A
SERIES OF
Lessons in Gnani
Yoga
THE
ELEVENTH LESSON. THE
LAW OF KARMA
"Karma" is a
Sanscrit term for that great Law known
to Western thinkers as Spiritual Cause
and Effect, or Causation. It relates
to the complicated affinities for
either good or evil that have been
acquired by the soul throughout its
many incarnations. These affinities
manifest as characteristics enduring
from one incarnation to another, being
added to here, softened or altered
there, but always pressing forward for
expression and manifestation. And, so,
it follows that what each one of us is
in this life depends upon is what we
have been and how we have acted in our
past lives.
Throughout the operations of the Law
of Karma the manifestation of Perfect
Justice is apparent. We are not
punished for our sins, as the current
beliefs have it, but instead we are
punished by our sins. We are not
rewarded for our good acts, but we
received our reward through and by
characteristics, qualities,
affinities, etc., acquired by reason
of our having performed these good
acts in previous lives. We are our own
judges and executioners. In our
present lives we are storing up good
or bad Karma which will stick to us
closely, and which will demand
expression and manifestation in lives
to come. When we fasten around
ourselves the evil of bad Karma, we
have taken to shelter a monster which
will gnaw into our very vitals until
we shake him off by developing
opposite qualities. And when we draw
to ourselves the good Karma of Duty
well performed, kindness well
expressed, and Good Deeds freely
performed without hope of reward, then
do we weave for ourselves the
beautiful garments which we are
destined to wear upon the occasion of
our future lives.
The Yogi Teachings relating to the Law
of Karma do not teach us that Sin is
an offense against the Power which
brought us into being, so much as it
is an offense against ourselves. We
cannot injure the Absolute, nor harm
It in any way. But we may harm each
other, and in so doing harm ourselves.
The Yogis teach that Sin is largely a
matter of ignorance and
misunderstanding of our true nature,
and that the lesson must be well
learned until we are able to see the
folly and error of our former course,
and thus are able to remedy our past
errors and to avoid their recurrence.
By Karma the effects arising from our
sins cling to us, until we become sick
and weary of them, and seek their
cause in our hearts. When we have
discovered the evil cause of these
effects, we learn to hate it and tear
it from us as a foul thing, and are
thence evermore relieved of it.
The Yogis view the sinning soul as the
parent does the child who will persist
in playing with forbidden things. The
parent cautions the child against
playing with the stove, but still the
child persists in its disobedience,
and sooner or later receives a burn
for its meddling. The burn is not a
punishment for the disobedience
(although it may seem so to it) but
comes in obedience to a natural law
which is invariable. To child finds
out that stoves and burns are
connected, and begins to see some
sense and reason in the admonitions of
the parent. The love of the parent
sought to save the child the pain of
the burn, and yet the child-nature
persisted in experimenting, and was
taught the lesson. But the lesson once
thoroughly learned, it is not
necessary to forbid the child the
stove, for it has learned the danger
for itself and thereafter avoids it.
And thus it is with the human soul
passing on from one life to another.
It learns new lessons, gathers new
experiences, and learns to recognize
the pain that invariably comes from
Wrong Action, and the Happiness that
invariably comes from Right Action. As
it progresses it learns how hurtful
certain courses of action are, and
like the burnt child it avoids them
thereafter.
If we will but stop to consider for a
moment the relative degrees of
temptation to us and to others, we may
see the operations of past Karma in
former lives. Why is it that this
thing is "no temptation" to you, while
it is the greatest temptation to
another. Why is it that certain things
do not seem to have any attraction for
him, and yet they attract you so much
that you have to use all of your will
power to resist them? It is because of
the Karma in your past lives. The
things that do not now tempt you, have
been outlived in some former life, and
you have profited by your own
experiences, or those of others, or
else through some teaching given you
by one who had been attracted to you
by your unfolding consciousness of
Truth.
We are profiting to-day by the lessons
of our past lives. If we have learned
them well we are receiving the
benefit, while if we have turned our
backs on the words of wisdom offered
us, or have refused to learn the
lesson perfectly, we are compelled to
sit on the same old school-benches and
hear the same old lesson repeated
until it is fairly driven into our
consciousness. We wonder why it is
that other persons can perform certain
evil acts that seem so repulsive to
us, and are apt to pride ourselves
upon our superior virtue. But those
who know, realize that their
unfortunate brethren have not paid
sufficient attention to the lesson of
the past, and are having it repeated
to them in a more drastic form this
time. They know that the virtuous ones
are simply reaping the benefit of
their own application in the past, but
that their lesson is not over, and
that unless they advance and hold fast
to that which they have attained, as
well, they will be outstripped by many
of those whose failure they are now
viewing with wonder and scorn.
It is hard for us to fully realize
that we are what we are because of our
past experiences. It is difficult for
us to value the experiences that we
are now going through, because we do
not fully appreciate the value of
bitter experiences once lived out and
outlived. Let us look back over the
experiences of this present life, for
instance. How many bitter episodes are
there which we wish had never
happened, and how we wish we could
tear them out of our consciousness.
But we do not realize that from these
same bitter experiences came knowledge
and wisdom that we would not part with
under any circumstances. And yet if we
were to tear away from us the cause of
these benefits, we would tear away the
benefits also, and would find
ourselves back just where we were
before the experience happened to us.
What we would like to do is to hold on
to the benefits that came from the
experience---the knowledge and wisdom
that were picked from the tree of
pain. But we cannot separate the
effect from the cause in this way, and
must learn to look back upon these
bitter
experiences as the causes from which
our present knowledge, wisdom and
attainment proceeded. Then may we
cease to hate these things, and to see
that good may come from evil, under
the workings of the Law.
And when we are able to do this, we
shall be able to regard the painful
experiences of our present day as the
inevitable outcome of causes away back
in our past, but which will work
surely toward increased knowledge,
wisdom and attainment, if we will but
see the Good underlying the working of
the Law. When we fall in with the
working of the Law of Karma we
recognize its pain not as an injustice
or punishment, but as the beneficent
operation of a Law which, although
apparently working Evil, has for its
end and aim Ultimate Good.
Many object to the teachings of the
Law of Karma by saying that the
experiences of each life not being
remembered, must be useless and
without value. This is a very foolish
position to take concerning the
matter. These experiences although not
fully remembered, are not lost to us
at all--they are made a part of the
material of which our minds are
composed. They exist in the form of
feelings, characteristics,
inclinations, likes and dislikes,
affinities, attractions, repulsions,
etc., etc., and are as much in
evidence as are the experiences of
yesterday which are fresh in our
memory. Look back over your present
life, and try to remember the
experiences of the past years. You
will find that you remember but few of
the events of your life. The pressing
and constant experiences of each of
the days that you have lived have
been, for the most part, forgotten.
Though these experiences may have
seemed very vivid and real to you when
they occurred, still they have faded
into nothingness now, and they are to
all intents and purposes lost to you.
But are they lost? Not at all. You are
what you are because of the results of
these experiences. Your character has
been moulded and shaped, little by
little, by these apparently forgotten
pains, pleasures, sorrows and
happinesses.
This trial strengthened you along
certain lines; that one changed your
point of view and made you see things
with a broader sweep of vision. This
grief caused you to feel the pain of
others; that disappointment spurred
you on to new endeavors. And each and
every one of them left a permanent
mark upon your personality--upon your
character. All men are what they are
by reason of what they have lived
through and out. And though these
happenings, scenes, circumstances,
occurrences, experiences, have faded
from the memory, their effects are
indelibly imprinted upon the fabric of
the character, and the man of to-day
is different from what he would have
been had the happening or experience
not entered into his life.
And this same rule applies to the
characteristics brought over from past
incarnations. You have not the memory
of the experiences, but you have the
fruit in the shape of
"characteristics," tastes,
inclinations, etc. You have a tendency
toward certain things, and a distaste
for others. Certain things attract,
while others repel you. All of these
things are the result of your
experiences in former incarnations.
Your very taste and inclination toward
occult studies which has caused you to
read these lessons is your legacy from
some former life in which some one
spoke a word or two to you regarding
the subject, and attracted your
interest and desire. You learned some
little about the subject then--perhaps
much--and developed a desire for more
knowledge along these lines, which
manifesting in your present life has
brought you in contact with further
instruction. The same inclination will
lead to further advancement in this
life, and still greater opportunities
in future incarnations. Nearly every
one who reads these lines has felt
that much of this occult instruction
imparted is but a "re-learning" of
something previously known, although
many of the things taught have never
been heard before in this life. You
pick up a book and read something, and
know at once that it is so, because in
some vague way you have a
consciousness of having studied and
worked out the problem in some past
period of your lives. All this is the
working of the Law of Karma, which
caused you to attract that for which
you have an affinity, and which also
causes others to be attracted to you.
Many are the reunions of people who
have been related to each other in
previous lives. The old loves, and old
hates work out their Karmic results in
our lives. We are bound to those whom
we have loved, and also to those whom
we may have injured. The story must be
worked out to the end, although a
knowledge of the Law undoubtedly
relieves one of many entangling
attachments and Karmic relationships,
by pointing out the nature of the
relation, and enabling one to free
himself mentally from the bond, which
process tends to dissolve much of the
Karmic entanglements.
Life is a great school for the
learning of lessons. It has many
grades, many classes, many scales of
progress. And the lessons must be
learned whether we will or no. If we
refuse or neglect to learn the lesson
we are sent back to accomplish the
task, again and again, until the
lesson is finally learned. Nothing
once learned is ever forgotten
entirely. There is an indelible
imprint of the lesson in our
character, which manifests as
predispositions, tastes, inclinations,
etc. All that goes to make up that
which we call "Character" is the
workings of the Law of Karma. There is
no such thing as Chance. Nothing ever
"happens." All is regulated by the Law
of Cause and Effect or Karma. As a man
sows so shall he reap, in a literal
sense. You are what you are to-day, by
reason of what you were in your last
life. And in your next life you will
be what you are making of yourself
to-day. You are your own judge, and
executioner--your own bestower of
rewards. But the Love of the Absolute
is ever working to lead you upward to
the Light, and to open your soul to
that knowledge that, in the words of
the Yogis, "burns up Karma," and
enables you to throw off the burden of
Cause and Effect that you have been
carrying around with you, and which
has weighted you down.
In the Fourteen Lessons we quoted from
Mr. Berry Benson, a writer in the
Century Magazine for May, 1894. The
quotation fits so beautifully into
this place, that we venture to
reproduce it here once more, with your
permission. It reads as follows:
"A little boy went to school. He was
very little. All that he knew he had
drawn in with his mother's milk. His
teacher (who was God) placed him in
the lowest class, and gave him these
lessons to learn: Thou shalt not kill.
Thou shalt do no hurt to any living
thing. Thou shalt not steal. So the
man did not kill; but he was cruel,
and he stole. At the end of the day
(when his beard was gray--when the
night was come) his teacher (who was
God) said: Thou hast learned not to
kill, but the other lessons thou hast
not learned. Come back tomorrow.
"On the morrow he came back a little
boy. And his teacher (who was God) put
him in a class a little higher, and
gave him these lessons to learn: Thou
shalt do no hurt to any living thing.
Thou shalt not steal. Thou shalt not
cheat. So the man did no hurt to any
living thing; but he stole and
cheated. And at the end of the day
(when his beard was gray--when the
night was come) his teacher (who was
God) said: Thou hast learned to be
merciful. But the other lessons thou
hast not learned. Come back tomorrow.
"Again, on the morrow, he came back, a
little boy. And his teacher (who was
God) put him in a class yet a little
higher, and gave him these lessons to
learn: Thou shalt not steal. Thou
shalt not cheat. Thou shalt not covet.
So the man did not steal; but he
cheated and he coveted. And at the end
of the day (when his beard was
gray--when the night was come) his
teacher (who was God) said: Thou hast
learned not to steal. But the other
lessons thou hast not learned. Come
back, my child, tomorrow.
"This is what I have read in the faces
of men and women, in the book of the
world, and in the scroll of the
heavens, which is writ with stars."
Under the operation of the Law of
Karma every man is master of his own
destiny--he rewards himself--he
punishes himself--he builds, tears
down and develops his character,
always, however, under the brooding
influence of the Absolute which is
Love Infinite and which is constantly
exerting the upward spiritual urge,
which is drawing the soul toward its
ultimate haven of rest. Man must, and
does, work out his own salvation and
destiny, but the upward urge is always
there--never tiring--never
despairing--knowing always that
Ultimate Victory belongs to the soul.
Under the Law of Karma every action,
yea, every thought as well, has its
Karmic effect upon the future
incarnations of the soul. And, not
exactly in the nature of punishment or
rewards, in the general acceptation of
the term, but as the invariable
operation of the Law of Cause and
Effect. The thoughts of a person are
like seeds which seek to press forward
into growth, bud, blossom and fruit.
Some spring into growth in this life,
while others are carried over into
future lives. The actions of this life
may represent only the partial growth
of the thought seed, and future lives
may be necessary for its full
blossoming and fruition. Of course,
the individual who understands the
Truth, and who has mentally divorced
himself from the fruits of his
actions--who has robbed material
Desire of its vital force by seeing it
as it is, and not as a part of his
Real Self--his seed-thoughts do not
spring into blossom and fruit in
future lives, for he has killed their
germ. The Yogis express this thought
by the illustration of the
baked-seeds. They show their pupils
that while ordinary seeds sprout,
blossom and bear fruit, still if one
bakes the seeds their vitality is
gone, and while they may serve the
purposes of a nourishing meal still
they can never cause sprout, blossom
or fruit. Then the pupil is instructed
in the nature of Desire, and shown how
desires invariably spring into plant,
blossom and fruit, the life of the
person being the soil in which they
flourish. But Desires understood, and
set off from the Real Man, are akin to
baked-seeds--they have been subjected
to the heat of spiritual wisdom and
are thus robbed of their vitality, and
are unable to bear fruit. In this way
the understood and mastered Desire
bears no Karmic fruit of future
action.
The Yogis teach that there are two
great principles at work in the matter
of Karmic Law affecting the conditions
of rebirth. The first principle is
that whereby the prevailing desires,
aspirations, likes, and dislikes,
loves and hates, attractions and
repulsions, etc., press the soul into
conditions in which these
characteristics may have a favorable
and congenial soil for development.
The second principle is that which may
be spoken of as the urge of the
unfolding Spirit, which is always
urging forward toward fuller
expression, and the breaking down of
confining sheaths, and which thus
exerts a pressure upon the soul
awaiting reincarnation which causes it
to seek higher environments and
conditions than its desires and
aspiration, as well as its general
characteristics, would demand. These
two apparently conflicting (and yet
actually harmonious) principles acting
and reacting upon each other,
determine the conditions of rebirth,
and have a very material effect upon
the Karmic Law. One's life is largely
a conflict between these two forces,
the one tending to hold the soul to
the present conditions resulting from
past lives, and the other ever at work
seeking to uplift and elevate it to
greater heights.
The desires and characteristics
brought over from the past lives, of
course, seek fuller expression and
manifestation upon the lines of the
past lives. These tendencies simply
wish to be let alone and to grow
according to their own laws of
development and manifestation. But the
unfolding Spirit, knowing that the
soul's best interests are along the
lines of spiritual unfoldment and
growth, brings a steady pressure to
bear, life after life, upon the soul,
causing it to gradually kill out the
lower desires and characteristics, and
to develop qualities which tend to
lead it upward instead of allowing it
to remain on its present level, there
to bring to blossom and fruit many low
thoughts and desires. Absolute Justice
reigns over the operations of the Law
of Karma, but back of that and
superior even to its might is found
the Infinite Love of the absolute
which tends to Redeem the race. It is
that love that is back of all the
upward tendencies of the soul, and
which we all feel within our inner
selves in our best moments. The light
of the Spirit (Love) is ever there.
Our relationship to others in past
lives has its effect upon the working
of the Law of Karma. If in the past we
have formed attachments for other
individuals, either through love or
hate; either by kindness or cruelty;
these attachments manifest in our
present life, for these persons are
bound to us, and we to them, by the
bonds of Karma, until the attachment
is worn out. Such people will in the
present life have certain
relationships to us, the object of
which is the working out of the
problems in which we are mutually
concerned, the adjustment of
relationship, the "squaring up" of
accounts, the development of both. We
are apt to be placed in a position to
receive hurts from those whom we have
hurt in past lives, and this not
through the idea of revenge, but by
the inexorable working out of the Law
of Compensation in Karmic adjustments.
And when we are helped, comforted and
receive favors from those who we
helped in past lives, it is not merely
a reward, but the operation of the
same law of Justice. The person who
hurts us in this way may have no
desire to do so, and may even be
distressed because he is used as an
instrument in this way, but the Karmic
Law places him in a position where he
unwittingly and without desire acts so
that you receive pain through him.
Have you not felt yourselves hurting
another, although you had no desire
and intention of so doing, and, in
fact, were sorely distressed because
you could not prevent the pain? This
is the operation of Karma. Have you
not found yourself placed where you
unexpectedly were made the bestower of
favors upon some almost unknown
persons? This is Karma. The Wheel
turns slowly, but it makes the
complete circle.
Karma is the companion law to
Metempsychosis. The two are
inextricably connected, and their
operations are closely interwoven.
Constant and unvarying in operation,
Karma manifests upon and in worlds,
planets, races, nations, families and
persons Everywhere in space is the
great law in operation in some form.
The so-called mechanical operations
called Causation are as much a phase
of Karma as is the highest phases
manifest on the higher planes of life,
far beyond our own. And through it all
is ever the urge toward
perfection--the upward movement of all
life. The Yogi teachings regard the
Universe as a mighty whole, and the
Law of Karma as the one great law
operating and manifesting through that
whole.
How different is the workings of this
mighty Law from the many ideas
advanced by man to account for the
happenings of life. Mere Chance is no
explanation, for the careful thinker
must inevitably come to the conclusion
that in an Universe governed by law,
there can be no room for Chance. And
to suppose that all rewards and
punishments are bestowed by a personal
deity, in answer to prayers,
supplications, good behavior,
offerings, etc., is to fall back into
the childhood stage of the race
thought. The Yogis teach that the
sorrow, suffering and affliction
witnessed on all sides of us, as well
as the joy, happiness and blessings
also in evidence, are not caused by
the will or whim of some capricious
deity to reward his friends and punish
his enemies--but by the working of an
invariable Law which metes out to each
his measure of good and ill according
to his Karmic attachments and
relationships.
Those who are suffering, and who see
no cause for their pain, are apt to
complain and rebel when they see
others of no apparent merit enjoying
the good things of life which have
been denied their apparently more
worthy brethren. The churches have no
answer except "It is God's will," and
that "the Divine motive must not be
questioned." These answers seem like
mockery, particularly when the idea of
Divine Justice is associated with the
teaching. There is no other answer
compatible with Divine Justice other
than the Law of Karma, which makes
each person responsible for his or her
happiness or misery. And there is
nothing so stimulating to one as to
know that he has within himself the
means to create for himself newer and
better conditions of life and
environment. We are what we are to-day
by reason of what we were in our
yesterdays. We will be in our
tomorrows that which we have started
into operation to-day. As we sow in
this life, so shall we reap in the
next--we are now reaping that which we
have sown in the past. St. Paul voiced
a world truth when he said:
"Brethren, be not deceived. God is not
mocked, for whatsoever a man soweth
that shall he also reap."
The teachers divide the operation of
Karma into three general classes, as
follows: (1) The Karmic manifestations
which are now under way in our lives,
producing results which are the
effects of causes set into motion in
our past lives. This is the most
common form, and best known phase of
Karmic manifestation.
(2) The Karma which we are now
acquiring and storing up by reason of
our actions, deeds, thoughts and
mental and spiritual relationships.
This stored up Karma will spring into
operation in future lives, when the
body and environments appropriate for
its manifestation presents itself or
is secured; or else when other Karma
tending to restrict its operations is
removed. But one does not necessarily
have to wait until a future life in
order to set into operation and
manifestation the Karma of the present
life. For there come times in which
there being no obstructing Karma
brought over from a past life, the
present life Karma may begin to
manifest.
(3) The Karma brought over from past
incarnations, which is not able to
manifest at the present time owing to
the opposition presented by other
Karma of an opposite nature, serves to
hold the first in check. It is a well
known physical law, which likewise
manifests on the mental plane, that
two opposing forces result in
neutralization, that is, both of the
forces are held in check. Of course,
though, a more powerful Karma may
manage to operate, while a weaker is
held in check by it.
Not only have individuals their own
Karma, but families, races, nations
and worlds have their collective
Karma. In the cases of races, if the
race Karma generated in the past be
favorable on the whole, the race
flourishes and its influence widens.
If on the contrary its collective
Karma be bad, the race gradually
disappears from the face of the earth,
the souls constituting it separating
according to their Karmic attractions,
some going to this race and some to
another. Nations are bound by their
Karma, as any student of history may
perceive if he studies closely the
tides of national progress or decline.
The Karma of a nation is made up of
the collective Karma of the
individuals composing it, so far as
their thoughts and acts have to do
with the national spirit and acts.
Nations as nations cease to exist, but
the souls of the individuals composing
them still live on and make their
influence felt in new races, scenes
and environments. The ancient
Egyptians, Persians, Medes, Chaldeans,
Romans, Grecians and many other
ancient races have disappeared, but
their reincarnating souls are with us
to-day. The modern revival of
Occultism is caused by an influx of
the souls of these old peoples pouring
in on the Western worlds.
The following quotation from _The
Secret Doctrine_, that remarkable
piece of occult literature, will be
interesting at this point:
"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
neighbors 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 road of
respectability and duty, and then
complain of those ways being 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 Makes 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 that 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 have 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 action and
altruism not simply in name."
Edwin Arnold, in his wonderful poem,
"The Light of Asia," which tells the
story of the Buddha, explains the
doctrine of Karma from the Buddhist
standpoint. We feel that our students
should become acquainted with this
view, so beautifully expressed, and so
we herewith quote the passages
referred to:
"Karma--all that total of a soul Which
is the things it did, the thoughts it
had, The 'self' it wove with woof of
viewless time Crossed on the warp
invisible of acts.
* * * * *
"What hath been bringeth what shall
be, and is, Worse--better--last for
first and first for last; The angels
in the heavens of gladness reap Fruits
of a holy past.
"The devils in the underworlds wear
out Deeds that were wicked in an age
gone by. Nothing endures: fair virtues
waste with time, Foul sins grow purged
thereby.
"Who toiled a slave may come anew a
prince For gentle worthiness and merit
won; Who ruled a king may wander earth
in rags For things done and undone.
"Before beginning, and without an end,
As space eternal and as surety sure,
Is fixed a Power divine which moves to
good, Only its laws endure.
"It will not be contemned of any one:
Who thwarts it loses, and who serves
it gains; The hidden good it pays with
peace and bliss, The hidden ill with
pains.
"It seeth everywhere and marketh all:
Do right--it recompenseth! Do one
wrong-- The equal retribution must be
made, Though DHARMA tarry long.
"It knows not wrath nor pardon;
utter-true Its measures mete, its
faultless balance weighs; Times are as
naught, to-morrow it will judge, Or
after many days.
"By this the slayer's knife did stab
himself; The unjust judge hath lost
his own defender; The false tongue
dooms its lie; the creeping thief And
spoiler rob, to render.
"Such is the law which moves to
righteousness, Which none at last can
turn aside or stay; The heart of it is
love, the end of it Is peace and
consummation sweet. Obey!
* * * * *
"The books say well, my brothers! each
man's life The outcome of his former
living is; The bygone wrongs bring
forth sorrow and woes, The bygone
right breeds bliss.
"That which ye sow ye reap. See yonder
fields! The sesamum was sesamum, the
corn Was corn. The silence and the
darkness knew; So is a man's fate
born.
"He cometh, reaper of the things he
sowed, Sesamum, corn, so much cast in
past birth; And so much weed and
poison-stuff, which mar Him and the
aching earth.
"If he shall labor rightly, rooting
these, And planting wholesome
seedlings where they grew, Fruitful
and fair and clean the ground shall
be, And rich the harvest due.
"If he who liveth, learning whence woe
springs, Endureth patiently, striving
to pay His utmost debt for ancient
evils done In love and truth always;
If making none to lack, he thoroughly
purge The lie and lust of self forth
from his blood; Suffering all meekly,
rendering for offence Nothing but
grace and good:
"If he shall day by day dwell
merciful, Holy and just and kind and
true; and rend Desire from where it
clings with bleeding roots, Till love
of life have end:
"He--dying--leaveth as the sum of him
A life-count closed, whose ills are
dead and quit, Whose good is quick and
mighty, far and near, So that fruits
follow it.
"No need hath such to live as ye name
life; That which began in him when he
began Is finished: he hath wrought the
purpose through Of what did make him
man.
"Never shall yearnings torture him,
nor sins Stain him, nor ache of
earthly joys and woes Invade his safe
eternal peace; nor deaths And lives
recur. He goes
"Unto NIRVANA. He is one with Life Yet
lives not. He is blest, ceasing to be.
OM, MANI PADME OM! the dewdrop slips
Into the shining sea!
"This is the doctrine of the Karma.
Learn! Only when all the dross of sin
is quit, Only when life dies like a
white flame spent. Death dies along
with it."
And so, friends, this is a brief
account of the operations of the Law
of Karma. The subject is one of such
wide scope that the brief space at our
disposal enables us to do little more
than to call your attention to the
existence of the Law, and some of its
general workings. We advise our
students to acquaint themselves
thoroughly with what has been written
on this subject by ourselves and
others. In our first series of
lessons--the _"Fourteen Lessons"_--the
chapter or lesson on Spiritual Cause
and Effect was devoted to the subject
of Karma. We advise our students to
re-study it. We also suggest that Mr.
Sinnett's occult story entitled
_"Karma"_ gives its readers an
excellent idea of the actual working
of Karma in the everyday lives of
people of our own times. We recommend
the book to the consideration of our
students. It is published at a popular
price, and is well worth the
consideration of every one interested
in this wonderful subject of
Reincarnation and Karma.
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