What the Buddha's awakening into the role of karma means for us now
"The role that kamma plays in the [Buddha's] awakening is empowering. It means that what each of us does, says, and thinks does
 matter — this, in opposition to the sense of futility that can come 
from reading, say, world history, geology, or astronomy, and realizing 
the fleeting nature of the entire human enterprise. The awakening lets 
us see that the choices we make in each moment of our lives are real, 
and that they produce real consequences. The fact that we are empowered 
also means that we are responsible for our experiences. We are not 
strangers in a strange land. We have formed and are continuing to form 
the world we experience. This helps us to face the events we encounter 
in life with greater equanimity, for we know that we had a hand in 
creating them. At the same time, we can avoid any debilitating sense of 
guilt because with each new choice we can always make a fresh start.
The
 awakening also tells us that good and bad are not mere social 
conventions but are built into the structure of experience. We may be 
free to design our lives, but not to change the underlying rules that 
determine what good and bad actions are, and how the process of kamma 
works itself out. Thus cultural relativism — even though it may have 
paved the way for many of us to leave our earlier religious orientations
 and enter the Buddhist fold — has no place once we are within that 
fold. There are certain ways of acting that are inherently unskillful, 
and we are fools if we insist on our right to follow them."
~ Thanissaro Bhikkhu "The Meaning of the Buddha's Awakening"
Comments
Post a Comment