If all Truth belongs to Christ, and if this woman saw some element of Truth in Buddhism, which she did not happen to see in the form of Christianity that she was exposed to previously, then you can’t say that she “rejected” Christ, not knowing what’s in her Heart.
Actually, although you are right in that Christianity and Buddhism share some truths, Holly3278 is also right that Buddhism and Christianity are contradictory, since the two religions go their separate ways in such an early impasse in their fundamentals, and thus it is inconceivable, in my mind, how the two can be mixed together.
The most fundamental basis of Buddhism, from what I can understand about it, is the
Four Noble Truths of Buddhism. A form of them are:
- Suffering exists
- Suffering arises from attachment to desires
- Suffering ceases when attachment to desire ceases
- Freedom from suffering is possible by practicing the Eightfold Path
buddhaweb.org/
Now, of course, Christianity agrees with Truth 1. Suffering DOES exist. And Christianity also agrees (up to a point) with Truth 2: Suffering DOES come from attachment to desires of this world.
However, Christianity will NEVER agree with Truth 3. Christianity believes that each and every thing in this world is not just good, but
very good: “And God saw everything that he had made, and behold, it was very good” Genesis 1:31, Therefore, even the desires of man are
very good, which is opposite of Buddhism’s view wherein the desires of man are either inconsequential or downright evil.
But if this is so, then why do we have these desires? What are they for? Christianity’s answer is the polar opposite of Truth 3, and the content of Christianity’s minor objection to Buddhism’s Second Noble Truth: man suffers when he desires ONLY the world. And herein is the reason why I do not believe Buddhism can ever compare with Christianity: I believe that Buddhism is the greatest philosophy of the entire world, and yet it is only OF the world. Gautama Buddha’s genius truly grasped life’s dilemma of man’s insatiable desires which none of this world can satisfy, and since desire cannot be satisfied, desire is man’s main and—as Buddha ingeniously grasped—only source of suffering. In other words,
despair is man’s lot in this world, and Buddha, with all of his intellect, wisdom, and experience, only saw embracing despair as the answer.
Nirvana is Siddhartha’s despair for something to love.
And herein lies Buddha’s weakness, for he had never known anything beyond this world. Man can never truly love anything of this world, or even the whole world, since his heart has a hole that cannot be filled by the entire universe, and the pleasures of this world can never fit the shape of that hole.
For you see, man’s heart has a hole in the size and shape of God.
“Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength.”
That is Christianity’s rebuttal to the Third Noble Truth: we are not to deny all of our desires, but we are actually to inflame and to build one desire, our True Desire, the desire that was given by the Creator that grasps beyond this world, til it reaches the highest heavens.
“So now faith, hope, and love abide, these three; but the greatest of these is
love.”