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Good Karma | A Wisdom Archive on Good Karma |  | Good Karma A selection of articles related to Good Karma |  |
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Good Karma, Karma, Karma Yoga, Good Karma, Bad Karma, Hinduism Karma, Hindu Karma, Buddhism Karma, Buddhist Karma, Karma Symbols, Law of Karma, Definition of Karma, Karma Effects, x
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Good Karma | |
|  |  |  | Good Karma: Activate the Cycle Of Good Karma "Why are we here?" asked a boy of his mother. "Why, to help others, of course," she replied. "And what are the others here for?" asked the boy. The mother had no answer. The others, especially the needy, are there so that we can extend to them a helping hand. One day, as William Gladstone was preparing a speech he was to deliver in parliament, he was called to visit a dying boy. When he returned to the writing of his speech, he said: "That speech may fail or not; but in helping that boy I have tasted exquisite joy." (See also: Life and Death, Life and Beyond, Death and Dying, Body Mind and Soul)
Read more here: » Life and Death: Activate the Cycle Of Good Karma |
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 |  |  | Good Karma: Karma YogaKarma Yoga - The Yoga of Action Karma yoga joins both the physical and mental aspects of Hindu philosophy to produce a single concept. It believes that the present relies on the past and that in turn, with your actions, you can alter the future. Selflessness is a primary requirement for karma practice. Steering your actions towards the good Ð saying good, thinking good, doing good will all facilitate selflessness. Acting this way eliminates egoistic and negative behaviour and enables you to influence your destiny. Read more here: » Yoga Branches: Karma Yoga |
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of Work - Karma YogaKarma yoga is the yoga of action or work; specifically, karma yoga is the path of dedicated work: renouncing the results of our actions as a spiritual offering rather than hoarding the results for ourselves. Karma is both action and the result of action. What we experience today is the result of our karma--both good and bad--created by our previous actions. This chain of cause and effect that we ourselves have created can be snapped by karma yoga: fighting fire with fire, we use the sword of karma yoga to stop the chain reaction of cause and effect. Read more here: » Karma Yoga: The Path
of Work - Karma Yoga |
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 |  |  | Good Karma: The Working Of The Law of KarmaThe Law of Karma is one of the fundamental doctrines not only in Hinduism, but also in Buddhism, and in Jainism. As a man sows, so he shall reap. This is the Law of Karma. If you do an evil action, you must suffer for it. If you do a good action, you must get happiness. There is no power on this earth which can stop the actions from yielding their fruits. Every thought, every word, every deed is, as it were, weighed in the scales of eternal, divine Justice. The Law of Karma is inexorable. Excerpt from All About Hinduism by Sri Swami Sivananda Read more here: » Karma: The Working Of The Law of Karma |
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 |  |  | Good Karma: The logic behind the concept of KarmaHinduism and Karma In simple terms, the law of karma suggests that a person's mental and physical actions determine the progress of his life on earth. What ever actions he undertakes, both his good and bad actions, impact his life in several ways and bring twists and turns in the course of his life. His bad actions lead him to suffering and unhappiness, while his good actions lead him to happiness and spiritual success. Read more here: » Hinduism and Karma: The logic behind the concept of Karma |
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 |  |  | Good Karma: Karma Yoga
- Lesson IX (of XI )Karma Yoga Lesson IX All worship began as the worship of the dead, The offer of thilah, good thoughts, and akshatas undying affection to the manes; The tarpana; The fire mystery; The use of incense; the modern fire worship suggested; The Lord's prayer and Fateha; The obligations to other lives in Nature; The Eucharist; The duty to the Universal Mind, Brahma. Read more here: » Karma Yoga: Karma Yoga
- Lesson IX (of XI ) |
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 |  |  | Good Karma: Nine Questions About HinduismNine Questions About Hinduism Prepared for the July 4th, 1990 meeting of the youth of the Hindu Temple of greater Chicago, by Gurudeva, Sivaya Subramuniyaswami 1) What is the Hindu definition of God-monotheistic or polytheistic? 2) Could you describe the process of reincarnation? 3) What is karma? 4) Why do Hindus regard the cow as sacred? 5) Are Hindus idol worshippers? 6) Is there a rule about Hindus eating meat? 7) Why do Hindu women wear the dot on the forehead? 8) Is the memorization of slokas and mantras essential to being a good Hindu? 9) How can we use scriptures and the Bhagavad Gita or religious books as a practical guide to growing up in the United States? Read more here: » Hinduism: Nine Questions About Hinduism |
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 |  |  | Good Karma: What is
karma in Hinduism?What is karma in Hinduism? Karma is one of the natural laws of the universe. It simply means "cause and effect." Our religion is made up of many natural laws of the universe. Karma is just one of them. (This is a simple answer for a casual seeker. After you have said this, smile and ask if they want to know anything more.) Read more here: » Hinduism: What is
karma in Hinduism? |
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 |  |  | Good Karma: Meaning and Definition of KarmaKarma has quite a karma. Long after India's seers immortalized it in the Vedas, it suffered bad press under European missionaries who belittled it as "fate" and "fatalism," and today finds itself again in the ascendancy as the subtle and all-encompassing principle which governs man's experiential universe in a way likened to gravity's governance over the physical plane. Like gravity, karma was always there in its fullest potency, even when people did not comprehend it. Read more here: » Karma: Meaning and Definition of Karma |
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 |  |  | Good Karma: Karma Yoga - Path of Action "As you sow, so shall you reap" is an old and true saying. It points out the law of cause and effect which forms one of the fundamental laws of the Universe." Karma Yoga is the path of detached action and selfless service. At this point, you may ask, how could action be detached if a goal or mission is to be accomplished! Now, the secret of right activity is to do the action with full dedication and enthusiasm in the correct manner and mode of operation but you need not anticipate or be anxious about the consequences or result of this action. (See also: Yoga Systems, Yoga, Yoga and Health, Yoga Systems, Yoga Positions)
Read more here: » Yoga Systems: Karma Yoga - Path of Action |
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 |  |  | Good Karma: KARMA and REINCARNATIONKARMA and REINCARNATION The twin beliefs of karma and reincarnation are among Hinduism's many jewels of knowledge. Others include dharma or our pattern of religious conduct, worshipful communion with God and Gods, the necessary guidance of the Sat Guru, and finally enlightenment through personal realization of our identity in and with God. So the strong-shouldered and keen-minded rishis knew and stated in the Vedas. Read more here: » Hinduism: KARMA and REINCARNATION |
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 |  |  | Good Karma: Gist of Karma YogaKarma Yoga is selfless service unto humanity. The important point is to serve humanity without any attachment or egoism. The central teaching of the Gita is non-attachment to work. Lord Krishna says: "Work incessantly. Your duty is to work but not expect the fruits thereof." From "Easy Steps to Yoga" by Sri Swami Sivananda. Read more here: » Karma Yoga: Gist of Karma Yoga |
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