A friend of mine lent me his World Religions(Huston Smith) text book.
That’s a phenomenal book, but it’s not without its flaws. Sometimes Smith sticks so much to western terminology (understandable, given his target audience) that certain chapters about eastern religions sometimes inadvertently minimize/belittle the things that set those religions - and the cultures of which they’re a part - apart from western religions.
The chapter on Hinduism is especially guilty of that in my opinion.
I ended up reading the chapters on Christianity, Hinduism, and Buddhism. The 3 religions all shared notable storys and teachings such as:
Mara trying to tempt Buddha (Jesus in the desert with the Devil)
The ideas of acceptance of God.
The stages of life (Sacraments),
The idea of letting go of material items to follow God or a deeper calling.
The 10 Commandments and Path of Renunciation (refrain from certain things for God)
Love, joy, and peace and a lifestyle free from guilt.
These are all deep basic ideas that all trace back to morality, and the idea of 1 God; living a better lifestyle. In a sense, they all seem the same on ground level. Is it possible to be Christian but agree and follow some Hinduist and Buddhist ideas?
The things that unite the three religions - especially the arbitrary concrete details certain stories share - are so vague and universal that I think your very question is invalid.
For instance, “ideas that all trace back to morality” - if you incorporate certain practices in line with it into your Christian life, that’s probably fine, but are you really “following some Hindu and Buddhist ideas?” Not really. There’s nothing particularly Hindu or Buddhist about things like following common-sense moral precepts, practicing self-sacrifice in the service of some higher goal, etc. Those things are present in most human cultures.
Hinduism and Buddhism are very different from Christianity. In the end, the only similarities are either (a) in arbitrary details (Mara tempted Buddha? So what? temptation stories are a nearly universal cultural motif), or (b) in broad principles that nearly all human societies share (stages of life, letting go, moral principles…)
When one responsibly engages in specificity, one finds that Christianity is different than Hinduism and Buddhism on some extremely important levels: reincarnation, pantheism,
anatta, etc.
I guess I see religion a little differently. There is only one God, but every religion has their own name for Him, whether it’s Buddha, Christ, Shiva, or Jesus.
That’s a hugely problematic assertion, however, because religions that believe in each of the entities you cite have wildly different conceptions of the divine. It’s simply academically irresponsible to pretend that they’re different names for the same thing:
Buddha: claimed not to be a god. Regardless, Buddhists wouldn’t care if he were “god” in any sense, but rather in his dharma (teachings) and status as enlightened.
Christ: Greek word for the Hebrew “Messiah/Anointed One” and regarded as God in a specifically Trinitarian Judeo-Christian sense
Shiva: A Hindu god, and Hindu concepts of the divine are pantheistic and therefore about as removed from the Jewish philosophical tradition - in which Christianity finds itself - as you can get.
And the list goes on…
The practices of each are very different, but if we all get to the same place, God, what’s the difference?
Why do you assume that all religions lead to the same place? “Union with God” is
not the goal of every religion (Buddhism? Confucianism?), and even in those in which it is, like Hinduism and Christianity, the very phrase means almost entirely different things.
If Buddhism and Christianity are in any way compatible, it would
only be precisely
because they’re so very different that they barely overlap (though when they do, usually they conflict unless we’re sticking to things that every human culture believes anyway).
Isn’t it a bit arrogant to say which way to God is correct because then we are speaking for God?
Well, if you’re a follower of Jesus Christ, you ought to take seriously His claim that “No one comes to the Father except through me” and that “Whoever believes and is baptized will be saved; whoever does not believe will be condemned.” It’s not
we who are applying this exclusivity; it’s a part of Jesus’ own teachings…
Can’t we approach God from different angles?
Sure, but what if
God approached
us at a certain angle? That would surely be the surest route, and it is precisely the Christian claim about the person of Jesus.