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Paul Carus - This booklet needs no preface for those
who are familiar with the sacred books of Buddhism,
which have been made accessible to the Western world
by the indefatigable zeal and industry of scholars
like Beal, Bigandet, Buehler, Burnouf, Childers,
Alexander Csoma, Rhys Davids, Dutoit, Eitel,
Fausboell, Foucaux, Francke, Edmund Hardy, Spence
Hardy, Hodgson, Charles R. Lanmann, F. Max Mueller,
Karl Eugen Neumann, Oldenberg, Pischel, Schiefner,
Senart, Seidenstuecker, Bhikkhu Nyanatiloka, D. M.
Strong, Henry Clarke Warren, Wasselijew, Weber,
Windisch, Winternitz & c.
To those not familiar with the subject it may be
stated that the bulk of its contents is derived from
the old Buddhist canon. Many passages, and indeed
the most important ones, are literally copied in
translations from the original texts. Some are
rendered rather freely in order to make them
intelligible to the present generation; others have
been rearranged; and still others are abbreviated.
Besides the three introductory and the three
concluding chapters there are only a few purely
original additions, which, however, are neither mere
literary embellishments nor deviations from Buddhist
doctrines. Wherever the compiler has admitted
modernization he has done so with due consideration
and always in the spirit of a legitimate
development. Additions and modifications contain
nothing but ideas for which prototypes can be found
somewhere among the traditions of Buddhism, and have
been introduced as elucidations of its main
principles.
The best evidence that this book characterizes the
spirit of Buddhism correctly can be found in the
welcome it has received throughout the entire
Buddhist world. It has even been officially
introduced in Buddhist schools and temples of Japan
and Ceylon. Soon after the appearance of the first
edition of 1894 the Right Rev. Shaku Soyen, a
prominent Buddhist abbot of Kamakura, Japan, had a
Japanese translation made by Teitaro Suzuki, and
soon afterwards a Chinese version was made by Mr.
O'Hara of Otzu, the talented editor of a Buddhist
periodical, who in the meantime has unfortunately
met with a premature death. In 1895 the Open Court
Publishing Company brought out a German edition by
E. F. L. Gauss, and Dr. L. de Milloue, the curator
of the Musee Guimet, of Paris, followed with a
French translation. Dr. Federigo Rodriguez has
translated the book into Spanish and Felix Orth into
Dutch. The privilege of translating the book into
Russian, Czechic, Italian, also into Siamese and
other Oriental tongues has been granted, but of
these latter the publishers have received only a
version in the Urdu language, a dialect of eastern
India.
Buddhism, like Christianity, is split up into
innumerable sects, and these sects not infrequently
cling to their sectarian tenets as being the main
and most indispensable features of their religion.
The present book follows none of the sectarian
doctrines, but takes an ideal position upon which
all true Buddhists may stand as upon common ground.
Thus the arrangement into a harmonious and
systematic form is the main original feature of this
Gospel of Buddha. Considering the bulk of the
various details of the Buddhist canon, however, it
must be regarded as a mere compilation, and the aim
of the compiler has been to treat his material in
about the same way as he thinks that the author of
the Fourth Gospel of the New Testament utilized the
accounts of the life of Jesus of Nazareth. He has
ventured to present the data of the Buddha's life in
the light of their religio-philosophical importance;
he has cut out most of their apocryphal adornments,
especially those in which the Northern traditions
abound, yet he did not deem it wise to shrink form
preserving the marvellous that appears in the old
records, whenever its moral seemed to justify its
mention; he only pruned away the exuberance of
wonder which delights in relating the most
incredible things, apparently put on to impress
while in fact they can only tire. Miracles have
ceased to be a religious test; yet the belief in the
miraculous powers of the Master still bears witness
to the holy awe of the first disciples and reflects
their religious enthusiasm.
Lest the fundamental idea of the Buddha's doctrines
be misunderstood, the reader is warned to take the
term "self" in the sense in which the Buddha uses
it. The "self" of man translates the word atman
which can be and has been understood, even the
Buddhist canon, in a sense to which the Buddha would
never have made any objection. The Buddha denies the
existence of a "self" as it was commonly understood
in his time; he does not deny man's mentality, his
spiritual constitution, the importance of his
personality, in a word, his soul. But he does deny
the mysterious ego-entity, the atman, in the sense
of a kind of soul-nomad which by some schools was
supposed to reside behind or within man's bodily and
psychical activity as a distinct being, a kind of
thing-in-itself, and a metaphysical agent assumed to
be the soul.
Buddhism is monistic. It claims that man's soul dies
not consist of two things, of an atman (self) and of
a manas (mind or thoughts), but that there is one
reality, our thoughts, our mind or manas, and this
manas constitutes the soul. Man's thoughts, if
anything, are his self, and these is no atman, no
additional and separate "self" besides. Accordingly,
the translation of atman by "soul", which would
imply that the Buddha denied the exitstence of the
soul, is extremely misleading. Representative
Buddhists, of different schools and of various
countries, acknoledge the correctness of the view
here taken, and we emphasize especially the assent
of Southern Buddhists because they have preserved
the tradition most faithfully and are very
punctilious in the statement of doctrinal points.
"The Buddhist, the Organ of the Southern Church of
Buddhism," writes in a review of The Gospel of
Buddha:
"The eminent feature of the work is its grasp of the
difficult subject and the clear enunciation of the
doctrine of the most puzzling problem of atman, as
taught in Buddhism. So far as we have examined the
question of atman ourselves from the works of the
Southern canon, the view taken by Dr. Paul Carus is
accurate, and we venture to think that it is not
opposed to the doctrine of Northern Buddhism."
This atman-superstition, so common not only in
India, but all over the world, corresponds to man's
habitual egotism in practical life. Both are
illusions growing out of the same root, which is the
vanity of worldliness, inducing man to believe that
the purpose of his life lies in his self. The Buddha
puroposes to cut off entirely all thought of self,
so that it will no longer bear fruit. Thus Nirvana
is an ideal state, in which man's soul, after being
cleansed from all selfishness, hatred and lust, has
become a habitation of the truth, teaching him to
distrust the allurements of pleasure and to confine
all his energies to attending to the duties of life.
The Buddha's doctrine is not negativism. An
investigation of the nature of man's soul shows
that, while there is no atman or ego-entity, the
very being of man consists in his karma, his deeds,
and his karma remains untouched by death and
continues to live. Thus, by denying the existence of
that which appears to be our soul and for the
destruction of which in death we tremble, the Buddha
actually opens (as he expresses it himself) the door
of immortality to mankind; and here lies the
corner-stone of his ethics and also of the comfort
as well as the enthusiasm which his religion
imparts. Any one who does not see the positive
aspect of Buddhism, will be unable to understand how
it could exercise such a powerful influence upon
millions and millions of people.
The present volume is not designed to contribute to
the solution of historical problems. The compiler
has studied his subject as well as he could under
the circumstances, but he does not intend here to
offer a scientific production. Nor it this book an
attempt at popularizing the Buddhist religious
writings, nor at presenting them in a poetic shape.
If this Gospel of Buddha helps people to comprehend
Buddhism better, and if in its simple style it
impresses the reader with the poetic grandeur of the
Buddha's personality, these effects must be counted
as incidental; its main purpose lies deeper still.
The present book has been written to set the reader
thinking on the religious problems of to-day. It
sketches the picture of a religious leader of the
remote past with the view of making it bear upon the
living present and become a factor in the formation
of the future.
It is a remarkable fact that the two greatest
religions of the world, Christianity and Buddhism,
present so many striking coincidences in the
philosophical basis as well as in the ethical
applications of their faith, while their modes of
systematizing them in dogmas are radically
different; and it is difficult to understand why
these agreements should have caused animostity,
instead of creating sentiments of friendship and
good-will. Why should not Christians say with Prof.
F. Max Mueller:
"If I do find in certain Buddhist works doctrines
identically the same as in Christianity, so far from
being frightened, I feel delighted, for surely truth
is not the less true because it is believed by the
majority of the human race."
The main trouble arises from a wrong conception of
Christianity. There are many Christians who assume
that Christianity alone is in possession of truth
and that men could not, in the natural way of his
moral evolution, have obtained that nobler
conception of life which enjoins the practice of a
universal good-will towards both friends and
enemies. This narrow view of Christianity is refuted
by the mere existence of Buddhism.
Must we add that the lamentable exclusivesness that
prevails in many Christian churches, is not based
upon Scriptural teachings, but upon a wrong
metaphysics?
All the essential moral truths of Christianity,
especially the principle of a universal love, of the
eradication of hatred, are in our opinion deeply
rooted in the nature of things, and do not, as is
often assumed, stand in contradiction to the cosmic
order of the world. Further, some doctrines of the
constitution of existence have been formulated by
the church in certain symbols, and since these
symbols contain contradictions and come in conflict
with science, the educated classes are estranged
from religion. Now, Buddhism is a religion which
knows of no supernatural revelation, and proclaims
doctrines that require no other argument that the
"come and see." The Buddha bases his religion solely
upon man's knowledge of the nature of things, upon
provable truth. Thus, we trust that a comparison of
Christianity with Buddhism will be a great help to
distinguish in both religions the essential from the
accidental, the eternal from the transient, the
truth from the allegory in which it has found its
symbolic expression. We are anxious to press the
necessity of discriminating between the symbol and
its meaning, between dogma and religion, between
metaphysical theories and statements of fact,
between man-made formulas and eternal truth. And
this is the spirit in which we offer this book to
the public, cherishing the hope that its will help
to develop in Christianity not less than in Buddhism
the cosmic religion of truth.
The strength as well as the weakness of original
Buddhism lies in its philosophical character, which
enabled a thinker, but not the masses, to understand
the dispensation of the moral law that pervades the
world. As such, the original Buddhism has been
called by Buddhists the little vessel of salvation,
or Hinayana; for it is comparable to a small boat on
which a man may cross the stream of worldliness, so
as to reach the shore of Nirvana.
Following the spirit of a missionary propaganda, so
natural to religious men who are earnest in their
convictions, later Buddhists popularized the
Buddha's doctrines and made them accessible to the
multitudes. It is true that they admitted many
mythical and even fantastic notions, but they
succeeded nevertheless in bringing its moral truths
home to the people who could but incompletely grasp
the philosophical meaning of the Buddha's religion.
They constructed, as they called it, a large vessel
of salvation, the Mahayana, in which the multitudes
would find room and could be safely carried over.
Although the Mahayana unquestionably has its
shortcomings, it must not be condemned offhand, for
it serves its purpose. Without regarding it as the
final stage of the religious development of the
nations among which it prevails, we must concede
that it resulted from an adaptation to their
condition and has accomplished much to educate them.
The Mahayana is a step forward in so far as it
changes a philosophy into a religion, and attempts
to preach doctrines that were negatively expressed,
in positive propositions.
Far from rejecting the religious zeal which gave
rise to the Mahayana in Buddhism, we can still less
join those who denounce Christianity on account of
its dogmatology and mythological ingredients.
Christianity has certainly had and still has a great
mission in the evolution of mankind. It has
succeeded in imbuing with the religion of charity
and mercy the most powerful nations of the world, to
whose spiritual needs it is especially adapted. It
extends the blessings of universal good-will with
the least possible amount of antagonism to the
natural selfishness that is no stronly developed in
the Western races. Christianity is the religion of
love made easy. This is its advantage. which,
however, is not without its drawbacks. Christianity
teaches charity without dispelling the ego-illusion;
and in this sense it surpasses even the Mahayana; it
is still more adapted to the needs of multitudes
than a large vessel fitted to carry over those who
embark on it; it is comparable to a grand bridge, a
Mahasetu, on which a child who has no comprehension
as yet of the nature of self can cross the stream of
self-hood and worldly vanity.
A comparison of the many striking agreements between
christianity and Buddhism may prove fatal to
sectarian conceptions of either religion, but will
in the end help to mature our insight into the true
significance of both. It will bring out a nobler
faith which aspires to be the cosmic religion of
universal truth. Let us hope that this Gospel of
Buddha will serve both Buddhists and Christians as a
help to penetrate further into the spirit of their
faith, so as to see its full height, length and
breadth. Above any Hinayana, Mahayana, and Mahasetu
is the Religion of Truth.
Paul Carus
Publisher - The Open Court Publishing Company,
LaSalle, Illinois, United States.
1894
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