
This episode offers a comparative analysis of apocalyptic narratives and cyclical timeacross different traditions, primarily contrasting Christianity's linear End Time with Buddhist cosmology's cyclical view of spiritual decline and renewal. The analysis highlights that while mainstream Christianity focuses on a cataclysmic, divine judgment at the end of history, Buddhist concepts like the Latter Age of the Dharma (Mappo) emphasize a period of spiritual degeneration that is nevertheless a prelude to reawakening, making the future human-centered and hopeful. The source further examines how Christian mystics interpret the apocalypse symbolically as inner transformation rather than literal destruction, drawing parallels between their view of spiritual crisis (the Dark Night of the Soul) and Buddhist concepts of profound doubt, aligning both traditions in their focus on moral clarity and inner growth as antidotes to societal decay. Finally, the text proposes an alternative metaphorical reading of the Buddhist Three Ages as a psychological cycle of spiritual journey—moving from direct realization to ritualistic form and then to necessary disintegration—which functions as a catalyst for deeper awakening.