THE
OF
THEOSOPHY
A Definitive Work on Theosophy
By
William Quan Judge
CHAPTER
11
Karma
Karma is an unfamiliar word for Western ears. It is
the name adopted by Theosophists of the nineteenth century for one of the most
important of the laws of nature. Ceaseless in its operation, it bears alike
upon planets, systems of planets, races, nations, families, and individuals. It
is the twin doctrine to reincarnation. So inextricably interlaced are these two
laws that it is almost
impossible to properly consider one apart from the
other. No spot or being in the universe is exempt from the operation of Karma,
but all are under its sway, punished for error by it yet beneficently led on,
through discipline, rest, and reward, to the distant heights of perfection. It
is a law so comprehensive in
its sweep, embracing at once our physical and our
moral being, that it is only by paraphrase and copious explanation one can
convey its meaning in English.
For that reason the Sanskrit term Karma was adopted to
designate it. Applied to man's moral life it is the law of ethical causation,
justice, reward and punishment; the cause for birth and rebirth, yet equally
the means for escape from incarnation. Viewed from another point it is merely
effect flowing from cause, action and reaction, exact result for every thought
and act. It is act and the result of act; for the word's literal meaning is
action. Theosophy views the Universe as an intelligent whole, hence every
motion in the Universe is an action of that whole leading to results, which
themselves become causes for further results.
Viewing it thus broadly, the ancient Hindus said that
every being up to Brahma was under the rule of Karma. It is not a being but a
law, the universal law of harmony which unerringly restores all disturbance to
equilibrium. In this the theory conflicts with the ordinary conception about
God, built up from the Jewish system, which assumes that the Almighty as a
thinking entity, extraneous to the Cosmos, builds up, finds his construction
inharmonious, out of proportion, errant, and disturbed, and then has to pull
down, destroy, or punish that which he created. This has either caused
thousands to live in fear of God, in compliance with his assumed commands, with
the selfish object of obtaining reward and securing escape from his wrath, or
has plunged them into darkness which comes from a denial of all spiritual life.
But as there is plainly, indeed painfully, evident to every human being a
constant destruction going on in and around us, a continual war not only among
men but everywhere through the whole solar system, causing sorrow in all directions,
reason requires a solution of the riddle. The poor, who see no refuge or hope,
cry aloud to a God who makes no reply, and then envy springs up in them when
they consider the comforts and opportunities of the rich. They see the rich
profligates, the wealthy fools, enjoying themselves unpunished.
Turning to the teacher of religion, they meet the
reply to their questioning of the justice which will permit such misery to
those who did nothing requiring them to be born with no means, no opportunities
for education, no capacity to overcome social, racial, or circumstantial
obstacles, "It is the will of God."
Parents produce beloved offspring who are cut off by
death at an untimely hour, just when all promised well. They too have no answer
to the question "Why am I thus afflicted?" but the same unreasonable
reference to an inaccessible God whose arbitrary will causes their misery. Thus
in every walk of life, loss,
injury, persecution, deprivation of opportunity,
nature's own forces working to destroy the happiness of man, death, reverses,
disappointment continually beset good and evil men alike. But nowhere is there
any answer or relief save in the ancient truths that each man is the maker and
fashioner of his own destiny, the
only one who sets in motion the causes for his own
happiness and misery. In one life he sows and in the next he reaps. Thus on and
forever, the law of Karma leads him.
Karma is a beneficent law wholly merciful,
relentlessly just, for true mercy is not favor but impartial justice.
"My
brothers! each man's 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."
How is the present life affected by that bygone right
and wrong act, and is it always by way of punishment? Is Karma only fate under
another name, an already fixed and formulated destiny from which no escape is
possible, and which therefore might make us careless of act or thought that
cannot affect destiny?
It is not fatalism. Everything done in a former body
has consequences which in the new birth the Ego must enjoy or suffer, for, as
No act is performed without a thought at its root
either at the time of performance or as leading to it. These thoughts are
lodged in that part of man which we have called Manas -- the mind, and there
remain as subtle but powerful links with magnetic threads that enmesh the solar
system, and through which various effects are brought out. The theory put
forward in earlier pages that the whole system to which this globe belongs is
alive, conscious on every plane, though only in man showing self-consciousness,
comes into play here to explain how the thought under the act in this life may
cause result in this or the next birth. The marvellous modern experiments in
hypnotism show that the slightest impression, no matter how far back in the
history of the person, may be waked up to life, thus proving it is not lost but
only latent. Take for instance the case
of a child born humpbacked and very short, the head
sunk between the shoulders, the arms long and legs curtailed. Why is this? His
karma for thoughts and acts in a prior life. He reviled, persecuted, or
otherwise injured a deformed person so persistently or violently as to imprint
in his own immortal mind the deformed picture of his victim. For in proportion
to the intensity of his thought will be the intensity and depth of the picture.
It is exactly similar to the exposure of the sensitive
photographic plate, whereby, just as the exposure is long or short, the
impression in the plate is weak or deep. So this thinker and actor -- the Ego
-- coming again to rebirth carries with him this picture, and if the family to
which he is attracted for birth has similar physical tendencies in its stream,
the mental picture causes the newly-forming astral body to assume a deformed
shape by electrical and magnetic osmosis through the mother of the child. And
as all beings on earth are indissolubly joined together, the misshapen child is
the karma of the parents also an exact consequence for similar acts and
thoughts on their part in other lives. Here is an exactitude of justice which
no other theory will furnish.
But as we often see a deformed human being --
continuing the instance merely for the purpose of illustration -- having a
happy disposition, an excellent intellect, sound judgment, and every good moral
quality, this very instance leads us to the conclusion that karma must be of
several different kinds in every individual case, and also evidently operates
in more than one department
of our being, with the possibility of being pleasant
in effect for one portion of our nature and unpleasant for another.
Karma is of three sorts:
First -- that which has not begun to produce any
effect in our lives owing to the operation on us of some other karmic causes.
This is under a law well known to physicists, that two opposing forces tend to
neutrality, and that one force may be strong enough to temporarily prevent the
operation of another one.
This law works on the unseen mental and karmic planes
or spheres of being just as it does on the material ones. The force of a
certain set of bodily, mental, and psychical faculties with their tendencies
may wholly inhibit the operation on us of causes with which we are connected,
because the whole nature of each person is used in the carrying out of this
law. Hence the weak and mediocre furnish a weak focus for karma, and in them
the general result of a lifetime is limited, although they may feel it all to
be very heavy. But that person who has a wide and deep-reaching character and
much force will feel the operation of a greater quantity of karma than the
weaker person.
Second -- that karma which we are now making or
storing up by our thoughts and acts, and which will operate in the future when the
appropriate body, mind, and environment are taken up by the incarnating Ego in
some other life, or whenever obstructive karma is removed.
This bears both on the present life and the next one.
For one may in this life come to a point where, all previous causes being
worked out, new karma, or that which is unexpended, must begin to operate.
Under this are those cases where men have sudden
reverses of fortune or changes for the better either in circumstances or
character. A very important bearing of this is on our present conduct. While
old karma must work out and cannot be stopped, it is wise for the man to so
think and act now under present circumstances, no matter what they are, that he
shall produce no bad or prejudicial causes for the next rebirth or for later
years in this life.
Rebellion is useless, for the law works on whether we
weep or rejoice. The great French engineer, de Lesseps, is a good example of
this class of karma. Raised to a high pitch of glory and achievement for many
years of his life, he suddenly falls covered with shame through the
Third -- that karma which has begun to produce
results. It is the operating now in this life on us of causes set up in
previous lives in company with other Egos. And it is in operation because,
being most adapted to the family stock, the individual body, astral body, and
race tendencies of the present incarnation, it exhibits itself plainly, while
other unexpended karma awaits its regular turn.
These three classes of karma govern men, animals,
worlds, and periods of evolution. Every effect flows from a cause precedent,
and as all beings are constantly being reborn they are continually experiencing
the effects of their thoughts and acts (which are themselves causes) of a prior
incarnation. And thus
each one answers, as St. Matthew says, for every word
and thought; none can escape either by prayer, or favor, or force, or any other
intermediary.
Now as karmic causes are divisible into three classes,
they must have various fields in which to work. They operate upon man in his
mental and intellectual nature, in his psychical or soul nature, and in his
body and circumstances. The spiritual nature of man is never affected or
operated upon by karma.
One species of karma may act on the three specified
planes of our nature at the same time to the same degree, or there may be a
mixture of the causes, some on one plane and some on another. Take a deformed
person who has a fine mind and a deficiency in his soul nature. Here punitive
or unpleasant karma is operating on his body while in his mental and
intellectual nature good karma is being experienced, but psychically the karma,
or cause, being of an indifferent sort the result is indifferent. In another
person other combinations appear. He has a fine body and favourable circumstances,
but the character is morose, peevish, irritable, revengeful, morbid, and
disagreeable to himself and others.
Here good physical karma is at work with very bad
mental, intellectual, and psychical karma. Cases will occur to readers of
persons born in high station having every opportunity and power, yet being
imbecile or suddenly becoming insane.
And just as all these phases of the law of karma have
sway over the individual man, so they similarly operate upon races, nations,
and families. Each race has its karma as a whole. If it be good that race goes
forward. If bad it goes out -- annihilated as a race -- though the souls
concerned take up their karma in
other races and bodies. Nations cannot escape their
national karma, and any nation that has acted in a wicked manner must suffer
some day, be it soon or late. The karma of the nineteenth century in the West
is the karma of
the European and American nations.
The old Aztec and other ancient American peoples died
out because their own karma -- the result of their own life as
nations in the far past -- fell upon and destroyed
them. With nations this heavy operation of karma is always through famine, war,
convulsion of nature, and the sterility of the women of the nation. The latter
cause comes near the end and sweeps the whole remnant away. And the individual
in race or nation is warned by this great doctrine that if he falls into
indifference of thought and act, thus moulding himself into the general average
karma of his race or nation, that national and race karma will at last carry
him off in the general destiny. This is why teachers of old cried, "Come
ye out and be ye separate."
With reincarnation the doctrine of karma explains the
misery and suffering of the world, and no room is left to accuse Nature of
injustice.
The misery of any nation or race is the direct result
of the thoughts and acts of the Egos who make up the race or nation. In the dim
past they did wickedly and now suffer. They violated the laws of harmony. The
immutable rule is that harmony must be restored if violated. So these Egos
suffer in making
compensation and establishing the equilibrium of the
occult cosmos.
The whole mass of Egos must go on incarnating and
reincarnating in the nation or race until they have all worked out to the end
the causes set up. Though the nation may for a time disappear as a physical
thing, the Egos that made it do not leave
the world, but come out as the makers of some new
nation in which they must go on with the task and take either punishment or
reward as accords with their karma. Of this law the old Egyptians are an
illustration. They certainly rose to
a high point of development, and as certainly they
were extinguished as a nation. But the souls -- the old Egos -- live on and are
now fulfilling their self-made destiny as some other nation now in our period.
They may be the new American nation, or the Jews fated
to wander up and down in the world and suffer much at the hands of others. This
process is perfectly just. Take, for instance, the
Individual unhappiness in any life is thus explained:
(a) It is punishment for evil done in past lives; or
(b) it is discipline taken up by the Ego for the
purpose of eliminating defects or acquiring fortitude and sympathy. When
defects are eliminated it is like removing the obstruction in an irrigating
canal which then lets the water flow on. Happiness is explained in the same
way: the result of prior lives of goodness.
The scientific and self-compelling basis for right
ethics is found in these and in no other doctrines. For if right ethics are to
be practised merely for themselves, men will not see why, and have never been
able to see why, for that reason they should do right. If ethics are to be
followed from fear, man is degraded and will surely evade; if the favor of the Almighty,
not based on law or justice, be the reason, then we will have just what
prevails today -- a code given by Jesus to the west professed by nations and
not practised save by the few who would in any case be virtuous.
On this subject the Adepts have written the following
to be found in the Secret Doctrine:
"Nor would the ways of karma be inscrutable were
men to work in union and harmony instead of disunion and strife. For our
ignorance of those ways -- which one portion of mankind calls the ways of Providence
dark and intricate, while another sees in them the action of blind fatalism,
and a third simple chance
with neither gods nor devils to guide them -- would
surely disappear if we would but attribute all these to their correct cause.
With right knowledge, or at any rate with a confident conviction that our
neighbours will no more work harm to
us than we would think of harming them, two-thirds of
the world's evil would vanish into thin air. Were no man to hurt his brother,
Karma-Nemesis would have neither cause to work for nor weapons to act through.
. . .
We cut these numerous windings in our destinies daily
with our own hands, while we imagine that we are pursuing a track on the royal
high road of respectability and duty, and then complain of those ways beings so
intricate and so dark. We stand
bewildered before the mystery of our own making and
the riddles of life that we will not solve, and then accuse the great Sphinx of
devouring us. But verily there is not an accident in our lives, not a misshapen
day or a misfortune, that could not be traced back to our own doings in this or
another life. . . .
Knowledge of Karma gives the conviction that if --
'virtue in
distress and vice in triumph Make atheists of Mankind',
it is only because that mankind has ever shut its eyes
to the great truth that man is himself his own saviour as his own destroyer;
that he need not accuse heaven and the gods, fates and providence, of the
apparent injustice that reigns in the midst of humanity. But let him rather
remember and repeat this bit of
Grecian wisdom which warns man to forbear accusing
That which
'Just though
mysterious, leads us on unerring
Through ways
unmarked from guilt to punishment'
-- which are now the ways and the high road on which
move onward the great European nations. The western Aryans had every nation and
tribe like their eastern brethren of the fifth race, their Golden and their
Iron ages, their period of comparative irresponsibility, or the Satya age of purity,
while now several of them have reached their Iron age, the Kali Yuga, an age
black with horrors. This state will last . . . until we begin acting from
within instead of ever following impulses from without . . . Until then the
only palliative is union and harmony -- a Brotherhood in actu and altruism not
simply in name."
______________________
THE
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