In
this article William Judge ponders how karma works.
“For thou shalt be in league with
the stones of the field; and the beasts of the field shall be at peace with
thee.”
(Job 5:23)
As a Western Theosophist, I would
like to present to my Indian brethren a few thoughts upon what I conceive to be
the operation of the Law of Compensation in part, or, to put it more clearly,
upon the operation of one branch of this law.
It seems undeniable that this law is
the most powerful, and the one having the most numerous and complicated
ramifications of all the laws with which we have to deal. This it is that makes
so difficult for a human spirit, the upward progress after which we all are
striving, and it is often forced upon me that it is this law which perpetuates
the world, with its delusions, its sadness, its illusions, and that if we could
but understand it so as to avoid its operation, the nirvana for the
whole human family would be an accomplished fact.
In a former number a respected
brother from Ceylon, speaking with authority, showed us how to answer the
question so often asked: “Why do we see a good man eating the bread of poverty,
and the wicked dwelling in riches, and why so often is a good man cast down
from prosperity to despair, and a wicked man after a period of sorrow and
hardship made to experience for the balance of his life nothing but success and
prosperity?” He replied that our acts in any one period of existence were like
the arrow shot from the bow, acting upon us in the next life and producing our
rewards and punishments. So that to accept his explanation —as we must— it is,
of course, necessary to believe in reincarnation. As far as he went, he was
very satisfactory, but he did not go into the subject as thoroughly as his
great knowledge would permit. It is to be hoped that he will favor us with
further essays upon the same subject.
I have not yet seen anywhere stated
the rationale of the operation of this law — how and why it acts in any
particular case.
To say that the reviling of a
righteous man will condemn one to a life of a beggar in the next existence is
definite enough in statement, but it is put forward without a reason, and
unless we accept these teachings blindly we cannot believe such consequences
would follow. To appeal to our minds, there should be a reason given, which
shall be at once plain and reasonable. There must be some law for this
particular case; otherwise, the statement cannot be true. There must occur,
from the force of the revilement, the infraction of some natural regulation,
the production of some discord in the spiritual world which has for a
consequence the punishment by beggary in the succedent existence of the
reviler.
The only other reason possible of statement is, that it is so ordered.
But such a reason is not a reason at all because no Theosophist will believe
that any punishment, save that which man himself inflicts, is ordered. As
this world is a world produced by law, moved by law, and governed by the
natural operation of laws which need no one to operate them, but which
invariably and unerringly operate themselves, it must follow that any
punishment suffered in this way is not suffered through any order, but is
suffered because the natural law operates itself. And further, we are compelled
to accept this view, because to believe that it was ordered, would infer
the existence of some particular person, mind, will, or intelligence to order
it, which for one instant no one will believe, who knows that this world
was produced, and is governed, by the operation of number, weight and measure,
with harmony over and above all.
So then we should know in what
manner the law operates, which condemns the reviler of a righteous man to
beggary in his next existence. That knowledge once gained, we may be able to
find for ourselves the manner and power of placating, as it were, this terrible
monster of compensation by performing some particular acts which shall in some
way be a restoration of the harmony which we have broken, if perchance we have
unconsciously or inadvertently committed the sin.
Let us now imagine a boy born of
wealthy parents, but not given proper intelligence. He is, in fact, called an
idiot. But instead of being a mild idiot, he possesses great malice which
manifests itself in his tormenting insects and animals at every opportunity. He
lives to be, say, nineteen and has spent his years in the malicious, although
idiotic, torment of unintelligent, defenseless animal life. He has thus
hindered many a spirit in its upward march and has beyond doubt inflicted pain
and caused a moral discord. This fact of his idiocy is not a restoration of the
discord. Every animal that he tortured had its own particular elemental spirit,
and so had every flower that he broke in pieces. What did they know of his
idiocy, and what did they feel after the torture but revenge? And had they a
knowledge of his idiocy, being unreasoning beings, they could not see in it any
excuse for his acts. He dies at nineteen, and after the lapse of years is
reborn in another nation— perchance another age—into a body possessing more
than average intelligence. He is no longer an idiot, but a sensible active man
who now has a chance to regenerate the spirit given to every man, without the
chains of idiocy about it. What is to be the result of the evil deeds of his
previous existence? Are they to go unpunished?
I think not.
But how are they to
be punished; and if the compensation comes, in what manner does the law operate
upon him?
To me there seems to be but one way, that is through the discord
produced in the spirits of those unthinking beings which he had tortured during
those nineteen years. But how? In this way. In the agony of their torture these
beings turned their eyes upon their torturer, and dying, his spiritual picture
through the excess of their pain, together with that pain and the desire for
revenge, were photographed, so to speak, upon their spirits —for in no other
way could they have a memory of him— and when he became a disembodied spirit
they clung to him until he was reincarnated when they were still with him like
barnacles on a ship. They can now only see through his eyes, and their revenge
consists in precipitating themselves down his glance on any matter he may
engage in, thus attaching themselves to it for the purpose of dragging it down
to disaster.
This leads to the query of what is
meant by these elementals precipitating themselves down his glance. The
ancients taught that the astral light —Akasa— is projected from the eyes, the thumbs and the palms of
the hands. Now as the elementals exist in the astral light, they will be able
to see only through those avenues of human organism which are used by the
astral light in traveling from the person. The eyes are the most convenient. So
when this person directs his glance on any thing or person, the astral light
goes out in that glance and through it those elementals see that which he looks
upon. And so also, if he should magnetize a person, the elementals will project
themselves from his hands and eyes upon the subject magnetized and do it
injury.
Well then, our reincarnated idiot
engages in a business which requires his constant surveillance. The elementals
go with him and throwing themselves upon everything he directs, cause him
continued disaster.
But one by one they are caught up
again out of the orbit of necessity into the orbit of probation in this world,
and at last all are gone, whereupon he finds success in all he does and has his
chance again to reap eternal life. He finds the realization of the words of Job
quoted at the head of this article: he is in league with the stones of the
field, and the beasts of the field are at peace with him.”
These words were
penned ages ago by those ancient Egyptians who knew all things. Having walked
in the secret paths of wisdom which no fowl knoweth and the vulture’s eye hath
not seen, they discovered those hidden laws, one within the other like the wheels
of Ezekiel, which govern the universe. There is no other reasonable explanation
of the passage quoted than the theory faintly outlined in the foregoing poor
illustration. And I only offer it as a possible solution or answer to the
question as to what is the rationale of the operation of the Moral Law
of Compensation in that particular case, of which I go so far as to say that I
think I know a living illustration. But it will not furnish an answer for the
case of the punishment for reviling a righteous man.
I would earnestly ask the learned
friends of the Editor of The Theosophist
to give the explanation, and also hint to us how in this existence we may act
so as to mitigate the horrors of our punishment and come as near as may be to a
league with the stones and the beasts of the field.
(The Theosophist, October 1881, p.15-16; Echoes II,
p.70-73)
OBSERVATION
I
could not tell you if the elementals operate their revenge as William Judge
conjectured, but I do not agree with the example he gave, because master
Kuthumi specified that negative karma is only returned to you to the extent
that you are aware of your actions, and since the boy William Judge mentioned
was an idiot, that boy was largely unaware of his actions (due to his mental
incapacity) and therefore he will not be fully held responsible for his
actions.
No comments:
Post a Comment