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  • When Jesus met Buddha

    http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2 008/12/14/when_jesus_met_buddha/?page=full

    The Boston Globe

    When Jesus met Buddha

    Something remarkable happened when evangelists for two great religions
    crossed paths more than 1,000 years ago: they got along


    By Philip Jenkins | December 14, 2008

    WAS THE BUDDHA a demon?

    While few mainline Christians would put the matter in such confrontational
    terms, any religion claiming exclusive access to truth has real
    difficulties reconciling other great faiths into its cosmic scheme. Most
    Christian churches hold that Jesus alone is the Way, the Truth, and the
    Life, and many also feel an obligation to carry that message to the world's
    unbelievers. But this creates a fundamental conflict with the followers of
    famous spiritual figures like Mohammed or Buddha, who preached radically
    different messages. Drawing on a strict interpretation of the Bible, some
    Christians see these rival faiths as not merely false, but as deliberate
    traps set by the forces of evil.

    Being intolerant of other religions - consigning them to hell, in fact -
    may be bad enough in its own right, but it increasingly has real-world
    consequences. As trade and technology shrink the globe, so different
    religions come into ever-closer contact with one another, and the results
    can be bloody: witness the apocalyptic assaults in Mumbai. In such a world,
    teaching different faiths to acknowledge one another's claims, to live
    peaceably together side by side, stops being a matter of good manners and
    becomes a prerequisite for human survival.

    Over the past 30 years, the Roman Catholic Church has faced repeated
    battles over this question of Christ's uniqueness, and has cracked down on
    thinkers who have made daring efforts to accommodate other world
    religions. While the Christian dialogue with Islam has attracted

    most of the headlines, it is the encounters with Hinduism and especially
    Buddhism that have stirred the most controversy within the church. Sri
    Lankan theologians Aloysius Pieris and Tissa Balasuriya have had many
    run-ins with Vatican critics, and, more recently, the battle has come to
    American shores. Last year, the Vatican ordered an investigation of
    Georgetown University's Peter Phan, a Jesuit theologian whose main sin, in
    official eyes, has been to treat the Buddhism of his Vietnamese homeland as
    a parallel path to salvation.

    Following the ideas of Pope Benedict XVI, though, the church refuses to
    give up its fundamental belief in the unique role of Christ. In a widely
    publicized open letter to Italian politician Marcello Pera, Pope Benedict
    declared that "an inter-religious dialogue in the strict sense of the term
    is not possible." By all means, he said, we should hold conversations with
    other cultures, but not in a way that acknowledges other religions as
    equally valid. While the Vatican does not of course see the Buddha as a
    demon, it does fear the prospect of syncretism, the dilution of Christian
    truth in an unholy mixture with other faiths.

    Beyond doubt, this view places Benedict in a strong tradition of
    Christianity as it has developed in Europe since Roman times. But there is
    another, ancient tradition, which suggests a very different
    course. Europe's is not the only version of the Christian faith, nor is it
    necessarily the oldest heir of the ancient church. For more than 1,000
    years, other quite separate branches of the church established thriving
    communities across Asia, and in their sheer numbers, these churches were
    comparable to anything Europe could muster at the time. These Christian
    bodies traced their ancestry back not through Rome, but directly to the
    original Jesus movement of ancient Palestine. They moved across India,
    Central Asia, and China, showing no hesitation to share - and learn from -
    the other great religions of the East.

    Just how far these Christians were prepared to go is suggested by a
    startling symbol that appeared on memorials and stone carvings in both
    southern India and coastal China during the early Middle Ages. We can
    easily see that the image depicts a cross, but it takes a moment to realize
    that the base of the picture - the root from which the cross is growing -
    is a lotus flower, the symbol of Buddhist enlightenment.

    In modern times, most mainstream churches would condemn such an amalgam as
    a betrayal of the Christian faith, an example of multiculturalism run
    wild. Yet concerns about syncretism did not bother these early Asian
    Christians, who called themselves Nasraye, Nazarenes, like Jesus's earliest
    followers. They were comfortable associating themselves with the other
    great monastic and mystical religion of the time, and moreover, they
    believed that both lotus and cross carried similar messages about the quest
    for light and salvation. If these Nazarenes could find meaning in the
    lotus-cross, then why can't modern Catholics, or other inheritors of the
    faith Jesus inspired?

    Many Christians are coming to terms with just how thoroughly so many of
    their fundamental assumptions will have to be rethought as their faith
    today becomes a global religion. Even modern church leaders who know how
    rapidly the church is expanding in the global South tend to see European
    values and traditions as the indispensable norm, in matters of liturgy and
    theology as much as music and architecture.

    Yet the reality is that Christianity has from its earliest days been an
    intercontinental faith, as firmly established in Asia and Africa as in
    Europe itself. When we broaden our scope to look at the faith that by 800
    or so stretched from Ireland to Korea, we see the many different ways in
    which Christians interacted with other believers, in encounters that
    reshaped both sides. At their best, these meetings allowed the traditions
    not just to exchange ideas but to intertwine in productive and enriching
    ways, in an awe-inspiring chapter of Christian history that the Western
    churches have all but forgotten.

    To understand this story, we need to reconfigure our mental maps. When we
    think of the growth of Christianity, we think above all of Europe. We
    visualize a movement growing west from Palestine and Syria and spreading
    into Greece and Italy, and gradually into northern regions. Europe is still
    the center of the Catholic Church, of course, but it was also the
    birthplace of the Protestant denominations that split from it. For most of
    us, even speaking of the "Eastern Church" refers to another group of
    Europeans, namely to the Orthodox believers who stem from the eastern parts
    of the continent. English Catholic thinker Hilaire Belloc once proclaimed
    that "Europe is the Faith; and the Faith is Europe."

    But in the early centuries other Christians expanded east into Asia and
    south into Africa, and those other churches survived for the first 1,200
    years or so of Christian history. Far from being fringe sects, these
    forgotten churches were firmly rooted in the oldest traditions of the
    apostolic church. Throughout their history, these Nazarenes used Syriac,
    which is close to Jesus' own language of Aramaic, and they followed Yeshua,
    not Jesus. No other church - not Roman Catholics, not Eastern Orthodox -
    has a stronger claim to a direct inheritance from the earliest Jesus
    movement.

    The most stunningly successful of these eastern Christian bodies was the
    Church of the East, often called the Nestorian church. While the Western
    churches were expanding their influence within the framework of the Roman
    Empire, the Syriac-speaking churches colonized the vast Persian kingdom
    that ruled from Syria to Pakistan and the borders of China. From their
    bases in Mesopotamia - modern Iraq - Nestorian Christians carried out their
    vast missionary efforts along the Silk Route that crossed Central Asia. By
    the eighth century, the Church of the East had an extensive structure
    across most of central Asia and China, and in southern India. The church
    had senior clergy - metropolitans - in Samarkand and Bokhara, in Herat in
    Afghanistan. A bishop had his seat in Chang'an, the imperial capital of
    China, which was then the world's greatest superpower.

    When Nestorian Christians were pressing across Central Asia during the
    sixth and seventh centuries, they met the missionaries and saints of an
    equally confident and expansionist religion: Mahayana Buddhism. Buddhists
    too wanted to take their saving message to the world, and launched great
    missions from India's monasteries and temples. In this diverse world,
    Buddhist and Christian monasteries were likely to stand side by side, as
    neighbors and even, sometimes, as collaborators. Some historians believe
    that Nestorian missionaries influenced the religious practices of the
    Buddhist religion then developing in Tibet. Monks spoke to monks.

    In presenting their faith, Christians naturally used the cultural forms
    that would be familiar to Asians. They told their stories in the forms of
    sutras, verse patterns already made famous by Buddhist missionaries and
    teachers. A stunning collection of Jesus Sutras was found in caves at
    Dunhuang, in northwest China. Some Nestorian writings draw heavily on
    Buddhist ideas, as they translate prayers and Christian services in ways
    that would make sense to Asian readers. In some texts, the Christian phrase
    "angels and archangels and hosts of heaven" is translated into the language
    of buddhas and devas.

    One story in particular suggests an almost shocking degree of collaboration
    between the faiths. In 782, the Indian Buddhist missionary Prajna arrived
    in Chang'an, bearing rich treasures of sutras and other
    scriptures. Unfortunately, these were written in Indian languages. He
    consulted the local Nestorian bishop, Adam, who had already translated
    parts of the Bible into Chinese. Together, Buddhist and Christian scholars
    worked amiably together for some years to translate seven copious volumes
    of Buddhist wisdom. Probably, Adam did this as much from intellectual
    curiosity as from ecumenical good will, and we can only guess about the
    conversations that would have ensued: Do you really care more about
    relieving suffering than atoning for sin? And your monks meditate like ours
    do?

    These efforts bore fruit far beyond China. Other residents of Chang'an at
    this very time included Japanese monks, who took these very translations
    back with them to their homeland. In Japan, these works became the founding
    texts of the great Buddhist schools of the Middle Ages. All the famous
    movements of later Japanese history, including Zen, can be traced to one of
    those ancient schools and, ultimately - incredibly - to the work of a
    Christian bishop.

    By the 12th century, flourishing churches in China and southern India were
    using the lotus-cross. The lotus is a superbly beautiful flower that grows
    out of muck and slime. No symbol could better represent the rise of the
    soul from the material, the victory of enlightenment over ignorance,
    desire, and attachment. For 2,000 years, Buddhist artists have used the
    lotus to convey these messages in countless paintings and sculptures. The
    Christian cross, meanwhile, teaches a comparable lesson, of divine victory
    over sin and injustice, of the defeat of the world. Somewhere in Asia,
    Yeshua's forgotten followers made the daring decision to integrate the two
    emblems, which still today forces us to think about the parallels between
    the kinds of liberation and redemption offered by each faith.

    Christianity, for much of its history, was just as much an Asian religion
    as Buddhism. Asia's Christian churches survived for more than a millennium,
    and not until the 10th century, halfway through Christian history, did the
    number of Christians in Europe exceed that in Asia.

    What ultimately obliterated the Asian Christians were the Mongol invasions,
    which spread across Central Asia and the Middle East from the 1220s
    onward. From the late 13th century, too, the world entered a terrifying era
    of climate change, of global cooling, which severely cut food supplies and
    contributed to mass famine. The collapse of trade and commerce crippled
    cities, leaving the world much poorer and more vulnerable. Intolerant
    nationalism wiped out Christian communities in China, while a surging
    militant Islam destroyed the churches of Central Asia.

    But awareness of this deep Christian history contributes powerfully to
    understanding the future of the religion, as much as its past. For long
    centuries, Asian Christians kept up neighborly relations with other faiths,
    which they saw not as deadly rivals but as fellow travelers on the road to
    enlightenment. Their worldview differed enormously from the norms that
    developed in Europe.

    To take one example, we are used to the idea of Christianity operating as
    the official religion of powerful states, which were only too willing to
    impose a particular orthodoxy upon their subjects. Yet when we look at the
    African and Asian experience, we find millions of Christians whose normal
    experience was as minorities or even majorities within nations dominated by
    some other religion. Struggling to win hearts and minds, leading churches
    had no option but to frame the Christian message in the context of
    non-European intellectual traditions. Christian thinkers did present their
    message in the categories of Buddhism - and Taoism, and Confucianism - and
    there is no reason why they could not do so again. When modern scholars
    like Peter Phan try to place Christianity in an Asian and Buddhist context,
    they are resuming a task begun at least 1,500 years ago.

    Perhaps, in fact, we are looking at our history upside down. Some day,
    future historians might look at the last few hundred years of Euro-American
    dominance within Christianity and regard it as an unnatural interlude in a
    much longer story of fruitful interchange between the great religions.

    Consider the story told by Timothy, a patriarch of the Nestorian
    church. Around 800, he engaged in a famous debate with the Muslim caliph in
    Baghdad, a discussion marked by reason and civility on both sides. Imagine,
    Timothy said, that we are all in a dark house, and someone throws a
    precious pearl in the midst of a pile of ordinary stones. Everyone
    scrabbles for the pearl, and some think they've found it, but nobody can be
    sure until day breaks.

    In the same way, he said, the pearl of true faith and wisdom had fallen
    into the darkness of this transitory world; each faith believed that it
    alone had found the pearl. Yet all he could claim - and all the caliph
    could say in response - was that some faiths thought they had enough
    evidence to prove that they were indeed holding the real pearl, but the
    final truth would not be known in this world.

    Knowing other faiths firsthand grants believers an enviable sophistication,
    founded on humility. We could do a lot worse than to learn from what we
    sometimes call the Dark Ages.

    Philip Jenkins is Edwin Erle Sparks professor of the humanities at Penn
    State University. He is author of "The Lost History of Christianity: The
    Thousand-Year Golden Age of the Church in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia
    -- and How It Died," published last month.

    © 2008 The New York Times Company

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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