Bhutan Beware
Bhutan Beware
Bhutan Beware
It is no secret that all world churches- most important of them being the Roman Catholic
Church and the Protestant Church- have a common agenda which they call
"Evangelization 2000 and Beyond". Evangelization 2000 is not an isolated phenomenon.
It comes in wake of two other movements, globalization and Westernization.
Westernization has culturally enslaved many people’s minds and lives. All this together
constitute a single, three-pronged onslaught on national sovereignty – economic, cultural
and religious of Buddhist nations such as yours and mine (Sri Lanka). Evangelization is
in fact homogenization. It seeks to impose "one God, one Prophet and one Book” over all
mankind. It will destroy cultural pluralism and religious diversity. It is the evangelizing
faiths that threaten the rich and colorful diversity and impose a monolithic way of life
over all peoples.
According to the World Evangelization Research Center (WERC), there are more than
four thousand mission agencies. Collectively they operate a huge apparatus, manned by
some 434,000 foreign missionaries wielding an annual global income of $18 billion.
They spend an astonishing average of $359,000 for every person baptized.
This subordination of humanitarian service to proselytizing is a matter of theology--
evangelical Christians believe they hold a divine mandate, their "Great Commission"
from God, to spread their creed. But it is also a matter of policy as far as the Catholic
Church is concerned. Pope John Paul II, during his 1998 visit to India, stated
categorically that the "Christianization" of Asia is an absolute priority" for the Catholic
Church in the new millennium. Missionaries have long capitalized on the leverage they
exercise over the young through thousands of church-run hospitals, schools, and
orphanages.
The practice of allurement, or providing "inducements" to the poor in return for their
conversion to Christianity, is quite common, and one that many missionaries readily
admit using. Today's methods are subtle and more concealed. Converts are now being
"bought" with food, medicine, promises, micro-loans and many other means. This
practice of bribing, rewarding and buying people over to Christianity, is not a recent
phenomenon, it has been the common characteristic of all Christian and western
humanitarian and charity missions and their NGO affiliates operating in poor countries.
When these baits and allurements fail, the missionaries resort to more-aggressive means
which border on intimidation and fraud. In Sri Lanka they resorted to making of the
Buddha- shaped cookies to be eaten by children and smashing and destroying statues of
the Buddha in their presence in order to kill children’s spirit of veneration to the Buddha.
For these peculiar Christians the "harvesting" of souls has become an end that justifies
almost any means. "It's not how we convert that matters," Paul insists. "Conversion is
what counts."
Buddhist Spirituality
For 2,500 years Buddhism has satisfied the spiritual needs of nearly one third of
mankind. It appeals to those in search of truth because it has no dogmas, satisfies the
reason and the heart alike, insists on self-reliance coupled with tolerance for other points
of view, embraces science, religion, philosophy, psychology, mysticism, ethics and art,
and points to man alone as the creator of his present life and sole designer of his destiny”.
Studies have revealed that Bhutanese are the happiest people on earth. The primary basis
of their happiness derives from their Buddhist way of life and attitude towards life,
towards others and towards their environment.
Negative social tendencies that characterize western ‘Christian societies are uncommon
in Buddhist countries such as yours and ours. Among these undesirable tendencies are
excessive divorces, broken families, family violence, single parents, abandoned children,
child abuse, abortions, teenage pregnancies, drug and sex addiction, proneness to stress
and depression, excessive sensuality.
Proselytization actions of Christian organizations not only work against Buddhism and
Buddhist culture that form the foundation of life in countries such as yours and ours, but
also, in the process, bring about divisiveness and disharmony among our people. This is a
most reprehensible form of exploitation. Divisive tendencies thrust upon people become
threats of the well-known community coherence, hospitality, cordiality and unity that
characterize out Buddhist communities. Community feeling pervades our Buddhist
societies, especially among our predominantly rural masses. Individualistic tendencies
are promoted by the Christian western corporate culture where aggressiveness, craving
and sensuality reign supreme. This so called culture promotes limitless craving for
material possessions, physical comforts and sensual pleasures.
The sensible and intelligent people of the western world are withdrawing from
Christianity in increasing numbers, and through their own conviction, have turned to the
meaningful Buddhist way of life. Today Western Europe, the traditional homeland of
Catholics and Anglican Protestants, is a post-Christian society. The churches are empty,
the people increasingly secular and some significant sections turning to Buddhist
meditation and yoga. A similar situation exists among many in USA among whom are
the educated, professionals and celebrities.
Former Christians are in increasing numbers, turning towards Buddhism and Buddhist
practices such as meditation to enrich their lives, because they do not see depth and
meaning in the lifestyle promoted by the western materialistic and individualistic life
style. They find it to be both stressful and shallow. Buddhism is the fastest growing
religion and spiritual influence in most western countries at present.
Vancouver, Canada