The
Scott Memorial,
A
familiar
Theosophy
an
outstanding introductory work on
Theosophy by a Student of
Katherine Tingley entitled “Elementary Theosophy”
Katherine
Tingley
1847
– 1929
Founder
& President of the
Point
Loma Theosophical Society 1896 -1929
She
and her students produced a series of informative
Theosophical
works in the early years of the 20th century
ELEMENTARY
By
A Student of Katherine Tingley
Chapter 6
Karma
"A
man's deeds come back to him," "that which a man sows, that shall he
also reap," "cast thy bread upon the waters and it shall come back
after many days," are three sayings which contain a law belonging as
sister to reincarnation, known as karma.
The
punishment aspect of it the Greeks called Nemesis; but that is only half of it.
It belongs to reincarnation because there is not time in any one life for all
the deeds a man does therein tocome back to him. They
come back to him because they are his.
Whenever
we do anything at all, purposefully, we do three things, though we ordinarily
think of one only. Consider, for example, theft.
(a) The
thing visibly done is the taking of some one else's property.
(b)
Invisibly, a change of character for the worse is made; this shows itself in
the fact that whatever is done once is easier to do the second time.
(c) The
third thing, also invisible, is that the world's atmosphere, in which we all
share, in which our minds live as our bodies live in the common air, is
poisoned.
An evil
wave has been sent into it. This wave, in however slight degree, does act on
and affect the minds of all other men. The world is hard enough, cold enough,
selfish enough as it is; this wave worsens it. The minds of men become by it,
in however slight degree, more suspicious, more grasping, harder. They feel, though
without noticing it, an increase in what we might call the thief element.
Of course
the wave sent out by one single act of theft is very slight. But when we
multiply it by millions every year, we can understand why the world is as it
is. Each of the millions has broken the harmony that should have been, the
harmony between men in act and thought, which must some time come about.
A whole
life may be spent in undetected and unpunished theft. But it was all
registered; the successive acts were written deeper and deeper on the man's
character; and they sent successive waves into the world's atmosphere. To that
atmosphere, which he helped to make, with that character, which he entirely
made, the man comes back. The echo of his own past deeds returns to him,
finding an exactly answering echo in his nature. All the world tendencies, the
effects of all the deeds ever done by man, come flooding in upon him, as they
do on all of us. Some find no echo in his character -- he may, for example,
have no tendency to murder. He will be tempted only by those that do have their
echo in his character.
All is now
ready for the opportunity. When that comes, what will happen? What is likely to
happen? He falls under the load of impulse he built into himself.
The luck
not to be found out (if it can be called luck) which he enjoyed before, some
time or other now fails -- perhaps on the very first occasion. Then there is a
calamity, disgrace. By that he may learn to reform, or many such may be
necessary, extending perhaps over more than one life. They go on happening
until at last he is strong enough to receive out of the world's atmosphere his
own current, find its echo in his own nature, and yet refuse to yield. When
there is no longer that echo, the battle is finally won there.
The man
has fought and neutralized that much evil; he has cleared the world's
atmosphere of that much of the stain which he made in his thefts.
This is
one aspect of karma, the coming back of evil deeds. The law cannot forgive
anything, for that would be to leave our characters still weak.
True
forgiveness is done by man himself when he turns so strongly to his higher
nature that he becomes at one with it. After that he can face the echoes of his
own deeds without fear; they find no answer in his own nature.
There are
many other aspects, for the law is really an explanation of life. Good deeds
come back as certainly as bad ones. He who does a good deed sweetens the
world's atmosphere and his own character. The current comes back as an urge to
repeat them, finds an echo in his character, and goes back to others with the
benediction of some new good deed. The world is bettered, its burdens eased a
little. The man has the inner joy and peace of harmony with his divine nature;
just as, by the other kind of action, he has unrest within and without. Ill
deeds bring inner unrest and outer pain; good deeds, inner peace and outer
harmony. With both hands this law helps us on to our greater destiny, to the
real life to come.
But karma
goes even deeper; it replies to defects of character which are not seen to
injure others. We shall understand if we remember that its aim is to develop,
to restore us to our proper and highest nature. It meets our weaknesses with
tonics, and tonics are sometimes bitter. Wiser eyes than those of ordinary men
are needed to follow its work in individual cases; but the general principles
are easy enough for a child to grasp. Some men meet seemingly unmerited
disgrace. Where is the justice of it?
Others close
their lives in the prolonged pain of some slow malady. Where here is justice?
In man's own former thoughts and deeds. It is nature's response to character.
We must
try to take nature's long view if we would understand her work in its
beneficence. In such cases as we have supposed, there must be a failure
somewhere needing correction, some flaw in character needing strengthening.
Some characters only bring forth their finest flower after great pain.
The pain
is transient, the flower eternal; and it was the flower that nature wanted to
secure. Perhaps there was a latent love of others' good opinion, which,
uncured, remained a weakness and might have led on to all kinds of evil,
hypocrisy, ambition, vanity.
The weed
is now uprooted. But in the last life it may have been very luxuriant --
leading, it may be, to some marked sin or crime. Karma carried that over to the
next page of her ledger, the next life. But the possibilities in details are
endless.
Physical
pain, again, often calls forth the most magnificent endurance, strengthening
the will in some cases as nothing else can. In such a case it could be crudely
described as punishment for the lack of endurance and patience; or, more
correctly, as a difficult bit of nature's beneficent training. A good deal of
the work of karma is to call our attention to failings of which we were before
unconscious, and give us the opportunity to correct them.
So the
theosophist sees in the workings of karma a law which is wholly beneficent,
which punishes and rewards for one sole purpose: the evocation of the soul. It
works behind and through every event of our lives. Nor are its ways
inscrutable.
If we
watched all that happened to us from day to day and from year to year, noted
what duties came up to be done, what pains and pleasures came into our path,
what accidents befell us -- if we watched instead of complaining, we should
find that at every turn we were being offered opportunity for growth of will,
of mind, of character.
If outer
life is monotonous, there is the opportunity to light up the outer life with
the radiance of the inner life, with the companionship of the divine. If outer
life is painful, it is the opportunity to develop will and endurance. And if we
stop the fierce wish to escape pain and procure pleasure, putting that much
force into compassionate deed and thought, we should find our minds grow
steadily clearer in comprehension of this law and its purpose. There are no
accidents. Whatever happens we have ourselves brought about in this or some
other life. We have done, or left undone, and the effects of both constitute
our environment and the stream of events.
Our deeds
of yesterday are the parents of the events of today, and events are the mask of
opportunity. They press on us from without, as our divine will does from within
both in the same direction. Karma waits at our side and when we have acted or
not acted, she adjusts the effect so as to teach and train us. We have
freewill; the future is absolutely in our hands.
Karma, if
we so choose, will show us her face as friend; it is always inner peacefor those who walk with her. She is always the friend
of those who make themselves the friends of humanity, who develop every faculty
and talent and strength of their nature that they may serve humanity the
better.
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