How Should We Treat Others
The subject relates
to our conduct toward and treatment of our fellows, including in that term all
people with whom we have any dealings. No particular mode of treatment is given
by Theosophy. It simply lays down the law that governs us in all our acts, and
declares the consequences of those acts. It is for us to follow the line of
action which shall result first in harmony now and forever, and second, in the
reduction of the general sum of hate and opposition in thought or act which now
darkens the world.
The great law which
Theosophy first speaks of is the law of karma, and this is the one which must
be held in view in considering the question. Karma is called by some the
"law of ethical causation," but it is also the law of action and
reaction; and in all departments of nature the reaction is equal to the action,
and sometimes the reaction from the unseen but permanent world seems to be much
greater than the physical act or word would appear to warrant on the physical
plane. This is because the hidden force on the unseen plane was just as strong
and powerful as the reaction is seen by us to be. The ordinary view takes in
but half of the facts in any such case and judges wholly by superficial
observation.
If we look at the
subject only from the point of view of the person who knows not of Theosophy
and of the nature of man, nor of the forces Theosophy knows to be operating all
the time, then the reply to the question will be just the same as the everyday
man makes. That is, that he has certain rights he must and will and ought to
protect; that he has property he will and may keep and use any way he pleases;
and if a man injure him he ought to and will resent it; that if he is insulted
by word or deed he will at once fly not only to administer punishment on the
offender, but also try to reform, to admonish, and very often to give that
offender up to the arm of the law; that if he knows of a criminal he will
denounce him to the police and see that he has meted out to him the punishment
provided by the law of man. Thus in everything he will proceed as is the custom
and as is thought to be the right way by those who live under the Mosaic
retaliatory law.
But if we are to
inquire into the subject as Theosophists, and as Theosophists who know certain
laws and who insist on the absolute sway of karma, and as people who know what
the real constitution of man is, then the whole matter takes on, or ought to
take on, a wholly different aspect.
I have never found an
insistence on my so-called rights at all necessary. They preserve themselves,
and it must be true if the law of karma is the truth that no man offends
against me unless I in the past have offended against him.
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