Religious Diversity and Dialogue

A Buddhist Perspective

Authors

  • Asanga Tilakaratne University of Colombo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/isit.40152

Keywords:

religious diversity, inter-religious dialogue, Buddhism, Vatican II

Abstract

With the understanding that one’s views on religious diversity shapes one’s attitude to interreligious dialogue, in this article I try to articulate how the Buddha perceived the phenomenon of religious diversity and then to discuss how this perception could inform the Buddhist practice of interreligious dialogue. I begin this discussion with reference to the diversity of views held by the Roman Catholics themselves on interreligious dialogue and the Colonial and more recent history of dialogue in the local context of Sri Lanka. Next I move on to discuss Buddhism’s own self-understanding as a non-theistic system. In order to support the non-theistic claim of Buddhism I produce two arguments, one philosophical and the other experiential, both derived from the discourses of the Buddha. Having supported the non-theist stance of Buddhism, I propose that the Buddhist attitude is to be open to religious diversity while upholding the position that nirvana is the ultimate goal irreducible to any other similar goals. The discussion shows that to accept diversity is not necessarily to accept pluralism in religion, and that this position does not preclude Buddhists from engaging in interreligious dialogue.

Author Biography

  • Asanga Tilakaratne, University of Colombo

    Asanga Tilakaratne is Emeritus Professor of Buddhist Studies at Colombo University. He graduated from Peradeniya University, Sri Lanka, specializing in Buddhist Philosophy. He has published, both in Sinhala and English, more than one hundred papers on Buddhist studies. Of his more recent academic works, Theravada Buddhism: the View of the Elders (2012) was published by University of Hawai'i Press. He co-edited with Professor Oliver Abeynayaka 2600 Years of Sambuddhatva: Global Journey of Awakening (2012), a work covering the history and the current status of global Buddhism of all three traditions. Professor Tilakaratne founded the Sri Lanka Association of Buddhist Studies (SLABS), an academic and professional organization of Buddhist scholars in Sri Lanka.

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Published

2020-04-14

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Tilakaratne, A. (2020). Religious Diversity and Dialogue: A Buddhist Perspective. Interreligious Studies and Intercultural Theology, 4(1), 61-75. https://doi.org/10.1558/isit.40152