Good people may have some bad actions squirreled away in their past. People who seem horrible now may have some wonderful actions in theirs. You never know.
"The second principle to keep in mind is that, in the Buddha’s teaching,
there’s no question of a person’s “deserving” happiness or “deserving”
pain. The principle of kamma is an impersonal one: that there are
actions leading to pleasure and actions leading to pain. In this way,
it’s not a respecter of persons; it’s purely an issue of actions and
results. Good people may have some bad actions squirreled away in their
past. People who seem horrible now may have some wonderful actions in
theirs. You never know. The Buddha didn’t create the principle of kamma,
or say that it’s good or just. He simply pointed out the way actions
produce results.
So there’s no question of a person’s deserving
or not deserving pleasure or pain. There’s simply the principle that
actions have results and that your present experience of pleasure or
pain is the combined result of past and present actions. You may have
some very unskillful actions in your past, but if you learn to think and
act skillfully when those actions bear fruit in the present, you don’t
have to suffer.
A third principle applies to the question of
whether the person who’s suffering “deserves” your compassion. Because
no human being has a totally pure karmic past, if you make a person’s
purity the basis for extending your compassion, there will be no one to
whom you can extend it.
Some people resist the idea that, for
example, children born into a warzone, suffering from brutality and
starvation, are there for a karmic reason. It seems heartless, they say,
to attribute these sufferings to kamma from past lives. The only
heartlessness here, though, is the insistence that people are worthy of
compassion only if they are innocent of any wrongdoing. Actually, people
who are doing wrong are just as deserving of our compassion as those
who are being wronged. There’s no need to like or admire the people for
whom you feel compassion. All you have to do is wish for them to be
happy. Then you do what you can to alleviate the suffering that comes
from past mistakes and to stop the mistaken behavior that causes
suffering now and into the future. The more you can develop this
attitude toward people you know have misbehaved or are misbehaving, the more you’ll be able to trust your intentions in any situation.
The
fourth principle to remember concerns the kamma you’re creating right
now in reaction to other people’s pleasure and pain. If you’re resentful
of somebody else’s happiness, someday when you get happy there’s going
to be somebody resentful of yours. So ask yourself: Would you want that?
Or if you’re hard-hearted toward somebody who’s suffering right now,
someday you may face the same sort of suffering. Would you want people
to be hard-hearted toward you? Always remember that your reactions are a
form of kamma, so be mindful to create the kind of kamma that gives the
results you’d like to see."
~ Thanissaro Bhikkhu "The Sublime Attitudes: A Study Guide on the Brahmavihāras"
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