Buddhism.
David McMahan states that modernism in Buddhism is similar to those
found in other religions. The sources of influences have variously been
an engagement of Buddhist communities and teachers with the new cultures
and methodologies such as "western monotheism; rationalism and scientific naturalism; and Romantic expressivism". The influence of monotheism has been the internalization of Buddhist gods to make it acceptable in modern West,
while scientific naturalism and romanticism has influenced the emphasis
on current life, empirical defense, reason, psychological and health
benefits.
Buddhist modernism (also referred to as modern Buddhism, modernist Buddhism and Neo-Buddhism) are new movements based on modern era reinterpretations of
The Neo-Buddhism movements differ in their doctrines and practices from the historical, mainstream Theravada, Mahayana and Vajrayana
Buddhist traditions. A co-creation of Western Orientalists and
reform-minded Asian Buddhists, Buddhist modernism has been a
reformulation of Buddhist concepts that has de-emphasized traditional
Buddhist doctrines, cosmology, rituals, monasticism, clerical hierarchy
and icon worship. The term came into vogue during the colonial and post-colonial era studies of Asian religions, and is found in sources such as Louis de la Vallee Poussin's 1910 article.
Examples of Buddhist modernism movements and traditions include Humanistic Buddhism, Secular Buddhism, Engaged Buddhism, Navayana, the Japanese-initiated new lay organizations of Nichiren Buddhism such as Soka Gakkai, the New Kadampa Tradition and the missionary activity of Tibetan Buddhist masters in the West (leading the quickly growing Buddhist movement in France), the Vipassana Movement, the Triratna Buddhist Community, Dharma Drum Mountain, Fo Guang Shan, Won Buddhism, Tzu Chi, and Juniper Foundation.
Examples of Buddhist modernism movements and traditions include Humanistic Buddhism, Secular Buddhism, Engaged Buddhism, Navayana, the Japanese-initiated new lay organizations of Nichiren Buddhism such as Soka Gakkai, the New Kadampa Tradition and the missionary activity of Tibetan Buddhist masters in the West (leading the quickly growing Buddhist movement in France), the Vipassana Movement, the Triratna Buddhist Community, Dharma Drum Mountain, Fo Guang Shan, Won Buddhism, Tzu Chi, and Juniper Foundation.
Overview
Buddhist
modernism emerged during the late 19th-century and early 20th-century
colonial era, as a co-creation of Western Orientalists and reform-minded
Buddhists.
It appropriated elements of Western philosophy, psychological insights
as well as themes increasingly felt to be secular and proper. It
de-emphasized or denied ritual elements, cosmology, gods, icons,
rebirth, karma, monasticism, clerical hierarchy and other Buddhist
concepts. Instead, modernistic Buddhism has emphasized interior
exploration, satisfaction in the current life, and themes such as cosmic
interdependence.
Some advocates of Buddhist modernism claim their new interpretations to
be original teachings of the Buddha, and state that the core doctrines
and traditional practices found in Theravada, Mahayana and Vajrayana
Buddhism are extraneous accretions that were interpolated and introduced
after Buddha died. According to McMahan, Buddhism of the form found in
the West today has been deeply influenced by this modernism.
Buddhist Modernist traditions are reconstructions and a reformulation with emphasis on rationality, meditation, compatibility with modern science about body and mind. In the modernistic presentations, Theravada, Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhist practices are "detraditionalized",
in that they are often presented in such a way that occludes their
historical construction. Instead, Buddhist Modernists often employ an
essentialized description of their tradition, where key tenets are
reformulated in universal terms, and the modernistic practices
significantly differ from Asian Buddhist communities with centuries-old
traditions.
History
The
earliest western accounts of Buddhism were by 19th-century European
travelers and Christian missionaries who, states Coleman, portrayed it
as another "heathen religion with strange gods and exotic ceremonies",
where their concern was not understanding the religion but to debunk it.
By mid 19th-century, European scholars gave a new picture but once
again in concepts understood in the West. They described Buddhism as a
"life-denying faith" that rejected all the Christian ideas such as "God,
man, life, eternity"; it was an exotic Asian religion that taught nirvana, which was explained then as "annihilation of the individual". In 1879, Edwin Arnold's book The Light of Asia
presented a more sympathetic account of Buddhism, in the form of the
life of the Buddha, emphasizing the parallels between the Buddha and the
Christ.
The sociopolitical developments in Europe, the rise of scientific
theories such as those of Charles Darwin, in late 19th-century and early
20th-century created interest in Buddhism and other eastern religions,
but it was studied in the West and those trained in Western education
system with the prevalent cultural premises and modernism.
The first comprehensive study of Buddhist modernism in the Theravada
tradition as a distinct phenomenon was published in 1966 by Heinz
Bechert.
Bechert regarded Buddhist modernism as "modern Buddhist revivalism" in
postcolonial societies like Sri Lanka. He identified several
characteristics of Buddhist modernism: new interpretations of early
Buddhist teachings, demythologisation and reinterpretation of Buddhism
as "scientific religion", social philosophy or "philosophy of optimism",
emphasis on equality and democracy, "activism" and social engagement,
support of Buddhist nationalism, and the revival of meditation practice.
Japan: Neo-Buddhism
The
term Neo-Buddhism and modernism in the context of Japanese Buddhist and
Western interactions appear in late 19th-century and early 20th-century
publications. For example, Andre Bellesort used the term in 1901, while Louis de la Vallee Poussin used it in a 1910 article. According to James Coleman, the first presenters of a modernistic Buddhism before a Western audience were Anagarika Dharmapala and Soyen Shaku in 1893 at The World Congress of Religion. Shaku's student D.T. Suzuki was a prolific writer, fluent in English and he introduced Zen Buddhism to Westerners.
"New Buddhism" and Japanese Nationalism
Scholars
such as Martin Verhoeven and Robert Sharf, as well as Japanese Zen monk
G. Victor Sogen Hori, have argued that the breed of Japanese Zen that
was propagated by New Buddhism ideologues, such as Imakita Kosen and
Soyen Shaku, was not typical of Japanese Zen during their time, nor is
it typical of Japanese Zen now. Although greatly altered by the Meiji Restoration,
Japanese Zen still flourishes as a monastic tradition. The Zen
Tradition in Japan, aside from the New Buddhism style of it, required a
great deal of time and discipline from monks that laity would have
difficulty finding. Zen monks were often expected to have spent several
years in intensive doctrinal study, memorizing sutras and poring over
commentaries, before even entering the monastery to undergo koan
practice in sanzen with the roshi. The fact that Suzuki himself was able to do so as a layman was largely a result of New Buddhism.
At the onset of the Meiji period, in 1868, when Japan entered
into the international community and began to industrialize and
modernize at an astounding rate, Buddhism was briefly persecuted in
Japan as "a corrupt, decadent, anti-social, parasitic, and superstitious
creed, inimical to Japan's need for scientific and technological
advancement."
The Japanese government dedicated itself to the eradication of the
tradition, which was seen as foreign, incapable of fostering the
sentiments that would be vital for national, ideological cohesion. In
addition to this, industrialization had taken its toll on the Buddhist
establishment as well, leading to the breakdown of the parishioner
system that had funded monasteries for centuries.
In response to this seemingly intractable state of turmoil, a group of
modern Buddhist leaders emerged to argue for the Buddhist cause.
These leaders stood in agreement with the government persecution of
Buddhism, stating that Buddhist institutions were indeed corrupted and
in need of revitalization.
This Japanese movement was known as shin bukkyo, or "New
Buddhism." The leaders themselves were university-educated intellectuals
who had been exposed to a vast body of Western intellectual literature.
The fact that what was presented to the West as Japanese Zen would be
so commensurate with the Enlightenment critique of "superstitious,"
institutional, or ritual-based religion is due to this fact, as such
ideals directly informed the creation of this new tradition. This
reformulation work has roots in the writings of Eugène Burnouf in the 1840s, who expressed his liking for "the Brahmins, the Buddhists, the Zoroastrians" and a dislike for "the Jesuits" to Max Muller.
Imakita Kosen, who would become D.T. Suzuki's teacher in Zen until his
death in 1892, was an important figure in this movement. Largely
responding to the Reformation critique of elite institutionalism, he
opened Engakuji monastery to lay practitioners, which would allow
students like Suzuki unprecedented access to Zen practice.
Advocates of New Buddhism, like Kosen and his successor Soyen
Shaku, not only saw this movement as a defense of Buddhism against
government persecution, they also saw it as a way to bring their nation
into the modern world as a competitive, cultural force. Kosen himself
was even employed by the Japanese government as a "national evangelist"
during the 1870s.
The cause of Japanese nationalism and the portrayal of Japan as a
superior cultural entity on the international scene was at the heart of
the Zen missionary movement. Zen would be touted as the essential
Japanese religion, fully embodied by the bushido,
or samurai spirit, an expression of the Japanese people in the fullest
sense, in spite of the fact that this version of Zen was a recent
invention in Japan that was largely based on Western philosophical
ideals.
Soyen Shaku, Suzuki's teacher in Zen after Kosen's death in 1892,
claimed "Religion is the only force in which the Western people know
that they are inferior to the nations of the East ... Let us wed the
Great Vehicle [Mahayana Buddhism] to Western thought…at Chicago next
year [referring to the 1893 World Parliament of Religions] the fitting
time will come.”
According to Martin Verhoeven, "The spiritual crisis of the West
exposed its Achilles' heel to be vanquished. Though economically and
technologically bested by the Western powers, Japan saw a chance to
reassert its sense of cultural superiority via religion."
D.T. Suzuki
For a number of reasons, several scholars have identified D.T. Suzuki—whose
works were popular in the West from the 1930s onward, and particularly
in the 1950s and 60s—as a "Buddhist Modernist." Suzuki's depiction of Zen Buddhism
can be classified as Buddhist Modernist in that it employs all of these
traits. That he was a university-educated intellectual steeped in
knowledge of Western philosophy
and literature allowed him to be particularly successful and persuasive
in arguing his case to a Western audience. As Suzuki presented it, Zen
Buddhism was a highly practical religion whose emphasis on direct experience made it particularly comparable to forms of mysticism that scholars such as William James had emphasized as the fountainhead of all religious sentiment.
As McMahan explains, "In his discussion of humanity and nature, Suzuki
takes Zen literature out of its social, ritual, and ethical contexts and
reframes it in terms of a language of metaphysics derived from German
Romantic idealism, English Romanticism, and American Transcendentalism."
Drawing on these traditions, Suzuki presents a version of Zen that has
been described by hostile critics as detraditionalized and
essentialized:
Zen is the ultimate fact of all philosophy and religion. Every intellectual effort must culminate in it, or rather must start from it, if it is to bear any practical fruits. Every religious faith must spring from it if it has to prove at all efficiently and livingly workable in our active life. Therefore Zen is not necessarily the fountain of Buddhist thought and life alone; it is very much alive also in Christianity, Mohammedanism, in Taoism, and even positivistic Confucianism. What makes all these religions and philosophies vital and inspiring, keeping up their usefulness and efficiency, is due to the presence in them of what I may designate as the Zen element.
Scholars such as Robert Sharf have argued that such statements also
betray inklings of nationalist sentiment, common to many early Buddhist
Modernists, in that they portray Zen, which Suzuki had described as
representing the essence of the Japanese people, as superior to all
other religions.
A Neo-Buddhist movement was founded by the Indian Dalit leader B. R. Ambedkar in the 1950s. Ambedkar held a press conference on October 13, 1956, announcing his rejection of Theravada and Mahayana vehicles, as well as of Hinduism. He then adopted Navayana Buddhism, and converted between 500,000 and 600,000 Dalits to his Neo-Buddhism movement. All the elements of religious modernism, state Christopher Queen and Sallie King, may be found in Ambedkar Buddhism where his The Buddha and His Dhamma
abandons the traditional precepts and practices, then adopts science,
activism and social reforms as a form of Engaged Buddhism.
Ambedkar's formulation of Buddhism is different from Western modernism,
states Skaria, given his synthesis of the ideas of modern Karl Marx into the structure of ideas by the ancient Buddha.
According to Ambedkar, several of the core beliefs and doctrines of traditional Buddhist traditions such as Four Noble Truths and Anatta
as flawed and pessimistic, may have been inserted into the Buddhist
scriptures by wrong headed Buddhist monks of a later era. These should
not be considered as Buddha's teachings in Ambedkar's view. Other foundational concepts of Buddhism such as Karma and Rebirth were considered by Ambedkar as superstitions.
Navayana abandons practices and precepts such as the institution
of monk after renunciation, ideas such as karma, rebirth in afterlife,
samsara, meditation, nirvana and Four Noble Truths considered to be
foundational in the Buddhist traditions. Ambedkar's Neo-Buddhism rejected these ideas and re-interpreted the Buddha's religion in terms of class struggle and social equality.
Ambedkar called his version of Buddhism Navayana or Neo-Buddhism. His book, The Buddha and His Dhamma is the holy book of Navayana followers. According to Junghare, for the followers of Navyana, Ambedkar has become a deity and he is worshipped in its practice.
West: Naturalized Buddhism
Other forms of Neo-Buddhism are found outside Asia, particularly in European nations. According to Bernard Faure
– a professor of Religious Studies with a focus on Buddhism,
Neo-Buddhism in the forms found in the West is a modernist restatement, a
form of spiritual response to anxieties of individuals and the modern
world that is not grounded in its ancient ideas, but "a sort of
impersonal flavorless or odorless spirituality". It is a re-adaptation, a
kind of Buddhism "a la carte", that understands the needs and then is
reformulated to fill a void in the West, rather than reflect the ancient
canons and secondary literature of Buddhism.
Some Western interpreters of Buddhism have proposed the term
"naturalized Buddhism" for few of these movements. It is devoid of
rebirth, karma, nirvana, realms of existence, and other concepts of
Buddhism, with doctrines such as the Four Noble Truths reformulated and
restated in modernistic terms.
This "deflated secular Buddhism" stresses compassion, impermanence,
causality, selfless persons, no Bodhisattvas, no nirvana, no rebirth,
and a naturalists approach to well-being of oneself and others. Meditation and spiritual practices such as Vipassana,
or its variants, centered around self-development remain a part of the
Western Neo-Buddhist movements. According to James Coleman, the focus of
most vipassana students in the west "is mainly on meditation practice
and a kind of down-to-earth psychological wisdom."
For many western Buddhists, the rebirth doctrine in the Four Noble Truths teaching is a problematic notion. According to Lamb, "Certain forms of modern western Buddhism [...] see it as purely mythical and thus a dispensable notion." Westerners find "the ideas of karma and rebirth puzzling", states Damien Keown
– a professor of Buddhist Ethics. It may not be necessary to believe in
some of the core Buddhist doctrines to be a Buddhist, though most
Buddhists in Asia do accept these traditional teachings and seek better
rebirth. The rebirth, karma, realms of existence and cyclic universe doctrines underpin the Four Noble Truths in Buddhism.
It is possible to reinterpret the Buddhist doctrines such as the Four
Noble Truths, states Keown, since the final goal and the answer to the
problem of suffering is nirvana and not rebirth.
According to Konik,
Since the fundamental problems underlying early Indian Buddhism and contemporary western Buddhism are not the same, the validity of applying the set of solutions developed by the first to the situation of the second becomes a question of great importance. Simply putting an end to rebirth would not necessarily strike the western Buddhist as the ultimate answer, as it certainly was for early Indian Buddhists.
Traditional Buddhist scholars disagree with these modernist Western
interpretations. Bhikkhu Bodhi, for example, states that rebirth is an
integral part of the Buddhist teachings as found in the sutras, despite
the problems that "modernist interpreters of Buddhism" seem to have with
it. Thanissaro Bhikkhu,
as another example, rejects the "modern argument" that "one can still
obtain all the results of the practice without having to accept the
possibility of rebirth." He states, "rebirth has always been a central
teaching in the Buddhist tradition."
According to Owen Flanagan, the Dalai Lama states that "Buddhists
believe in rebirth" and that this belief has been common among his
followers. However, the Dalai Lama's belief, adds Flanagan, is more
sophisticated than ordinary Buddhists, because it is not same as reincarnation,
rebirth in Buddhism is envisioned as happening without an assumption of
an "atman, self, soul", rather through a "consciousness conceived along
the anatman lines". The doctrine of rebirth is considered mandatory in Tibetan Buddhism, and across many Buddhist sects.
According to Melford Spiro, the reinterpretations of Buddhism that
discard rebirth undermine the Four Noble Truths, for it does not address
the existential question for the Buddhist as to "why live? why not
commit suicide, hasten the end of dukkha in current life by ending life". In traditional Buddhism, rebirth continues the dukkha and the path to cessation of dukkha isn't suicide, but the fourth reality of the Four Noble Truths.
According to Christopher Gowans, for "most ordinary Buddhists,
today as well as in the past, their basic moral orientation is governed
by belief in karma and rebirth".
Buddhist morality hinges on the hope of well being in this lifetime or
in future rebirth, with nirvana (enlightenment) a project for a future
lifetime. A denial of karma and rebirth undermines their history, moral
orientation and religious foundations.
However, adds Gowans, many Western followers and people interested in
exploring Buddhism are skeptical and object to the belief in karma and
rebirth foundational to the Four Noble Truths.
The "naturalized Buddhism", according to Gowans, is a radical
revision to traditional Buddhist thought and practice, and it attacks
the structure behind the hopes, needs and rationalization of the
realities of human life to traditional Buddhists in East, Southeast and
South Asia.
Other New Buddhisms
According
to Burkhard Scherer – a professor of Comparative Religion, the novel
interpretations are a new, separate Buddhist sectarian lineage and Shambhala International "has to be described as New Buddhism (Coleman) or, better still, Neo-Buddhism".
In Central and Eastern Europe, according to Burkhard Scherer, the fast growing Diamond Way Buddhism started by Hannah and Ole Nydahl
is a Neo-orthoprax Buddhism movement.. The charismatic leadership of
Nydahl and his 600 dharma centers worldwide have made it the largest
convert movement in Eastern Europe, but its interpretations of Tibetan
Buddhism and tantric meditation techniques have been criticized by both
traditional Buddhists and non-Buddhists.
Others have used "New Buddhism" to describe or publish manifesto
of socially Engaged Buddhism. For example, David Brazier published his
"manifesto of the New Buddhism" in 2001, wherein he calls for radical
shift of focus from monasticism and traditional Buddhist doctrines to
radically novel interpretations that engaged with the secular world.
According to Brazier, the traditional Buddhist traditions such as
Theravada and Mahayana have been "instrument of state policy for
subduing rather than liberating the population", and have become paths
of "individual salvation rather than address the roots of world
disease".
Lopez's concept of "modern Buddhism"
Donald
S. Lopez Jr. uses the term "Modern Buddhism" to describe the entirety
of Buddhist modernist traditions, which he suggests "has developed into a
kind of transnational Buddhist sect", "an international Buddhism that
transcends cultural and national boundaries, creating...a cosmopolitan
network of intellectuals, writing most often in English". This "sect" is
rooted neither in geography nor in traditional schools but is the
modern aspect of a variety of Buddhist schools in different locations.
Moreover, it has its own cosmopolitan lineage and canonical
"scriptures," mainly the works of popular and semi-scholarly
authors—figures from the formative years of modern Buddhism, including Soyen Shaku, Dwight Goddard, D. T. Suzuki, and Alexandra David-Neel, as well as more recent figures like Shunryu Suzuki, Sangharakshita, Alan Watts, Thich Nhat Hanh, Chögyam Trungpa, and the Fourteenth Dalai Lama."