πŸ’šDialogue between the Buddhist and Christian traditions: Is Christianity actually Buddhism behind the semantics and interpretations?

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"Are Christian concepts pointing at the same things that Buddhism is pointing at but with different approaches?"

I'd have to say no, but if one can see God as the personification of idappaccayatā or "this/that conditionality", which (IMO) is the fundamental principle or force of "life, the universe, and everything," then many of the things in the Christian texts start to make sense, and there is some overlap. But these are just my thoughts and I don't thing you'll find a "believer" that will agree with that interpretation of the Gospel (good story), or the so called "Old Testament."

And as far as convergence: Ven.Ṭhānissaro has noted, "All paths do not lead to the top of the mountain."

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Since it's Martin Luther King Day in the US, let me start with one of his more famous quotes: β€œThe arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.” Had he been living in less politically charged times he'd have probably said that it bends towards 'The Good' (in the classic Platonic sense), but justice was a deep concern at that moment in history.

My point, though, is that when we discuss these issues we need to think about the arc of the moral universe. Every faith and every philosophy has the same trajectory and the same target β€” as difficult to define as that might be β€”Β converging in from different starting points. One who stands stolidly in the middle of a worldview looking out at others will see difference and conflict; one who 'looses the arrow' (so to speak) and follows the arc will find unity and peace. At a certain point constructs like 'Buddhism', 'Christianity', etc, evolve into something that is both, all, neither, and none.

Ritual and dogma are the source of difference and conflict. But ritual and dogma are a cocoon, not an end in themselves. The question is whether one can see past that.

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