KARMA: We Mold Our Lives Like
a Potter Fashions a Pot
Article excerpt from Hinduism Today
Karma has quite a karma. Long after India's seers immortalized
it in the Vedas, it suffered bad press under European missionaries
who belittled it as "fate" and "fatalism," and
today finds itself again in the ascendancy as the subtle and all-encompassing
principle which governs man's experiential universe in a way likened
to gravity's governance over the physical plane. Like gravity, karma
was always there in its fullest potency, even when people did not
comprehend it.
The early seers who brought through the Vedas were practitioners,
mystics and divine oracles who put into practice the knowledge of
karma. To them, Karma -- from the root kri, "to do" --
was a power by which they could influence the Gods, nature, weather,
harvests and enemies through right intent and rites righteously
performed. Thus by their actions they could determine their destiny.
Through the ages, other realized souls explained the workings of
karma, revealing details of this cosmic law and, when the tradition
of writing came into vogue, recording it for future generations.
In this way they established karma as perhaps the fundamental principle
of Hindu consciousness and culture then and now.
Primordial and unborn, karma is anadi, "beginningless."
Its Rig Veda definitions are linked to the performance of the homa,
the potent fire rite that temporarily opens a window between the
three worlds -- physical, subtle and causal. With Sanskrit mantras,
mudras and meditative powers, Vedic priests precipitated a flow
of shakti from highly evolved souls, Mahadevas, residing in inner
worlds, securing the blessings of the Gods, insuring happiness for
the clan. Neglecting the rites or misperforming them made negative
karma and invited calamity and loss of wealth.
Communities were tight knit, and the clan prospered or suffered
collectively. When one person did transgress, elders suspected not
so much an individual's willful intent to do malice as malperformance
of the homa. The ritual was held responsible for sustaining a spiritual
force-field strong enough to ward off demonic entities that torment,
confuse and misguide weak individuals. Priests assumed primary responsibility
for the well-being of the community.
Indologist Herman W. Hull, author of The Vedic Origins of Karma,
writes: "In the context of Vedic ritual thought, good and bad
apparently refer to a valuation of action based on ritual exactitude:
good being equated with the correct performance of the rite, bad
with the incorrect performance." Swami Vivekananda, who spoke
and wrote on karma extensively, commented on this understanding
of the law: "The Vedic doctrine of karma is the same as in
Judaism and all other religions, that is to say, the purification
of the mind through sacrifices and such other external means."
The Upanishads (circa 1500-600 bce), the philosophic treatises
of the Vedas, show how karma relates to the individual and his or
her actions -- with questions of morality, responsibility, reward
and retribution. They clearly command the individual to be responsibly
concerned about personal conduct and not expect the priesthood alone
to secure and safeguard one's karma through the performance of sacred
rites. As Sage Yajnavalkya says in the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad:
"What becomes of this man? Indeed, one becomes good by good
action and bad by bad action."
Karma in Mystical Vision
The yogis of the ancient Sankhya philosophical system offered a
deeply mystical vision. They scrutinized karma to profound levels
of magnification and stressed its bearing on the soul of man. What
they saw was a plasmic jelly pulsating within the subtle bodies
of each person. Embedded in this plasma, which persists from life
to life, are the seeds of all past thought and action. In each lifetime,
certain of these karmic seeds are released into the nerve system
with coded impulsions and tendencies affecting present actions.
The effects were most commonly understood to determine three spheres
of life: a) jati, family and occupation; b) ayus, health and length
of life; c) bhoga, quality and enjoyment of life.
Karma as a Cosmic Building Block
To the rishi seers, karma appeared with such fundamental force
and substantive reality that they perceived it as one of the thirty-six
primary evolutes of form, called tattvas, which range from Parashakti,
pure consciousness, to prithivi tattva, earth. Karma is number eight,
called niyati tattva, a spiritual-magnetic energy form. This identification
of its magnetic quality is a crucial clue to understanding how karma
"comes back," rather than just "goes out." Each
karma, or action, generates a vibration, a distinct oscillation
of force, a vasana, or subliminal inclination that continues to
vibrate in the mind. These vasanas are magnetic conglomerates of
subconscious impressions. Like attracts like. Acts of love attract
loving acts, malice attracts malice. And each action, karma, continues
to attract until demagnetized. This is accomplished through re-experiencing
it, or resolving it with understanding -- rather than compounding
it with reaction -- or through other subtler spiritual means and
practices.
Karma Goes Global
"What goes around comes around," sings country Western
singer Willie Nelson. His ballad about "getting back what you
give out" dominated US and European radio waves for years and
became the West's homespun Upanishad on the Hindu concept of karma.
You can hardly watch TV today without a subtle lesson in this cosmic
law of cause and effect. Everywhere, karma has squeezed through
the white picket fences of non-Hindu religions and irrevocably attached
itself to the global ethic emerging worldwide.
But karma has suffered a chronic association with the word fate.
Fate is a Western idea, derived largely from the three Abrahamic
religions, Judaism, Christianity and Islam. It means, with wide
variation, that one's life has been set by agencies outside oneself.
Karma is exactly the opposite. "`It is the coward and the fool
who says this is fate,' goes the Sanskrit proverb," said Swami
Vivekananda. "But it is the strong man who stands up and says,
`I will make my fate.'"
KARMA GLOSSARY
karmabhanda: The bonds of actions, i.e., being
bound to rebirth.
karmadosha: Sinful work or vice, blunder; evil consequences.
karmadushta: Corrupt in action.
karmaja: Act-born; resulting or produced from an act, good or bad.
karmajiva: Livelihood earned by work, trade, profession.
karmakshaya: Annihilation of work.
karmakshetra: Place of religious acts.
karmanirhara: The removal of bad deeds or their effects.
karmanishtha: Diligent in performing religious actions.
karmapaka: Ripening of acts, matured results of acts of former births.
karmaphala: The fruit of actions.
karmarambha: The commencement of an act.
karmashaya: "Holder of karma." Describes body of the soul.
karmasamya: Equipoise of karma.
karmasiddhi: Successful action.
karmatyaga: Abandoning worldly duties and obligations.
karmavasha: The necessary influence or repercussion of actions.
karmavidhi: Rule of action; mode of conducting ceremonies.
karmayoga: "Union through action;" selfless religious
service.
kriyamana karma: Actions being made. Karma being created.
papa: Wickedness, sin, crime. Wrongful action. Demerit from wrongdoing.
prayaschitta: Penance. "Predominant thought or aim; weighing
heavily on the mind."
prarabdha karma: Actions set in motion. Sanchita karma released
to bear fruit in one's current life.
punya: Holy, virtuous; auspicious. Meritorious action.
sanchita karma: The entirety of all karmas of this life and past
lives.
Reference: A Sanskrit English Dictionary, Sir
Monier Monier-Williams.
[KARMA is pronounced as "karmuh,"
the "uh" being subtle.]
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Texts on this subject:
Reincarnation
& Karma. Article from Starseed,
a zine by Omni / John Payne (channeled material)
Karma, Meaning and
Definition. Excerpt from an article from Hinduism Today that
gives a contemporary explanation of the concept of Karma, as seen
in Hinduism.
Karma, the Law of Action
followed by Reaction. A text on Karma Yoga that builds upon
the ideas of the previous text.
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