
The Bible Project Daily Podcast A Christian Reaction to Reading Thích Nhất Hạnh's Book "The Miracle of Mindfulness." (1975)
This episode was originally released as a Patreon-only special episode on the 10th May 2025.
Mindfulness The 1970’s Buddhist appropriation of Prayer and Reflection.
Thích Nhất Hạnh, the Vietnamese Zen Buddhist monk, peace activist, and prolific author, stands as one of the most influential contemporary figures in introducing Buddhist thought, particularly mindfulness meditation, to Western audiences. His 1975 work, "The Miracle of Mindfulness," offered an introduction to mindfulness, not merely as a spiritual technique but as an encompassing way of life. Hạnh’s message, deeply rooted in Mahayana Buddhism and Vietnamese Zen traditions, is characterized by gentleness and commitment to nonviolence.
While these teachings on presence and compassion have resonated with individuals across various religious and secular paths, their underlying metaphysical assumptions present significant divergences when viewed from a Christian worldview.
Themes:
1. The Nature of the Self: Created Dignity vs. Illusory Ego
2. The Problem of Suffering: Moral Transgression vs. Karmic Ignorance
3. The Path to Liberation: Divine Redemption vs. Self-Realization
4. Temporal Presence and Eternal Hope: The Trajectory of Time
5. The Nature of the Divine: Personal God vs. Non-Theistic Interbeing
Conclusion: Christians must be anchored in a Different Narrative
Thích Nhất Hạnh’s "The Miracle of Mindfulness" offers some insights into the idea of living in the moment, but in my opinion, not adding anything to what the Stoics taught 2000+ years ago. However, from a Christian theological perspective, its foundational assumptions about the self, suffering, salvation, time, and the nature of ultimate reality diverge significantly from the Christian worldview.
Christianity anchors its understanding of life and its spiritual practices in a revealed narrative: the story of creation by a personal God, the tragic fall of humanity into sin, the redemptive work of Jesus Christ, and the promised hope of future restoration and eternal communion with God. This narrative provides a framework where the self is not an illusion to be overcome but a creation to be redeemed, where suffering finds its ultimate answer not in mindful detachment alone but in the sacrificial love of God, and where the present moment, while sacred, points towards an eternal
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