Posted on 11/07/2011 12:51:06 AM PST by Love Wisdom Truth
The Budist is a Christian. You won't find much difference in Budism with that of Christianity. Buda preached accepting sufferings calmly, so did Christ. That's what Beinsa Douno said in regards to Budism.
Any budists coming here on this forum?
Welcome to FR.
Does your mom know you're still up?!
What is a budist and who is buda? And if you couldn’t spell it, why would you choose to put up a vanity about it?
you are also wrong to state that Buddhists are Christian. buddhism, especially Hinayana/Theravada buddhism is not a religion but a philosophy and inherently athiestic
prince Gautama arose out of Vedic times and rejected the cycle of birth and rebirth. He adopted the ideas of Mahavira with the aim of folks reaching adinatha status but softened it from jainism
Both jaina and buddha philosophies are essentially derived from Vedic thought based on the never-ending cycles. This is quite different from Judeao-Christian linear progression of time
Also, Vedic hinduism was polytheistic, and jaina is strongly anti-creator deity. Buddhism hedges its bets but is also to a large extent like jainism stating that there is no creator deity.
This of course is completely opposite to the Judeo-Christian monotheistic tradition
Christianity also, whichever denomination, states that one cannot "save" oneself while Buddhism essentially says that
In Christianity you can be a good guy, a Gandhi, but if you don't accept Jesus Christ as God, no go (to the point of Gandhi, we don't know about his convictions, so for him personaly I will not comment). For Buddhism on the other hand, you focus on your meditations, karma and over several lifetimes (as we see in Gautama's previous births and rebirths), you attain Nirvana.
So, the very fundamentals are different as the originating sources (Hinduism v/s Judaism) differ.
Also do note that in Buddhism being ahimsa is not for the sake of love of God as in Christianity but for the "selfish" reason of it adding to your karma.
In a bit of a hurry right now - have to dash out in the rain to get our Son from school.
But there are quite a few similarities in the two. Off the top of my head:
Benevolence toward others
Charitable works
Sacrifice of the self
Adherence to ritual
Organization to benefit the propagation of the church/temple
Now, I think I can guess your response - Yes, these are acts. But I would propose that "By their acts they will be known" as a response to your possible comment.
es, there is a great difference in the basic tenets of Christianity and Buddhism; but there is also a great deal of similarity.
FWIW, I consider myself a Christian...a poor one...but I profess and do testify to my Christian beliefs.
“There may be some simularities in how a Christian and a Bhuddist lives and acts nut there is no simularity in Bhuddism and Christianity.”
This.
We'll see.
To be wrong about creation is to be wrong about everything. --Robert Bolton, The One and the Many
"... meaning, purpose, and unity (or wholeness) are all functions of one another. To see the whole is to understand the meaning, and vice versa. For example, you can't understand the purpose of the heart if you don't situate it in the context of the body it serves. Likewise, words take on entirely different shades of meaning depending on the sentence in which they are situated.
Again, one of the important points Bolton raises is that nondualism is nihilsim, which is to say, meaningless. Or, you could say that the meaning of existence is its ultimate meaninglessness.
He points out the irony that the principle of karma -- of moral cause and effect -- is central to Buddhism.
And yet, when it comes to the totality -- the whole -- "they deny that there is any cause for the world as such.
Their passion for causality suddenly evaporates just where causality approaches its most significant consequence."
(And please bear in mind that Bolton is not being remotely disrespectful, only trying to clearly describe the differences, and their consequences, between atheistic nondualism and theistic dualism.) ....."
Y?
Or just sometimes Y?
First: Who is Jesus? Jesus Christ according to Beinsa Douno is the manifestation of God's love.
Now, one can see the “human” element “... accepting the Lord Jesus Christ as ones personal Savior... “ in understanding Christ's teaching. Jesus often used symbolic language, and when He said “I am the way...” He meant that LOVE, the Divine Love is the way to Heaven.
A lot of the doctrines that many churches have today do not come from Christ. Christ never preached them.
If Jesus came today, he would say: “These churches don't preach what I preached.” What I preached is Love, brotherhood and sisterhood.
Thank you for pointing out my spelling mistake “Buddhist”.
I am willing and am trying to perfect my English.
Divine Blessings,
DS
Yes, but only if a cat is a dog (both have 4 legs and a tail).
This, of course, is precisely what is wrong with all forms of leftist do-gooderism, and why their ideas do not work in practice. To be perfectly accurate, like the Dalai Lamas ideas, they will work, but only in paradise -- as will Maos ideas. But if you willfully confuse the herebelow with paradise, a lot of people are going to be hurt and killed. And you wont get paradise anyway. ...."
Yes, the West has problems, but Buddhist nonattachment is not the answer. Rather, the answer lay in a recovery of our own spiritual roots, which easily transcend and include the insights of Buddhism. Or, perhaps we can say that there are certain insights of Buddhism that can help illuminate certain ideas that are present but underemphasized in our own tradition. But Christianity is obviously fundamentally complete and needs no other revelation to complete it. It is missing nothing. ...."
Good then take up the cross and follow Jesus.
Your statement: "The Budist is a Christian." Just rubbed me the wrong way.
"First: Who is Jesus?
He is God. The only begotten Son of the Father.
"Jesus often used symbolic language, and when He said I am the way... He meant that LOVE, the Divine Love is the way to Heaven."
No, Christ's words weren't symbolic. Jesus meant, quite literally, that HE is WAY the TRUTH and the LIFE. Jesus died a sacrificial death for us on the cross. There is no other way to heaven but to accept His gift of grace.
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