Karma: Difference between revisions

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*[http://www.theosophical.ca/adyar_pamphlets/AdyarPamphlet_No195c.pdf# You Create Your Own Future: Deeds and Their Consequences] by Annie Besant
*[http://www.theosophical.ca/adyar_pamphlets/AdyarPamphlet_No195c.pdf# You Create Your Own Future: Deeds and Their Consequences] by Annie Besant
*[http://www.theosophical.org/files/resources/articles/KARMA.pdf# Karma] Written down by Mabel Collins
*[http://www.theosophical.org/files/resources/articles/KARMA.pdf# Karma] Written down by Mabel Collins
*[http://www.blavatsky.net/theosophy/judge/articles/aphorisms-on-karma.htm# Aphorisms On Karma] by William Q. Judge
*[http://www.blavatsky.net/theosophy/judge/articles/karma.htm# Karma] by William Q. Judge
*[http://www.theosophical.org/publications/quest-magazine/1504# Karma and Dharma: Twin Keys to the Heroic Journey] by Joy Mills
*[http://www.theosophical.org/publications/quest-magazine/1504# Karma and Dharma: Twin Keys to the Heroic Journey] by Joy Mills
*[http://www.theosophical.org/online-resources/leaflets/1799# Karma: The Law of Order and Opportunity] by Theosophical Society in America
*[http://www.theosophical.org/online-resources/leaflets/1799# Karma: The Law of Order and Opportunity] by Theosophical Society in America

Revision as of 20:38, 16 November 2012

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Karma (devanāgarī: कर्म) is a Sanskrit term that "action" or "deed." In in Hindu, Jain, Buddhist and Sikh religions karma refers to a law that regulates causes and effects.

H. P. Blavatsky defined it as follows:

Karma (Sk.). Physically, action: metaphysically, the LAW OF RETRIBUTION, the Law of cause and effect or Ethical Causation. Nemesis, only in one sense, that of bad Karma. It is the eleventh Nidana in the concatenation of causes and effects in orthodox Buddhism; yet it is the power that controls all things, the resultant of moral action, the meta physical Samskâra, or the moral effect of an act committed for the attainment of something which gratifies a personal desire. There is the Karma of merit and the Karma of demerit. Karma neither punishes nor rewards, it is simply the one Universal LAW which guides unerringly, and, so to say, blindly, all other laws productive of certain effects along the grooves of their respective causations. When Buddhism teaches that "Karma is that moral kernel (of any being) which alone survives death and continues in transmigration" or reincarnation, it simply means that there remains nought after each Personality but the causes produced by it; causes which are undying, i.e., which cannot be eliminated from the Universe until replaced by their legitimate effects, and wiped out by them, so to speak, and such causes—unless compensated during the life of the person who produced them with adequate effects, will follow the reincarnated Ego, and reach it in its subsequent reincarnation until a harmony between effects and causes is fully reestablished. No “personality”—a mere bundle of material atoms and of instinctual and mental characteristics—can of course continue, as such, in the world of pure Spirit. Only that which is immortal in its very nature and divine in its essence, namely, the Ego, can exist for ever. And as it is that Ego which chooses the personality it will inform, after each Devachan, and which receives through these personalities the effects of the Karmic causes produced, it is therefore the Ego, that self which is the “moral kernel” referred to and embodied karma, “which alone survives death.”[1]

In Hinduism

In Hinduism there are three kinds of karma: Sanchita karma (accumulated past karma), Prarabdha karma (the one ready to be experienced through the present incarnation), and Kriyamana karma (the karma being created in the present incarnation, the fruits of which will be experienced in the future).

Lords of Karma

See Lipikas.

Notes

  1. Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, The Theosophical Glossary (Krotona, CA: Theosophical Publishing House, 1973), 173-174.

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