Everything about Karma In Hinduism totally explained
Karma is a concept in
Hinduism which explains
causality through a system where beneficial effects are derived from past beneficial actions and harmful effects from past harmful actions, creating a system of actions and reactions throughout a person's
reincarnated lives.
The doctrine of transmigration of the soul, or fateful retribution for acts committed, doesn't appear in the
Rig Veda. The concept of karma appeared in Hindu thought during the period 800-200 BC and became widespread during the period considered as "Classical Hinduism" 200 BC - 1100 AD.
Axel Michaels explains that codification of these ideas appeared only in late texts, and then as only one of many explanations for why things happen as they do:
With the early Upaniṣads, diverse and incoherent speculations about the transmigration of the soul appeared, which were expanded into a ramified system in the legal texts and Purāṇas. Only with these texts do we find the concept of the repeated transmigration linked with desires for deliverance from the eternal cycle of rebirth... and a continuous ethicization of retribution for acts in the form of catalogues of new existences. Thus, the doctrine of Karma is a theodicy, and explanation of the suffering and unjust earthly world as a result of previous acts, and an eschatology, a doctrine of liberation. Both doctrines don't belong together in every case, and countless other explanations for fate exist alongside them.
Definition
"Karma" literally means "deed" or "act", and more broadly names the universal principle of
cause and
effect, action and reaction, which Hindus believe governs all life. It is believed that only beings that can distinguish right from wrong, such as adult humans, can accumulate Karma. Animals and young children are not responsible to accumulate Karma as they're incapable of discriminating between right and wrong. However, all sentient beings can feel the effects of Karma, which are pleasure and pain. Karma isn't
fate; humans are believed to act with
free will, creating their own destinies. According to the Vedas, if an individual sows
goodness, he or she'll reap goodness; if one sows
evil, he or she'll reap evil. Karma refers to the totality of mankind's actions and their concommitant reactions in current and previous lives, all of which determine the future. However, many karmas don't have an immediate effect; some accumulate and return unexpectedly in an individual's later lives. The conquest of karma is believed to lie in intelligent action and dispassionate reaction.
Unkindness yields spoiled fruits, called
paap, and good deeds bring forth sweet fruits, called
punya. As one acts, so does he become: one becomes virtuous by virtuous action, and evil by evil action.
There are three types of karma in Hinduism:
- sanchita karma, the sum total of past karmas yet to be resolved;
- prarabdha karma, that portion of sanchita karma that's to be experienced in this life; and
- kriyamana karma, the karma that humans are currently creating, which will bear fruit in future.
Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami explains in the lexicon section of his book,
Dancing with Siva, that
karma literally means "deed or act" and more broadly names the universal principle of
cause and effect,
action and
reaction which governs all
life. As he explains it, karma isn't
fate, for man acts with
free will creating his own
destiny. The Vedas tell us that if we sow
goodness, we'll reap goodness; if we sow
evil, we'll reap evil. Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami further notes that karma refers to the totality of our actions and their concomitant reactions in this and previous lives, all of which determine our
future. The conquest of karma lies in intelligent action and dispassionate reaction. Not all karmas rebound immediately. Some accumulate and return unexpectedly in this or other births.
The role of divine forces
Several different views exist in
Hinduism regarding the role of divine beings. In Hinduism, many see the
devas as playing some kind of role. Still others such as followers of
Vedanta consider
Ishvara, a personal supreme God, as playing that role. In these theistic schools, karma isn't seen merely as a law of cause and effect, but dependent on the will of a personal supreme God. Examples of a personal supreme God include
Shiva in
Shaivism or
Vishnu in
Vaishnavism. Other Hindus,such as the
Mimamsakas, reject such notions of divinity being responsible and see karma as acting independently, considering the natural laws of causation sufficient to explain the effects of karma.
These differing views are explicitly noted in a series of passes in the
Brahma Sutras (III.2.38-40), an important text in
Vedanta, the major school of Hinduism, which endorses the concept of
[[Ishvara|]] for example, a personal supreme God, as the source of fruits of karma, but note opposing views in order to refute them. For example,
Swami Sivananda's commentary on verse III.2.38 from the
Brahma Sutras refers to the role of
[[Ishvara|]] (the Lord) as the dispenser of the fruits of karma. A commentary by Swami Vireswarananda on the same verse says that the purpose of this verse is specifically to refute the views of the
Mimamsakas, who say that karma (work) and not, gives the fruits of one's actions. According to the Mimamsakas it's useless to set up an for that purpose, since Karma itself can give the result at a future time.
Some interpretations of the Bhagavad Gita suggest an intermediate view, that karma is a law of cause and effect yet God can mitigate karma for His devotees.
Another view holds that a Sadguru, acting on God's behalf, can mitigate or work out some of the karma of the disciple.
Two examples from the Puranas
The story of
Markandeya, who was saved from death by
Siva, illustrates that God's grace can overcome Karma and death for His beloved devotee.
The story of
Ajamila in the
Bhagavata Purana
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Narayana and therefore received
Moksha or union with God, and was saved from the messengers of
Yama. Ajamila was actually thinking of his youngest son, whose name was also Narayana. But the name of God has powerful effects, and Ajamila was forgiven for his great sins and attained salvation, despite his bad Karma.
Views of Hindu traditions on karma
Scriptures divide Karma into three kinds:
Sanchita (accumulated),
Prarabdha (fruit-bearing) and
Kriyamana (current) karma. All
kriyamana karmas become
sanchita karma upon completion. From this stock of
sanchita karma, a handful is taken out to serve one lifetime and this handful of actions which has begun to bear fruit and which will be exhausted only on their fruit being enjoyed and not otherwise, is known as
prarabdha karma. In this way, so long as the stock of
sanchita karma lasts, a part of it continues to be taken out as
prarabdha karma for being enjoyed in one lifetime, leading to the cycles of birth and death. A
jiva can't attain Moksha until the accumulated
sanchita karmas are completely exhausted.
Advaita Vedanta
Shankara: Swami Sivananda's translation
Swami Sivananda, an
Advaita scholar, reiterates the same views in his commentary synthesising Vedanta views on the
Brahma Sutras, a Vedantic text. In his commentary on Chapter 3 of the Brahma Sutras, Sivananda notes that karma is insentient and short-lived, and ceases to exist as soon as a deed is executed. Hence, karma can't bestow the fruits of actions at a future date according to one's merit. Furthermore, one can't argue that karma generates
apurva or
punya, which gives fruit. Since apurva is non-sentient, it can't act unless moved by an intelligent being such as God. It can't independently bestow reward or punishment.
There is a passage from Swami Sivananda's translation of the
Svetasvatara Upanishad (4:6) illustrating this concept:
» Two birds of beautiful plumage — inseparable friends — live on the same tree. Of these two one eats the sweet fruit while the other looks on without eating.
In his commentary, the first bird represents the individual soul, while the second represents
Brahman or
God. The soul is essentially a reflection of Brahman. The tree represents the body. The soul identifies itself with the body, reaps the fruits of its actions, and undergoes rebirth. The Lord alone stands as an eternal witness, ever contented, and doesn't eat, for he's the director of both the eater and the eaten.
Swami Sivananda also notes that God is free from charges of partiality and cruelty which are brought against him because of
social inequality, fate, and universal
suffering in the world. According to the
Brahma Sutras, individual souls are responsible for their own fate; God is merely the dispenser and witness with reference to the
merit and demerit of souls.
In his commentary on Chapter 2 of the Brahma Sutras, Sivananda further notes that the position of God with respect to karma can be explained through the analogy of rain. Although rain can be said to bring about the growth of rice, barley and other plants, the differences in various species is due to the diverse potentalities lying hidden in the respective seeds. Thus, Sivananda explains that differences between classes of beings are due to different merits belonging to individual souls. He concludes that God metes
rewards and
punishments only in consideration of the specific actions of beings.
Nyaya
The
Nyaya school, one of six orthodox schools of Hindu philosophy, states that one of the proofs of the existence of God is karma:
Adŗişhţāt (lit., from the unforeseen): It is seen that some people in this world are happy, some are in misery. Some are rich and some poor. The Naiyanikas explain this by the concept of Karma and reincarnation. The fruit of an individual's actions doesn't always lie within the reach of the individual who is the agent. There ought to be, therefore, a dispenser of the fruits of actions, and this supreme dispenser is God. This belief of Nyaya, accordingly, is the same as that of
Vedanta.
Shaivism
Thirugana Sambanthar
Thirugnana Sambanthar writes about karma in his outline of
Saivism. He explains the concept of karma in Hinduism by distinguishing it from that of Buddhism and Jainism, which don't require the existence of an external being like God. In their beliefs, just as a calf among a large number of cows can find its mother at suckling time, so also does karma find the specific individual it needs to attach to and come to fruition. However Hindus posit that karma, unlike the calf, is an unintelligent entity. Hence, karma can't locate the appropriate person by itself. Shri Sambantha concludes that an intelligent
Supreme Being with perfect wisdom and power (
Shiva, for example) is necessary to make karma attach to the appropriate individual. In such sense, God is the Divine Accountant.
Appaya Dikshita
Appaya Dikshita, a Saivite theologian and proponent of Siva Advaita, states that Siva (God) only awards happiness and misery in accordance with the law of karma. Thus persons themselves perform good or evil actions according to their own inclinations as acquired in past creations, and in accordance with those deeds, a new creation is made for the fulfilment of the law of karma. Shaivas believe that there are cycles of creations in which souls gravitate to specific bodies in accordance with karma, which as an unintelligent object depends on the will of Siva alone. Thus, many interpret the
caste system in accordance with karma, as those with good deeds are born into a highly spiritual family (probably the
brahmana caste).
Srikantha
Srikantha, another Saivite theologian, believes that individual souls themselves do things which may be regarded as the cause of their particular actions, or desisting from particular actions, in accordance with the nature of the fruition of their past deeds. Srikantha further believes that Siva only helps a person when he wishes to act in a particular way or to desist from a particular action. Regarding the view that karma produce their own effects directly, Srikantha holds that karma being without any intelligence can't be expected to produce manifold effects through various births and various bodies; rather fruits of one's karma can be performed only by the will of God operating in consonance with man's free will, or as determined in later stages by man's own karma so the prints of all karma are distributed in the proper order by the grace of God
Shiva). . In this way, God is ultimately responsible on one hand for our actions, and on the other for enjoyment and suffering in accordance with our karmas, without any prejudice to humans' moral responsibility as expressed through free will or as determined later by our own deeds.
Vaishnavism
Ramanuja
Ramanuja addresses the problem of evil by attributing all evil things in life to the accumulation of evil karma of
jivas (human souls) and maintains that God is
amala, or without any stain of evil.
In
Sri Bhasya, Ramanuja's interpretation of the Brahma sutras from a
Vaishnavite theistic view, he agrees with the Advaitan school that Brahman, whom he conceives as
Vishnu, arranges the diversity of creation in accordance with the different karma of individual souls.
Furthermore, similarly like Srikantha, the Saivite theologian, Ramanuja believes that
Vishnu wishing to do a favour to those who are resolved on acting so as fully to please Him, engenders in their minds a tendency towards highly virtuous actions, such as means to attain to Him; while on the other hand, in order to punish those who are resolved on lines of action altogether displeasing to Him, He engenders in their minds a delight in such actions as have a downward tendency and are obstacles in the way of the attainment of God.
Madhva
Madhva, the founder of the
Dvaita school, on the other hand, believes that there must be a root cause for variations in karma even if karma is accepted as having no beginning and being the cause of the problem of evil. Since jivas have different kinds of karma, from good to bad, all must not have started with same type of karma from the beginning of time. Thus, Madhva concludes that the jivas are not God's
creation as in the Christian doctrine, but are rather entities co-existent with
Vishnu, although under His absolute control. Souls are thus dependent on Him in their pristine nature and in all transformations that they may undergo.
According to Madhva, God, although He has control, doesn't interfere with Man's free will; although He is omnipotent, that doesn't mean that He engages in extraordinary feats. Rather, God enforces a rule of law and, in accordance with the just deserts of jivas, gives them freedom to follow their own nature. Thus, God functions as the sanctioner or as the divine accountant, and accordingly jivas are free to work according to their innate nature and their accumulated karma, good and bad. Since God acts as the sanctioner, the ultimate power for everything comes from God and the jiva only utilizes that power, according to his/her innate nature. However, like
Shankara's interpretation of the
Brahma Sutras as mentioned earlier, Madhva, agrees that the rewards and punishments bestowed by God are regulated by Him in accordance with the good and sinful deeds performed by them, and He does so of out of His own will to keep himself firm in justice and he can't be controlled in His actions by karma of human beings nor can He be accused of partiality or cruelty to anyone.
Swami
Tapasyananda further explains the Madhva view by illustrating the doctrine with this analogy: the power in a factory comes from the powerhouse (God), but the various cogs (
jivas) move in a direction in which they're set. Thus he concludes that no charge of partiality and cruelty can be brought against God. The jiva is the actor and also the enjoyer of the fruits of his/her own actions.
Madhva differed significantly from traditional Hindu beliefs, owing to his concept of
eternal damnation. For example, he divides souls into three classes: one class of souls which qualify for liberation (
Mukti-yogyas), another subject to eternal rebirth or eternal transmigration (
Nitya-samsarins), and a third class that's eventually condemned to eternal
hell or
Andhatamas (
Tamo-yogyas). No other Hindu philosopher or school of Hinduism holds such beliefs. In contrast, most Hindus believe in
universal salvation: that all souls will eventually obtain moksha, even if it's after millions of rebirths.
Gita interpretations and role of Guru
Some interpretations of certain verses in the Bhagavad Gita suggests an intermediate view, that karma is a law of cause and effect yet God can mitigate karma for His devotees. Another view holds that a Sadguru, acting on God's behalf, can mitigate or work out some of the karma of the disciple.
Caste and karma
As stated earlier, there are cycles of creations in which souls gravitate to specific bodies in accordance with karma, which as an unintelligent object depends on the will of God alone. Thus, many interpret the caste system in accordance with karma, as those with good deeds are born into a spiritual family, which is synonymous with the
brahmana caste. However,
Krishna said in the
Gita that characteristics of a
brahmin are determined by behavior, not by birth. A verse from the Gita illustrates this point: "The duties of
Brahmins,
Kshatriyas,
Vaishyas as also of
Sudras, O scorcher of foes, are distributed according to the
gunas (behavior) born of their own nature." (Bhagavad Gita 18.41)
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