Karma Revisited

2005-8-15 00:14:00

Larry quotes me:

The higher evolved can lead others into danger for a great cause and be justified, but if they take the life of another, either high or low, they will suffer the effects of karma just like anyone else.

Just to clarify exactly what you are saying here in regards to "tak[ing] the life of another," it is not the case that you are saying that in all cases if you take the life of another you will receive some negative karma, is it?

Every action or cause brings an either positive or negative effect. Notice that I said the high and low will receive the same effects. Just like the effects of gravity can be used for good or evil, and effects the high and low the same way, even so the high and low will suffer the results of the cause of a death through the same principles.

Of course, the circumstances of the death will determine the ultimate effect. If a person has to take a life in self-defense then the true cause of that death is the attacker, not the one forced to defend. If you jump off a cliff and kill yourself the cause of the death is your decision to jump, not the gravity that pulled you to your death.

Now the effects I am talking about are divorced from emotion. Add emotion to the problem and the results will be different, even with gravity.

Two people fall off a ladder and break their arms. In the same circumstances they suffered the same effects.

Now add emotion in the mix.

The one man is optimistic, heals fast and goes back to work.

The second man is negative, fearful and refuses to get on a ladder again and loses his job. He feels even God is against him and his life is ruined.

The two men suffered different effects not because of gravity, but because of the added cause of emotion that they placed in the circumstance themselves.

The main difference between the highly evolved and the lesser is the emotional ingredient. Both suffer the same effects from cause but the truly spiritual person will not add in an extra negative emotional cause to add more pain to the situation than necessary.

Ruth:

Jesus said to the Father when He was on the cross, something to the effect of "Forgive them Father, for they know not what they do"..... so if the *Father forgives* does this in effect, wipe out the karmic debt to be repaid to/by those people or race;..... or from "forgiveness" from a higher entity such as the Christ etc, does this stamp out cause and effect or karma for people via the Lords of Karma?

To forgive does not release another from the results of karma or cause and effect.

If you give me a black eye and I forgive you I still have a black eye and you are still effected by what you did.

Forgiveness relives the people from the emotional condemnation. Lower emotion is created by the interplay of mind and etheric energy and is a temporary energy full of illusion. This illusion is dispelled through forgiveness but cause and effect in the physical and the world of mind continue.

Jesus was aware that those who put him to death did not know what they were doing but felt they were righteously doing their job. This included the Roman soldiers and most of the Jewish leaders. He knew that many would later realize they put an innocent and righteous man to death and when this realization came he didn't think they deserved to suffer because of emotional condemnation of themselves. He wanted the Father to safeguard them from this future emotional torment.

Seeing the movie The Robe would add understanding to this. Richard Burton played the Roman soldier who wound up with the robe of Jesus. After he realized what he did he suffered excruciating guilt and pain. This is what Jesus wanted the forgiveness to nullify.

If you haven't seen this movie I would suggest you rent it.

Ruth:

However, was not Hitler the effect from a cause set in motion via the Jews or their race? If Hitler was an effect to a cause of something the Jews did in the past, perhaps even from Jesus' time on Earth, then the effect was still there for them, and so, did the Father really forgive those people(Jews?)

First, Hitler would have surfaced with or without the Jews. Killing the Jews was more of an afterthought for him. Even if the Jews did not exist he would have sought for power and convinced the people of various enemies who needed to be destroyed to secure his power.

Only a handful of Jews had anything to do with the death of Jesus and this event had little to do with the problems the race had in Germany. The cause of their problems there was because of various seeds of exclusivity that had to be worked out. The peaceful existence the Jews enjoy in the United States is a foreshadowing of what they need to accomplish world-wide.

Wisdom is knowing what to do next; virtue is doing it. David Starr Jordan (1851 - 1931), American naturalist