Karma
By
William Q. Judge
First Published 1886
THE child is the father
of the man, and none the less true is it: My brothers!
each mans life
The outcome of his
former living is;
The bygone wrongs bring
forth sorrows and woes
The bygone right breeds
bliss.
"This is the
doctrine of Karma."
But in what way does
this bygone wrong and right affect the present life? Is the stern nemesis ever
following the weary traveler, with a calm, passionless, remorseless step?
Is there no escape from
its relentless hand? Does the eternal law of cause and effect, unmoved by
sorrow and regret, ever deal out its measure of weal and woe as the consequence
of past action? The shadow of the yesterday of sin--must it darken the life of
today? Is Karma but another name for fate? Does the child unfold the page of
the already written book of life in which each event is recorded without the
possibility of escape? What is the relation of Karma to the life of the
individual? Is there nothing for man to do but to weave the chequered
warp and woof of each earthly existence with the stained and discolored threads
of past actions?
Good resolves and evil
tendencies sweep with resistless tide over the nature of man and we are told:
"Whatever action he performs, whether good or bad, every thing done in a
former body must necessarily be enjoyed or suffered." Anugita,
Cp. III. There is good Karma, there is bad Karma, and as the wheel of life
moves on, old Karma is exhausted and again fresh Karma is accumulated.
Although at first it may
appear that nothing can be more fatalistic than this doctrine, yet a little
consideration will show that in reality this is not the case. Karma is twofold,
hidden and manifest, Karma is the man that is, Karma
is his action. True that each action is a cause from which
evolves the countless ramifications of effect in time and space.
"That which ye sow ye reap." In some sphere of action the harvest
will be gathered. It is necessary that the man of action should realize this
truth. It is equally necessary that the manifestations of this law in the operations
of Karma should be clearly apprehended. Karma, broadly speaking, may be said to
be the continuance of the nature of the act, and each act contains within
itself the past and future.
Every defect which can
be realized from an act must be implicit in the act itself or it could never
come into existence. Effect is but the nature of the act and cannot exist
distinct from its cause. Karma only produces the manifestation of that which
already exists; being action it has its operation in time, and Karma may
therefore be said to be the same action from another point of time. It must,
moreover, be evident that not only is there a relation between the cause and
the effect, but there must also be a relation between the cause and the
individual who experiences the effect. If it were otherwise, any man would reap
the effect of the actions of any other man.
We may sometimes appear
to reap the effects of the action of others, but this is only apparent.
In point of fact it is our own action.
...None else compels
None other holds you that ye live and die.
It is therefore
necessary in order to understand the nature of Karma and its relation to the
individual to consider action in all its aspects. Every act proceeds from the
mind. Beyond the mind there is no action and therefore no Karma. The basis of
every act is desire. The plane of desire or egotism is itself action and the
matrix of every act. This plane may be considered as
non-manifest, yet having a dual manifestation in what we call cause and
effect, that is, the act and its consequences. In reality, both the act and its
consequences are the effect, the cause being on the plane of desire. Desire is therefore
the basis of action in its first manifestation on the physical plane, and
desire determines the continuation of the act in its karmic relation to the individual.
For a man to be free
from the effects of the Karma of any act he must have passed to a state no
longer yielding a basis in which that act can inhere. The ripples in the water
caused by the action of the stone will extend to the furthest limit of its
expanse, but no further; they are bounded by the shore. Their course is ended
when there is no longer a basis or suitable medium in which they can inhere;
they expend their force and are not.
Karma is, therefore, as
dependent upon the present personality for its fulfillment, as it was upon the
former for the first initial act. An illustration may be given which will help
to explain this. A seed, say for instance mustard, will produce a mustard tree
and nothing else; but in order that it should be produced, it is
necessary that the co-operation of soil and culture should be equally
present.
Without the seed,
however much the ground may be tilled and watered, it will not bring forth the
plant, but the seed is equally in-operative without the joint action of the
soil and culture. The first great result of Karmic action is the incarnation in
physical life. The birth-seeking entity consisting of desires and
tendencies, presses forward towards incarnation. It is governed in the
selection of its scene of manifestation by the law of economy. Whatever is the
ruling tendency, that is to say, whatever group of affinities is strongest,
those affinities will lead it to the point of manifestation at which there is
the
least opposition. It incarnates in those surroundings most in
harmony with its Karmic tendencies and all the effects of actions contained in
the Karma so manifesting will be experienced by the individual. This governs
the station of life, the sex, the conditions of the irresponsible years of
childhood, the constitution with the various diseases inherent in it, and in
fact all those
determining forces of physical existence which are ordinarily classed
under the terms, "heredity," and "national
characteristics." It is really the law of economy which is the truth
underlying these terms and which explains them.
Take for instance a
nation with certain special characteristics. These are the plane of expansion
for any entity whose greatest number of affinities are
in harmony with those characteristics. The incoming entity following the law of
least resistance becomes incarnated in that nation, and all Karmic effects
following such characteristics will accrue to the individual. This will explain
what is the meaning of such expressions as the "Karma of
nations," and what is true of the nation will also apply to family
and caste.
It must, however, beremembered that there are many tendencies which are not
exhausted in the act of incarnation. It may happen that the Karma which caused
an entity to incarnate in any particular surrounding,
was only strong enough to carry it into physical existence. Being exhausted in
that direction, freedom is obtained for the manifestation of other tendencies
and their Karmic effects. For instance, Karmic force may cause an entity to
incarnate in a humble sphere of life. He may be born as the child of poor
parents. The Karma follows the entity, endures for a longer or shorter time,
and becomes exhausted. From that point, the child takes a line of life totally
different from his surroundings. Other affinities engendered by former action
express themselves in their Karmic results. The lingering effect of the past
Karma may still manifest itself in the way of obstacles and obstructions which
are surmounted with varying degrees of success according to their intensity.
From the standpoint of a special creation for each entity entering the world,
there is vast and unaccountable injustice.
From the standpoint of
Karma, the strange vicissitudes and apparent chances of life can be considered
in a different light as the unerring manifestation of cause and sequence. In a
family under the same conditions of poverty and ignorance, one child will be
separated from the others and thrown into surroundings very dissimilar. He may
be adopted by a rich man, or through some freak of fortune receive an education
giving him at once a different position. The Karma of incarnation being
exhausted, other Karma asserts itself. A very important question is here
presented: Can an individual affect his own Karma, and if so to
what degree and in what manner?
It has been said that
Karma is the continuance of the act, and for any particular line of Karma to
exert itself it is necessary that there should be the basis of the act
engendering that Karma in which it can inhere and operate. But action has many
planes in which it can inhere. There is the physical plane, the body with its
senses and organs; then there is the intellectual plane, memory, which binds
the impressions of the senses into a consecutive whole and reason puts in
orderly arrangement its storehouse of facts.
Beyond the plane of
intellect there is the plane of emotion, the plane of preference for one object
rather than another: the fourth principle of the man. These three, physical,
intellectual, and emotional, deal entirely with objects of sense perception and
may be called the great battlefield of Karma. There is
also the plane of ethics, the plane of discrimination of the
"I ought to do this, I ought not to do that." This plane harmonizes
the intellect and the emotions. All these are the planes of Karma or action:
what to do, and what not to do. It is the mind as the basis of desire that
initiates action on the various planes, and it is only through the mind that
the effects of rest and action can be received. An entity enters incarnation
with Karmic energy from
past existences, that is to say the action of past lives is
awaiting its development as effect. This Karmic energy presses into
manifestation in harmony with the basic nature of the act. Physical Karma will
manifest in the physical tendencies bringing enjoyment and suffering.
The intellectual and the
ethical planes are also in the same manner the result of the past Karmic
tendencies and the man as he is, with his moral and intellectual faculties, is
in unbroken continuity with the past. The entity at birth has therefore a
definite amount of Karmic energy.
After incarnation this
awaits the period in life at which fresh Karma begins. Up to the time of
responsibility it is as we have seen the initial Karma only that manifests.
From that time the fresh personality becomes the ruler of his own destiny. It
is a great mistake to suppose that an individual is the mere puppet of the
past, the helpless victim of fate.
The law of Karma is not
fatalism, and a little consideration will show that it is possible for an
individual to affect his own Karma. If a greater amount of energy be taken up
on one plane than on another this will cause the past Karma to unfold itself on
that plane. For instance, one who lives entirely on the plane of sense
gratification will from the plane beyond draw the energy required for the fulfillment
of his desires. Let us illustrate by dividing man into upper and lower nature.
By directing the mind and aspirations to the lower plane, a "fire" or
centre of attraction, is set up there, and in order to feed and fatten it,
the energies of the whole upper plane are drawn down and
exhausted in supplying the need of energy which exists below due to the
indulgence of sense gratification.
On the other hand, the
centre of attraction may be fixed in the upper portion, and then all the needed
energy goes there to result in increase of spirituality. It must be remembered
that Nature is all bountiful and withholds not her hand. The demand is made,
and the supply will come. But at what cost? That energy which should have strengthened the moral nature and
fulfilled the aspirations after good, is drawn to the lower desires.
By degrees the higher
planes are exhausted of vitality and the good and bad Karma of an entity will
be absorbed on the physical plane. If on the other hand the interest is
detached from the plane of sense gratification, if there is a constant effort
to fix the mind on the attainment of the highest ideal, the result will be that
the past Karma will find no basis in which to inhere on the physical plane. Karma
will therefore be manifested only in harmony with the plane of desire. The sense
energy of the physical plane will exhaust itself on a higher plane and
thus become transmuted in its effects. What are the means
through which the effects of Karma can be thus changed is also clear.
A person can have no
attachment for a thing he does not think about,
therefore the first step must be to fix the thought on the highest ideal. In
this connection one remark may be made on the subject of repentance. Repentance
is a form of thought in which the mind is constantly recurring to a sin. It has
therefore to be avoided if one would set the mind free from sin and its Karmic
results.
All sin has its origin
in the mind. The more the mind dwells on any course of conduct, whether with
pleasure or pain, the less chance is there for it to become detached from such
action. The manas (mind) is the knot of the heart,
when that is untied from any object, in other words when the mind loses its
interest in any object, there will no longer be a link between the Karma
connected with that object and the individual. It is the attitude of the mind
which draws the Karmic cords tightly round the soul. It imprisons the
aspirations and binds them with chains of difficulty and obstruction.
It is desire that causes
the past Karma to take form and shape and build the house of clay. It must be
through non-attachment that the soul will burst through the walls of pain, it
will be only through a change of mind that the Karmic burden will be lifted. It
will appear, therefore, that although absolutely true that action brings its
own result, "there is no destruction here of actions good or not good.
Coming to one body after
another they become ripened in their respective ways." Yet this ripening
is the act of the individual. Free will of man asserts itself and he becomes
his own saviour. To the worldly man Karma is a stern Nemesis, to the spiritual man Karma unfolds itself in
harmony with his highest aspirations. He will look with tranquility alike on
past and future, neither dwelling withremorse on past
sin nor living in expectation of reward for present action.
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