Human Beings And Buddhism

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¶ … Origin Jesus said that God created human beings (Matt. 19:4) and they should worship and obey Him wholly and also love their neighbors, much as they love themselves (Matt. 22: 37-39). He also taught that human beings have immaterial souls that live on after one dies and that these souls will be reunited with bodies on the day of resurrection (Matt: 12: 26-27; John 5:28-29). Interestingly, Jesus termed human beings as spiritually "lost" (Luke 19:10) and also corrupt (Matt. 9:13; Mark 7:21-23) (Douglas R. Groothuis 2003).

Buddha did not speculate about the origins of humans. His focus was the existing human condition with emphasis on suffering occasioned by having unfulfilled wants and desires. His teachings asserted that humans cannot satisfy the needs of their souls as they do not have souls to begin with. Similar to a chariot that lacks essence and is just a composition of individual components and parts, human beings are also a composition of states or parts referred to as skandas (Douglas R. Groothuis 2003).

2. Question of Identity

Western civilization today tends to place great value and importance on things like equality, state of the environment, human rights, freedom...

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Events like the Russian and French revolutions, as well as eco-fascism, peace fascism and eco-fascism are examples of thinking patterns that can place prominence of other things over human life. A parallel can be drawn between such thinking to the Christina Inquisition that happened in the Middle Ages. Importance of these campaigns and paradigms extend beyond religious boundaries and pervade our thinking habits, mostly unconsciously (Mikio Matsuoka 2005).
While Buddhism rejects the existence of a soul, the teachings of the Bible reveal that human being possesses a soul that will live eternally and the soul forms the essential identity of the person. This would imply that you don't actually have soul -- you're a soul. And because you're a soul, you have a body. Philosophers from various ages have agreed to the existence of a soul. Plato is one of them. As Jesus taught, the soul lives on for eternity and for one to see God's kingdom, they must be "born again" (Paul Dooley 2014).

3. Question of Purpose

Nothingness is where all nature is grounded and negation is really where the truth about existence lies. So, if one wishes to attain a significantly higher state and exit the layout that is influenced by constantly changing conditions and phenomena, they should rid themselves of their attachments to substances of this world. Early Buddhist teachings are proponents of this idea and push for man to emancipate himself from various factors from which they draw desire such birth illusion (Mikio Matsuoka 2005). Jesus asserted that God exists and that He was an amoral…

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References

Douglas R. Groothuis. "Jesus and Buddha: Two Masters or One?" CHRISTIAN RESEARCH JOURNAL, 2003.

Mikio Matsuoka. "The Buddhist Concept of the Human Being: From the Viewpoint of the Philosophy of the Soka Gakkai." The Journal of Oriental Studies, 2005.

Paul Dooley. Buddhism V. Christianity. 2014. https://evidencetobelieve.net/buddhism-vs.-christianity/.

Scott A. Mitchell. "Christianity is for rubes; Buddhism is for actors": U.S. media representations of Buddhism in the wake of the Tiger Woods' scandal." Journal of Global Buddhism, 2012: 61-79.


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