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Thoughts On Karma
By
William Quan Judge
First Published 1892
Every day in life we
see people overtaken by circumstances either good or bad and coming in blocks
all at once or scattered over long periods of time. Some are for a whole life
in a miserable condition, and others for many years the very reverse; while
still others are miserable or happy by snatches.
I speak, of course,
of the circumstances of life irrespective of the effect on the mind of
the person, for it
may often be that a man is not unhappy under adverse circumstances, and some
are able to extract good from the very strait lines they are put within.
Now all this is the
Karma of those who are the experiencers, and therefore we ask ourselves if
Karma may fall in a lump or may be strung out over a long space of years. And
the question is also asked if the circumstances of this life are the sum total
result of the life which has immediately preceded it.
There is a little
story told to a German mystic in this century by an old man, another mystic, when
asked the meaning of the verse in the Bible which says that the sins of the
father will be visited on the children to the third and fourth generation. He
said: "There was once an Eastern king who had one son, and this son
committed a deed the penalty of which was that he should be killed by a great
stone thrown upon him. But as it was seen that this would not repair the wrong
nor give to the offender the chance to become a better man, the counsellors of
the king advised that the stone should be broken into small
pieces, and those be
thrown at the son, and at his children and grandchildren as
they were able to
bear it. It was so done, and all were in some sense sufferers
yet none were
destroyed."
It was argued, of
course, in this case that the children and grandchildren could not have been
born in the family of the prince
if they had not had
some hand in the past, in other lives, in the formation of his character, and
for that reason they should share to some extent in his punishment.
In no other way than
this can the Christian verses be understood if we are to attribute justice to
the God of the Christians. Each Ego is attracted to the body in which he will
meet his just deserts, but also for another reason.
That is, that not
only is the body to give opportunity for his just reward or
punishment, but also
for that he in the past was connected with the family in which the body was
born, and the stream of heredity to which it belongs is his too.
It is therefore a question
not alone of desert and similarity, but one of
responsibility.
Justice orders that the Ego shall suffer or enjoy irrespective of what family
he comes to; similarity decrees that he shall come to the family in which there
is some characteristic similar to one or many of his and thus having a drawing
power; but responsibility, which is compounded of justice, directs that the Ego
shall come to the race or the nation or the family to which
its responsibility
lies for the part taken by it in other lives in forming of the general
character, or affecting that physical stream of heredity that has so much
influence on those who are involved in it.
Therefore it is just
that even the grandchildren shall suffer if they in the past have had a hand in
moulding the family or even in bringing about a social order that is
detrimental to those who fall into it through incarnation. I use the word
responsibility to indicate something composed of similarity and justice. It may
be described by other words probably quite as well, and in the present state of
the English language very
likely will be.
An Ego may have no
direct responsibility for a family, national, or race condition, and yet be
drawn into incarnation there. In such an event it is similarity of character
which causes the place of rebirth, for the being
coming to the abode
of mortals is drawn like electricity along the path of least
resistance and of
greatest conductibility.
But where the
reincarnating Ego is
directly responsible
for family or race conditions, it will decide itself, upon
exact principles of
justice and in order to meet its obligations, to be reborn where it shall
receive, as grandchild if you will, physically or otherwise the results of its
former acts.
This decision is made
at the emergence from Devachan. It is thus entirely just, no matter whether the
new physical brain is
able or not to pick
up the lost threads of memory. So to-day, in our civilization, we are all under
the penalty of our forefathers sins, living in bodies which medical science has
shown are sown with diseases of brain and flesh and blood coming in the turbid
stream of heredity through the centuries.
These disturbances
were brought about by ourselves in other centuries, in ignorance,
perhaps, of
consequences so far-reaching, but that ignorance lessens only the
higher moral
responsibility and tends to confine the results to physical suffering.
This can very well
lead, as it often does, to efforts on the part of many reincarnating Egos in
the direction of general reform. It was through a belief in this that the
ancients attempted to form and keep up in India a pure family stream such as
the highest caste of Brahmin. For they knew that if such a clean family line
could be kept existing for many centuries, it would develop the power of
repelling Egos on the way to rebirth if they were not in character
up to the standard of
that stream of life.
Thus only teachers by
nature, of high
moral and spiritual
elevation, would come upon the scene to act as regenerators
and saviors for all
other classes. But under the iron rule of cyclic law this degenerated in time,
leaving now only an imitation of the real thing.
A variation of the
Eastern story told above is that the advice of the kings counsellors was that
the broken stone should be cast at the prince. This was done, and the result
was that he was not killed but suffered while the pieces were being thrown. It
gives another Karmic law, that is, that a given amount of force of a Karmic
character may be thrown at one or fall upon one at once, in bulk, so to say, or
may be divided up into smaller pieces, the sum of which
represents the whole
mass of Karmic force.
And so we see it in
life. Men suffer through many years an amount of adverse Karma which, if it
were to fall all at once, would crush them. Others for a long time have general
good fortune that might unseat the reason if experienced in one day; and the
latter happens also, for we know of those who have been destroyed by the sudden
coming of what is called great good fortune.
This law is seen also
in physics. A piece of glass may be broken at once by a single blow, or the
same amount of force put into a number of taps continuously repeated will
accomplish the same result and mash
the glass.
And with the emotions
we observe the same law followed by even the most ignorant, for we do not tell
bad news at once to the person who is the sufferer, but get at it slowly by
degrees; and often when disaster is suddenly heard of, the person who hears it
is prostrated. In both cases the sorrow caused is the same, but the method of
imparting the news differs. Indeed, in whatever direction we look, this law is
observed to work. It is universal, and it ought to be applied to Karma as well
as to anything else.
Whether the life we
are now living is the net result of the one just preceding is answered by
Patanjali in his 8th and 9th aphorisms, Book IV. "From these works there
results, in every incarnation, a manifestation of only those mental deposits
which can come to fructification in the environment provided.
Although the
manifestation of mental
deposits may be
intercepted by unsuitable environments, differing as to class, place, and time,
there is an immediate relation between them, because the memory and the train
of self-reproductive thought are identical," and also by other doctrines
of the ancients. When a body is taken up, only that sort of Karma which can
operate through it will make itself felt.
This is what
Patanjali means. The "environment" is the body, with the mind, the
plastic nature, and the emotions and desires. Hence one may have been great or
the reverse in the preceding life, and now have only the environment which will
serve for the exhaustion of some Karma left over from lives many incarnations
distant. This
unexhausted Karma is
known as stored-up Karma.
It may or may not
come into operation now, and it can also be brought out into view by violent
effort of the mind leading to such changes as to alter the bodily apparatus and
make it equivalent to a new body. But as the majority of men are lazy of mind
and nature, they suffer themselves to run with the great family or national
stream, and so through one life make no changes of this inner nature. Karma in
their
cases operates
through what Patanjali calls "mental deposits."
These are the net
results stored from each life by Manas. For as body dies, taking brain with it,
there can be no storage there nor means of connecting with the next earth-life;
the division known as Kama is dissipated or purged away together with astral
body at some time before rebirth; astral body retains nothing--as a general
rule for the new life, and the value or summation of those skandhas which
belong to Kama is concentrated and deposited in Manas or the mind. So, when the
immortal
being returns, he is
really Manas-Buddhi-Atma seeking a new environment which is
found in a new body,
prana,
the sway of cyclic
law, the reincarnation can only furnish an engine of a horsepower, so to say,
which is very much lower than the potential energies stored in Manas, and thus
there remain unexhausted "mental deposits," or unexhausted Karma.
The Ego may therefore
be expending a certain line of Karma, always bringing it to similar
environments until that class of Karma shall be so exhausted or weakened as to
permit another set of "mental deposits" to preponderate, whereupon
the next incarnation will be in a different environment which shall give
opportunity for the new set of deposits to bring about new or different Karma.
The object that is
indicated for life by all this is, to so live and think during each life as to
generate no new Karma, or cause for
bondage, while one is
working off the stock in hand, in order that on closing each life-account one
shall have wiped off so much as that permits. The old "mental
deposits" will thus gradually move up into action and exhaustion from life
to life, at last leaving the man in a condition where he can master all and
step into true consciousness, prepared to renounce final reward in order that
he may remain with humanity, making no new Karma himself and helping others
along the steep road to perfection.
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