Sunday, January 08, 2006

Thoughts...

My aunt used to be a Sai Baba worshipper which distressed me plenty. And then, the statue of the hindu elephant "god" appeared in her house before the larger- than-life photograph of Sai Baba. Then one day, she got a medium to come remove Sai Baba whom she had dumped for Buddhism. The elephant god remained though.


I am kinda amused watching her. She came from CHIJ itself so I wonder why she has never thought about turning back to GOD to CHRIST to find salvation, help and peace from the so-called "black magic" that has been thrown upon her by someone.

Instead of seeking the ONLY path of salvation, she has led her family from one idol worship to another and now to a somewhat safer and more middle-of-the-road religion of Buddhism. My younger cousin, the eldest daughter, as a 2 or 3 year old, prayed to Christ when she was by my maternal grandmother's bedside. My grandma was dying from cancer then and my cousin, bless her, who could not speak yet, would kneel before the cross and pray in her baby language.

Yet this same cousin, has grown up hopping from one religion to another... how can this be good for her spiritual growth or her sister's? I wonder if my aunt has ever realised that her search for her religion has only caused more harm than good to her loved ones... but perhaps God in his infinite wisdom and goodness will transform all that into His miracles, bless and use my cousins powerfully when they are older.

I have nothing against Buddhists and I respect them greatly for many are wonderful people. But my personal opinion lies as such- salvation is through Christ and only Christ.

So what is the difference between Buddhism and Christianity? I mean how big can the gulf be right? They are both on the side of goodness...

How wrong can we be... there are differences. Major and glaring ones between both doctrines.

Here is an article I found online:


How does Buddhism differ from Christianity?

1. There Is No God
Void vs. Loving God
(emptiness, apathy, ignorance)

In Buddhist thought, there is no supreme being, no Creator, no omnipotent omnipresent God, no Loving Lord over his creation. Ultimate Reality is an impersonal Void or Emptiness (Sunyata). Only the Void is Permanent.
To a Buddhist, saying that God exists is like saying that the Void exists. Saying that God is loving and desires relationship with us is saying God is Ignorance since all desire comes from ignorance. Saying that God created us and has a purpose for our lives is saying that God is Karma, the cause and effect of our existence. Thus, in Buddhist thought, the concept of God is closest equated to the Void, Ignorance, and Karma.
So who are Buddhists bowing down and praying to in their temples? Remember that Buddhism has adapted and absorbed many other beliefs rooted in animism and ancestral worship.

2. Christ’s Deity Denied
If a Buddhist were asked who Jesus was, responses would likely include: a good man, a prophet, the founder of the Christian religion, a bodhisattva, the younger brother of Buddha. As it is hard for a Buddhist to understand the existence of God, it is inconceivable that Jesus is the incarnate Lord, God in the flesh.

3. Man Is Not A Spiritual Being
Mankind has no soul or permanence. In Buddhist thought, an individual consists of five skandhas or aggregates. These aggregates are disassembled at death and there is no longer a cohesive unit that can be identified as an individual person. People are impermanent and transitory, perpetually facing the problem of how to escape from suffering. All life is meaningless and without purpose. The ultimate hope lies in what is permanent: The Void. Before one can find permanence, one must disappear into the Void, that is, achieve nirvana.

4. Karma Is The Iron Law
Karma vs. Mercy
Buddhists believe that the totality of one’s actions and the results of those actions determine one’s fate in subsequent reincarnations. This is the cosmic Law of Cause and Effect. Karma is the ultimate impersonal, unmerciful judge. Karma is unchangeable, cannot be undone, altered, avoided, or forgiven. What is done is done and cannot be undone, nor can you be forgiven or released from it.

5. Sin Has No Consequences
The two systems` concepts of sin stand in stark contrast. To Buddhists sin does not have any consequences before a holy God. It is not defined by doctrine, for to them existence is sin. They think that "desire" or transitory deception is sin. Popularly, sin is killing life in any form. I remember a Thai woman once saying to me, "I have never sinned." It is difficult to help one who does not sense a need. At best, sin is an illusion, though the karmic consequences will accumulate for those who fail to break the endless cycles of reincarnation. The Christian identifies sin as a principle in all humankind, a flaw resulting from the Fall. In practice, sins are violations of God`s character, an affront to Him by missing the mark, and subsequently moral failures. (from Dr. Alex G. Smith)

6. Salvation Through Self, Merit vs. Grace
There is no savior. There is no grace or forgiveness. The Buddha said he could not help anyone; he could only point the way. One must overcome karma by one’s own merit and works.

7. Attain Enlightenment by eliminating ALL desire

In Buddhist thought, there is no difference
between good desire and bad desire. Even to
desire life itself is to not be enlightened.

8. Death, Not Life
To a Buddhist, hope lies in ending the cycle of
suffering and reincarnation. There is no Eternal Life for the Buddhist, no hell, no heaven. Hope lies in achieving nirvana. Hope lies in non-existence..

Also see: http://www.ankerberg.org/Articles/_PDFArchives/apologetics/AP3W1101.pdf

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