Here is where I am having a problem with this, hang with me here for a moment.
Buddhism is Zen
No, Zen is one particular form of Buddhism which originated relatively late. It’s the form that is particularly interesting to many Westerners, whether secular, Christian, and Jewish, because on the whole it’s the least “religious” and thus the easiest to transplant (and also just because it’s intrinsically interesting, with great philosophical depth, considerable accessibility, and a longstanding, profound influence on Asian art and culture).
Zen is a way of reaching deep down into yourself to find the truth.
Sort of, yes. But in Zen, as in all forms of Buddhism, the truth you find is that there is no ultimate “you” there at all–everything is interconnected.
The best comparison of Zen and Christianity I know is by the Zen master Masao Abe, found in Paul Griffiths’
Christianity through Non-Christian Eyes. He sees the fundamental disagreement being over the Christian understanding that God is independent of us. Buddhists think that there cannot possibly be any ultimate reality that is independent of the rest of reality. He also argues that Buddhists have a more profound understanding of the metaphysical underpinnings of good and evil, by denying that good is any more ontologically basic than evil. That one I have a huge problem with–and in fact he admits that in practical terms Christians have an advantage there.
One could make the case that just as Christians often wind up slightly misstating Buddhist principles, even when they are well-intentioned and fairly well-informed, so Abe doesn’t quite get Christian metaphysics. (It probably doesn’t help that he seems to have been primarily drawing on 20th-century “mainline” protestant theologians such as Paul Tillich.) So I wouldn’t conclude necessarily that there’s even as much opposition as Abe says there is. But his talk is a pretty good place to start, I think.
We believe as Catholics the GOD is the way the truth and the light.
Yes, but there’s also a strong Christian tradition of finding God through attention to one’s own interiority–this is found in Augustine’s *Confessions, *for instance.
In Buddhism you are not CENTERING CHRIST in your life.
Buddhism per se certainly doesn’t do that. But that doesn’t really address the question. The question is whether one can adhere to Buddhism while also centering Christ in one’s life. I’m not sure that one can. The examples of most of those who claim to have done so are not very encouraging. But I think we should deal with specifics and not rush to judgment as if we understood all the implications of attempting to be a “Buddhist Christian” or “Christian Buddhist.”
Edwin