JESUS AND
BUDDHA
Both
Buddha and Jesus were baptized in the presence of the "spirit" of
God. 54
Both
went to their temples at the age of twelve, where they are said to have
astonished all with their wisdom.55
Both
supposedly fasted in solitude for a long time: Buddha for forty--seven days and
Jesus for forty.56
Both
wandered to a fig tree at the conclusion of their fasts 57
Both
were about the same age when they began their public ministry:
"When
he [Buddha] went again to the garden he saw a monk who was calm, tranquil,
self--possessed, serene, and dignified. The prince, determined to become such a
monk, was led to make the great renunciation. At the time he was twenty--nine
years of age...".58
"Jesus, when he began his ministry, was about thirty years of
age." (Luke
3:23).
Both
were tempted by the "devil" at the beginning of their ministry: To
Buddha, he said: "Go not forth to adopt a religious life but return to
your kingdom, and in seven days you shall become emperor of the world, riding
over the four continents."59
To
Jesus, he said: "All these [kingdoms of the world] I will give you, if you
fall down and worship me" (Matthew 4:9).
Buddha answered the "devil": "Get you away from me."60
Jesus
responded: "...begone, Satan!" (Matthew 4:10).
Both
experienced the "supernatural" after the "devil" left:
For
Buddha: "The skies rained flowers, and delicious odors prevailed [in] the
air."61
For
Jesus: ".angels came and ministered to him" (Matthew 4:11).
The
multitudes required a sign from both in order that they might believe.62
Both
strove to establish a kingdom of heaven on earth.63
Buddha
"represented himself as a mere link in a long chain of enlightened
teachers."64
Jesus
said: "Think not that I have come to abolish the law, and the prophets; I
have come not to abolish them but to fulfill them" (Matthew 5:17).
According
to the Somadeva (a Buddhist holy book), a Buddhist ascetic's eye once offended
him, so he plucked it out and cast it away.65
Jesus
said: "If your right eye causes you to sin, pluck it out, and throw it
away;." (Matthew 5:29).
"Buddha
taught that the motive of all our actions should be pity or love of our
neighbor."66
Jesus
taught: "...love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you."
(Matthew 5:44).
Buddha
said: "Hide your good deeds, and confess before the world the sins you
have committed."67
Jesus
said: "Beware of practicing your piety before men to be seen by
them;." (Matthew 6:1) and "Therefore confess your sins one to
another, and pray one for another, that you may be healed..." (James
5:16).
Both
are said to have known the thoughts of others:
"By
directing his mind to the thoughts of others, [Buddha] can know the thoughts of
all beings."68
"Jesus,
knowing their thoughts, said: `Why do you think evil in your hearts?' "
(Matthew 9:4).
T.W.Rhys
Davids, Nineteenth-Century Professor:
There
is every reason to believe that the Pitakas [sacred books containing the
legends of Buddha] now extant in Ceylon are substantially identical with the
books of the Southern Canon, as settled at the Council of Patna about the year
250 B.C. As no works would have been received into the Canon which were not
then believed to be very old, the Pitakas may be approximately placed in the
fourth century B.C., and parts of them possibly reach back very nearly, if not
quite, to the time of Gautama (Buddha) himself.46
Samuel
Beal, Nineteenth-Century Professor:
We know
that the Fo-pen-hing [legends of Buddha] was -translated into Chinese from
Sanskrit (the ancient language of Hindostan) so early as the eleventh year of
the reign of -Wing-ping (Ming-ti) of the Hans Dynasty, i.e., 69 or 70 A.D. We
may, therefore, safely suppose that the original work was in circulation in
These
points of agreement with the Gospel narrative arouse curiosity and require
explanation. If we could prove that they [the legends of Buddha] were unknown
in the East for some centuries after Christ, the explanation would be easy. But
all the evidence we have goes to prove the contrary....48
Ernest
de Bunsen, Nineteenth Century:
“With
the remarkable exception of the death of Jesus on the cross, and of the
doctrine of atonement by vicarious suffering, which is absolutely excluded by
Buddhism, the most ancient of the Buddhistic records known to us contain
statements about the life and the doctrines of Gautama Buddha which -correspond
in a remarkable manner, and impossibly by mere chance, with the traditions
recorded in the Gospels about the life and doctrines of Jesus Christ....” 49
Max
Muller, Nineteenth--Century Professor:
“Between
the language of Buddha and his disciples, and the language of Christ and his
apostles, there are strange coincidences. Even some of the Buddhist legends and
parables sound as if taken from the New Testament, though we know that many of
them existed before the beginning of the Christian era.” 50
Kenneth
Scott Latourette, Twentieth Century:
“Approximately
five centuries older than Christianity, by the time of the birth of Christ,
Buddhism had already spread through much of
M.
L'Abbe Huc, Nineteenth--Century Missionary Apostolic:
“The
miraculous birth of Buddha, his life and instructions, contain a great number
of the moral and dogmatic truths professed in Christianity.” 52
T. W.
Doane, Nineteenth Century:
“...nothing
now remains for the honest man to do but acknowledge the truth, which is that
the history of Jesus of Nazareth[,] as related in the books of the New
Testament, is simply a copy of that of Buddha, with a mixture of mythology
borrowed from other nations.” 53
FOOTNOTES:
46. Rhys Davids, Buddhism: Being a Sketch of
the Life and Teachings of Gautama, the Buddha (
47 Beal, The Roamantic Legends of Sakya Buddha fron the Chinese Sanskrit (
48. Ibid,pp. viii-ix.
49. De Bunsen, The Angel Messiah of
Buddhists, Essenes and Christians (
50. Muller, Introduction to the Science of
Religion (
51. Latourette, A History of Christianity
(New York, 1975), p. 274.
52. Huc, Christianity in
53. Doane, p. 302.
54. De Bunsen, p. 45; Matthew 3:16.
55. Ibid, p. 37; Luke 2:41--48.
56. Arthur Lillie, Buddha and Early Buddhism
(
57. Hans Joachim Schoeps, An Intelligent
Person's Guide to the Religions of Mankind (
58. Encyclopedia
60. De Bunsen, p. 38.
61. Ibid.
62. Muller, Science, p. 27; Matthew 16:1.
63. Beal, p. x; Matthew 4:17.64. Muller,
Science, p. 140.
65. Ibid., p. 245.
66. Ibid., p. 249.
67. Ibid., p. 28.
68. R. Spence Hardy, The Legends and Theories
of the Buddhists Compared with History and Science (