JP Cusick wrote:
I see Buddhism to be similar to Christianity in that the human followers screwed up everything taught by their founders.
Christianity got Jesus Christ all wrong, and so too Buddhism got the Buddha all wrong.
I myself love the real teachings of Buddha, but not so much for the followers.
The problem is that you and I never met Jesus, so we have no clue what he might have taught. Neither did he personally write anything down. So all we have are the hearsay Gospel rumors that were written about him.
Therefore, how can you say that anyone got Jesus wrong?
You see, the problem is we have Matthew claiming that Jesus himself spoke the following words:
Matthew 5:18 For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled.
Considering the Jewish culture he lived in it only makes sense that the "
jots and tittles" he was referring to was the Jewish law as written in the Torah. Therefore according to Matthew Jesus was a Literal Fundamentalist. After all, he's proclaiming that every jot and tittle shall not pass from law. That's about as literal as a person can get.
We could claim that Matthew was mistaken or outright lying about what Jesus might have said. But what would be our grounds for making such an accusation? We never met Jesus ourselves, and outside of these hearsay Gossips we really have no clue what Jesus might have said, taught, or thought.
So to proclaim that Matthew got Christ all wrong would be baseless. That could only be a hopeful guess on our part.
Similar things can be said about Siddhartha Gautama. There can be no doubt that Buddhist disagree on what Siddhartha taught, just as Christians disagree on what Jesus taught. But once again, since we never met Siddhartha ourselves, we are not in any position to say who got him right and who got him wrong. All we can do is give our own hopeful opinions about what we "
wish" he might have taught.
Also, just as Jesus was born, raised, and taught within the Abrahamic theological culture and was therefore necessarily tied into supporting those cultural ideals, Siddhartha didn't invent "
Buddhism" entirely out of the blue either. He merely made Buddhism popular by voicing his own opinions on these concepts.
For example, the Buddha didn't invent the idea of pantheism, or reincarnation, or the cycle of samsara. Or even the idea that the goal of life should be to get out of samsara. To the contrary, these ideas already existed. All Siddhartha claimed was that he had become "
enlightened" and was convinced that he had achieved this goal. And its anyone's guess whether there was something to it, or the man was just deluding himself.
I mean seriously. I too like a lot of the wisdom that is associated with the teachings of the Buddha, and like you, I even see similar teachings associated with Jesus when we ignore the the dogma of fundamental Judaism as claimed by Matthew 5:18.
In fact, I see so many similarities between many of the things taught by Siddhartha and Jesus that I'm convinced that Jesus was actually a mystic-minded Jew who was trying to bring the higher moral teachings of Buddhism into his home culture of Judaism (
unsuccessfully I might add).
In any case, the bottom line is that both of these men were working with previous cultural beliefs, folklore, and superstitions of a spiritual afterlife or reincarnation, etc. So neither of them made this stuff up. These superstitious beliefs already existed in the cultures they grew up in.
For us to say today that people don't "get" Jesus or Buddha, is to be quite blunt about it, extremely silly, and even arrogant on our part. Clearly we never met either of these men and we have no clue what they might have been trying to teach or whether there was any truth to any of their teachings, especially when it comes to the supernatural and superstitious tales of an afterlife.
In the Jesus story the authors claim that Jesus was the virgin born Son of God. They even have God proclaiming in a loud voice from the clouds that Jesus is his Son and that we are to listen to him. Obviously, anyone who believes that would then also believe that Jesus would actually know the truth of reality, and things like a spirit world an afterlife. But clearly there's no reason to believe that any God spoke from the clouds proclaiming Jesus to be his Son. If a supernatural God could speak to us from the clouds, then why bother sending Jesus at all? Why not just tell us what he wants us to know directly? The moment we see the claim that this God spoke from the clouds proclaiming Jesus to be his Son is the moment we should sit the Bible on the shelf marked "fiction" next to Greek Mythology.
At least there is no claim that any God told anyone to listen to Siddhartha. So we can easily chalk Sid up to just being an over-zealous spiritual nut case.
As wise as his teachings may have been. Wise teachings do not imply supernatural knowledge or wisdom. To the contrary, if we are wise enough to recognize that his teachings are wise, then ultimately we are just as wise as we seem to think he was. So nothing special there. The same goes for Jesus too of course.