Again
the same thing can appear as good and evil under different circumstances. That
which appears as good in one case, may appear as evil if the conditions change
and the results be different. The same fire may be called a giver of life and
comfort and a bestower of happiness and a producer of good, when it saves the
life of a half-frozen man, or when it gives us warmth in the coldest days of
winter, or when it cooks our food and guides our feet. But it will be called
the producer of evil and a curse of God when it destroys life, or inflicts
injury on man or on his property. Still the nature of fire is to burn, and this
nature does not change. The Great London fire destroyed many lives, brought
ruin and destruction to many families, but at the same time it destroyed the
germs of a plague that could have done more evil. So it was both good and evil
at the same time. The same force of gravitation is called good when it attracts
atoms and molecules of our bodies and keeps together the atoms of our clothes,
gives shapes to our houses, bodies, and this earth where we are now living, but
it is the producer of evil when it kills a man who falls from the roof of a
house.
Electricity
is good when it gives light, moves a streetcar, cures a pain, and relieves a
disease, but it is evil when it crushes a man under the shock of its tremendous
currents. As electricity, it is neither good nor evil, but their
expressions may be called good or evil according to the results they produce.
The forces of nature are running in the universe with tremendous activity and
mad rush, like the currents of a mighty river which brings what we call good
and blessings on one shore and evil and destruction on the other. As standing
on one shore, where good prevails, we say the river is very good, it is the
producer of good, etc., so, standing on the other shore, we call the same river
a producer of evil, or a creator of destruction. Similarly, we say the forces
of nature are good or evil according to our standard, ideas and interests. On
the one hand, the river fertilizes the country by depositing rich soil and
helps the growth of vegetation and, on the other hand, the same river destroys
villages and all that stands in its way.
That
which fulfills our interests is called good, and that which brings to us misery
or anything which we do not want, is called evil. When we look at the phenomena of
nature piecemeal, without recognizing their connection, we do not get the
proper explanation of events. If we look at the same phenomena as related to
one another and to the whole universe, then we discover the true explanation
and we are no longer puzzled. Then the proper cause of good and evil is
understood. It is limitation, the inability to recognize the relation of the part
to the whole.
According
to the monistic philosophers of India, it is impossible to find anything
absolutely good, or absolutely evil, in this world of relativity. That which we
call good, is only one phase and the other is evil. When we ignore the one
phase, we see the other phase all along. The same event may produce evil in one
country and good in another. The famine in India killed millions by starvation,
but it made the American farmers richer than ever before. The famine has done
evil in India, but good in America. This is true in every case. Our life, which
is a great blessing to us, depends upon the life of others. The maintenance of
our life causes thousands to die. Millions of lower animals are killed every
day for our food. Each stomach has become a cemetery and each tooth a
tombstone. When one man murders another, his motive is to do good to himself,
or to his family, or to society, or to fulfill some purpose, which he considers
good. The murderer may believe that he does some good to somebody, but, as he
takes a wrong course of action, he is called a murderer, and gets no sympathy
from anybody, and is punished by society and the State.
When
a big murderer, however, comes from the battlefield after committing hundreds
of murders to possess another’s territory, we praise him and call him the
greatest hero, and reward him. But if we analyse the nature of the work he has
done, we find that he has committed many murders to serve his country. As the murderer
of multitude is supposed to do good to his country, so possibly the man who
kills but one person, may do some good somewhere, although we may not recognise
it as such. Our intellect is shortsighted, therefore, we cannot always see the true
results of our actions. As we cannot draw a sharp line of demarcation
between the good and evil results of the physical forces of nature and cannot
say that this is good and good alone, so we cannot separate the good and evil
results of our moral acts. That which is morally good in one case, may be evil
in another. As, for instance, the commandment of God is supposed to be a moral
good and beneficial to all. Think of the command that God gave Saul:
“Now go and smite Amalek and utterly destroy all that they have and spare
them not; but slay both man and woman, infant and suckling, ox, sheep, camel
and ass.”
-(Samuel, XV, 3)
-(Samuel, XV, 3)
We
call it a good act, because God did it, but if one man commands another to do
such a horrible deed, what will you call him? Such is our judgment. We
say many things without knowing why we say them. Let us open our eyes and see
how far good goes and how it is mixed with evil. Each act that we do
must be backed by a motive and that motive again is for the good of some, or
for the evil of some. We may or may not understand it, but the results of our
acts are always mixed with good and evil. Take, for instance, the nearest
example. I am talking to you. Perhaps I am doing some good. At least, I intend
to do so. But at the same time I am causing the death of millions of microbes.
It may be good to me, to you, but the poor microbes would not call it good.
When we see the results of this act from our standpoint we call it good, but if
we were to look at it from the microbe’s standpoint, it would appear quite
different and they would doubtless call it evil.
If
we judge everything from our standpoint, we can never know whether it is really
good or evil, because our standard is limited and imperfect.
Those
who do not recognize the results of acts from different standpoints are liable
to all kinds of error. If I judge the whole universe by my standard, my
judgment will be very poor. But when I look at things from the various
standpoints, I can understand how the same event can produce good and evil in
relation to different conditions. Every mistake we make becomes a great
teacher in the long run. Thus evil has its good side, and good has its
evil side. Therefore good and evil go hand in hand. But ordinarily, wherever we
find a preponderance of good over evil, we designate it good and the opposite
as evil.
Again,
that which is sinful to one may be virtuous to another. Consider the different
standards of sin among the Mohammedans, the Mormons and the Christians. Compare
the scriptures of the world and see how, what is a virtue in the Old Testament,
is a vice to men who believe in other scriptures. If polygamy is a sin
according to the Christians, it is virtue with the Mohammedans and the Mormons,
and was such with the ancient Jews. That which is good for some persons, as
inculcated by their religion, may be evil to others living under a different
dispensation.
Thus
we cannot draw a sharp line of demarcation between good and evil. Punishment
and reward, according to the Vedanta philosophy, are but the reactions of our
own actions. It says that every action must have a similar reaction. If action
were good, the reaction must be the same. The Vedanta philosophy says: “Every action,
whether backed by good or bad motives, is covered with its opposite, as fire is
enveloped with smoke.” If we examine our lives, we will notice that
good often comes out of evil. If the greater numbers of personal misfortunes
have their good side, hardly any good fortune ever befell any one that did not
give, either to the same or to some other person, something to regret. The
Vedanta philosophers try to explain the so-called punishment and reward by
referring to the law of cause and sequence, or the law of action and reaction.
Action and reaction are sometimes opposite and sometimes equal, says physical
law. When
we do certain acts, we are sure to reap certain results. But, if the results
come before we have forgotten the causes that brought them, we call them either
rewards, or punishments.
If
a good act is done today, the result may come at once, or after many years.
It is own acts that bring the results, either in the form of reward, or
punishment. When we understand clearly the law of cause and sequence, or of
action and reaction, we cease to blame God, or any other extra-cosmic creator
of evil. Then we do not say that evil has been interpolated from without. If we
know that all the forces of nature, both physical and mental, are but so many
expressions of one eternal Energy or Divine will, which is far beyond the
relative good and evil, then we do not see good and evil in the universe. On
the contrary, we find everywhere the expression of that Divine will. The nature of an effect must be the same
as that of a cause, because effect is nothing but the manifested state of the
cause, and if the cause of the universe be one eternal, divine Energy, then the
universe, as a whole, can be neither good nor evil.
We
can throw aside the narrow and limited (looking) glass of our relative
standard, through which now looking at the events of life and put on our mental
eye the (looking)) glass of divine energy, or universal will, then we no longer
see good and evil, or virtue and vice, or reward and punishment. But we see the
expression of one law of causation everywhere. Then we do not blame our
parents, or the Satan, or God, or anybody, but understand that all
our misery is but the result of our own acts which we did in this life
or in a past incarnation. If we understand that as electricity is neither
positive nor negative, but appears as positive or negative when manifested
through a magnet, we apprehend that the laws of nature only appear to us as
good or evil when they express themselves through the gigantic magnet of the
phenomenal universe. If we realise that the eternal Energy, or the Divine will,
appears as good or evil only as related to our minds and lives then we can say,
as the great sages in India said:
“God does not create good or evil, nor does He take the virtue or sin of anybody. He does not punish the wicked or reward the virtuous. Our intelligence being covered, as it were, with the cloud of ignorance and relativity, deluded as we are, we imagine, on account of our imperfect understanding, that God creates good and evil, that His creation is good or evil, that He punishes or rewards.”
However,
let us strive to see the Divinity, by going behind the phenomenal appearance of
good and evil. Let us go to the eternal source of all the phenomena. Let us
first reach the highest plane of spiritual oneness, and standing on that Divine
will, let us understand that good and evil are two aspects of one eternal substance
which is neither good nor evil, but is the Absolute or the Brahman. Then and
then alone, we shall transcend good and evil and enjoy the eternal Bliss in
this life. It should be remembered that relativity created by the categories of
time and space is nescience (ajnana or ignorance) and when we dispel the darkness of
nescience, the ever shining light of the Atman, or the Brahman, is manifested.
The light of the Brahman is self-revealing (svayam-prakasha) and it exists
within us and within the phenomena all the time.
“God does not create good or evil, nor does He take the virtue or sin of anybody. He does not punish the wicked or reward the virtuous. Our intelligence being covered, as it were, with the cloud of ignorance and relativity, deluded as we are, we imagine, on account of our imperfect understanding, that God creates good and evil, that His creation is good or evil, that He punishes or rewards.”
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