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Buddhism and Gnosticism

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Buddhologist Edward Conze (1966) has proposed that similarities existed between Buddhism and Gnosticism, a term deriving from the name "Gnostics" given to a number of Christian sects. To the extent that the Buddha taught the existence of evil inclinations that remain unconquered, or that require special spiritual knowledge to conquer, Buddhism has also qualified as Gnostic.

Conze

Edward Conze claimed to have noted phenomenological commonalities between Mahayana Buddhism and Gnosticism,[1] in his paper Buddhism and Gnosis, following an early suggestion by Isaac Jacob Schmidt.[2][note 1] Conze explicitly compared Mahayana Buddhism with "gnosis," that is, knowledge or insight, and not with "the Gnostics," because too little was known about the Gnostics as a social group.[2] Based on Conze's eight similarities, Hoeller gives the following list of similarities:[4]

  • Liberation or salvation can be achieved by a liberating insight, namely gnosis or jnana
  • Ignorance, or a lack of insight, called agnosis or avidyā, is the root cause of entrapment in this world
  • Liberating insight can be achieved by interior revelation, not by external knowledge
  • Both systems give a hierarchical ordering of spiritual attainment, from blind materialism to complete spiritual attainment
  • Wisdom, as the feminine principle personified in Sophia and prajna, plays an important role in both religions
  • Myth is preferred over historical fact; the Christ and the Buddha are not mere historical figures, but archetypal primordial beings
  • Both systems have antinomian tendencies, that is, a disregard for rules and social conventions in higher spiritual attainments
  • Both systems are intended for spiritual elites, not for the masses, and have hidden meanings and teachings
  • Both systems are monistic, aiming at a metaphysical oneness beyond the multiplicity of the phenomenal world.


Manicheism

Manicheism was directly influenced by Buddhism. Mani himself aimed for Nirvana like Buddha and used this word showing the significance of Buddhist influences. He further believed in transmigration of souls, Sangha and used various Buddhist terms in his teachings.[1] Mircea Eliade noted similarities in the symbolism of light and mystic knowledge, predating Manicheism, and possibly going back to an early common Indo-Iranian source. Mani considered himself to be a reincarnation of Buddha. He also claimed that he was preaching the same message of Buddha.[5] Verardi notes that Manicheism is the prime source for comparisons between Buddhism and Gnosticism, Manicheism representing "the same urban and mercantile ambience of which Buddhism was an expression in India."[6] When the mercantile economy declined, with the decline of the Roman empire, Manicheism lost its support.[7] The Manicheists were hostile to the closed society of farming and landownership, just like the Buddhism conflicted with the "non-urban world controlled by Brahman laymen."[8][note 2]

Mani, an Arsacid Persian by birth,[note 3] was born 216 AD in Mesopotamia (modern Iraq), then within the Persian Sassanid Empire.[10] According to the Cologne Mani-Codex, Mani's parents were members of the Jewish Christian Gnostic sect known as the Elcesaites.[11]

Mani believed that the teachings of Buddha, Zoroaster, and Jesus were incomplete, and that his revelations were for the entire world, calling his teachings the "Religion of Light."[12] Following Mani's travels to the Kushan Empire[note 4] at the beginning of his proselytizing career, various Buddhist influences seem to have permeated Manichaeism:

Buddhist influences were significant in the formation of Mani's religious thought. The transmigration of souls became a Manichaean belief, and the quadripartite structure of the Manichaean community, divided between male and female monks (the "elect") and lay followers (the "hearers") who supported them, appears to be based on that of the Buddhist sangha.[13]

Early 3rd century–4th century Christian writers such as Hippolytus and Epiphanius write about a Scythianus, who visited India around 50 CE from where he brought four books and "the doctrine of the Two Principles", in which the early church fathers describe as assigning both "good" and "evil" to God. According to Cyril of Jerusalem, Scythianus' pupil Terebinthus presented himself as a "Buddha" ("He called himself Buddas").[web 1] Terebinthus went to Palestine and Judaea ("becoming known and condemned"), and ultimately settled in Babylon, where he transmitted his teachings to a woman who left his books to a young Mani, thereby creating the foundation of Manichaeism:

"But Terebinthus, his disciple in this wicked error, inherited his money and books and heresy, and came to Palestine, and becoming known and condemned in Judæa he resolved to pass into Persia: but lest he should be recognised there also by his name he changed it and called himself Buddas."
—Cyril of Jerusalem, "Catechetical lecture 6"

According to Willis Barnstone and Marvin Meyer, evidence of the influence of Buddhist thought on the teachings of Mani can be found throughout texts related to Mani.[14] In the story of the Death of Mani, the Buddhist term Nirvana is being used:

It was a day of pain
and a time of sorrow
when the messenger of light
entered death
when he entered complete Nirvana

Notes

  1. The paper was presented at the conference Origins of gnosticism: colloquium of Messina, held 13–18 April 1966. Conze: "The topic of my paper has a fairly long ancestry. Already in 1828 Isaac Jacob Schmidt, a German living in Russia, published a pamphlet entitled Über die Verwandtschaft der gnostisch-theosophischen Lehren mit den Religionssystemen des Orients, vorzüglich dem Buddhaismus."[3] ("About the relationship of Gnostic theosophical teachings with religious systems of the East, especially Buddhism").
  2. Note that Buddhism declined in India after the end of the Gupta empire (c. 320–650 CE), which was related to the decline of the Roman Empire and the decline of sea trade. Power was decentralised in India, and Buddhism lost its support from royal courts, being replaced by Brahmanical Hinduism.[9]
  3. * Mary Boyce, Zoroastrians: their religious beliefs and practices, Routledge, 2001. pg 111: "He was Iranian, of noble Parthian blood..."
    * Warwick Ball, Rome in the East: the transformation of an empire, Routledge, 2001. pg 437: "Manichaeism was a syncretic religion, proclaimed by the Iranian Prophet Mani.
    * Sundermann, Werner, Mani, the founder of the religion of Manicheism in the 3rd century AD, Encyclopaeia Iranica, 2009.
  4. Several religious paintings in Bamiyan are attributed to him.[citation needed]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Verardi 1997, p. 323.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Conze 1967.
  3. Conze 1967, p. 651.
  4. Hoeller 2012, p. 180.
  5. Verardi 1997, pp. 323–324.
  6. Verardi 1997, p. 332.
  7. Verardi 1997, pp. 332–333.
  8. Verardi 1997, p. 333.
  9. Michaels 2004, p. 42.
  10. Coyle 2009.
  11. Koenen & Römer 1988.
  12. Coyle 2009, p. 13.
  13. Foltz 2010.
  14. Willis Barnstone, The Gnostic Bible

Sources

Printed sources
  • Barnstone, Willis; Meyer, Marvin W. (2005), The Gnostic Bible 
  • Bennett, Clinton (2001), In search of Jesus: insider and outsider images 
  • Conze, Edward (1967), "Buddhism and Gnosis", in Bianchi, U., Origins of Gnosticism: Colloquium of Messina, 13–18 April 1966 
  • Coyle, John Kevin (2009), Manichaeism and Its Legacy, BRILL, ISBN 978-90-04-17574-7 
  • Foltz, Richard (2010), Religions of the Silk Road (2nd ed.), Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 978-0-230-62125-1 
  • Hoeller, Stephan A. (2012), Gnosticism: New Light on the Ancient Tradition of Inner Knowing, Quest Books 
  • Der Kölner Mani-Kodex. Über das Werden seines Leibes. Kritische Edition. (Abhandlung der Reinisch-Westfälischen Akademie der Wissenschaften: Papyrologica Coloniensia 14, 1988 
  • Michaels, Axel (2004), Hinduism. Past and present, Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press 
  • Verardi, Givanni (1997), "The Buddhists, the Gnostics and the Antinomistic Society, or the Arabian Sea in the First Century AD", AION 57 (3/4): 324–346, http://opar.unior.it/1042/1/Articolo_Verardi_pdf.pdf 
Web-sources





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