Greta wrote:
I find that description somewhat similar to the Christian model. The main aim still appears to be either complete or near-absorption by God.
Au contraire, in Christianity individual identity is sacred, the body is a gift, not a "flesh prison" of the spirit, and nobody is "absorbed" into the Divine, as they are in Buddhism. Buddhism aims at "
Nirvana," which is not a "heaven" or even an "afterlife"
per se, but rather a state of soul-extinction, for which Buddhists use analogies like a drop of water dissipating into the ocean or a flame being blown out.
Buddhists believe one must work over a number of lifetimes to achieve this goal while Christians believe that we only get one lifetime to get there.
Yes, that's yet another key difference: reincarnation. Moreover, Buddhism institutionalizes suffering as inevitable (
samsara), and ultimately incurable as a human condition. Individuals may become enlightened and escape, but the race itself suffers eternally. Evil persists forever in Buddhism, as the necessary opposite of good -- though both conceptions, good and evil, are not the same in Buddhism as in Christianity either.
In Christianity, desire is an intimation of mankind's incompleteness without God, and can actually point to that; in Buddhism, desire (both good and evil) is not a positive at all, but rather anchors the soul to physical reality and prevents enlightenment. The world is not redeemable for Buddhists, and the Buddhist god does not love it...
No, they're very, very different.