IT’S THE KARMA, STUPID
There are a lot of bad things you can say about Christianity, especially as an organized religion, but you cannot deny that societies whose cultures have been overwhelmingly influenced by the Protestant version thereof have done rather better in just about every way than societies that have not. The three most notable exceptions—Japan, South Korea and Taiwan—have been profoundly influenced by the USA, and might even be described as the jewels in the American Imperial Crown, as it were.
Protestantism appears to have raised individualism and its concomitant sense of the value of individual human lives to a higher degree than other faiths have. It has also tended to place an inordinately great burden of moral responsibility on each individual, thus creating societies characterized by an adherence to ‘rule of law’, a respect for human rights, and excessive guilt, neurosis and destructive criminality. Prozac might just be the price we pay for our wealth and our freedoms.
Buddhism, which has long been the most attractive of the other “great traditions” to individuals from the Protestant West (most often as a non-pharmaceutical substitute for psychotherapy), is about as different from Protestant Christianity as it’s possible to be.
It is a ‘godless’ religion, if it is considered a religion at all by its adherents in the West, which denies the existence of individual souls and indeed individual ‘selves’ (the root belief of Western Christianity) and posits an eternity of incarnations in which to “get it right”, as opposed to the Christian “one chance and you’re out” approach, resulting either in an eternity of bliss or one of unspeakable torture, rather than an eternity of chances to make it to Buddhahood. And therein lies the “problem”.
The regulating mechanism that Buddhism proposes to make sense of these infinite lives being lived throughout multiple eternities is karma, a Sanskrit word meaning “action”.
Modern Buddhists are at pains to point out that karma has nothing to do with moral justice, or reward and punishment, and especially tend to deny that karma equals “fate” or “destiny”; these Buddhists are usually addressing themselves to Western audiences who have often had enough of the guilt that comes with the Protestant emphasis on judgement, but who are utterly unwilling to give up the empowering notion of individual free will that comes with it in the Christian worldview. Karma is simply a “natural law”, that of “cause and effect”.
Regardless of the somewhat abstruse and undeniably fascinating (to some) discussions in the literature that the apparent contradictions of the notion of karma have given rise to over the almost three millennia of Buddhist development, there is no way of getting around the fact that in the Buddhist view, that mangy dog keeping you awake at night and threatening your children as they wander down the soi may just be your wife’s granddad.
So, whatever you do, don’t hurt that dog.
And that God-King you have to grovel in front of and who holds your life in his hands? His merit, collected through countless lives, is what it is, so don’t cut off his head or otherwise upset the natural karmic order. Same thing goes for the Mercedes-driving psychotic who just ran down a group of ban nok buffaloes waiting to board that crowded oven of a bus.
Got cancer of the liver? Well, as one Zen teacher has said, "Cause and effect are one thing. And what is that one thing? You. That’s why what you do and what happens to you are the same thing." One wonders what those folk at the bus stop had done to have that psycho in a Benz “happen to them”.
The primary image of the Christian faith is that of a suffering man, an innocent man, being murdered by his Imperial masters for the crime of resistance to their rule. That of Buddhism is a golden man-child with a self-satisfied smile on his face as he glances down at his crotch. And Jesus’ response to the sight of suffering and death and hunger? Miracles to heal, revive and feed the suffering, a kind of pre-technological welfare state solution to the human condition. Siddhartha confronting the same? Off to the forest to meditate and fast.
And that is karma: you are what you do, indeed.


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