About From Jesus to Buddha: An Insider's View of Christianity & Buddhism by Narinda. This website are devoted to exploring the Christian heart, mindset and culture from a native Buddhist perspective.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Jesus OutShines Buddha?

NAMO TASSA BHAGAVATO ARAHATO SAMMASAMBUDDHASSA
NAMO TASSA BHAGAVATO ARAHATO SAMMASAMBUDDHASSA
NAMO TASSA BHAGAVATO ARAHATO SAMMASAMBUDDHASSA
Translation: May veneration be presented to the exalted one who is a Buddha and who has achieved enlightenment by himself righteously.

Please click here to read the article: Jesus OutShines Buddha?

By Bhikkhu aggacitto


If anyone would like to contact the author of this article or anything else his e-mail address is: revaggacitto7@gmail.com

Monday, October 26, 2009

Did Jesus Live In India? I

We usually think of the process of myth-making as something that happened in ancient times and over many centuries. Not so. Myth-making is alive and well and the myths made today spread faster and become more widely accepted than in the past mainly because of modern communications. Take the 'Jesus lived in India' myth for example. In 1894 a Russian journalist, Nicalos Notovitch about who little is known, published a book called The Unknown Life of Jesus which was rapidly translated into English and several other languages and attracted a much attention. In the book, Notovitch claimed that during a journey to Ladakh in 1887 he had broken a leg, been put up at the famous Himis Monastery and while there the abbot had read out to him an ancient document called Life of Saint Issa, Best of the Sons of Men. It told of Jesus' visit to Kashmir/Ladakh/Tibet where he studied with Buddhist masters and of his eventual return to Palestine where he taught, was crucified and died. Some years later a Jewish merchant visiting Kashmir/Ladakh/Tibet met the teachers of Jesus, heard of Jesus and wrote an account of his 'unknown years.' Notovitch claimed that the life of Issa was fairly well-known in Kashmir etc and even that detailed accounts of his life in India were to be found hidden away in the Vatican's secret archives. In other words, Notovitch's story had all the ingredients that would make it an irresistible to certain people - the 'wisdom of the East', the romance of the Himalayas, an alternative to conventional Christianity and a good old-fashioned Catholic conspiracy. The book attracted a lot of attention despite being panned by most reviewers.
But then the big guns were brought to bear on it. Prof. Max Muller, the most widely known and respected scholar of his generation gave his verdict on Notovitch's book. He started by pointing out that despite the claim that the life of Issa was well-known it did not appear in any of the catalogues of the literature of Tibet (and there many of these catalogues, some of them very ancient). He continued by highlighting some of the extraordinary coincident in the book. 'If we understand Mr. Notovitch rightly, this life of Christ was taken down from the mouths of some Jewish merchants who came to India immediately after the Crucifixion.' Muller asked how these Jewish merchants happened, among the uncounted millions of India, to meet 'the very people who had known Issa as a casual student of Sanskrit and Pali in India…and still more how those who had known Issa as a simple student in India, saw at once that he was the same person who had been put to death under Pontius Pilate…Two things in their account are impossible, or next to impossible. The first, that the Jews from Palestine who came to India in about 35 A.D should have met the very people who had known Issa when he was a student at Benares; the second, that this Sutra of Issa, composed in the first century of our era, should not have found a place either in the Kandjur or in the Tandjur.' As Muller was writing his article about Notovitch's book he receive a letter from an Englishwoman friend who happened to have just visited Himis Monastery. It was dated Leh, Ladakh, June 29, 1894, and read in part, 'Yesterday we were at the great Himis monastery, the largest Buddhist monastery up here, - 800 lamas. Did you hear of a Russian who could not gain admittance to the monastery in any way, but at last broke his leg outside and was taken in? His object was to copy a Buddhist life of Christ which is there. He says he got it and has published it since in French. There is not a single word of truth in the whole story! There has been no Russian here. No one has been taken into the Seminary for the past fifty years with a broken leg!'
In June 1895 Professor J. Archibald Douglas of Agra wrote a letter to the papers concerning Notovitch. He was at that time a guest in the Himis monastery, enjoying the hospitality of the very abbot who was supposed to have imparted the Unknown Life to Notovitch. Douglas found that no memory of any foreigner with a broken leg lingered at Leh or at Himis. The abbot of Hemis indignantly repudiated the statements ascribed to him by Notovitch, and said that no traveler with a broken leg had ever been nursed at the monastery. He stated with emphasis that no such work as the 'Life of Issa' was known in Tibet, and that the statement that he had imparted such a record to a traveler was an invention. When Notovitch's book was read to him he exclaimed with indignation, "Lies, lies, lies, nothing but lies!" Further, the abbot had not received from Notovitch the presents Notovitch reported having given him - a watch, an alarm clock, and a thermometer. In fact, he didn’t even know what a thermometer was. The Victorians took great note of their scholars and scientists and The Unknown Life of Jesus Christ quickly lost its appeal and was relegated to well-deserved obscurity.
But literary frauds (and there are many of them) have an amazing ability to hang on - just think of the Book of Mormon, the Protocol of the Elders of Zion and the Mahatma Letters (these last two perpetrated by Russians incidently). The Unknown Life of Jesus Christ was to become anything but 'unknown' and to take on a life of its own.

Source: http://sdhammika.blogspot.com/2009/02/did-jesus-live-in-india-i.html

Did Jesus Live In India? II

In 1908 Levi H Dowling published The Aquarian Gospel of Jesus the Christ which he had been able to download from the 'akasic records' and which included a chapter on Jesus' life in India. The book only circulated amongst a few theosophists and other cranks. But in 1926 a newspaper in America reported the discovery in a monastery in Tibet of a lost Life of Saint Issa, Best of the Sons of Men ( a rehash of Notovitch's story), other papers, first in America and later overseas, took up the story and it came into popular consciousness again. This pumped a bit of life into the myth and allowed it to hang on until the 1960's. With the growth of the New Age movement in that decade the 'Jesus lived in India' myth really became firmly established (we could call it an 'urban myth' although I think its quite popular in rural areas too).
Since then a small and rather profitable industry has developed around the myth. There are more than two dozen books dedicated entirely to the subject, many others allude to it as fact and there are literally hundreds of articles about it. There are several pseudo-documentaries about it too. We even have authentic pictures of Jesus during his Indian sojourn - meditating, backpacking through the Himalayas and on the cover of Elizabeth Clare prophet's book staring wistfully at Lamyuru Monastery in Ladakh, founded in the 10th century CE, a thousand years after Jesus. Recently a Jesus Thanka, a Tibetan painted scroll, has been 'found' (it was only a matter of time I suppose). A quick examination of this thanka, particularly the careless and hasty brush strokes on the outlines and the use of chemical pigments, shows that it was painted by one of those artists from Katmandu who knock out fake thankas for tourists. I would date it circa 2000.
With each new publication more 'facts' come to light, more details are 'discovered' and more sayings of Jesus emerge, so that now the account of his life in India is longer and more well-documented than his life in Palestine. Here are some of the more popular books on the subject. King of Travelers - Jesus Lost Years in India by Edward Martin, The Lost Years of Jesus Revealed by Charles H Potter, Jesus Lived in India by Halgen Kersten, Jesus In India by H. N.G. Ahmed, Jesus of India by Maury Lee, Jesus in India by James Deardorff (by this stage authors are struggling to think of titles that do not contain the words 'Jesus,' 'lived' and 'India'), The Mystery of Israel's Ten Lost Tribes and the Legend of Jesus in India by J. M. Benjamin, A Search for the Historical Jesus by Fida Hassnain, Jesus in Heaven on Earth by K. N. Ahmad and Christ in Kashmir by Aziz Kashmiri.
Now you have to admit, this is rather fascinating. More fascinating still is that there is not an iota, not a shred, not an atom of evidence that Jesus ever left Palestine. Not one inscription, not one fragment of ancient parchment and not one 'legend' or 'account' that can be traced back before the late 19th century. There isn’t even a puff of smoke and a few mirrors.


Indeed, the evidence that Jesus even lived in Palestine is scarce enough. Nearly all historians accept that there was a person called Yehoshua (Joshua) of Nazareth (Jesus is an Anglicized pronunciation of the Greek attempt to say Joshua. An equivalent of this is if the English had gone to Thailand in the 17th century and had attempted to say the Thai pronunciation for 'Buddha' which is something like Putowar, and we today were calling the Buddha Putohyouare) who attracted attention sometime between around 29-35 CE. But curiously, the earliest documents to mention Jesus, the letters of St Paul, (a man who never met Jesus and whose letters make up nearly half the New Testament) contain hardly a single quotation of Jesus. The four Gospels date from between 35 and 70 years after the death of Jesus and no scholars consider them to be written by the direct disciples of Jesus or to be eyewitness accounts. That somebody named Jesus lived, taught and attracted attention there is little doubt, that he went to India there is no more evidence than that he went to Newfoundland, Outer Mongolia or Polynesia.



Except for Dowling's 1908 'akasic records' all the early books on Jesus in India relied on statements like 'it is widely believed', 'in Kashmir ancient tradition says', 'historians think it is possible that', i.e. they make at least some pretence at drawing on ancient evidence. But as the myth has become more accepted 'evidence' is asserted as if it were general knowledge. The confidence with which this is done doesn't even bother to take into account genuine and well-established facts. Swami Satyasangananda of the Bihar School of Yoga in his book on Indian gurus, for example, writes that Jesus studied at Nalanda, disregarding the unimpeachable fact that Nalanda wasn’t founded until about 350 years after Jesus death. But hey! We're talking about belief here and when belief takes up the front see seats facts sit at the back. Source: http://sdhammika.blogspot.com/2009/02/did-jesus-live-in-india-ii.html

Did Jesus Live In India? III

(1) The belief seems to be that there should be some information about Jesus' first 27 or 28 years and because there isn’t the information that was there must have been 'lost.' The reality is that there probably never was any information about Jesus' early life, undoubtedly because he did nothing during that time but hammer in nails, saw logs and plane planks. The situation is similar with the Buddha. Other than a few details about his birth, the fact that he was from a privileged background and the names of some of the members of his family, we know almost nothing about the Buddha until he renounced the world to become a monk. Nearly everything we do 'know' about those 30 years is legends from a later period. The first, second and third generation of Buddhists were mainly interested in what the Buddha taught, not what he did before he became a monk. Incidentally, we know almost nothing about Shakespeare for the same reason. People only became interested in the man several generations after he died, by which time all the people who knew him were dead. We know nothing about Fred Smith of No 32 Railway Cuttings, East Cheam either - quite simply because he did never did anything of any significance beyond his own family (if he had one). If he had shot the prime minister, invented the can opener or painted a masterpiece someone would have taken some notice of him and recorded some facts about him. There are no 'lost years' of Jesus.

(2) During Notovitch's time it was already known that there was some contact between the Roman Empire and India and it was assumed that most of this was by land. Consequently Notovitch claimed that Jesus went to India by land. Now we know that most direct Roman-Indian contact was by sea. Many of the books about the 'Jesus lived in India' myth have maps showing the supposed route Jesus took to India. Such maps prove nothing. A map showing the Buddhas route up the east coast of Australia may well look 'official' or 'authentic' but it is not evidence that the Buddha made such a trip.

(3) Notovitch claims to have traveled through Ladakh/Tibet in 1885. That the British India Secret Service has no record of him having done so is very strong evidence that he never did. The last decades of the 19th century were the height of the Great Game, the imperialist competition between Britain and Russia. The North-west Frontier Agency, Gilgit/Swat/Kashmir/Ladakh, was perhaps the most sensitive and closely watched border in the world at that time. It was said that a third of the population were spies for the British and the other two thirds spied on the spies. The presence of a Russian 'journalist' (read 'spy') snooping around Ladakh, which was under British suzerainty, would have set off alarm bells in Calcutta and Simla. It is highly unlikely that Notovitch would have been given permission to enter Ladakh and if he was he would have been followed every inch of the way. And yet his name does not appear in any official British documents.

(4) Some later versions of the 'Jesus lived in India' myth say that Jesus studied Buddhism at Hemis Monastery, no doubt a detail originating in a careless reading of Notovitch's claim that he heard about Issa while convalescing at this monastery. The problem with this claim is that Hemis Monastery was only founded 1672, quite a few centuries after Jesus. In 1989 I stayed at Hemis as the guest of a senior monk there and had the good fortune to witness the famous Hemis Festival. I asked my host about the Jesus story. He groaned, rolled his eyes upwards and told me that Westerners often come to the monastery and ask about Jesus and that some of the younger monks string them along for both fun and profit - mainly for profit.

(5) Notovitch claimed that the document about Jesus which was read to him was written in Pali, probably because he knew enough about oriental studies to know that it was the oldest Buddhist language. Had he known just a little more he would have claimed the book was in Sanskrit which was by far a more widely used language. And if it were in Pali it is virtually impossible that a monk in Ladakh or Tibet in the 19th century would have known or even known about this language.

(6) Despite Notovitch's claim that the Issa story was well-known in the Himalayan region, no copy of this text has ever been found, nor are there any quotations from it or even a mention of it in other ancient writings. The famous Blue Annals (Deb-ther sngon-po) for example, chronicles the early history of Buddhism in India and Tibet and refers to hundreds of scriptures and hundreds of teachers but makes no mention of Issa or his biography.

(7) Those who accept the 'Jesus lived in India' myth usually make much of the supposed tomb of Jesus in Kashmir. According to the original 1894 tale, Jesus came to India and then returned to Palestine where he was executed. A later expanded version of the story (myth have a tendency to grow) says that he survived the crucifixion, decided that the Jews weren't worth the effort, and returned to India where he lived happily ever after and finally died. Now I have not been able to find any archaeological account of Jesus' tomb so I'm going to give you my conjectures on it. It is hardly surprising that there should be such a tomb. Muslims have always considered Jesus to be one of the prophets of God, at least at some period there may have been a desire to have or visit some 'relic' of this prophet, and as it the case of pilgrimage in all religions, the law of demand and supply operates. When the devote want a relic or a holy site, one inevitably emerges. The inscription on the supposed tomb mentioning Jesus proves nothing. It is in Arabic script so it must date from after the 14th century when Kashmir became Islamic, although its probably much later and likely rather recent. Further, judging by from the photos of the inscription it looks more like graffiti. The great gate at the entrance of the Taj Mahal in Agra has the names of all the prophets revered in Islam carved on it, including the name of Jesus. This does not prove that Jesus visited the Taj.

(8) The other evidence that Jesus went to India and studied with Buddhist masters is the supposed similarities between some passages in the Buddhist scriptures and the Bible. Perhaps it's just because I'm out-of-step with current trends but I have always considered this to be the weakest of all the 'evidence' that Jesus did go to India and have contact with the Dhamma. If Jesus knew the Dhamma you would expect there to be some reference to Buddhism's most characteristic teachings - the Four Noble Truths, the Eightfold Path, etc. Instead, we have a few vaguely similar similes, sayings and parables, most of which are found in other religious traditions too and which could have been borrowed from a common source. On the other hand, when we compare Jesus' parables, similes, theology and sometimes phrases or even whole sentences, they look very like a continuation of the great Jewish sages and teachers who preceded him. Almost everything he said fits well with the Jewish world-view and Jewish spirituality from around the first millennium. His few ideas which do deviate from Jewish tradition (in the John's Gospel 'I am God') have no parallel in Buddhism. And his beloved Kashmir and the Himalayas? Why didn’t he make at least one or two references to them? If Jesus had studied with Buddhist masters the Bible would contain much more wisdom than it does.

Years ago I happened to be in a remote Sri Lankan village and amongst the supplies I had was a few cans of food and one of those can openers with a sharp disk which you put on the rim of the can and turn with the handle. An old Sinhalese govitang who must have never seen such a can opener before, looked at and said, 'Meka carika vage' (Like a car). At first I laughed at this; a can opener doesn't look anything like a car. But then I became intrigued and asked the old man what he meant. He said, in affect, that both have wheels, both have moving parts, both are made of metal and both perform a task. He mentioned how like turning the handle of the can opener and having the wheel go round was to putting a key in the ignition and having the car's wheels move. An interesting way at looking at it! In my opinion, the similarities between Buddhism and Christianity are like the similarities between a can opener and a car.
The picture is of the supposed tomb of Jesus in Kashmir.

Source: http://sdhammika.blogspot.com/2009/02/did-jesus-live-in-india-iii.html

Friday, October 23, 2009

Where was Jesus for 18 years? Missing in Bible !

The Hidden Story of Jesus

Venerable Aggacitto

About Venerable Aggacitto

He describing himself as follow: I am a homeless missionary Buddhist Monk. We take our lineage from the Tipataka Scripture, Vinaya Pataka (Mahavagga Ch.11) "Go ye now o bhikkhus,a... (More) I am a homeless missionary Buddhist Monk. We take our lineage from the Tipataka Scripture, Vinaya Pataka (Mahavagga Ch.11) "Go ye now o bhikkhus,and wander for the gain of the many,for the welfare of the many, out of compassion for the world, for the good ,for the gain,and for the welfare of gods and men.Let not two of you go the same way.Preach o bhikkhus, the doctrine which is glorious in the beginning, glorious in the middle and glorious at the end, in the spirit and in the letter; proclaim a consummate, perfect, and pure life of holiness.There are beings whose mental eyes are covered by scarcely any dust,but if the Doctrine is not preached to them, they cannot attain salvation.They will understand the Doctrine. And I will go also,o bhikkhus,to Uruvela, to Senaninigama, in order to preach the Doctrine". I enjoy religious study in general as well as Tipataka study in particular, contemplation (vipassana) meditation (samadhi),meeting new people and experiencing new places.

Interests

Venerable Shravasti Dhammika

Shravasti Dhammika was born in Australia in 1951 into a Christian family and converted to Buddhism at the age of 18. In 1973 he went to Thailand with the intention of becoming a monk and from there to Laos, Burma and finally to India. For the next three years, he traveled around India learning yoga and meditation and finally ordained under Venerable Matiwella Sangharatna, the last disciple of Anagarika Dharmapala.

In 1976 he went to Sri Lanka where he studied Pali at Sri Lanka Vidyalaya and later became one of the co-founders of the Nilambe Meditation Centre and one of its teachers. Since then, he has spent most of his time in Sri Lanka and Singapore.

Bhante Dhammika had written over 25 books and scores of articles on Buddhism and related subjects. He is also well-known for his public talks and represented Theravada Buddhism at the European Buddhist Millennium Conference in Berlin in 2000. Go to the following link for recent update on Venerable Dhammika: http://sdhammika.blogspot.com/

Venerable Shravasti Dhammika is a distinguished lecturer and Buddhist monk from Australia. He has spoken on Buddhism and Asian religions in universities and on television and radio in Australia and throughout Asia.

Ven Dhammaika is the author of many popular books on Buddhism:

All About Buddhism - published by BDMS 1
An in-depth study of the Buddha's teachings. Ideal as a textbook for an introductory Dhamma course.

Good Question, Good Answer - published by Sukhi Hotu Dhamma Publication (Also available as a BuddhaNet eBook)

Questions on: What is Buddhism? Basic Buddhist Concepts, The Buddhist Scriptures, About Monks and Nuns, Rebirth, Vegetarianism, Becoming a Buddhist, Buddhism and the God-idea, and many more are answered by Ven. Dhammika.

Matreceta's Hymn to the Buddha - published by BDMS
A translation of 1st Century Buddhist devotional literature.

Buddha Vacana - published by BDMS
Daily readings from the sacred literature of Buddhism

Navel of the Earth - published by BDMS
An account of the history and legends surrounding Bodh Gaya, the most sacred of the Buddhist sites.

Buddha and His Disciples - published by BDMS (Also available as a BuddhaNet eBook)
Discover what the Buddha was like through his interactions with his contemporaries.

Middle Land Middle Way - published by BDMS
A comprehensive guidebook to the Buddha's India.

The Edicts of King Asoka - published by BDMS
A small anthology of 210 verses from the Pali Tipitaka.

Encounters with Buddhism - published by BDMS
Essays by people from both East and West, telling of their conversion to Buddhism.

Sayings of the Buddha - published by BDMS
Selected saying from the Pali Tipitaka.

Rahula Leads the Way - published by BDMS (Also available as a BuddhaNet eBook)
A book for children with delightful full-colour illustrations - co-authored and illustrated by Susan Harmer.

The Buddha and His Friends - published by Times Books International
The life of the Buddha and related stories in full-colour cartoon format, co-authored and illustrated by Susan Harmer.


1 The Buddha Dhamma Mandala Society (BDMS) is dedicated to making known the Teaching of the Buddha by publishing books and organising talks and Dhamma courses. For more information, please write or visit us at 56/A, Balestier Road, Singapore 329884 or call 02 352 2859

Thursday, October 22, 2009

God Spelled Backwards

Most people believe dogs are very close to God. Why? Because after all DOG is God spelled backwards.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Did Jesus Study Buddhism? (BBC) Did Jesus learn what he knew from India? Where was Jesus and what was he doing from ages 12-30?

Goodbye Buddha Hello Jesus - A Classic Example Of Lying Christian Propaganda

NAMO TASSA BHAGAVATO ARAHATO SAMMASAMBUDDHASSA
NAMO TASSA BHAGAVATO ARAHATO SAMMASAMBUDDHASSA
NAMO TASSA BHAGAVATO ARAHATO SAMMASAMBUDDHASSA

Translation: May veneration be presented to the enlightened one who is a Buddha
and has achieved enlightenment by himself righteously.

Goodbye Buddha Hello Jesus

A Classic Example Of Lying Christian Propaganda

By Bhikkhu aggacitto



All scripture quoted is from the Pali Canon Tipataka which is the oldest known extant writing from the oral tradition of what the Venerable Gotama (Buddha) taught his disciples as dhamma (teaching).

Recently I came across the “Heavens Family’’ website .The caption read “Goodbye Buddha Hello Jesus”, and I was intrigued. Upon reading the article though it seems as if this must be one of those bogus stories fabricated for the purpose of assisting them in their donation and conversion efforts while allowing them a format to take a few very misinformed shots at the Buddhist monastic sangha (community) and at the Buddhist teaching as well.
Note the clandestine feel of this article, which serves to help further their objectives.

Okay, first things first…I doubt that the Buddhist monks for reasons apparent that grace the beginning of this web site article were aware that their image and likeness would be used for a Christian evangelical web site. Not that the “Heavens Family” could care less of course! The only other photographs for this article are of ‘David’ the presumed author and a blurred secret identity styled photo allegedly of the Buddhist monk who is a “secret disciple of Jesus”.

We read in this article about a Burmese Buddhist monk who is a supposed “secret disciple of Jesus” but if any one should look closer this story becomes very suspicious. In the first paragraph it states that they met secretly, where he has lived for the past thirty years and that he only had a limited amount of time to be missing from the monastery.

We met secretly, in the morning. He had only a limited amount of time to be missing from the monastery where he’s lived for the past thirty years. To be absent too long might arouse suspicion among the sixty other Buddhist monks with whom he resides.

I’m sure that this is written to give the impression that the Buddhist monastery is comparable to some sort of oppressive religious prison where the other monks are always keeping an eye on you, but as a Theravada Buddhist monk myself I assure you all that after living there for the past thirty years he would not have such a concern.

Our hour together was one of the highlights of my recent three weeks in Myanmar, a Buddhist nation where Heaven’s Family has been working for the past six years. More details of that monk’s fascinating story follow in this update, along with four other encouraging reports .All of them are only a sample of the good that is being accomplished around the world because of your compassion. Thanks for being a part of Heaven’s Family.---David

From inside his saffron robe he drew a New Testament. He’s read it six times through so far, and I noted that many verses were underlined .He told me that his favorite one was John 14:6,and then he quoted it: “I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father but through Me.” He is a Buddhist monk who is a secret disciple of Jesus.

How convenient for their article that this would be his fave Christian scripture!

Trying to decipher the doctrines of Buddhism has been compared to searching for a black cat in a dark room in which there really is no cat. Not an easy task.

It is interesting here to note that the author acknowledges that he is basically “in the dark”
when it comes to the Buddha dhamma (teaching) . This is why no explanation follows this sort of statement.

The author then quotes from the Kalama Sutta of the Auguttara NIkaya 3.65
In this sutta the Venerable Gotama gives a discourse on the value of spiritual inquiry.
He does not discuss from what sutta he is actually paraphrasing, after all why would he want someone to know? They might look it up and learn something factual about the Buddhist spiritual path.

There is however, one of Buddha’s teaching that makes very good sense:

Do not accept anything by mere tradition….Do not accept anything just because it accords wth your scriptures…..Do not accept anything merely because it agrees with your preconceived notions….

Now lets take a look at what the pertinent part of the Kalama Sutta actually says shall we?

“And this aversive person overcome by aversion, he mind possessed by aversion, kills living beings, takes what is not given, goes after another person’s wife, tells lies ,and induces others to do likewise, all of which is for long-term harm & suffering.”

“Yes, lord.”

“Now, what do you think, Kalamas? When delusion arises in a person, does it arise for welfare or for harm?”

“For harm, lord.”

“And this deluded person, overcome by delusion, his mind possessed by delusion, kills living beings, takes what s not given, goes after another person’s wife, tells lies, and induces others to do likewise, all of which is for long-term harm & suffering.”

“Yes, lord.”

“So what do you think, Kalamas: Are these qualities skillful or unskillful?”

“Unskillful, lord.”

“Blameworthy or blameless?”

“Blameworthy, lord.”

“Criticized by the wise, or praised by the wise?

“Criticized by the wise, lord,”

“When adopted & carried out, do they lead to harm & to suffering, or not?”

“When adopted & carried out, they lead to harm & to suffering. That is how it appears to us.”

So, as I said , Kalamas: ‘Don’t go by reports, by legends, by traditions, by scripture, by logical conjecture, by inference, by analogies, by agreement through pondering views, by probability, or by the thought, “This contemplative is our teacher .”When you know for yourselves that,” These qualities are unskillful; these qualities are blameworthy; these qualities are criticized by the wise; these qualities, when adopted & carried out, lead to harm & to suffering”- then you should abandon them,’ Thus was it said. And in reference to this was it said.

"Now, Kalamas, don't go by reports, by legends, by traditions, by scripture, by logical conjecture, by inference, by analogies, by agreement through pondering views, by probability, or by the thought, 'This contemplative is our teacher.' When you know for yourselves that, 'These qualities are skillful; these qualities are blameless; these qualities are praised by the wise; these qualities, when adopted & carried out, lead to welfare & to happiness' — then you should enter & remain in them.

Perhaps it would be good if the author read more of this particular sutta.

Thankfully, some of Buddha’s followers heed his advice regarding the traditions, scriptures and preconceived notions of Buddhism, and they’re turning to Jesus. One of them attended Chuck King’s recent pastor’s conference in Myanmar (Burma).

For the first forty years of his life he was a Muslim, and he was known as Raja Mohammed Adam. From reading the Koran, he learned about Jesus, respecting Him as a prophet. But Islam did not fulfill Raja’s deepest spiritual yearnings. Most of the citizens of his country were Buddhists, and Raja was quite familiar with their numerous temples that dotted Myanmar’s landscape. Hoping to find what he was searching for, he joined the ranks of the Buddhist monks who roam the streets each morning, barefoot, begging for rice. He moved into a monastery, and his name was changed to -------------.

Buddhist believe that all suffering stems from unfulfilled desire, so Buddhist monks attempt to restrain their desires, following a path of asceticism. But after twenty- seven years of begging, fasting, meditation and celibacy, ------------ still hadn’t found what he was searching for. So he borrowed a Bible. As he read through the four Gospels, he encountered a different Jesus than he had learned about through Islam. Jesus was much more than a prophet. He was the Creator and Master--- in the flesh. As he read, it seemed as if Jesus was saying to him,

“You are just like a Pharisee.”------------ was cut to the heart. He decided to repent and follow Jesus. That was three years ago.

After thirty years of being a monk, and now at age seventy in one of Asia’s poorest nations,--------is afraid to leave his monastery, not knowing how he would survive. But he is looking for an opportunity, and he knows that his fellow monks are very suspicious and watching him closely. He told me he would renounce his robe immediately if he had a way of escape. Please pray for him as we work on a strategy to help him with the exodus for which he longs.

Let us now make a note of a few things:

This Buddhist monk supposedly was a Muslim by the name of Raja Mohammed Adam for the first forty years of his life. This Buddhist monk has been a monk it is claimed for thirty years now. This Buddhist monk is now supposedly a convert to Christianity.

Now let us all sit back and imagine for a moment just what a spiritual jewel this would be for any Christian evangelical organization!
Certainly with expert knowledge of the Qur’an and the Pali Canon Tipataka!
How devastating a witnessing tool it would be to have someone who was a Muslim for forty years and a Buddhist monk for thirty years to now witness for Jesus as a part of their ministry in Myanmar a largely Buddhist nation, where they have been working for the past six years!

“Buddhist believe that all suffering stems from unfulfilled desire, so Buddhist monks attempt to restrain their desires, following a path of asceticism.”

If this were true then ending suffering would entail the Buddhist fulfilling as many unfulfilled desires as possible! Not following a path of asceticism!

No wonder he can’t find the cat in the dark!

Suffering stems from wrong view. I will refer the “Heavenly Family” to the Pali Canon Tipataka Sutta Pitaka- Majjhima Nikaya #9, the Sammaditthi Sutta.

As he read, it seemed as if Jesus was saying to him, “You are just like a Pharisee.”------------was cut to the heart. He decided to repent and follow Jesus.

This should be recognized as fabricated story line material to allow this organization the cheap opportunity to call the Buddhist monastic sangha (community) “---just like a Pharisee”

He told me he would renounce his robe immediately if he had a way of escape. Please pray for him as we work on a strategy to help him with the exodus for which he longs.

They presumably need a strategy to help him with the exodus for which he longs? Okay so lets get this straight…They will use what we are to believe is his story to assist their Christian evangelical efforts but not him as an outreach worker and a willing convert to Christianity in a nation where they have been working for the past six years, giving him the “exodus for which he longs”?!! Certainly they should be able to find something meaningful for such a jewel of a Christian convert!

One might say… “Well he is afraid of negative repercussions” Really? From whom would such negative repercussions come from?
The other Buddhist monks and laity who would wish him well? Or would that be from the ruling military junta who would not mind at all seeing one less Buddhist monk in the world when many of them are busy looking to shoot and otherwise execute us?
Should we believe that this alleged convert to Christianity would rather engage in the fraudulent behavour of pretending to be a sincere Buddhist monk when in fact he is not?
Is that what he has presumably learned for the past three years as a Christian?

Yes, this story is apparently one of those bogus stories designed to help them in their donation and conversion efforts. The “Heavenly Family” know that if they can convince the people in Myanmar (Burma) that this is true then that might be almost as good as having the real thing.

I wish you all the very best of all things spiritual.

Bhikhu aggacitto


If anyone would like to contact me regarding this article or anything else my e mail address is revaggacitto7@gmail.com If anyone would like a reliable source for Buddha dhamma(teaching),I would recommend accesstoinsight.org and dhammaprotector.blogspot.com/

Book Review: From Buddha To Jesus, An Insider's View of Buddhism and Christianity

by Venerable Shravasti Dhammika, The Buddhist Channel, Feb 20, 2009

Singapore -- A book on Buddhism has just been published that has apparently created some interest within evangelical Christian circles. The book is called From Buddha to Jesus and the author, Steve Cioccolanti, is of Thai-Western extraction and pastor of a church in Melbourne, Australia. Both in his website and once in his book (p.13) Cioccolanti says he was a Buddhist and thus his book has the subtitle 'An Insiders View of Buddhism and Christianity'.


He mentions that when he called himself a 'deist' he apparently wore a 'white Buddha' around his neck and a cross (p.14). On his website he says he came from a family of Catholics, Methodists, Buddhists and Muslims. This suggests to me that Cioccolanti came from a very nominally religious, not to say a religiously confused, background and that he was never a Buddhist in any meaningful sense. By the seventh page of the book it becomes abundantly clear that this is the case.


Cioccolanti claims that his book is an account - not of Buddhist philosophy, the Buddhism of the sacred scriptures - but of Buddhism 'as it is actually lived' (p.13). He is anxious to help Westerns see that Buddhism 'on the ground' differs a great deal from 'real' Buddhism. That may be true, but surely it’s the same with Christianity 'as it is actually lived'. To give but one example. The southern United States, the so-called Bible Belt, has the highest percentage of churchgoers in the USA and some 84% of Christians there describe themselves as being either evangelical or 'born-again.' And yet it has long been and continues to be even today the most racially bigoted part of the US. Blacks and whites don’t mix and never is the South more segregated than on Sunday morning. Blacks and whites will not even worship the same God together and 200 years of fervent churchgoing has not been able to change this sad situation. Buddhism 'as it is actually lived' is sometimes not very inspiring but nor is Christianity.

However, despite the claim that he is only going to examine Buddhism 'as it is actually lived' Cioccolanti fails to keep his word. Throughout his book he describes various popular Thai superstitions, belief or customs and then a few pages later attributes them to the Buddha or says that they are based on canonical teachings. For example, he tells a story (p.144.pp) not found in the Tipitaka, the commentaries or the sub-commentaries and which is either a village folk story or one of his own fabrication (he gives no source). Then a little later (p.149) he discusses this story as if it were the authoritative words of the Buddha. This slight-of-hand enables him to give the impression that Buddhism is a mishmash of confused and contradictory ideas.

Another trick he pulls is to say 'Buddhists believe…' and then describe some Thai misunderstanding of the Dhamma, whereas in fact most of the things he describes are specifically Thai and unknown in other Buddhist lands. For example, he says that according to Buddhism a woman 'can never give food directly into a monk's hands' (p.117). So poor is Cioccolanti's knowledge of Buddhism that he is unaware that this is a custom unique to Thailand and not practiced in Sri Lanka, Burma, Bhutan, Tibet, Mongolia, China, Korea or Japan. It is not a 'Buddhist' teaching, it is a Thai custom. Like many Thais, Cioccolanti labors under the conceit that what's done in Thailand is Buddhism.

The third trick Cioccolanti uses is the old and well-worn one of attributing to your opponent an idea that they don’t hold and then demonstrating that this idea is wrong, foolish or untrue. This is his main strategy. So for example, he insists again and again that Buddhism teaches that you cannot go to heaven/attain enlightenment if you break any of the moral rules, that it is impossible to follow all these rules and that as a result Buddhists live lives of frustration, disappointment and despair and go straight to hell when they die.

To make this sound like an even more hopeless situation he discusses some of the 227 Vinaya rules, sometimes correctly saying that these are for monks and nuns but at other times muddying the water so as to give the impression that lay people are expected to abide by these rules too (p.56;75). He even goes as far as to claim that all the Vinaya rules were incumbent on every Buddhists but because the monks realized that it was impossible for 'commoners' to follow them all they 'have brought it down to 5', i.e. the five Precepts (p.75). This is utter nonsense.

As every monk and all informed lay people know, the Vinaya rules are for the clergy and consist of moral rules, rules of etiquette, for the smooth running of the monastic community and for harmonious communal living. Nowhere did the Buddha suggest that it was only possible to attain enlightenment by following these rules. He taught the exact opposite. For example, he said that the minor Vinaya rules could be changed according to circumstances (Digha Nikaya,II,154) meaning that they are not necessary for salvation. He said that 'even if a monk is not expert in the rules he may still practice in full accordance with the Dhamma, may still practice correctly, may still live by Dhamma, and therefore be one worthy of honor and respect' (Majjhima Nikaya, III,39).

The purpose of all this is not to give a fair and authentic account of Buddhism, but to reinforce evangelical prejudice against Buddhism and hopefully to disillusion Westerners in Buddhism. Cioccolanti hopes that when Westerners know what Buddhism is 'really like' that they will loose interest in it, and perhaps return to the faith of their fathers. As it is, most Western Buddhists are interested in the Dhamma because it is a logical, credible, humane and fulfilling philosophy of life, not because of what the Thais do or don’t do.

If Buddhism is really as nonsensical and confused as Cioccolanti claims, why do so many Westerners leave Christianity and embrace it? The 2006 census showed that the number of Buddhists in Australia had jumped by 107% since 1996 (p.8). Cioccolanti is convinced that it cannot be that Buddhism has anything worthwhile to offer, so he has to explain its attraction some other way. His explanation is that actually Westerners are embracing Buddhism as a reaction against Christianity, particularly against the Christian doctrine of sin (p.14). Being both a Westerner and a Buddhist I find this explanation unconvincing. Based on my own experience and that of my many Western Buddhists friends I would say that the main reasons Westerners reject Christianity are, in order of importance, (1) the contradictions between Christianity and science, (2) logical and ethical problems with the idea of God, (3) Christianity's record of intolerance, (4) perceived Christian hypocrisy, and (5) having had negative experiences with Christians or with churches.

Apparently the recent Hillsong scandal in Australia led to a significant number of people losing their faith or at least have it badly shaken; - not the doctrine of sin, but the sinful behavior of those claiming to have all the answers. Recently released statistics show that in Austria during the last 15 years 370,000 people left the church, 40,500 in 2008 alone, a hemorrhaging that experts attribute to a string of high-profile church scandals, not to the churches' teachings about sin. And why do Westerners look to Buddhism as an alternative? The most commonly mentioned factors are (1) intellectually acceptable doctrines, (2) the emphasis on understanding rather than dogma and credulous belief, (3) Buddhism's generally gentle and tolerant outlook, (4) the self-awareness and inner peace imparted by meditation, and (5) having met a Buddhist who impressed them. Most Western Buddhists, and not only them, are put off by the doctrine of Original Sin and eternal hell, but none I know have ever said that it was a major reason for leaving Christianity.

I perused Steve Cioccolanti's wedsite and noticed that some of his sermons dealt with such subjects as the date of the end of the world, the coming world wars, how to identify the anti-Christ, biblical prophecies and miraculous healings. It seems that he also believes that Satan was responsible for the 911 bombings (p.221) and that a plumber turned evangelist named Smith Wigglesworth raised more than 20 people from the dead (p.157). I think it is fair here to point out that even many sincere Christians wince with embarrassment and roll their eyes upwards when they hear this sort of Christianity being preached.

The truth is that many better-educated Westerners find these and similar evangelical beliefs unconvincing and even laughable. Cioccolanti has a series of DVD's on different religions which I assume are as biased, ill-informed and full of put-downs as his From Buddha to Jesus is. I would say that another reason many people turn to Buddhism is because it's gentle, respectful attitude to other faiths is more in keeping with good-will and tolerance, values that they have come to treasure.

To give the impression of an in-depth and 'insider's' knowledge of Buddhism Cioccolanti frequently uses Pali and Sanskrit terms. This is unfortunate because it immediately demonstrates that he knows very little Buddhism and that he has not even read any reliable secondary sources. A small selection of his garbled Pali will demonstrate what I mean. The Sanskrit root of Buddha is not bud but budh (p.11). He has tukka instead of dukkha (p.49), benja seen instead of panca sila (p.75), anata instead of anatta (p.188), khandas instead of khandha (p.188), antn-na-ta-na vermani instead of adinnadana veramani (p.76) and micha-thi-ti for miccha ditthi (p.202). That these and numerous other spelling mistakes are systemic rather than typographical errors is verified by other supposed Pali words and phrases that are incomprehensible. For example, he says that a-mita-bucha is Pali for 'don’t worship materiality' (p.176), tamma means 'the teaching of morals' (p.197) and that panya-dtagk-charn and pa-ti-sampi-tayarn are Pali-Sanskrit terms (p.201). I showed these phrases to a professor of Pali at Peradeniya University in Sri Lanka and he too was unable to make sense of them. Likewise, the Pali words given on pages 99, 143, 203 and 238 are incomprehensible. On the few occasions when Cioccolanti gets his Pali right he usually misunderstands or mistranslates it. For example, he takes samsara to mean 'reincarnation' (p.12) whereas the actual word for reincarnation is punabhava.

On page 143 Cioccolanti gives the hardly recognizable Pali of the Buddha's last words and then 'translates' them. This is his 'translation.' 'Do not make idols nor worship or bow down to them. Seek the Holy One who is always living. Watch your heart. Don’t be careless, but be ready all the time. Let all of you search for the way to escape your sinful natures, or eternal ruin will come to all of you.' Perhaps the third and fourth sentence could be considered a very loose paraphrase of part of the Buddha's final words, but the rest bears no resemblance to them at all. It looks like Cioccolanti has deliberately fabricated these words to make it appear that the Buddha was pointing to the advent of Jesus. The Buddha's last words can be found at Digha Nikaya,II,156). On page 12 Cioccolanti says that Pali and Sanskrit are 'inextricably intertwined', which gives you some idea of the level of his understanding of the two languages.

Cioccolanti's knowledge of the Buddhist scriptures is even worse than his Pali. Although he often quotes the Bible and always gives the scriptural reference, not one of his supposed sayings of the Buddha is accompanied by a reference to the Buddhist scriptures, or indeed any source, and not one of these supposed sayings is familiar to me.

According to Cioccolanti the Buddha said 'if one is guilty of one sin, one is guilty of all of them' (p.93). I have been studying the Tipitaka for 35 years and I know of nowhere where the Buddha says this or anything like it. 'Buddha taught that these gileads (kilesa, defilements?) were part of the immortal nature of man' (p.52). He taught the exact opposite. 'The mind is pure but it is stained by defilements that come from without' (Anguttara Nikaya,II,94). He also said, 'By defilement of mind beings are defiled; by purification of mind beings are purified' (Samyutta Nikaya,III,151). And of course the Buddha also taught that man does not have an immortal nature. In fact, the doctrine of no immortal self (anatta) is the Buddha's most unique and well-known doctrines - well-known to everyone except Steve Cioccolanti.

He asserts that the Buddha commanded his disciples to abstain from meat (p.114). Wrong again! Indeed, when one of his disciples demanded that vegetarianism be made compulsory the Buddha firmly refused (Vinaya,II,197). 'Sins can never be erased by one's good deeds'. That may be Cioccolanti's idea but it is not the Buddha's; see for example Dhammapada 173 and also Anguttara Nikaya, I,249-52). He claims that the Buddha never denied the existence of God (p.139) and thus must be unfamiliar with Jataka VI,208 where the Buddha unambiguously does so. He quotes the Buddha as saying, 'To worship correctly, you should worship the truth, don’t worship materiality' (p.143) which could be a vague paraphrase of 'Be heirs of my Dhamma, do not be heirs of material things' (Majjhima Nikaya,I,12) but as no reference is given it is impossible to say. And anyway, if it is this passage it is nothing like an accurate translation of it.

Cioccolanti relates several stories concerning the life of the Buddha or which supposedly illustrate aspects of Buddhist doctrine. Again, none of these stories are from the Tipitaka or even from the ancient commentaries and I have never heard of any of them before. I suspect they are Thai religious folk tales. The problem with such material is that it could be used to prove or disprove almost anything. If I were to use Christian apocryphal literature, non-canonical Gospels, Medieval hagiographies and Sicilian religious folk tales to prove that Jesus taught A, B or C Cioccolanti would be the first to cry foul, and rightly so. If I were to relate all the misunderstandings of the Gospel (the Catholics, the Mormons, the Jehovah Witnesses, the Prosperity Gospel, etc) and all the scandals that plague evangelical and Pentecostal churches as examples of Christian belief and practice, Cioccolanti would be incensed, and he would have a right to be. But this is exactly the approach he takes to Buddhism.

There are several places where Ciccolanti relates teachings and parable which are recognizable as being from the Tipitaka, two of these being the Buddha's comparison of people to lotuses and his Parable of the Blind Turtle. Both these teachings are well-known and often feature in popular literature on Buddhism. But it's obvious that Cioccolanti's has never read any of the numerous popular books that contain these teachings, let alone the original. It looks like his only familiarity with them is a confused, third-hand, folk retelling of them. He devotes a whole chapter (p.41-45) to the Buddha's comparison (he incorrectly calls it a 'parable') of different types of people to lotuses and he draws several points from it. Unfortunately, his ignorance of the original invalidates all these points.

The Buddha mentions three types of individuals, not four, and the purpose of the comparison is to highlight the Buddha's compassion in teaching the Dhamma even though most beings have 'much dust in their eyes', not to analyze different psychological types. This is evident from the Buddha's inspiring peon at the end of the comparison, 'Open for them are the gates of the Immortal. Let those who can hear respond with faith' (Majjhima Nikaya,I,169). The famous Parable of the Blind Turtle is of course used to illustrate the idea that human birth is a rare and precious opportunity. Cioccolanti's skewed version of it leads him to think that its moral is 'it's impossible to save yourself from your own sins by trying to keep good rules' (p.141). As with the rest of his book, his ignorance of Buddhist language, literature and philosophy leads him to completely unjustified interpretations.

Cioccolanti says that the Buddhist scriptures are difficult to read and that most Buddhists are unfamiliar with them, both valid points, although he admits that this last point is equally true of Christians (p.226). While this is a sad fact, it is probably understandable given that most people in Buddhist countries were simple rice farmers until recently and many still are. Cioccolanti on the other hand, is a literate, well-educated person who is claiming to have written 'an insider's' account of Buddhism and yet his knowledge of the Buddhist scriptures is abysmal. He claims to have spent 'countless hours…pouring over Buddhist scriptures and translating them' (p.9). I can only say that everything in his book strongly suggests that he does not have even a rudimentary knowledge of Pali, that he would be unable to translate Buddhist scriptures and that he has never even read translations of them.

On page 40 there is a picture of a banyan tree which is incorrectly labeled as a Bodhi tree. The two trees are of course different species, the former being Ficus bengalensis and the later Ficus religiosa and the latter is special to Buddhists, not the former. If the Buddha died in 483 BC (p.45) he could hardly be a contemporary of Socrates (p.125). Mahayana did not emerge 'in China in the 2nd century', it began in India in the 1st century BC (p.162). Buddhism did not arrive in Tibet in the 4th century (p.167) but in the 7th century, a fact that Cioccolanti could have easily found in a children's encyclopedia. These and numerous other minor errors when all put together give the impression of an amateurish, sloppy and unreliable piece of writing. The more serious errors show that Cioccolanti has only the most superficial knowledge of Buddhism. Once again, I cannot list all of these errors because there too many; a random selection will do.

'But beyond the (first five disciples) we have little idea who else may have been able to attain it'; i.e. enlightenment (p.109). Cioccolanti has little idea because he has never read the scriptures. If he had he would know that the first 35 pages of the Vinaya mention more than a thousand people who attained enlightenment - Yasa, Vimala, Subahu, Punnaji, Gavampati, the fifty friends of Yasa, the three Kassapa brothers and their disciples, to mention just a few (Vinaya,I,17, 19, 20, 35).

The Sutta Pitaka likewise names numerous people who became enlightened. How many does Cioccolanti want? 'It is doubtful that the Buddha believed in reincarnation' (p.112). It isn’t 'doubtful', it's an absolute certainty that he did. 'The Buddha's prophecies of the Maitreya are scattered in many places' (p.144). The Buddha made one and only one reference to Maitreya (Digha Nikaya,III,76). According to Cioccolanti, someone is claiming that this prophecy has been 'ripped out' of the Thai Tipitaka, a rumor that he says he 'cannot confirm or deny.' Peddling unconfirmed rumors is no way to write seriously on any subject. And had he wanted to find out the truth of this matter he could have easily done so. A full set of the Thai Tipitaka can be found in every temple in Thailand and each of the several Thai temples in Melbourne where Cioccolanti lives also has a set. All he had to do was look at the Royal Thai Edition, Vol.11, Suttantapitaka, Tatiyo Bhago Patikavaggo page 83-85 and he would have found the prophecy still there.

The Tipitaka contains 32 books, not 45 (p.175), although Cioccolanti is probably confusing the number of volumes in the Thai edition of the Tipitaka with the number of books in it. This is equivalent to confusing the one volume of the Bible with all the books it contains. The Abhidhamma does not attempt 'to explain, reword and reorganize' stories (p.176) simply because it contains no stories. It's surprising that Cioccolanti didn’t notice this during the 'countless hours' he spent 'pouring over Buddhist texts and translating them' (p.9). 'Nearly all…Buddhists who believe in reincarnation desire to come back in the next life with whiter skins…' (112). I lived in Sri Lanka for 20 years, studying and later teaching Buddhism and I count amongst my many Sinhalese friends simple villagers, middle class people, monks and university professors and I have never heard anyone ever express such an idea. Likewise, I have taught Buddhism in Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore and India and I have never heard this idea mentioned there either. '(O)nly by perfect obedience could (sic) you escape karma and reach nirvana' (p.56).

Every informed Buddhist knows that the third of the ten Fetters is the false belief that performing rituals or following moral rules (sila vata paramasa) will lead to enlightenment (Anguttara Nikaya,III,377). The whole thrust of the Buddha's teachings is that we are liberated by wisdom, not by adhering to rules. 'Buddhism and Christianity teach we are sinners from the day we are born' (p.51). Buddhism teaches no such thing. 'All of the rules (in Buddhism) deal only with the flesh' (p.54). Really? What about Right Thought, Right Mindfulness and Right Concentration?

The Buddha says that following the first Precept means that one 'abstains from killing, lays aside the stick and the sword and lives with care, kindness and compassion for all living creatures' (Digha Nikaya,I,4). Surely care, kindness and compassion are psychological states, inner qualities, not 'of the flesh.' 'You're not a vegetarian? You're done for…This is according to the Buddha, not Jesus' (p.94). It's according to Steve Cioccolanti, not the Buddha. 'In Buddhism, if you want to escape the cycle of suffering and go to Heaven, the qualification is that you become a Buddha' (p.61). Here we see Cioccolanti confusion of heaven with Nirvana and his ignorance of enlightened saints (arahats). A Buddha does not go to heaven, he attains enlightenment (Nirvana) and saints, who are not Buddhas, can also attain enlightenment. And in contrast to Christianity, Buddhism says that any virtuous person can go to heaven.

Even when Cioccolanti diverts his attention from Buddhism to his own field, Christianity, he shows himself as not particularly well-informed. He quotes what he says are 'the last words of Jesus' (p.227). My Bible, the New International Version, 1986, must be different from the one he reads because it gives Jesus' last words at Matthew 27,46; Mark 15,37; Luke 23,46 and John 19,30, and they are different from the ones he quotes. He says that Martin Luther protested against 'the idea that the Pope was infallible' (p.11). But the issue of papal infallibility is not mentioned in any of Luther's 95 Theses and did not become a doctrine of the Church until 1870. Cioccolanti says, 'Unlike the Bible, the Tipitaka has undergone many major revisions' (p.179), although he gives no examples of this because he doesn’t know of any. I am surprised that he is unaware that several passages have been removed from the Lord's Prayer (Luke 11,2-5) making it somewhat different from how I used to say it at Sunday School and in church.

He apparently also does not know that most Bibles today have a note at the end of the Gospel of Mark saying that, 'The most reliable early manuscripts and other ancient witnesses do not have Mark 16, 9-20', meaning that this whole section was added to the Bible at a later time. He must have also failed to notice that quite a few verses have been deleted from the text of the Bible, e.g. verse 28 from chapter 15 of Mark and verses 44 and 46 from chapter 9. He says that 'no one is sinless except Jesus' (p.142) which contradicts Jesus' own assessment of himself. When someone called him 'good teacher' he replied, 'Why do you call me good? No one is good except God alone (Luke 18,19). He claims that all the worlds' languages have their origin in Babylon, a theory that was discredited nearly two centuries ago and which no linguists accept.

In several places Cioccolanti relates an alleged incident from recent Buddhist history (p.215; 237-240). The details of this incident are not entirely clear to me as Cioccolanti's English is rather poor but if I read him correctly this is his claim. Just before the Sixth Buddhist Council in 1954-6 a Thai monk named Tongsuk Siriruk was given permission to copy out the whole Tipitaka and his copy was later verified to be complete and authentic by his village head man on 13th October 1954 (Wow! No doubt this villager was a leading authority on Pali and Tipitaka textural history and spent the months that would be necessary carefully comparing Tongsuk Siriruk's copy with the standard texts).

When the Sixth Council edition of the Tipitaka was published it was found to be different from Tongsuk Siriruk's version. All the parts that sounded 'Christian' and which prophesized the coming of a messiah 'with scars on His hands, feet and side' had been surreptitiously removed. Naturally, Tongsuk Siriruk was astonished by this and converted to Christianity. Even if this story is true, and to me it's on a par with the one about Satan bombing the Twin Towers, it would be of no consequence. Copies of the Tipitaka in Cambodian, Thai, Burmese and Sinhala scripts dating from long before, sometimes centuries before, the 1954-6 council are housed in the great manuscript collections of the Pali Text Society in England and in various university libraries around the world. All these manuscripts show that the Fifth Council edition of the Tipitaka, the PTS edition, the Simon Hewavitana edition, the Buddha Jayanti edition, the Nava Nalanda edition, the Royal Thai edition, etc, are all the same, except for minor scribal errors. The claim that parts of the Tipitaka were removed during the Sixth Council is completely bogus and can very easily be shown to be false.

In chapter 16 Cioccolanti turns his attention to reincarnation (i.e. rebirth) and presents what he considers to be strong evidence against it. He asks, 'Why can't babies speak the language of their former life?' This is a reasonable question and although I don’t know the answer I will hazard a guess. It's possible that memories, although not all, are imprinted on the brain (some recent research points in this direction) and so when a person dies and gets a new body and thus a new brain the old memories are absent.

Another possibility is that the nine months in the womb, nine months of almost complete sensory deprivation, erases most memories. A third possibility is that the barrage of sensory impingement in a child's first few months simply swamps and erases former memories. Quoting another writer Cioccolanti asks, 'Why does a person need to be under hypnosis…or to be in an altered state on consciousness during meditation in order to have such (past life) memories?' Well of course they don’t need to be. In fact, the research of Prof. Ian Stevenson of Virginia University and others in the field shows that most people who have past life memories do so spontaneously and most often when they are young. Cioccolanti's other objections to rebirth are weak and poorly considered. 'Reincarnation contradicts all observable evidence.'

Perhaps, but I would have thought that virgin births, walking on water, turning water into wine, being dead and then coming back to life and being bodily assumed into heaven were against 'all observable evidence' too. He asks why billions of people in the world, regardless of cultural background, don’t believe it. Good question! But I would like to ask why, if Jesus is really God, billions of Buddhists, Muslims, Taoists, Hindus, Confucianists, Sikhs, Baha'is, animists, freethinkers and atheists as well as millions of former Christians don’t believe it. The answer to this question would probably answer the one Cioccolanti poses. And of course, when you are stuck for an intelligent objection you can always wheel out Satan. Past life memories could be, Cioccolanti contends, 'demon possession'.

At the beginning of From Buddha to Jesus the author promises his readers that he is going to help them better understand Buddhism. His almost complete ignorance of his subject has meant that he has failed to keep this promise. The kindest thing I can say about his book is that it is badly researched, ill-informed, confused, dishonest and hardly worth the paper it is printed on.

The Christian Gospels are Pirate-copies of the Buddhist Gospels

The 27 books of the New Testament, as known, constitute the fundamental holy scripture of Christianity.

Without the four Gospels according to Matthew, to Mark, to Luke and to John, Christianity is virtually null and void.

Recent epoch-making discoveries of old Sanskrit manuscripts in Central Asia and Kashmir provide decisive proof that the four Greek Gospels have been translated directly from the Sanskrit.

A careful comparison, word by word, sentence by sentence shows that the Christian Gospels are Pirate-copies of the Buddhist Gospels. God's word, therefore, is originally Buddha's word.

Comparison reveals that there is no person, no event, no locality mentioned in the four Christian Gospels not already present in the Buddhist Gospels that, for sure, are far earlier in time than their Christian copies.
The Sanskrit
TRi-RaTNaS
becomes the Latin
TRi-NiTaS.

...even the name is copied...
A Buddhist original... ...and a Christian copy