The Origin Of Evil
Christian theology states that evil came into the world
through the sin of the first man’s eating of the tree of forbidden fruit. All
men sinned in Adam; because of Adam’s sin, every other being is and has been a
sinner. Strangely enough this first man was made by a Superior Being in His own
image, or, in other words, perfect;
yet, he was not able to restrain himself from doing those things which he had
been forbidden to do. In the very first being created in the image of the
“Supreme,” there was a tendency to do wrong!
We have, then, in this creation, out of nothing, a very limited Creator, as it is perfectly
patent that any being must be. A being could be neither infinite,
supreme, nor omnipresent; for there is That in which all beings, however high,
or planets, or solar-systems, have their existence— Space, which exists whether
there is anything in it or not; which has no beginning nor ending; which always
is; which is outside as well as inside of every being. Any being must be less than Space; could the Absolute be less than
Space? Illimitability and infinitude are not in relation to any being whatever;
hence creation from the point of view of a
Creator has to be abandoned.
But the existence of all beings—not only of mankind, but of
beings of every grade and everywhere—has to be accounted for: what is the basis
of all existence? We have to go back of all form, back of every kind of being,
to see that all beings and all forms spring from One Source, which is not
different in any. It is in deed the Supreme which lies within and behind every
being; every being of every kind in the universe is in its innermost essence a
ray from and one with It. It is Life. It is Spirit. It is Consciousness. Each is God in his innermost Essence.
Taking this basis for our thinking, let us ask the question:
under what process do things become? What brings about the operation of all the
different forms that we see? Whether consciously or unconsciously, we all
recognize the fact that Law rules in this universe, but what we have to
understand is that Law is merely the inter-relation and inter-action and
interdependence of all the acts of all beings concerned in the universe. The
one inclusive law is the law of action and reaction—a law not outside of, but inherent in the nature of every being.
From the very Source there is the power to act, but there is no action unless
there is a being to act and feel the effects of the action. If I act, I get
re-action. If the highest archangel acts, he gets the re-action of his action.
There are two kinds of re-actions produced from acts: those
that are good or beneficent; those that are evil or maleficent. The whole
responsibility of every action rests upon each and every being. So, if any
being finds himself in any given state, good or bad, it is because of his
thoughts, words and deeds—his own, and those of nobody else. We get some good
and we get some evil, all of our own reaping; but all the time, every single
moment of our existence, we have the power of choice in the direction of good
or evil.
Good has no existence by itself; evil has no existence by
itself. The two terms relate to matters of conduct and of impressions we
receive. They merely characterize the effects produced upon us: a thing is
“good” to us if it benefits us in any way, and “evil” if it does not benefit
us. Who is it that judges between good and evil effects? In every case, it is
the man himself. One man will say such and such things are good for me, and
such and such things are evil; while another man, with a different point of
view and different relations to things, will perhaps say the exact contrary
about the very same matters. So it always resolves itself into the individual
point of view: in the last analysis each man is himself the sole director and
final authority as to what is good and what is evil, so far as he is concerned.
We need to ask ourselves if we have always followed that
which seemed to us to be the best course to follow; and, then again, if we
have, did we consider that course from the point of view of personal
self-benefit, or from the point of view of benefit to all others. For if we
moved along the line of that which at the time seemed best for us personally, we must have acted in a way
that afflicted others; we must have done evil to others, whether consciously or
unconsciously, by obstructing their path. There we sowed evilly, and we either
have reaped or will reap evilly. The very first act that was selfishly done was
the origin of evil so far as that being was concerned. Likewise, wherever there
was an unselfish act, there was the origin of good for him. Let us remember,
too, that the Tree of Knowledge mentioned in the Bible was the knowledge of
both good and evil. Good and evil are not to be considered separately, but together.
You cannot tell good except by its opposite, evil. Goodness would speedily
cease to be such, were it not for the operation of its contrary.
There are many things in life regarded by us as
evils----like sorrow and death—which are not, in fact, evils. They are merely
stages and conditions through which we pass in our progress up the ladder of
development. We need not be afraid of death, for death will never touch us at
all. We pass on out of life, and on. One of the Great Teachers said that death
ever comes to the Ego as a friend. There is no need to fear anything, for there
is nothing in the universe, high or low, that can ever destroy us—our
consciousness, or our acquired individuality. Mistakes occur, for many of our
actions are performed through ignorance, and evil results follow. Even so, it
is through those very wrong actions that we learn. It is through the operation
of vice that virtue is seen as a resistance to vice.
The origin of evil is to be found in ignorance of our own
true natures. There are no afflictions put upon us by any being other than
ourselves. We are afflicted just to the extent that we make ourselves open to
affliction. Things affect some people terribly. The same things affect other
people very little or not at all. Why? Because of their point of view. Attitude
towards things makes the suffering or the not suffering, the pleasure or the
pain—not the things in themselves. If we knew ourselves to be divine beings
merely going through a school of life— our whole purpose to learn—what would
there be to fear, or even to be anxious about? If it were not for the obstacles
in life—if life were one happy, placid dream—we never would make the motion or
the effort that would arouse the highest characteristics of thought and action.
It is by reason of the obstacles we have to overcome that we become stronger
and obtain nobler traits. There is no such thing as a divinely created being,
for everything that exists becomes.
Is it not true that now we can look back upon and smile at
anything ‘ that ever happened to us in the past? It looked awful at the time, but it has passed, and we can see that from
those very things came something of gain, of strength and wisdom. Under the law
no one can meet with an obstacle which he is not able to overcome; the obstacle
is but an opportunity for him to get rid of some defect which he now possesses.
Often the very things which seem the most difficult for us prove to be the most
beneficent.
Those who stand the greatest chance of loss in the future
are those who have the easy times. When one has ‘ Karma—that is, when
everything is coming his way—he is prone to take the ease of it and flow with
the current of the river, missing many an opportunity to do good. Through these errors of omission, which are as bad as any
errors of commission, he fails to under stand that he has diminished his own
stock of good Karma and must of necessity share in the evil which flows from
his lack of appreciation of the situation and his opportunity. We need never
fear our opportunities, but should always act up to them, relying on the law of
our own spiritual being to carry us through any thing and everything. The Path
is within ourselves, not outside; each of us is the stair to his own
development.
We have so long been ruled by political and religious man
made laws that we have come to believe in them. Yet, goodness does not need
laws. Our laws are based on the ignorance and selfishness and wickedness in
men’s natures; they are made to restrain the evil which we think is ineradicable
and incurable because ‘we all sinned in Adam and cannot help it.” Then, too,
because we think we know what is good and what is evil, we are very anxious
that everybody else should be made to think in the same way. We want to
prohibit those things which we do not desire ourselves; we want other people to
eat what we think they ought to eat, and to clothe themselves as we think they
should be clothed. We talk much of the “rights” of men. But we have just one
right, and that is the right to do right.
No man was ever made “good” by law; no man was ever made moral by law. Each man
must be a law for himself, both moral and spiritual.
Are we proud of this civilization, made by the collective
thought and action of every individual in it? Have our telephones, automobiles,
airplanes, and radiographs made us any more divine? Do they measure our true
progress? No; because ignorance and selfishness still lie in every human heart;
because men, according to the vicarious atonement idea, blame their parents for
their wrong attributes and tendencies, and accept only the good as their own.
They are unjust, for both good and bad are their own earnings. If we have good,
let us be happy that at some time we earned it; if we are in bad case, let us
be glad, claim it, understand it and correct it. If we want a civilization
better than the one we have now, we are the ones to start right now to make it.
No one else will make it for us. We have to set the lines in motion towards a
true civilization from a true basis; but if we think we are not able to do much
and are not now doing what we can, it is certain we never can do more. As we do
what we can, greater opportunities arise to do. Until we do what is before us,
never will any greater opportunities arise.
When we get the right attitude of mind—and that is what
discipleship is—there is not a quality in us, not a force, not an at tribute,
but can be put to the best and highest use. We do not get off this plane. We do
not cut off any part of our being. We do not destroy the usefulness of any part
of us, but put all to the proper use and for the proper end. Herein is seen the
difference between one who knows and one who does not know. One who knows does
not get off to the Christian’s heaven, nor to any other heaven. He works right
here where he finds himself and does the best work he can with the instrument
he now has, fearing nothing, trusting the Law of his own being. If any being
will trust the Law of his own nature, if he will work on with nature by helping
all others in every direction possible, then all nature will turn and help him.
It never was otherwise. It cannot be otherwise.
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