patheos
 
 
Future of Buddhism 
 
Into the Mainstream: Buddhism, Mysticism, and Ecumenism

 
Buddhism is clearly moving from the fringes of American religious life into 
 its mainstream.

July 5, 2010


By James William Coleman  
Buddhism is something of a "stealth" religion in North America. At least to 
 judge by its treatment in the mass media, Buddhism is seen as something 
rather  rare and exotic. When media figures, politicians, and even academics 
discuss  religious diversity in America, Islam is usually the first religion 
they add to  the traditional list of Judeo-Christian faiths. 
Yet when the _Pew Religious Landscape Survey_ 
(http://religions.pewforum.org/)  asked a random sample of  Americans to name 
their religious affiliation 
in 2007, 0.7 percent said they  were Buddhist while only 0.4 said they were 
Muslim. There is, moreover, good  reason to believe that this figure 
significantly underestimates the actual  number of Buddhist practitioners. The 
majority of Buddhists in America were not  born into the tradition, but are 
converts, and their difficulties with what they  view as the rigidity and 
intolerance of other faiths often make them reluctant  to proclaim any 
sectarian 
religious identification. Perhaps more importantly,  Buddhist teachings 
themselves warn about the dangers of grasping at any kind of  
self-identification, including that of being a Buddhist.
 
If we look at other measures, the number of Buddhists is much larger. A 
2009  survey by the Purdue Social Research Institute found that 2.2 percent of 
adult  Americas visit a Buddhist teacher or monk at least a few times a 
year, 2.7  percent practice Buddhist meditation at least one a month, and 3.1 
percent read  Buddhist literature at least one a month. (In reality, these 
statistics are  probably also underestimates, since they exclude those who 
identified themselves  as Asian Americans.) By these measures, the percentage 
of 
Americans who are  Buddhists is actually significantly larger than the 1.7 
percent who told the Pew  survey they were Jewish in religion. Most 
surprising of all, is the remarkable  finding of the 2003 Religion and 
Diversity 
Survey funded by the Lilly Endowment  that 12.5 percent of Americans felt that 
Buddhist teachings had an important  influence on their thinking about 
religion or spirituality. 
Clearly, this is not a rare or exotic religious movement. 
What does all this portend for the future? Although my crystal ball is a  
little cloudy just now, it seems indubitable that Buddhism will move from the 
 fringes of American religious life into its mainstream, if it has not 
already  done so. But what will its role be in this new age of multiculturalism 
and  globalization? Although the answer is far from clear, it seems to me 
that  Western Buddhism is the quintessential example of a religious movement 
based on  direct religious experience, rather than doctrines, rituals, 
devotional  practices, or a promise of community support. Demographically, its 
adherents are  disproportionately drawn from highly educated classes who shape 
our cultural  evolution. 
Thus, I think Western Buddhists stand a reasonable chance of leading a 
major  ecumenical movement to return direct mystical experience beyond the 
confines of  doctrine and ideology back to the center of religious life. One 
thing is  certain; the 21st-century world faces no more important challenge 
than 
the  discovery of the universal core that binds all religious life and all 
the  world's warring peoples together. 
James William Coleman is Professor of Sociology at the California  
Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo. He is the author of numerous  
books 
and articles including _The New Buddhism_ 
(http://books.google.com/books?id=9-Q6bCGIPhkC&dq=coleman+news+buddhism&source=gbs_navlinks_s)
 : The Western  
Transformation of an Ancient Tradition (Oxford,  2001).

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