I’ve
delved into various disciplines of meditation, eastern religions, and found my
home in Yoga, without ever leaving the original teachings of Jesus. Yoga
reflects what Jesus said in his parables, sayings and admonitions.
The
parables and sayings of Jesus can be grouped under several important themes:
reversing natural human inclinations, the Kingdom of Heaven, entering the
Kingdom of Heaven, purity, on worry and being present, on aspiration, showing
the path to others, God's unconditional love, and forgiveness of sins, and the
karmic consequences of our actions. Many of the insights that I have had about
them are informed by comparisons that I have made with the teachings of the
Yoga Siddhas (a person who has achieved spiritual realization), as well as with
the Gospel of Thomas, discovered at Nag Hammadi in 1945.
Reversing
Natural Human Inclinations:
"Be
ye perfect, even as your Father in Heaven is perfect," (Matthew 5.48 with
parallel in Luke 6:36). One of the meanings of the word for a Yogic saint or
Siddha is "one who has become perfect." Jesus challenged his
listeners to perfect themselves, to overcome their lower human nature, and to
become divine. Jesus, like the greatest of Yoga adepts, made his life his Yoga
or oneness with God. He overcame all the ordinary limitations of the human
existence to reveal his true nature, and more importantly, He admonished His
listeners to do the same.
Jesus
asks us to do the opposite of what human nature would ordinarily cause us to do.
He said:
"Don't
react violently against the one who is evil; when someone slaps you on the
right cheek, turn the other as well. When someone wants to sue you for your
shirt, let that person have your coat along with it. Further, when anyone
conscripts you for one mile, go an extra mile." (Matthew 5:39-41, with
parallels in Luke 6.29)
"Give
to the one who begs from you; and don't turn away the one who tries to borrow
from you." (Matthew 5:42, with parallels in Luke 6.29)
"Love
your enemies." (Matthew 5.43 with parallel in Luke 6:27-28).
Because
the commands are so extreme, even ridiculous when taken literally (we'd all
soon be naked and impoverished if we followed them to the limit), they give us
the kind of insight that we could only have by becoming aware of the ordinary
tendencies of the ego. They demand responses which are just barely possible, so
they push us to go to the edge of human nature, and beyond. The admonition to
"love your enemies" is particularly memorable because it cuts against
the social grain and constitutes a paradox: those who love their enemies have
no enemies.
This
is also the method of Yoga and Tantra. As Sri Aurobindo put it humorously, when
urged by his comrades who were fighting for India's independence from the
British Empire to resume his political struggle, he quickly replied that what
was needed was "not a revolt against the British Government, which anyone
could easily manage, but a revolt against the whole of universal Nature."
The
"edge" of what the practitioner finds possible to do in a Yoga
posture is the metaphor for the edges which we reach in our human experience,
for example, whenever we feel anger, fear or depression. By learning to keep
our balance and our awareness, keeping calm, listening, acting only after reflecting,
rather than reacting, we extend what we are capable of doing, in effect
stretching our human nature a little farther. Most of Yoga is doing the
opposite of what our human nature would ordinarily cause us to do - remaining
calm and content in the face of opposition or discord, sitting still, rather
than moving, remaining awake when the eyes are closed, in meditation; allowing
the breathing to slow; training even the mind to become still, rather than to
be restless.
The
Kingdom of Heaven
The
parable of the mustard seed expressed his vision of the Kingdom of Heaven.
"The
followers said to Jesus, 'Tell us what heaven's kingdom is like.' He said to
them, 'It is like a mustard seed. (It) is the smallest of all seeds, but when
it falls on prepared soil, it produces a large plant and becomes a shelter for
birds of heaven.'" (Gospel of Thomas Saying 20, with parallel verses in
Mark 4.30-32, Luke 13.18-19, and Matthew 13. 31-32)
The
metaphor of the mustard seed (proverbial for its smallness) is considered by
scholars to be a good example of how Jesus considered God's domain to be:
modest, common and pervasive, rather than imperial. They point out that the
mighty cedar of Lebanon tree (Ezekiel 17:22-23) and the apocalyptic tree of
Daniel (Daniel 4:12, 20-22) were the traditional metaphors used to describe
God's domain. Jesus' selection of the mustard tree pokes fun at established
tradition in a comical way. It is also anti-social in that it endorses counter
movements and ridicules established tradition.
The
parable of the leaven in the flour also teaches us about the Kingdom of Heaven,
and how reversing our human nature permits us to perceive it.
"The
Kingdom of Heaven is like leaven which a woman took and concealed in fifty
pounds of flour until it was all leavened." (Matthew 13.33, parallels in
Luke 13.20-21 and Thomas 96)
This
one-sentence parable transmits the voice of Jesus as clearly as any ancient
record can. Jesus uses three images in a way that would have been very
surprising to His audience. "Hiding" leaven in flour is an unusual
way to express the idea of mixing yeast and flour. It implies that God has
deliberately concealed His Kingdom from us. The surprise increases when Jesus
notes that there were "fifty pounds" of flour. In Genesis 18, three
men, representatives of God, appear to Abraham and promise him and his wife
that she will conceive a child soon, even though she is aged. For the occasion,
Sarah is instructed to make cakes of fifty pounds of flour to give to the
heavenly visitors. Fifty pounds of flour must be a suitable quantity to
celebrate an epiphany (Greek - "the appearance; miraculous
phenomenon"), a visible, though indirect manifestation of God. The third
image is the use of leaven, regarded as a symbol of corruption by the Judeans.
In the Passover celebration, bread was made without leaven. In a surprising
reversal of the customary associations, the leaven here represents not what is
corrupt and unholy, but the Kingdom of God. That God deliberately hides his
Kingdom from us is one of the "five functions of the Lord," (see
below). It obliges us to seek Him, to overcome the delusion of the world.
In
His Grace was I born;
In
His Grace I grew up;
In
His Grace I rested in death;
In
His Grace I was in obfuscation;
In
His Grace I tasted of ambrosial bliss;
In
His Grace, Nandi (the Lord) entered.
(Thirumandiram,
Holy Incantation- a Tamil poetic work verse 1800)
Thomas
113 tells us that the Kingdom of Heaven is already here, but that we do not see
it:
"His
disciples said to him, When will the Kingdom of Heaven come? He replied: It
will not come by watching for it. It will not be said, Look, here! or Look,
there!' Rather, the Kingdom of Heaven is spread out upon the earth, and people
don't see it."
"They
who do not see the Treasure that surpasses all,
But
seek the treasures that perish,
If
within their melting heart they seek inside
They
will see the Treasure that dies not."
(Thirumandiram,
verse 762)
On
Entering into the Kingdom of Heaven
Today,
we live in a country which enjoys unprecedented prosperity. Our church leaders
encourage us to become prosperous. Televangelists ask us to give generously to
their churches so that God will reward us here and now with material things. Is
this consistent with the teachings of Jesus?
"For
it is easier for a camel to go through a needle's eye, than for a rich man to
enter into the Kingdom of Heaven." (Mark 10.25, with parallels in Matthew
19.24 and Luke 18.25)
Does
this mean that becoming wealthy in this world will prevent us from entering Heaven
in the next world? This saying is graphic and humorous and exhibits Jesus' use
of hyperbole and exaggeration. It cannot be taken literally, which suggests
that the whole discussion of the relation of wealth to God's Kingdom should be
viewed circumspectly: does Jesus literally mean that everyone should embrace
poverty as a way of life? Poverty and celibacy are aspects of the ascetic life
that became popular in the Christian movement at an early date.
This
aphorism is also part of a complex of wise sayings or aphorisms, known as the
beatitudes, which describe how difficult it is for those with money to enter
God's kingdom. The more material things one has, the greater the risk of
becoming attached to them, and consequently missing "the Kingdom of Heaven."
"Blessed
are the poor, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven,
Blessed
are the hungry, for you will feast,
Blessed
are those who weep, for you will be comforted."
(Luke
6.21, with parallels in Thomas 54, 69.2, 58 and Matthew 5.3, 5.6)
"Blessed
are you when people hate you, when they persecute you, and denounce you and
scorn your name as evil, because of the son of man." (Luke 6.22-23, with
parallels in Matthew 5.10-12, Thomas 68.1-2, 69.1)
Jesus
had blessed the poor in the beatitudes, telling them that God's Kingdom
belonged to them, so he probably believed that in simplicity, one was closer to
the living Presence of the Lord. It reflects the view that attachment to
material things prevents one from realizing the spiritual dimension. It is not
the material things themselves that are problematic, but the desire and
attachments for them, which cause us to lose sight of the Reality of God's
Kingdom around us. It is the deluding tendency of the mind to fantasize, worry
and become preoccupied with things, absorbed in them, rather than to live
freely, identified as self-effulgent awareness, "in the light." He is
also encouraging his listeners to go beyond the duality of poor-rich,
hungry-not hungry, weeping-comforted, having-not having, in other words the
disease of the mind, in which one ordinarily identifies with one body, mind and
emotions. One must purify oneself of desires, in order to transcend the ego's
perspective that "I am the body" and its attachment to the body's
pleasures.
Saying
that the poor are blessed, or in modern terms, "congratulating the poor
without qualification is unexpected, to say the least, and even paradoxical,
since congratulations were normally extended only to those who enjoyed
prosperity, happiness, or power. The congratulations addressed to the weeping
and the hungry are expressed in vivid and exaggerated language, which announces
a dramatic transformation."
The
pairs of opposites employed in these beatitudes also reminds one of the
practice of Yoga, which is "opposite doing." Being still rather than
moving, remaining silent rather than speaking, fasting, rather than feasting,
cultivating pure consciousness in mental silence instead of permitting mental
chatter. In so doing one is able to transcend the ordinary human consciousness,
the perspective of the ego, and access the perspective of our soul, which is
one of peace and unconditional joy, in short, beatitude.
The
beatitudes (Latin - "perfect happiness") are paradoxical statements,
which call for a deep reflection upon their meaning. Given Jesus' repeated
assertions that the Kingdom of God is already present, the beatitudes are not a
promise of a future reward in some heavenly afterlife, as is usually
interpreted by those who believe Jesus was announcing the end of the world. Are
they not, rather, a challenge to his listeners to transform their condition
into a means of purification? It is a direct challenge to let go of the
feeling, "I am suffering," "I am poor," "I am
hungry," and to realize that "I am not the body," "I am not
my emotions," "I am not my suffering" and "I am not my
mind." "I am" is closer to the Truth. It is a challenge to be
the Witness of our life, to be the Seer, not the Seen.
In
the Yoga-Sutras, Patanjali tells us that "By austerity, impurities of the
body and senses are destroyed and perfection gained." Yoga-sutra II.43
(Kriya Yoga Sutras of Patanjali and the Siddhas, page 109). Classical Yoga, as
expounded by Patanjali tells us that we are dreaming with our eyes open,
because we identify not with what we are, which is pure consciousness, but with
what we are not, our dreams, the movements of the mind. This apparent and
mistaken identification of the Self or Seer, with the manifestations of nature
(the Seen) is the fundamental cause of human suffering and the fundamental
problem of human consciousness. The Self is the pure, absolute subject, and is
experienced as "I am." But in ordinary human consciousness, the Self
has become an object: "myself", a personality, an ego ridden
collection of thoughts, feelings and sensations which assumes the role of the
subject. The habit of identifying with our thoughts, emotions, sensations, that
is, egoism is the nearly universal disease of ordinary human consciousness. It
is only by ceasing to identify with these, through the process of detachment
and purification, that one can realize one's true identity: the Self. The Self
and the Lord have one common element, consciousness, according to Patanjali and
the Siddhas, and it is by the realization of our true Self, that we can also
realize the Lord, and be in His Kingdom.
A
Personal Experience of Entering the Kingdom of Heaven
I
was initiated into the Kriya Yoga tradition. I practiced this technique
religiously. My aspiration was to know God. My practice met with a series of
powerful meditation experiences, which filled me with great peace and joy. A
peace and joy that is impossible to describe, because it did not involve forms
or visions, but the presence of the Lord. Following I experience God everywhere,
even in the simplest life form.
On
Purity
"Listen
to me, all of you, and try to understand! It's not what goes into a person from
the outside that can defile; rather it's what comes out of the person that
defiles". (Mark 7.14-15 with parallels in Matthew 15.10-11 and Thomas
14.5)
As
a means of entering the Kingdom of God through purification, Jesus insists here
on the true purity: inner purity, as distinct from the external rules
emphasized by the Pharisees. Inner purity, of the heart, begins with discrimination
against thoughts that defile: judgment, greed, lust, anger, hatred, desire. All
of them cause suffering, not only for others, but for the person harboring
them. Words and actions are preceded by thoughts, so one must develop awareness
of the negative mental tendencies and detach from them as soon as they begin to
manifest within us. In Yoga-sutra I.30, Patanjali lists nine obstacles to inner
awareness: "disease, dullness, doubt, carelessness, laziness, sense
indulgence or addiction, false perception, failure to reach firm ground (lack
of patience and perseverance) and the failure to maintain ones equilibrium
during the highs and lows of life." (Kriya Yoga Sutras of Patanjali and
the Siddhas, page 39-40). Patanjali also takes a direct approach to such
negative thoughts and tendencies: "When bound by negative thoughts, their
opposite should be cultivated." (Yoga-sutra II.33) But Patanjali's main
Yogic method was the cultivation of detachment towards them, letting go of
identifying with the mental movements. The purifying process of Classical Yoga
can be summarized in two acts of spiritual discipline: "Yoga is
remembering Who Am I, and letting go of what I am not." Like the two wings
of a bird, they lift one to the heavens.
On
Worry, and Being Present
Don't
fret about your life - what you are going to eat and drink - or about your body
- what you are going to wear. There is more to living than food and clothing.
Take a look at the birds of the sky: they don't plant or harvest, or gather
into barns. Yet your heavenly Father feeds them. You are worth more than they,
aren't you? Can any of you add one hour to life by fretting about it? Why worry
about clothes? Notice how the wild lilies grow: they don't slave and they never
spin. Yet let me tell you, even Solomon at the height of his glory was never
decked out like one of them. If God dresses up the grass in the field, which is
here today and tomorrow is thrown into an oven, won't (God care) for you even
more, you who don't take anything for granted? So, don't fret. Don't say, 'What
am I going to eat?' or 'What am I going to drink' or "What am I going to
wear?'" (Matthew 6.25-31, with parallels in Luke 12.22-31 and Thomas 36)
This
is one of the most important things that Jesus said. It is also connected with his
saying, "Blessed are the hungry" (Luke 6.21), petition for the day's
bread (Mathew 6.11) and the certainty that those who ask will receive. (Luke
11:10) Drawing upon figures of speech from the everyday world, these figures
challenge the common attitudes towards life. They are exaggerations: humans are
not fed like birds and are not clothed like the grass of the field.
By
encouraging his listeners to live in the present, Jesus was reminding them that
it is only here, now, where they can find the Kingdom of God. By letting go of
worries, and appreciating the present moment, one can develop the mystic vision
of the eternal moment, the highest goodness. This echoes Patanjali's famous
aphorisms: "Yoga is the cessation of identifying with the fluctuations arising
within consciousness. Yoga chitta nirodha – yoga is for the purpose of
modifying the mind stuff - the Seer abides in his own true form." (Kriya
Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, pages 2-4). In the ordinary human mind, worries
obscure the vision, so one fails to see the ever-present Being. All spiritual
traditions, including Yoga and that to which Jesus belonged, taught the value
of cultivating mental silence and equanimity. In doing so, we purify ourselves
of the false identities of the ego.
On
Aspiration:
"Ask,
and it shall be given you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be
opened for you. Rest assured: everyone who asks receives; everyone who seeks
finds; and for the one who knocks it is opened. Who among you would hand a son
a stone when it is bread he's asking for? Again, who would hand him a snake
when it is fish he's asking for? Of course no one would! So if you, as you are,
know how to give your children good gifts, isn't it much more likely that your
Father in Heaven will give good things to those who ask him?" (Matthew
7.7-11)
Here,
Jesus is not referring to the ordinary prayers, which are generally petition
for things which our ego believes that it needs to be happy. Rather he is
addressing what is referred to in Yogic literature as "aspiration."
Sri Aurobindo defines aspiration as "a spiritual enthusiasm, the height
and ardor of the soul's seeking." (The Practice of Integral Yoga, page 42)
Aspiration is the call of the soul for the Lord Himself. Desire is the cry of
the ego, for something it imagines that it needs to be happy. Aspiration is the
opposite of desire. One is intensely aware of the limitations of the ego-bound
existence, and one seeks to come out of its prison. One directs one's energies
away from the ego-center. It first manifests as a thirst for spiritual
knowledge, and later as a quiet, steady seeking of the Divine Itself. It is a
spiritual enthusiasm of our soul towards perfection, unconditional love, truth
and beauty. Grace is the response of the Lord to the soul's call. It reflects
the widespread recognition that prayers are answered by a source of
benevolence, independent of whether we are deserving or not. Unlike karma,
grace does not depend upon whether we deserve reward or punishment. With grace,
we receive what is uplifting and edifying for our soul, in response to its
call, in the form of spiritual experiences, insights and realizations about the
Truth and the Presence.
Aspiration
in the practice of Yoga, may take the form of intensive austerities, known as
tapas, with the purpose of surrendering one ego, and its desires and fears, to
the Lord. And when this is done at a sacred place, for a prolonged period the
intense spiritual energy within and without facilitates spiritual experiences
and much grace. Tapas means literally, "to heat," or
"straightening by fire," and it can be used as a voluntary
self-challenge to overcome anything in one's nature, or as a penance to atone
for past misdeeds, but in Yoga it is used primarily to cultivate the fire of aspiration:
to surrender the ego's perspective and to realize God.
Yogis
would recognize the forty days Jesus spent in the wilderness as Yogic tapas.
His great aspiration to surrender all desires, all temptations, to want only
the Father, were all characteristic of what advanced Yogis do to purify
themselves, and enter into a state of communion with the Lord.
Showing
the Path to Others
"Since
when is the lamp brought in to be put under the bushel basket or under the bed?
It is put on the lamp stand, isn't it? After all there is nothing hidden except
to be brought to the light, nor anything secreted away that won't be
exposed." (Mark 4.21-22 with parallels in Luke 8.16; Matt. 5.15, Luke
11:33 and Thomas 33.2-3) The simplest form of this saying appears in Thomas
5.2, where it consists of a single line: "There is nothing hidden that
will not be revealed." In all of these contexts, "light" is a
metaphor for higher consciousness or insight. In the context of parable
interpretation, this saying can only mean that the secrets of the parables are
intended to be revealed. If so, it is puzzling why those secrets were hidden in
the first place?
The
appended aphorism about the need for the hidden to be brought to light and the
explanation of why everything is in parables appears to be contradictory. The
confusion undoubtedly is due to the attempt of early interpreters to reconcile
two opposing themes in the Jesus tradition:
Jesus taught in parables that were
difficult to understand;
Jesus insisted that his teachings were
meant to shed light, to be understood, to be revealing. In imitation of Mark,
Luke attempts to utilize these appended proverbs to explain this paradox.
This
is similar to the deliberately obscure twilight language used by the Siddhas in
their poetry. It is language which is intended to hide certain truths from
non-initiates; it contains several layers of meaning, both at the level of
ordinary experience and of transcendence. It is both suggestive and paradoxical.
The language itself is mystical in nature, where the highest is clothed in the
form of the lowest. The Siddhas made free use of typology, wordplay, paradox,
repetition, and metaphor to convey to the listener the richness of the reality
hidden in the visible terms and symbols. The true meaning of the expression is
accessible only to the initiated. It is likely that the Siddha poems themselves
functioned as an initiation. It is a language for preaching esoteric, mystical
doctrines.
Sharing
one's light, is similar to the concept of arrupadai ("showing the path to
others") in the Siddha literature. This is expressed in Thirumular's
famous aphorism: "May this world share the bliss that I have had."
The social concern of the Siddhas included not only their physical well being,
but sharing the wisdom and means to removing the sources of suffering.
The
message of not hiding our light is not as straightforward as one might think.
When to show it? How? To whom? Who is ready to see it?
God's
Unconditional Love
The
parable of the prodigal son (Luke 15. 11-32) is the longest parable spoken by
Jesus and its message of God's unconditional love for all souls is, along with
the presence of the Kingdom of God, the most important.
"Once
there was this man who had two sons. The younger of them said to his father,
'Father, give me the share of my property that's coming to me.' So he divided
his resources between them.
Not
too many days later, the younger son got all his things together and left home
for a faraway country, where he squandered property by living extravagantly.
Just when he had spent it all, a serious famine swept through that country, and
he began to do without. So he went and hired himself out to one of the citizens
of that country, who sent him out to his farm to feed the pigs. He longed to
satisfy his hunger with the carob pods, which the pigs usually ate; but no one
offered him anything. Coming to his senses he said, 'Lots of my father's hired
hands have more than enough to eat, while here I am dying of starvation!. I'll
get up and go to my father and I'll say to him 'Father, I have sinned against
heaven and affronted you; I don't deserve to be called a son of yours any
longer; treat me like one of your hired hands' And he got up and returned to
his father.
But
the father said to his slaves, 'Quick! Bring out the finest robe and put it on
him; put a ring on his finger and sandals on his feet. Fetch the fat calf and
slaughter it; let's have a feast and celebrate, because this son of mine was
dead and has come back to life; he was lost and now is found.' And they started
celebrating.
Now
his elder son was out in the field; and as he got closer to the house, heard
music and dancing. He called one of the servant-boys over and asked what was
going on.
He
said to him, 'Your brother has come home and your father has slaughtered the
fat calf, because he has him back safe and sound.'
Bu
he was angry and refused to go in. So his father came out and began to plead
with him. But he answered his father, 'See here, all these years I have slaved
for you. I never once disobeyed any of your orders; yet you never once provided
me with a kid goat so I could celebrate with my friends. But when this son of
yours shows up, the one who has squandered your estate with prostitutes - for
him you slaughter the fat calf.'
But
(the father) said to him, 'My child, you are always at my side. Everything
that's mine is yours. But we just had to celebrate and rejoice, because this
brother of yours was dead, and has come back to life; he was lost and now is
found.'" (The Five Gospels: What Did Jesus Really Say? pages 356-357)
In
this parable, Jesus is primarily addressing the righteous, represented by the
older son. He tells us that they should not feel resentment towards those who
have truly repented and returned, but receive them with open hearts, joy, love
and forgiveness, as the father did. In a parable, as in a poem or a dream, the
teller is all the images and characters. Christian teaching identifies Jesus
with the father in the parable. But it is also true that he is the father,
whose delicate, loving treatment of the older son calls for as much admiration
as his unconditional acceptance of the younger son. And he is also the older
son, whose grievances are stated harshly but fairly, and whom the parable
treats with the tolerance and respect. We can recognize that Jesus, the
storyteller, is the younger son at least as much as he is the father. When the
son returns to the father, all his shame and sadness melt away in the presence
of the father's joy. In a sense the son becomes the father. There is no
difference between the love and joy of being forgiven and the love and joy of
forgiving. The son and the father are one.
This
same message of God's unconditional love for us is a central teaching of the
Siddhas as well. The Siddhas taught that God loves us through all the stages of
our lives, all our suffering, ups and downs and in all His Divine functions,
according to Saiva Siddhanta, the philosophy of the Siddhas. Why? The Lord,
known as pati (literally, "Lord"), the pasu (individual soul), and
the pasas, (bonds of egoism, karma and maya - "illusion of the world
appearance") are the three eternal realities. According to its earliest
Siddha exponent, Thirumular, the greatest of saints and a contemporary of
Jesus, the Lord has five functions: creation, preservation, destruction,
obscuration and grace. These are His alone, and they distinguish Him from
God-realized souls. Through them, souls gain the experience they need to find
their way back to the Godhead. What is the Lord's purpose in performing His
several activities?" Some would say it is just a play. Play does not mean
amusement. It means to be at ease; that God performs all these acts with ease,
without undergoing any change. The purpose of the activities of the Lord is not
for amusement; His activities are for His love of the souls. It is His grace
that actuates His activities. The reason is to help the souls to be rid of the
obstacles which keep them from the Kingdom of Heaven. "The act of creation
is carried out by God to enable the souls, by giving them a body, etc., to work
out their Karma; sustenance is to make the souls experience the fruit of their
action; destruction is to give rest to the souls; obfuscation is to veil the
nature of souls as chit (consciousness) and bring about indifference to fruits
of actions, good and bad, by first making them engage in action; grace is the
grant of release. All these activities are thus indicative of His Grace."
(The Yoga of Siddha Tirumular, pages 62-63)
Jesus'
parable of the prodigal son all reflects this purpose: the one son loses his
way in the delusion of the world. It takes remembering whose son he is, to
become freed from his delusion. The son experiences complete liberation from
his suffering due to the unconditional love of his father.
Forgiveness
of Sins and the Karmic Consequences of our Actions
Closely
related to the theme of Jesus' teaching of unconditional love is the
forgiveness of sins. The parable of the shrewd manager (Luke 16.1-8)
illustrates this:
"There
was this rich man whose manager had been accused of squandering his master's
property. He called him in and said, 'What's this I hear about you? Let's have
an audit of your management, because your job is being terminated.'
Then
the manager said to himself, 'What am I going to do? My master is firing me.
I'm not strong enough to dig ditches and I'm ashamed to beg. I've got it! I
know what I'll do so doors will open for me when I'm removed from management.'
So
he called in each of his master's debtors. He said to the first, 'How much do
you owe my master?'
He
said, 'Five hundred gallons of olive oil.'
And
he said to him, 'Here is your invoice; sit down right now and make it two
hundred and fifty.'
Then
he said to another, 'And how much do you owe?'
He
said, 'A thousand bushels of wheat.'
He
says to him, 'Here is your invoice; make it eight hundred.'
The
master praised the dishonest manager because he had acted shrewdly."
This
parable troubled its earliest Christian interpreters. The several sayings Luke
has attached to it are attempts to moralize and soften it. (Luke 16.8b-13) The
dishonest manager was forgiven by his master because he forgave, in part, the
debts of others. Similarly, God forgives us when we forgive others. It echoes
what was included in the Lord's Prayer, discussed above: "Forgive our
debts to the extent we have forgiven those in debt to us." It is also
consistent with the teaching of unconditional love in the parable of the
prodigal son.
The
Old Testament prophets and their followers, the Pharisees, emphasized a legal
conception of our relationship with God. God makes laws. If you transgress
those laws, God will judge and punish you. Jesus brought a new message: God
loves you. And your sins against the law are forgiven when you recognize them
and make amends. Rather than fearing Him, learn to love Him. He is at hand.
In
this parable, notice that everyone was held to account, and were still required
to pay the greater part of their debt. This reflects the metaphysical teaching
about karma, that all actions, words and thoughts have consequences, but that
there is a higher metaphysical law, that of grace, which can mitigate the
consequences of karma, when we seek the Lord Himself. Bad karma, that which
causes suffering, can be countered with good karma, that which forgives others
for their transgressions against us or brings joy to others. Unlike karma,
however, Grace is bestowed when we seek the Lord. This is consistent with the
teachings of Jesus that the Kingdom of God is at hand, and that if we seek Him,
we will find him and His blessings. The parable teaches us that all of us are
prone to make mistakes, but when we recognize that the consequences are always
there, and that God loves us despite our errors, we are freed from our fear of
the Lord, and learn to love Him without conditions, as He loves us.
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