ISSN 1076-9005
Volume 22, 2015
Rimé Revisited: Shabkar’s Response to Religious Difference
Rachel H. Pang
Davidson College
This article analyzes Shabkar Tsokdruk Rangdrol’s (1781–1851)
Tibetan Buddhist response to interreligious and intersectarian difference.
While there exist numerous studies in Buddhist ethics that address the
Buddhist perspective on contemporary issues such as abortion, euthanasia, and
terrorism, there has been considerably less attention paid to Buddhist
responses towards religious difference. Moreover, the majority of the
research on this topic has been conducted within the context of
Buddhist-Christian dialogue. This article examines Shabkar’s non-sectarian
ideas on their own terms, within the context of Buddhist thought. I
demonstrate the strong visionary, apocalyptic, theological, and
soteriological dimensions of Shabkar’s rimé,
or “unbiased,” approach to religious diversity. The two main applications of
these findings are: (1) they broaden the current academic understanding of rimé from being a
sociological phenomenon to a theological one grounded in social and
historical particularities; (2) they draw attention to the non-philosophical
aspects of Buddhist ethics.
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