soul, the eventual purification of his own; a something lost in
reflection, self-effaced, only the alter ego of the outer world.
For
contemplation, not action, is the Far Oriental's ideal of life.
The
repose of self-adjustment like that to which our whole solar
system is slowly tending as its death,--this to him appears, though
from no
scientific deduction, the end of all
existence. So he sits
and ponders, abstractly,
vaguely, upon everything in general,
--synonym, alas, to man's finite mind, for nothing in particular,--
till even the sense of self seems to
vanish, and through the
mist-like
portal of unconsciousness he floats out into the vast
indistinguishable sameness of Nirvana's sea.
At first sight Buddhism is much more like Christianity than those of
us who stay at home and
speculate upon it
commonlyappreciate. As a
system of
philosophy it sounds
exceedingly foreign, but it looks
unexpectedly familiar as a faith. Indeed, the one religion might
well pass for the
counterfeit presentment of the other. The
re
semblance so struck the early Catholic missionaries that they felt
obliged to explain the
remarkable similarity between the two.
With them ingenuous surprise
instantly begot
ingenious sophistry.
Externally, the
likeness was so exact that at first they could not
bring themselves to believe that the Buddhist ceremonials had not
been filched
bodily from the practices of the true faith. Finding,
however, that no known human
agency had acted in the matter, they
bethought them of introducing, to
account for things, a deus ex
machina in the shape of the devil. They were so pleased with this
solution of the difficulty that they imparted it at once with much
pride to the natives. You have indeed got, they
graciously if
somewhat gratuitously informed them, the
outwardsemblance of the
true faith, but you are in fact the
miserable victims of an impious
fraud. Satan has
stolen the insignia of
divinity, and is now
masquerading before you as the deity; your god is really our devil,
--a
recognition of antipodal inversion truly
worthy the Jesuitical
mind!
Perhaps it is not matter for great surprise that they converted but
few of their hearers. The
suggestion was hardly so
diplomatic as
might have been expected from so generally astute a body; for it
could not make much difference what the all-presiding deity was
called, if his actions were the same, since his motives were beyond
human
observation. Besides, the bare idea of a foreign bogus was
not very terrifying. The Chinese possessed too many familiar devils
of their own. But there was another and a much deeper reason, which
we shall come to later, why Christianity made but little headway in
the Far East.
But it is by no means in externals only that the two religions are
alike. If the first glance at them awakens that
peculiar sensation
which most of us have felt at some time or other, a sense of having
seen all this before, further scrutiny reveals a deeper agreement
than merely in appearances.
In passing from the surface into the substance, it may be mentioned
incidentally that the codes of
morality of the two are about on a
level. I say
incidentally, for so far as its practice, certainly,
is
concerned, it not its
preaching,
morality has no more intimate
connection with religion than it has with art or
politics. If we
doubt this, we have but to examine the facts. Are the most religious
peoples the most moral? It needs no prolonged
investigation to
convince us that they are not. If proof of the want of a bond were
required, the matter of truth-telling might be adduced in point.
As this is a subject upon which a slight misconception exists in the
minds of some evangelically persuaded persons, and because, what is
more generally
relevant, the presence of this quality,
honesty in
word and deed, has more than almost any other one
characteristic
helped to put us in the van of the world's advance to-day, it may
not unfittingly be cited here.
The
argument in the case may be put thus. Have
specially religions
races been proportionally truth-telling ones? If not, has there been
any other cause at work in the development of mankind tending to
increase veracity? The answer to the first question has all the
simplicity of a plain
negative. No such
pleasing concomitance of
characteristics is observable to-day, or has been presented in the
past. Permitting, however, the dead past to bury its shortcomings
in
oblivion, let us look at the world as we find it. We observe,
then, that the religious spirit is quite as strong in Asia as it is
in Europe; if anything, that at the present time it is rather
stronger. The average Brahman, Mahometan, or Buddhist is quite as
devout as the ordinary Roman Catholic or Presbyterian. If he is
somewhat less given to propagandism, he is not a whit less regardful
of his own
salvation. Yet throughout the Orient truth is a thing
unknown, lies of
courtesy being de rigueur and lies of convenience
de raison; while with us,
fortunately, mendacity is generally
discredited. But we need not travel so far for proof. The same is
evident in less antipodal relations. Have the least religious
nations of Europe been any less
truthful than the most bigoted? Was
fanatic Spain
remarkable for veracity? Was Loyola a gentleman whose
assertions carried
conviction other than to the stake? Were the
eminently mundane burghers whom he persecuted noted for a pious
superiority to fact? Or, to narrow the field still further, and scan
the
circle of one's own
acquaintance, are the most believing
individuals among them
worthy of the most
belief? Assuredly not.
We come, then, to the second point. Has there been any influence at
work to differentiate us in this respect from Far Orientals?
There has. Two separate causes, in fact, have conduced to the same
result. The one is the development of
physical science; the other,
the
extension of trade. The sole object of science being to
discover truth, truth-telling is a necessity of its
existence.
Professionally, scientists are obliged to be
truthful. Aliter of a
Jesuit.
So long as science was of the
closet, its influence upon mankind
generally was
indirect and slight; but so soon as it proceeded to
stalk into the street and earn its own living, its veracious
character began to tell. When out of its theories
sprang inventions
and discoveries that revolutionized every-day affairs and changed
the very face of things, society insensibly caught its spirit.
Man awoke to the inestimable value of exactness. From scientists
proper, the spirit filtered down through every
stratum of education,
till to-day the average man is born exact to a degree which his
forefathers never dreamed of becoming. To-day, as a rule, the more
intelligent the individual, the more
truthful he is, because the
more innately exact in thought, and
thence in word and action.
With us, to lie is a sign of a want of cleverness, not of an excess
of it.
The second cause, the
extension of trade, has inculcated the same
regard for veracity through the pocket. For with the increase of
business transactions in both time and space, the telling of the
truth has become a
financial necessity. Without it, trade would
come to a standstill at once. Our whole mercantile
system, a modern
piece of
mechanism unknown to the East till we imported it thither,
turns on an implicit
belief in the word of one's neighbor. Our
legal safeguards would snap like red tape were the great bond of
mutual trust once broken. Western
civilization has to be
truthful,
or perish.
And now for the spirits of the two
beliefs.
The soul of any religion realizes in one respect the Brahman idea of
the individual soul of man,
namely, that it exists much after the
manner of an onion, in many concentric envelopes. Man, they tell us,
is
composed not of a single body simply, but of several layers of body,
each shell as it were
respectively inclosing another. The outermost
is the merely material body, of which we are so directly cognizant.
This encases a second, more
spiritual, but yet not
wholly free from
earthly affinities. This contains another, still more
refined; till
finally, inside of all is that immaterial something which they
conceive to
constitute the soul. This eventual residuum exemplifies
the Franciscan notion of pure substance, for it is a thing
delightfully
devoid of any attributes whatever.
We may, perhaps, not be aware of the
existence of such an elaborate
set of encasings to our own heart of hearts, nor of a something so
very
indefinite within, but the most
casual glance at any religion
will reveal its truth as regards the soul of a
belief. We recognize
the fact
outwardly in the buildings erected to
celebrate its
worship.
Not among the Jews alone was the holy of holies kept veiled, to
temper the
divineradiance to man's benighted understanding. Nor is
the chancel-rail of Christianity the sole
survivor of the more
exclusive barriers of olden times, even in the Western world.
In the Ear East, where difficulty of
access is deemed indispensable