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Sixth Study Conference of the European Network of Buddhist-Christian Studies: Conversion and Religious Identity in Buddhism and Christianity
Archabbey of St Ottilien, Bavaria
June 10-13, 2005
Summary by John D'Arcy May
Irish School of Ecumenics,
Trinity College, Dublin
A Benedictine abbey which has been involved in exchanges with Buddhist
monks since 1979 was an appropriate setting for serious discussion for
"double identity" and change of identity between Buddhists and Christians.
The European Network holds its conferences every two years, and after
experiencing the Benedictine hospitality of St Ottilien once again it was
decided that every second conference should be held here in future, with the
intervening ones in different centers throughout Europe. Br. Josef Götz OSB
introduced the conference by telling the story of the inter-monastic
encounters with monks of the Soto, Rinzai and Shingon traditions over the
last 25 years at St Ottilien. Participants in these agreed that they had
never learned so much about their own traditions as when they were engaged
in dialogue at a spiritual and experiential level with their monastic
"others". One Zen monk told the Benedictines: "Working with your carpenter,
I understand Christianity", and another asked for baptism in order to
participate more fully in the liturgy.
The situation in the Buddhist countries of Asia, however, is not
necessarily so harmonious, as reports by Fr Thomas Timpte OSB from Korea and
Dr Elizabeth Harris from Sri Lanka made clear. Just to hear about the
religious situation in South Korea, the "great unknown" of East Asian
Buddhism, was worthwhile. Though four traditions Shamanism, Buddhism with
elements of Daoism, Confucianism and Christianity co-exist largely
peacefully, the advent of Christianity caused tensions arising from both
persecutions and conversions. Though many Koreans would find no
contradiction in being both Confucianist (at least in a cultural sense) and
Christian, Buddhism itself is coming to be seen as a cultural phenomenon,
and those earnestly seeking peace of heart turn to Christianity. Almost half
the members of parliament are either Catholic or Protestant, though there is
little evidence of Christian ethics in political practice. Nevertheless,
Buddhism is now the fastest-growing religion, as Catholics in particular
find themselves attracted to the temple environment, which is experienced as
"a kind of homecoming". "Christian in the head, Shamanist in the belly,
Buddhist in the heart", though a simplification, sums up the situation.
In Sri Lanka, on the other hand, things are considerably more fraught,
and with the passage of anti-conversion legislation the conference theme of
conversion and identity is a charged topic. Elizabeth Harris illustrated the
lengths to which certain Christians are prepared to go to win converts, such
as working over the camps of tsunami survivors. Though British evangelical
missionaries had originally been afforded remarkable hospitality by the
Buddhists, even being invited to preach in temples, their insistence that if
Christianity is right, Buddhism must be wrong polarized relations, and the
great public debate of 1815 still sets a precedent. For these Christian
inheritors of the European Enlightenment, both the conviction of sin and
rational argument pointed to the superiority of Christianity. In the ethnic
conflict presently raging, the religions are "not innocent", with Tamils and
Christians being conflated into the other¹ against which Sinhalese
antipathy is directed. This is all the more tragic in that most Sri Lankan
Buddhists accept the traditional ethic of tolerance.
Jørgen Skov Sørensen and Kajsa Ahlstrand illuminated the religious
situation in Scandinavia from different perspectives. Sørensen reflected on
the "soft boundaries" which actually exist in many pluralistic societies,
something that puzzled both civil servants and missionaries even in colonial
India. There is a danger that contemporary Christians will try to impose the
same unambiguous boundaries on post-modern Europe as they did in their
former colonies. Ahlstrand's report on an empirical study done in Sweden
showed how unrealistic this is. "Dual identity" as both Buddhist and
Christian was more common than complete identification with either, and 42
per cent of those who identified completely with Christianity said they did
not believe in God!
The centerpiece of the conference was a vigorous debate between Paul
Williams, a prominent British Buddhist and professor of Indian and Tibetan
philosophy who announced his conversion to Catholicism in a provocative
book, The Unexpected Way, and two protagonists who disagreed with his
reasoning from Christian and Buddhist points of view. Perry Schmidt-Leukel,
professor of religious studies at Glasgow University, made the case that
genuine Buddhism affirms the existence of a transcendent reality upon which
salvation depends, without excluding both free will and grace. Williams had
previously affirmed this and had now changed sides without changing his view
of Buddhism. Jose Cabezon, professor of Tibetan studies in the University of
California at San Diego, stressed that all religions do not say the "same
thing" and that there is scope for real debate about truth. Buddhism is not
simply "passively tolerant" of Christianity. Though enlightenment does not
require divine intervention, there is a place for the help and protection of
enlightened ones. Buddhist insight depends on non-dualistic experiences
which are not simply "pleasant" but involve direct cognition of reality.
Buddhism therefore makes both truth claims and moral demands, and the
transcendence of subject-object duality does not exclude love.
In reply, Paul Williams emphatically defended his position. Buddhism
denies the possibility of a creator God and is therefore atheistic, whereas
orthodox Christianity affirms that God is the efficient, not just the final
cause of the world. Affirmations made of God are not simply metaphorical or
existential but are true of God, without disclosing the quid est of God in
Godself. Whereas most Buddhists think Christianity is irrational, the
affirmation of God's existence is entirely rational. The Buddhist reduction
of reality to "mind" doesn't work as an answer to the question "why is there
something rather than nothing?". Though the ensuing discussion was quite
technical and was carried on entirely in English, the largely
German-speaking audience was enthralled by it and participated willingly.
Ruben Habito of Southern Methodist University in Dallas, who came to St
Ottilien directly after the Los Angeles conference as president of the
Society of Buddhist-Christian Studies, gave a contrasting account of his own
journey from traditional Roman Catholicism to the twin realizations that the
God present in the Eucharist is the God made known as the Crucified One
among the suffering peasants of Asia, and that the Buddha he encountered in
Zen practice was the Dharmakaya of ultimate reality. Zen tradition "outside
the scriptures" "uses words to overturn words", and by employing "skillful
means" we can come to see how the words of the Buddha and the words of the
Gospel flow together in the practice of compassion. There is no ultimate
dichotomy between the discovery of the Crucified in the oppressed and the
discovery of the Buddha-nature in reality; different as the Spiritual
Exercises of St Ignatius and Zen practice are, there is no sui generis
religious experience that would exclude all others.
There was need of a theological framework in which to make sense of
these differing testimonies, and it was provided by Michael von Brück of the
University of Munich. For him, a theology of dual religious belonging would
have to be Trinitarian. It would have to take account of the psychological
fact that, just as all subsequent language learning is built on one's
"mother tongue", so too each of us, in the end, has "one mother" religiously
as well. This proved controversial. Von Brück maintained that "pluralism",
in the West, has political origins, whereas metaphysical and epistemological
pluralism is ultimately incoherent. Theological pluralism, however, is
conceivable as long as particular expressions of the truth are not made
mandatory for salvation. All our traditions are the result of cross-cultural
historical processes, and even the question of "truth" itself is culturally
conditioned: satya, aletheia and veritas are by no means the same. Truth
involves not just facts but experiences, which is why dual belonging, though
possible, can be emotionally difficult, and religious plurality has a
contemplative dimension. Logical consistency and emotional integration must
work hand in hand if an "inclusivistic pluralism" is to be achieved.
An established feature of Network conferences is the time reserved for
graduate students to present their research projects, which were once again
of considerable variety and interest. There were, however, relatively few
Buddhists present, and it was resolved to make Buddhist approaches to
pluralism the topic of the 2007 conference, to be co-coordinated by Perry
Schmidt-Leukel. John D'Arcy May succeeded Aasulv Lande, recently retired
from the University of Lund in Sweden, as president of the Network, new
members were invited to join the core organizing group, and it is hoped that
by 2009 it will be possible to hold a truly international conference
together with the Society of Buddhist-Christian Studies.
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