1. Eastern religion, Eastern philosophy: the Hindu and Buddhist philosophy according to which the quality of people’s current and future lives is determined by their behavior in this and in previous lives
2. Atmosphere radiated by a place, situation, person, or object (informal)
3. Destiny or fate in general
The term karma became part of the general lexicon in the west during the 60’s. It is certainly more “modern” to say karma rather than “reap what you sow” yet it means exactly the same thing, the concept of karma actually predating Christianity by over a thousand years. This concept is a cosmic law, is never broken and there is no appeal. Think law of gravity, same rules of appeal apply. The mistake most often made when thinking on karma is that it is a form of punishment. Unlike gravity, our actions determine our karma, reaping what we have sown.
The good news is that karma, or if you prefer The Law of Attraction, works both ways. To borrow from Wayne Dyer: When we change the way we look at things, the things we look at change. To be clear: everyone faces trouble or difficulty in the course of their lives they did nothing to attract, but these occasions are rare and if we are rigorously honest with ourselves it becomes clear that by the choices and decisions we made we set into motion the circumstances that eventually placed us in a position to be harmed.
We are blessed with free will, the ability to choose the path we walk, the choices we make determining the crop we reap. So we avoid the deliberate manufacture of misery and suffering, Living on the Spiritual Basis we walk the road less traveled, trusting and relying on a power greater than ourselves to keep the adversary, fear, in its proper place for If you knew, who walked beside you on this path you have chosen, you would never be afraid again.
©Vincent Lee Jones Living In Spirit All Rights Reserved
The Secret, Wayne Dyer,
ACIM, Serenity, Enlightenment, Zen, Emmet Fox, How To Be Happy, Golden Key,
Addicts Today, Chopra, Jesus, Healing Path Recovery, Einstein, Sobertec,
Marianne Williamson, Sayeh
Beheshti
No comments:
Post a Comment