Mother Teresa Was Compassionate, Buddha Was Not

I ran across a story in the San Francisco Chronicle , in which scientists are studying the brains of Buddhist nuns and monks in order to see what “compassion” looks like.  But Buddhism isn’t about compassion, properly understood.  Buddhists seek to become detached from, that is non reactive  to, the dualities of pleasure and pain, good and bad, etc., in order to escape suffering.  In contrast, the root meaning of compassion is to “suffer with.”  To experience compassion is to become profoundly  reactive by taking another’s suffering into yourself in order ease the other’s load.

In this sense, Mother Teresa was compassionate and Buddha was not. More thoughts on this over at Secondhand Smoke .

Next
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

Restoring Man at Notre Dame

Carl R. Trueman

It is fascinating to be an outsider on the inside of an institution going through times of…

Deliver Us from Evil

Kari Jenson Gold

In a recent New York Times article entitled “Freedom With a Side of Guilt: How Food Delivery…

Natural Law Needs Revelation

Peter J. Leithart

Natural law theory teaches that God embedded a teleological moral order in the world, such that things…