TO BELIEVE THAT KARMA IS THE INSTRUMENT OF MORAL ORDER IS DHAMMA☸💙
There is an order in the physical world.
This is proved by the following phenomenon
There is a certain order in the movements and actions of the starry bodies.
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There is a certain order by which seasons come and go in regular sequence
There is a certain order by which seeds grow into trees and trees yield fruits and fruits give seeds
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In Buddhist terminology these are called Niyamas, laws which produce an orderly sequence such as Rutu Niyam, Bija Niyam
Similarly is there a moral order in Human Society
How is it produced?
How is it maintained?
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Those who believe in existence of God have no difficulty in answering the question
& their answer is easy
Moral order they say is maintained by Divine Dispensation
God created d world & God is d Supreme Governor of d world
He is also d author of moral as well as of physical law
Moral law, according to them, is for man’s good bcoz it ensues from Divine will
Man is bound to obey God who is his maker & it is obedience to God which maintains d moral order
Such is d argument in support of the view that d moral order is maintained by Divine Dispensation
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The explanation is by no means satisfactory.
For if the moral law has originated from God,
and if God is the beginning and end of the moral order
What is the authority of the Divine Law? What is the hold of the Divine Law over the individual ?
These are pertinent questions. But to none of them is there any satisfactory answer from those who rely on Divine Dispensation as the basis for the moral order.
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To overcome these difficulties the thesis has been somewhat modified
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It is said: no doubt creation took effect at d command of God. It is also true that d cosmos entered upon its life by his will & by his direction
It is also true that He imparted to the cosmos once for all d energy which served as d driving power of a stupendous mechanism
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But God leaves it to Nature to work itself out in obedience to the laws originally given by him
So that if the moral order fails to work out as expected by God, the fault is of Nature and not of God.
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Even this modification in the theory does not solve the difficulty. It only helps to exonerate God from his responsibility. For the question remains, why should God leave it to Nature to execute His laws ? What is the use of such an absentee God ?
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The answer which the Buddha gave to the question,—“How is moral order maintained?” is totally different.
His answer was simple. “It is the Kamma Niyam and not God which maintains the moral order in the universe.” That was the Buddha’s answer to the question.
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The moral order of the universe may be good or it may be bad. But according to the Buddha the moral order rests on man and on nobody else.
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“Kamma means man’s action and Vipaka is its effect.
If the moral order is bad it is because man does Akusala (Bad) Kamma.
If the moral order is good it is because man does Kusala (Good) Kamma.
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The Buddha was not content with merely speaking of Kamma. He spoke of the law of Kamma which is another name for Kamma Niyam.
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By speaking of the law of Kamma what the Buddha wanted to convey was that the effect of the deed was bound to follow the deed, as surely as night follows day. It was like a Niyam or rule.
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No one could fail to benefit by the good effects of a Kusala Kamma and no one could escape the evil effects of Akusala Kamma.
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Therefore, the Buddha’s admonition was:
Do Kusala Kamma so that humanity may benefit by a good moral order which a Kusala Kamma helps to sustain;
do not do Akusala Kamma for humanity will suffer from the bad moral order which an Akusala Kamma will bring about.
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It may be that there is a time interval between the moment when the Kamma is done and the moment when the effect is felt. It is so, often enough.
👉(1) Ditthadamma Vedaniya Kamma
i.e. Immediately Effective Kamma
👉(2) Upapajjavedaniya Kamma
i.e. Remotely Effective Kamma &
👉(3) Aporapariya Vedaniya Kamma
i.e. Indefinitely Effective Kamma
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Kamma may also fall into the category of Ahosi Kamma, i.e., Kamma which is non-effective.
This Ahosi Kamma comprises all such Kammas which are too weak to operate, or which are counteracted by a more Kamma, at the time when it should have worked.
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But making allowance for all these considerations, it does not in any sense derogate from the claim made by the Buddha that the law of Kamma is inexorable.
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The theory of the law of Kamma does not necessarily involve the conception that the effect of the Kamma recoils on the doer of it and there is nothing more to be thought about it. This is an error. Sometimes the action of one affects another instead of the doer.
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All the same it is the working of the law of Kamma because it either upholds or upsets the moral order.
Individuals come and individuals go. But the moral order of the universe remains and so also the law of Kamma which sustains it.
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It is for this reason that in the religion of the Buddha, Morality has been given the place of God
Thus the Buddha’s answer to the question— “How the moral order in the universe is sustained?” is so simple and so irrefutable
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& yet its true meaning is scarcely grasped.
Often, almost always, it is either misunderstood or misstated or misinterpreted.
Not many seem to be conscious that the law of Kamma was propounded by the Buddha as an answer to the question— “How the moral order is maintained ?”
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That, however, is the purpose of Buddha’s Law of Kamma.
The Law of Kamma has to do only with the question of general moral order.
It has nothing to do with the fortunes or misfortunes of an individual.
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It is concerned with the maintenance of the moral order in the universe.
It is because of this that the law of Kamma is a part of Dhamma.
Among the Provinces of India which came Under Muslim domination,
Sind was the first.
It was ruled by a Shudra king.
But the throne was usurped by a Brahmin who established his own dynasty which naturally supported the Brahmnic religion at the time of the invasion of Sind by Ibne Kassim in 712 A.D.
The ruler of Sind was Dahir.
This Dahir belonged to the dynasty of Brahmin rulers.
Heuen Tsang had noticed that the Punjab was in his time ruled by a
Kshatriya Buddhist dynasty.
This dynasty ruled Punjab till about 880 A.D.
In that year the throne was usurped by a Brahmin army commander by name Lalliya who founded the Brahmin Shahi dynasty.
As to the conversion to the faith of Islam by the Buddhist population as a cause of the fall of Buddhism☸, there can hardly be much doubt.
In his Presidential address to the early Medieval and Rajput section of the Indian History Congress held at Allahabad in 1938,
Prof. Surendra Nath Sen very rightly observed that there were two problems relating to the Medieval History of India for which no satisfactory answers were forthcoming as yet.
He mentiond two:
1️⃣one connected with the origin of the Rajputs and the
2️⃣ other to the distribution of the Muslim population in India.
The Muslim invasions of India commenced in the year 1001 A.D.
The last wave of these invasions reached Southern India in 1296
A.D. when Allauddin Khilji subjugated the Kingdom of Devagiri.
The Muslim conquest of India was really not completed by 1296.
The wars of subjugation went on between the Muslim conquerors and the local rulers who though defeated were not reduced.
But the point which requires to bear in mind is that during this period of 300 years of Muslim Wars of conquests, India was governed all over by princes
who professed the orthodox faith of Bramhanism.
Bramhanism beaten and battered by the Muslim Invaders could look to the rulers for support and sustenance and did get it.
Buddhism beaten and battered by the Muslim invaders had no such hope.
POLITICAL REFORM MUST PRECEDE SOCIAL REFORM: Bodhisattva Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar (1932)☸💙🧘♀️📿
By establishing Bahujan Samaj Party i.e. BSP🐘🇮🇳 as the third front in Indian Politics, Manywar and Behenji have very well brought Babasaheb's dream mission forward.
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It was well advised by Babasaheb (1948) that, “Political power is the key to all social progress...", so BSP is not just a political movement but it is actually a Mission to transform the society at every levels.