or later, bring suffering into one’s life
(Gal. 6:7). In fact, as noted, in the end Buddhism
causes the most terrible form of suffering
imaginable: eternal suffering. While Buddhism seeks
to put an end to all suffering, it maintains this
can be accomplished apart from the cross. Such an
attitude can only insure suffering for those who
adopt it, for the only means to truly end suffering
is to look at, and accept, the suffering at the
Cross (Jn. 3:16). The simple fact is that Buddhists
cannot destroy their "image of God," their ego, or
their personality. They will exist eternally after
death. And outside of Christ, they will not end
their suffering.
From a Christian view, the irony
here is that the two greatest desires of the
Buddhist are the two things that can never be
attained: cessation of personal existence and
cessation of suffering. As long as one remains a
Buddhist one can do nothing to prevent the former
and can only guarantee the latter. The one thing
that will end their suffering (faith in Jesus’
atonement) is rejected on philosophical and
"theological" grounds.
Buddhists need to know that
personal immortality is a possibility,
without the necessity of a concomitant suffering. In
fact, God has promised this as a free gift to those
who believe in his Son (Jn. 6:47).
The fact that the gift is free
means it cannot be earned. Buddhists, of course,
hope to gain merit in this life by pilgrimages to
Buddhist temples, assisting monks, giving alms to
the needy, preaching Buddhism, etc. One also strives
to attain nirvana by one’s own efforts. But it is
precisely this kind of works salvation that is so
condemned biblically:
For we maintain that a man is justified by
faith apart from works of the Law. (Romans 3:28)
…to the one who does not work [for salvation]
but, believes in him who justifies the ungodly,
his faith is reckoned as righteousness. Just as
David also speaks of the blessing upon the man to
whom God reckons righteousness apart from works.
(Romans 4:5, 6)
But even if we or an angel from heaven should
preach a gospel other than the one we preached to
you, let him be eternally condemned! (Galatians
1:8)
Nevertheless knowing that a man is not
justified by the works of the Law but through
faith in Christ Jesus, that we may be justified by
faith in Christ, and not by the works of the Law;
since by the works of the Law shall no flesh be
justified. (Galatians 2:16)
Finally, above all else Buddhism
is an experientially based religion founded in
subjectivism. Its "confirmation" lies in the realm
of inner experience, not divine revelation.
Buddhism is not primarily a
religion of faith or obedience to a superior being.
It stresses the importance of personal experience of
the goal. While in the earlier stages of the
religious life the Buddhist must of necessity take
the teachings of Buddhism on faith, it is agreed
that finally these teachings must be validated
through the experience of enlightenment and nirvana.
34
Buddhism...does not make a strong distinction
between objective and subjective reality.... 35
How can any Buddhist have the
assurance of final success based upon a highly
speculative philosophy sustained only by mystical
experience? Apart from the subjective experience of
a mercurial "nirvana," Buddhism offers not the
slightest bit of evidence that its religious
doctrines are true. And if, in the end, no one
ultimately exists to experience nirvana, what’s the
point?
In conclusion, Buddhists may be
content within the confines of the Buddhist
worldview. But their indifference to Jesus will cost
them dearly. As Christians, we have the privilege of
sharing the truth about Jesus with our Buddhist
friends, in the hope that they too may inherit
eternal life. What could be more wonderful for a
Buddhist?
FOOTNOTES
28. Clive Erricker, Buddhism
(Chicago, IL: NTC Publishing, 1995), pp. 2-3.
29. J. I. Packer, Hot Tub
Religion, p. 22.
30. Erricker, p. 51.
31. Ibid.
32. J. Isamu Yamamoto, Beyond
Buddhism (Downer’s Grover, Il: InterVarsity
Press, 1982), p. 118, 123.
33. e.g., C. Burrows, "The
Fierce and Erotic Gods of Buddhism," Natural
History, April, 1972, pp. 26 ff.
34. Francis H. Cook, "Nirvana"
in Prebish (ed.), p. 133.
35. Walt Anderson, Open
Secrets, A Western Guide to Tibetan Buddhism
(New York: Viking Press, 1979), p. 36.
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Apologetics
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Dr. John Ankerberg
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