Well you could be right. I still think the basic premises of both faiths are mutually exclusive but it gets down to a matter of definitions, doesn't it. I use to study a lot of theology and that is all that that boils down to--a bunch of mental concepts and definitions and a whole lot of people fighting over them.
I always considered the kingdom of God stuff as just an acceptance of the rule of God. If you want to make it an actual mental state go ahead. I can't say it isn't but I think your reading more into the scripture than is there. As for this Buddha-nature pure land stuff I haven't the foggiest idea what that is supposed to be. When you get into the Mahayana and Zen schools you get a lot of strange concepts. When I studied Buddhism I restricted myself to the Pali cannon and none of that stuff applies. My professor and meditation instructor thought it was nonsense and I suppose I've carried that bias with me.
So we find ourselves playing theological ping-pong once more, a verbal argument over definitions and it looks like neither one of us is going to concede on definitions. Fun stuff
