I am often
intrigued by the way in which religions that have had no historical or
intellectual contact in the developing of their traditions nonetheless develop
their traditions along similar lines and arrive at similar conclusions. Anthropologists
and philosophers who study cultural movements and glance bigger picture
dynamics have commented on the way scientific, social, ethical, and religious movements
trend to develop synchronically over periods. One can point narrowly to the
rise of new religious movements in the 18th century when new
scientific discoveries challenged traditional orthodoxies as a key contributor to
the emergence of new religions from North America to the Far East against a
period directly prior where there was mostly stagnation and status quo
expressions.
Or one can
point to the broader historic pictures of a Bronze Age or Karl Jasper’s famous
term “Axial Age” which reinforced the teleological notion that history had a
goal from the suggestion that new ways of religious thinking and ethical
behavior corresponded to a relatively small window from the 8th to 3rd
Century BCE.
Oftentimes,
these similarities are not limited to a broad ethos towards progress, but remain eerily myopic in scope despite
the fact that they are treated at best as generic placeholders meant for
context, even while they do not suggest a conclusive scientific worldview.
Most of the
books written in the past century about Christianity and Buddhism that reflect
positively on the two as conversation partners often take the view that
similarity cannot be overstated. From those with deeper comprehension to those
with minimal interest, Western thinkers from Karl von Hase to Marcus Borg have
engaged the topic of similarity, often without reference to Jasper’s Axial Age
theory. My examples here are one directional, primarily because the rigid
dogmatism of Christian thinkers in the past has often detracted from their
ability to be open to Buddhism. Conversely, Buddhists historically have often
been open to syncretic treatments of their religion and giving honor to other
religious leaders standing outside. In particular, Japan Buddhists who operated
under the tradition of honji suijaku have
lived comfortably within a Shinto-Buddhist worldview that has only temporarily
been challenged in modern times.
One similarity
comes from the writing of Rennyo Shonin, a Japanese Buddhist monk writing in the 15th
century. Speaking on the topic of entrusting oneself to Amida Buddha as a means
of salvation in his Pure Land sect, Rennyo notes how his message of shinjin (trust) is open to all peoples
both male and female, young and old. Feudal Japan’s legacy as a patriarchal
society, a fact common in most societies around the global, meant that the
place of women was often structured to a more subservient role. The declaration
that women had the same rights to salvation as men was radical and “foreign” to
such a culture, and its development was unprovoked by Christianity and the work
of St. Paul who also made pivotal and radical statements about the social
standing of Greeks, Jews, men, and women in Christ Jesus. Christianity did not
touch the Japanese mainland until the 16th century, and for about
200 more years its contact was limited to the extreme South in Kyushu. Like Christianity,
these changes were not preempted by social change in the culture (e.g., from a
broader push for equal rights) but seem to come directly from within the
workings of the religious writing of which they were a part.
There are
hundreds, maybe thousands of similar stories of “axial” phenomena, and I am not
offering a thesis as to why this happens. The fact that it does happen should
be taken at face value until some better theory arises. We cannot appeal to
supernaturalism despite its attraction. Any such appeals are tacitly appeals
about greater meaning. And one might challenge any such attempt at meaning by introducing a reductio ad absurdum in which two movies with
similar themes are released one after another despite the fact that in prior
years, public interest and consumption of such topics is nowhere to be found. Why
does this occur? We can posit reasons. We can suggest “studio espionage” in
such cases with no proof since conspiracy theories help us cope when
information is limited. But in such cases, we would be cautious to attribute
cause to supernatural forces. The temptation towards meaning reminds me of a scholarly debate I once watched between historian Bart Ehrman and theologian William Lane Craig, in which the latter noted that despite what we cannot say in the academy without committing career suicide (a riposte against Ehrman), what we think and do in the privacy of our homes is quite different. And so it is.
Yet the
problem persists as cultures with no contact, one with another, progress to
views that often seem borrowed from each other. While the topic is not popular
in academic circles today, it remains one of those “energies” found beneath the
current of anthropology and philosophy, for which we, as post-moderns, are
either too quick or too slow to attribute causation and develop meaning.
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