The Sanskrit word
Karma (or kamma in Pali) literally means action. Whatever we do, with our body,
speech, or mind, will have a corresponding result. It mainly refers to one's
intention or motivation while doing an action. The effects or results of karma are
'vipaka' or 'phala'. 'You get what you give' in Buddhism or 'A person reaps
what he sows' in Christianity. It is a term about the cycle of cause and effect
and is an important part of many religions such as Hinduism, Buddhism,
Ayyavazhi, Sikhism and Jainism.
What Is Karma?
The self-controlled person, moving among
objects, with his senses free from attachment and malevolence and brought under
his own control, attains tranquility.
~ Bhagavad Gita II.64
~ Bhagavad Gita II.64
The law of cause and effect forms
an integral part of Hindu philosophy. This law is termed as 'karma', which
means to 'act'. The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English defines it as the "sum of person's actions in one of
his successive states of existence, viewed as deciding his fate for the
next". In Sanskrit karma means "volitional action that is undertaken
deliberately or knowingly". This also dovetails self-determination and a
strong will power to abstain from inactivity. Karma is the differentia that
characterizes human beings and distinguishes him from other creatures of the
world.
The Natural Law
The theory of karma
harps on the Newtonian principle that every action produces an equal and
opposite reaction. Every time we think or do something, we create a cause,
which in time will bear its corresponding effects. And this cyclical cause and
effect generates the concepts of samsara (or
the world) and birth and reincarnation. It is the personality of a human being
or the jivatman - with its positive and negative
actions - that causes karma.
Karma
could be both the activities of the body or the mind, irrespective of the
consideration whether the performance brings fruition immediately or at a later
stage. However, the involuntary or the reflex actions of the body cannot be
called karma.
Your Karma Is Your Own
Doing
Every person is
responsible for his or her acts and thoughts, so each person's karma is
entirely his or her own. Occidentals see the operation of karma as fatalistic.
But that is far from true since it is in the hands of an individual to shape
his own future by schooling his present.
Hindu
philosophy, which believes in life after death, holds the doctrine that if the
karma of an individual is good enough, the next birth will be rewarding, and if
not, the person may actually devolve and degenerate into a lower life form. In
order to achieve good karma it is important to live life according to dharma or what is right.
Three Kinds of Karma
According to the
ways of life chosen by a person, his karma can be classified into three kinds.
The satvik karma, which is without
attachment, selfless and for the benefit of others; the rajasik karma, which is selfish where the focus is on gains for oneself;
and the tamasik karma, which is undertaken without heed to consequences, and is
supremely selfish and savage.
In
this context Dr. D N Singh in his A Study of
Hinduism, quotes Mahatma Gandhi's lucid
differentiation between the three. According to Gandhi, the tamasik works in a
mechanic fashion, the rajasik drives too many horses, is restless and always doing
something or other, and the satvik works with peace in mind.
Swami
Sivananda, of the Divine Life Society, Rishikesh classifies karma into three
kinds on the basis of action and reaction: Prarabdha (so much of past
actions as has given rise to the present birth), Sanchita (the balance of
past actions that will give rise to future births - the storehouse of
accumulated actions), Agami or Kriyamana (acts being done in the present life).
The Discipline of
Unattached Action
According to the
scriptures, the discipline of unattached action (Nishkâma Karma) can lead to salvation of the soul. So they recommend that
one should remain detached while carrying out his duties in life. As Lord
Krishna said in the Bhagavad Gita: "To the man thinking about the objects (of the senses)
arises attachment towards them; from attachment, arises longing; and from
longing arises anger. From anger comes delusion; and from delusion loss of
memory; from loss of memory, the ruin of discrimination; and on the ruin of
discrimination, he perishes".
CHANT
HARE KRISHNA MAHA MANTRA
AND
ALWAYS BE HAPPY
ALWAYS BE HAPPY
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