Lesson
13 Spiritual
Cause
and Effect
LIFE
is
the
constant
accumulation
of knowledge - the storing up of the result
of experiences. The law of cause and effect
is in constant operation, and we reap what
we sow - not as a matter of punishment, but
as the effect following the cause. Theology
teaches us that we are punished for our
sins, but the higher knowledge shows us that
we are punished by our mistakes instead of
for them. The child who touches the hot
stove is punished by reason of the act
itself, not by some higher power for having
"sinned." Sin is largely a matter of
ignorance and mistake. Those who have
reached the higher plane of spiritual
knowledge have borne upon them such a
convincing knowledge of the folly and
unwisdom of certain acts and thoughts, that
it becomes almost impossible for them to
commit them. Such persons do not fear there
is some superior being waiting to strike
them to the earth with a mighty club for
doing certain things, simply because that
intelligence has laid down an apparently
arbitrary law forbidding the commission of
the act. On the contrary they know that the
higher intelligences are possessed of
nothing but intense love for all living
creatures, and are willing and ready to
always help them, so far as is possible
under the workings of the law. But such
persons recognize the folly of the act, and
therefore refrain from committing it - in
fact, they have lost the desire to commit
it. It is almost exactly parallel to the
example of the child and the stove. A child
who wants to touch the stove will do so as
soon as he finds an opportunity,
notwithstanding the commands of the parent,
and in spite of threatened punishment. But
let that child once experience the pain of
the burn, and recognize that there is a
close connection between a hot stove and a
burnt finger, and it will keep away from the
stove. The loving parent would like to
protect its child from the result of its own
follies, but the child-nature insists upon
learning certain things by experience, and
the parent is unable to prevent it. In fact,
the child who is too closely watched and
restrained, usually "breaks out' later in
life, and learns certain things by itself.
All that the parent is able to do is to
surround the child with the ordinary
safeguards, and to give it the benefit of
his wisdom, a portion of which the child
will store away - and then trust to the law
of life to work out the result.
And
so
the
human
soul
is constantly applying the test of
experience to all phases of life - passing
from one incarnation to another, constantly
learning new lessons, and gaining new
wisdom. Sooner or later it finds out how
hurtful certain courses of action are and
discovers the folly of certain actions and
ways of living, and like the burnt child
avoids those things in the Future. All of us
know that certain things "are no temptation
to us," for we have learned the lesson at
some time in some past life and do not need
to re-learn it - while other things tempt us
sorely, and we suffer much pain by reason
thereof. Of what use would all this pain and
sorrow be if this one life were all? But we
carry the benefit of our experience into
another life, and avoid the pain there. We
may look around us and wonder why certain of
our acquaintances cannot see the folly of
certain forms of action, when it is so plain
to us - but we forget that we have passed
through just the same stage of experience
that they are now undergoing, and have
outlived the desire and ignorance - we do
not realize that in future lives these
people will be free from this folly and
pain, for they will have learned the lesson
by experience, just as have we.
It
is
hard
for
us
to fully realize that we are what we are
just by the result of our experiences. Let
us take one single life as an example. You
think that you would like to eliminate from
your life some painful experience, some
disgraceful episode; some mortifying
circumstances; but have you ever stopped to
think that if it were possible to eradicate
these things, you would, of necessity, be
forced to part with the experience and
knowledge that has come to you from these
occurrences. Would you be willing to part
with the knowledge and experience that has
come to you in the way mentioned? Would you
be willing to go back to the state of
inexperience and ignorance in which you were
before the thing happened? Why, if you were
to go back to the old state, you would be
extremely likely to commit the same folly
over again. How many of us would be willing
to completely wipe out the experiences which
have come to us? We are perfectly willing to
forget the occurrence, but we know that we
have the resulting experience built into our
character, and we would not be willing to
part with it, for it would be taking away a
portion of our mental structure. If we were
to part with experience gained through pain
we would first part with one bit of
ourselves, and then with another, until at
last we would have nothing left except the
mental shell of our former self.
But,
you
may
say,
of
what use are the experiences gained in
former lives, if we do not remember them -
they are lost to us. But they are not lost
to you - they are built into your mental
structure, and nothing can ever take them
away from you - they are yours forever. Your
character is made up not only of your
experiences in this particular life, but
also of the result of your experiences in
many other lives and stages of existence.
You are what you are to-day by reason of
these accumulated experiences - the
experiences of the past lives and of the
present one. You remember some of the things
in the present life which have built up your
character - but many others equally
important, in the present life, you have
forgotten - but the result stays with you,
having been woven into your mental being.
And though you may remember but little, or
nothing, of your past lives, the experiences
gained in them continue with you, now and
forever. It is these past experiences which
give you "predispositions" in certain
directions - which make it very difficult
for you to do certain things, and easy to do
others - which cause you to "instinctively"
recognize certain things as unwise or wrong,
and to cause you to turn your back upon them
as follies. They give you your "tastes" and
inclinations, and make some ways seem better
than others to you. Nothing is lost in life,
and all the experiences of the past
contribute to your well-being in the present
- all your troubles and pains of the present
will bear fruit in the future.
We
do
not
always
learn
a lesson at one trial, and we are sent back
to our task over and over again, until we
have accomplished it. But not the slightest
effort is ever lost, and if we have failed
at the task in the past, it is easier for us
to accomplish it to-day.
An
American
writer,
Mr.
Berry
Benson, in the Century Magazine, of May,
1894, gives us a beautiful illustration of
one of the features of the workings of the
law of Spiritual Evolution. We reprint it,
herewith:
"A
little
boy
went
to
school. He was very little. All that he knew
he had drawn in with his mother's milk. His
teacher (who was God) placed him in the
lowest class, and gave him these lessons to
learn:
[missing
text]
is
seen
to
be
well
worth even the great price paid for it.
If
you
ask
the
Yogis
what is one's duty toward God (meaning God
in the grandest conception of Him) they will
answer "Love Him, and the rest will be made
clear to you - and to know him is to Love
him, therefore learn to Know Him." And if
you ask them what is one's duty toward his
fellow-men they will answer, simply: "Be
Kind - and you will be all the rest." These
two precepts~ if followed, will enable one
to live the Perfect Life. They are simple,
but they contain all that is worth knowing
concerning one's relations with the Infinite
Power and with one's fellow-men. All the
rest is froth and sediment - the worthless
rubbish which has accumulated around the
Divine Flame of the Truth. We mention them
in this place, because they sum up the idea
of the consciousness which all the race is
striving hard to acquire. If you are able to
make them a part of yourself, you will have
made great progress on the Path - will have
passed the Great Examination.
The
doctrine
of
Spiritual
Cause
and Effect is based upon the great truth
that under the Law each man is, practically,
the master of his own destiny - his own
judge - his own rewarder - his own awarder
of punishment. That every thought, word or
action, has its effect upon the future life
or lives of the man - not in the nature of a
reward or punishment (as these words are
generally understood) - but as the
inevitable result of the great Law of cause
and effect. The operation of the Law in
surrounding us with certain sets of
conditions in a new birth, is influenced by
two great general principles:
(1)
The
prevailing
desires,
aspirations,
likes and dislikes, and longing of the
individual at that particular stage of his
existence, and (2) By the influence of the
unfolding Spirit, which, pressing forward
eagerly for fuller expression and less
restraint, brings to bear upon the
reincarnating soul an influence which causes
it to be governed in its selection of the
desirable conditions of its new birth. Upon
the apparently conflicting influences of
these two great forces rests the whole
matter of the circumstances and conditions
surrounding the rebirth of the soul, and
also many of the conditions surrounding the
personality in the new life - for these
conditions are governed greatly all through
life by these conflicting (or apparently
conflicting) forces.
The
urge
of
the
desires,
aspirations, and habits of the past life, is
strongly pressing the soul towards
incarnation in conditions best fitted for
the expression and manifestation of these
likes, tastes and desires - the soul wishes
to go on along the line of its past life,
amid naturally seeks circumstances and
surroundings best fitted for the freest
expression of its personality. But, at the
same time, the Spirit, within the soul,
knows that the soul's unfoldment needs
certain other conditions to bring out
certain parts of its nature which have been
suppressed or not developed, and so it
exerts an attraction upon the reincarnating
soul, drawing it a bit aside from its chosen
course, and influencing that choice to a
certain degree. A man may have an
overpowering desire for material wealth, and
the force of his desire will cause him to
choose circumstances and conditions for a
rebirth into a family where there is much
wealth, or into a body best suited for the
attainment of his desires, but the Spirit,
knowing that the soul has neglected the
development of kindness, will draw it a
little aside, and cause it to be brought
into the sweep of circumstances which will
result in the man being made to suffer pain,
disappointment and loss, even though he
attain great wealth in his new life, to the
end that he may develop that part of his
nature.
We
may
see
illustrations
of
this last mentioned occurrence in some of
the very rich men of America. They have been
born into circumstances in which they have
had the freest expression of the desire for
material wealth - they have possessed
themselves of faculties best adapted to that
one end, and have managed to be surrounded
with circumstances best calculated to give
the freest manifestations of those
faculties. They have attained their heart's
desire, and have piled up wealth in a manner
unknown to former ages. But yet they are
most unhappy and dissatisfied as a rule.
Their wealth is a weight around their neck,
and they are tormented by fears of losing it
and the anxiety of attending to it. They
feel that it has brought them no real
happiness, but has on the contrary separated
them from their fellow-men, and from the
happiness known to those of moderate means.
They are feverish and restless and
constantly on the search for some new
excitement which will divert their minds
from the contemplation of their real
condition. They feel a sense of their duty
toward the race and although they do not
quite understand the feeling behind it all,
they endeavor to balance matters by
contributing to colleges, hospitals,
charities, and other similar institutions
which have sprung up in response to the
awakening consciousness of the race to the
reality of the Brotherhood of Man and the
Oneness of All. Before the end comes, they
will feel in the depths of their soul that
this success has not brought them real
happiness, and in the period of rest which
will follow their departure from the
physical body, they will "take stock" of
themselves, and readjust their mental and
spiritual affairs, so that when they are
again born they will no longer devote their
entire energies toward the piling up of
wealth that they cannot use, but will live a
more balanced life, and will find happiness
in unexpected quarters and will develop more
spiritually. This is not because they have
been impressed with the sense of any special
"wickedness"� in abnormal money getting, but
because the soul has found that it did not
secure happiness in that way, and is seeking
elsewhere for it, and because it has lived
out the desire for wealth, amid has turned
its attention to other things. Had the
Spirit not exerted its influence, the man
might have been born into the conditions
tending to produce wealth, and yet not have
been made to see the one-sidedness of such a
life, in which case it would have continued
to be possessed of such an abnormal desire
for wealth that it would have been born
again and again, with increasing power each
time, until it would have become practically
a money demon. But the Spirit's influence
always counteracts abnormal desires,
although sometimes several incarnations have
to be lived through before the soul wears
out its desire, and begins to be influenced
by the Spirit to a marked extent. Sometimes
the Spirit's influence is not sufficiently
strong to prevent rebirth into conditions
greatly favoring old desires, but in such
cases it is often able to manage affairs
during the life of the man, so as to teach
him the lesson needed to call a halt upon
his unbridled desires, by bringing him into
the sweep of the Law of Attraction and
causing certain pain to befall him - certain
disappointment - certain failures - that
will cause him to realize the pain,
disappointment, failures and sorrow of
others, and to bring upon him a course of
living which will help to unfold his higher
faculties. Many of the sudden strokes of
"misfortune" are really brought about by
this higher principle of the man, in order
to teach him certain lessons for his own
good. It is not necessarily a higher power
which makes a man realize these lessons of
life, but it is generally his own higher
self - the Spirit within him - which brings
about these results. The Spirit knows what
is really best for the man, and when it sees
his lower nature running away with him,
tries to swing him from his course, or to
bring him to a sudden stop if necessary.
This is not as a punishment, remember, but
as the greatest kindness. The Spirit is a
part of that man, and not an outside power -
although it is of course the Divine part of
him - that part of him in nearest touch with
the great overruling Intelligence which we
call God. This pain is not brought about
because of any feeling of righteous
indignation, revenge, impatience or any
similar feeling on the part of the Spirit,
but is akin to the feeling of the most
loving parent, who is forced to take from
the hands of the little child some dangerous
thing which may injure the little one - it
is the hand which draws back the child from
the brink of the precipice, although the
little one screams with rage and
disappointment because its desires are
frustrated.
The
man
or
woman
in
whom the Spiritual Mind is developed, sees
this condition of things, and instead of
fighting against the Spirit, yields himself
or herself to it without friction, and obeys
its guiding hand, and is thus saved much
pain. But those who know not, rage and rebel
at the restraining and guiding hand, strike
at it, and attempt to tear away from it,
thereby bringing upon themselves bitter
experience made necessary by their
rebellion. We are so apt to resent outside
influence in our affairs that this idea of
restraint is not pleasant to us, but if we
will only remember that it is a part of
ourselves - the higher part of us - that is
doing this directing, then we may see the
thing in a different light. And we must
remember this: That no matter how adverse
circumstances or conditions seem to be for
us, they are exactly what we need under just
the circumstances of our lives, and have for
their only object our ultimate good. We may
need strengthening along certain lines, in
order to round us out - and we are apt to
get just the experiences calculated to round
out that particular part of us. We may be
tending too much in one direction, and we
are given a check and an urge in another
direction. These little things - and great
things all mean something. And then our
interests arc bound up more or less with
those of others, owing to the laws of
attraction, and our acts may be intended to
reflect upon them, and theirs upon us, for
our mutual development and ultimate good. We
will have more to say on this subject a
little later on.
If
we
will
stand
still,
and calmly consider our past life (the
present life, we mean) we will sec that
certain things have led to certain other
things, and that small things have led to
great things - that little turning points
have resulted in an entire change in our
life. We may trace back the most important
thing in our life to some trifling incident
or occurrence. We are able to look back and
see how the painful experiences of the past
have strengthened us, and have brought us to
a larger and fuller life. We are able to see
how that particular thing in the past, which
seemed needlessly cruel and uncalled for,
was the very thing which has brought us to
some great thing in the present. All that is
needed is the perspective of years. And if
we get so that we are able to see this, we
will be able to bear with a far greater
degree of philosophy the pains and
disagreeable occurrences of the present,
knowing that they mean ultimate good. When
we cease to think of these things as
punishment, or a wanton interference of some
outside power, or the cruelty of Nature, and
begin to see them as either the consequences
of our own past lives, or the result of the
Spirit's directing hand, we will cease to
protest and struggle as we have been doing
in the past, and will endeavor to fall in
with the working of the great Law, and will
thereby avoid friction and pain. And no
matter what pain, sorrow or trouble we may
be undergoing, if we will open ourselves to
the guidance of the Spirit, a way will be
opened out for us - one step at a time - and
if we follow it we will obtain peace and
strength. The Law does not heap upon a back
more than it can bear, and not only does it
temper the wind to the shorn lamb, but
tempers the shorn lamb to the wind.
We
have
spoken
of
our
interests being bound up with those of
others. This also is a principle of the law
of Spiritual Cause and Effect. In our past
lives we have attached ourselves to certain
others, either by love or hate - either by
kind action or by cruelty. And these people
in this life have certain relationships to
us, all tending toward mutual adjustment and
mutual advancement and development. It is
not a law of revenge, but simply the law of
cause and effect which causes us to receive
a hurt (when a hurt is needed) from the
hands of some one whom we have hurt in some
past life - and it is not merely a law of
reward for good, but that same law of cause
and effect, that causes some one to bind up
our wounds and comfort us, whom we have
comforted and helped in some past life. The
person who is caused to hurt us, may have no
intention of doing so, being a perfectly
innocent party, but we are brought into
conditions whereby we receive pain from the
acts of that person, although he be
unconscious of it. H he hurts us
consciously, and still in obedience to the
law, it is because he is still on that
plane, and is willing to hurt us, and is
brought by the Law of Attraction into a
condition whereby we may receive hurt from
him. But even that hurt is calculated to
benefit us, in the end, so wonderful is this
law of cause and effect constituted. 01
course, if we once reach the position where
we see the truth, we do not need so many of
these lessons, and their necessity having
passed, the law allows us to escape that
which would otherwise have given us pain.
The
above
mentioned
condition
of
affairs may be illustrated by the case of
one who in a past incarnation deliberately
won the love of another, for selfish
reasons, and then having gratified the
desire willfully threw aside the other one,
as one would a worn-out toy. While not
pretending to explain the exact working of
the law in any particular case, we have been
informed by those who have watched these
matters from a higher point of view, that in
such a case as above mentioned, the betrayer
would probably in this life, fall violently
in love with the person who was the victim
in the last life, but the latter would be
utterly unable to return that affection, and
the former would suffer all the pain that
comes to one who loves in vain, the result
being that he would be brought to a
realization of the sacredness of human
affection, and the unkindness of trifling
with it. It will be noticed in this case
that the person causing pain in the present
life is a perfectly innocent party to the
whole thing and thereby does not start new
causes and effects.
Those
whom,
we
have
loved
and have been friendly to in past lives are
very apt to be connected with our present
life, being kept near us by the law of
attraction. The people who are brought into
close relations with us are, in all
probability, those with whom we have been
close in past lives. Sudden likes and
dislikes, so often observed between people,
may be accounted for on this theory of
rebirth, and many of the occurrences of our
every day lives come under this law of
spiritual cause and effect. We are
constantly bound up with the lives of
others, for pain or happiness, and the law
must work out its course. The only escape
from the complete working out of the law is
the acquirement of the knowledge of the
truth on our part, and the consequent
modeling of our lives on the lines of this
higher truth, in which case we are relieved
of the unnecessary lessons, and we ride on
the top of the wave, instead of having it
submerge us.
Let
us
beware
how
we
start into operation this law of cause and
effect by Hate, Malice, Jealousy, Anger, and
general Unkindness toward others. Let us be
as Kind as we can, in all justice to
ourselves and others, and let us avoid
feelings of Hate and a desire for Revenge.
Let us live on, bearing our burdens with as
much grace as we can summon, and let us
always trust in the guidance of the Spirit,
and the help of the highest Intelligence.
Let us know that all is working together for
good, and that we cannot be deprived of that
good. Let us remember that this life is as
but a grain of sand in the desert of time,
and that we have long ages ahead of us, in
which we will have a chance to work out all
our aspirations and high desires. Be not
discouraged for God reigns, and all is well.