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Anonymous /lit/24517288#24517288
7/3/2025, 4:39:22 PM
Christianity has proven itself to be not just inadequate for addressing our modern spiritual crisis, but actively complicit in creating it. The very foundations of Western nihilism and atheism can be traced back to Christianity's toxic marriage with Platonism, which birthed the mechanistic worldview that now haunts us. Where Buddhism offers the profound wisdom of śūnyatā, the liberating emptiness that dissolves all artificial divisions, Christianity clings to a primitive dualism that tears reality apart at its seams, creating an unbridgeable chasm between God and creation, subject and object, sacred and profane. This fundamental cleavage breeds the very self-centeredness that Christianity claims to cure, manifesting in centuries of Crusades, Inquisitions, and religious wars that Buddhism's history mercifully lacks. Christianity's obsession with will (both divine and human) has spawned the egotistical humanism that now devours the planet, while its linear eschatology traps believers in a neurotic relationship with time that modern consciousness can no longer accept. Even Christian "love" reveals itself as Nietzsche exposed: a disguised nihilism, a solidarity of the weak that transforms suffering into life-denial and pity into a practice of nothingness. Buddhism, by contrast, offers what Christianity desperately needs but cannot achieve on its own terms: a path beyond the self-centered prison of Western thought into the true freedom of absolute negativity, where the very ground of selfhood dissolves into the organic oneness that heals our fractured world.
Anonymous /his/17811464#17811464
7/3/2025, 4:21:10 PM
Christianity seems to have hit a wall when it comes to offering people a real sense of meaning today. The way it splits God from nature and the mind from the body just doesn't hold up anymore, especially since science, which Christianity ironically helped pave the way for, has pretty much dismantled that whole worldview. As a result, a lot of people are left feeling empty or nihilistic, stuck with a moral system that's life-denying. The focus on one true God and one chosen group has made it hard to embrace other perspectives, and the idea of some big final judgment day feels out of step with how we actually understand the world now. On the other hand Buddhism, with its idea of everything being connected, feels way more relevant. It doesn't ask you to believe in some sky daddy but invites you to find meaning in the here and now, in the actual stuff of life. It's not about guilt and salvation later, but about awareness and balance in the present.