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the Equinox - The Hermetic Library

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THE TEMPLE OF SOLOMON THE KING<br />

cackling over <strong>the</strong> future like hens over a china egg, and soon<br />

<strong>the</strong>y would be back at <strong>the</strong> old game of counting <strong>the</strong>ir chickens<br />

before <strong>the</strong>y were hatched. He must also have seen, that if he<br />

postulated a God, or First Cause, every unfledged rationalist<br />

in Pâtaliputta would cry, “Oh, but what a God, what a wicked<br />

God yours must be to allowall this sorrow you talk of . . .<br />

now look at mine . . .” little seeing that sorrow was just <strong>the</strong><br />

same with <strong>the</strong> idea of God as without it, and that all was<br />

indeed Moha or Mâyâ—both God and No-God, Sorrow and<br />

Joy.<br />

But Buddha being a practical physician, though he knew<br />

sorrow to be but a form of thought, was most careful in keeping<br />

as real a calamity as he could; for he well saw, that if<br />

he could only get people to concentrate upon Sorrow and its<br />

Causes, that <strong>the</strong> end could not be far off, of both Sorrow and<br />

Joy; but, if <strong>the</strong>y began to speculate on its illusiveness, this<br />

happy deliverance would always remain distant. His business<br />

upon Earth was entirely a practical and exoteric one, in no<br />

way mystical; it was rational not emotional, catholic and<br />

not secret.<br />

What <strong>the</strong>n is <strong>the</strong> Cause of Srrow? and <strong>the</strong> answer given by<br />

Gotama is: Karma or Action, which when once completed<br />

becomes latent and static, and according to how it was accomplished,<br />

when once again it becomes dynamic, is its resultant<br />

effect. Thus a good action produces a good reaction, and a<br />

bad one a bad one. This presupposes a code of morals,<br />

furnished by what?* We cannot call it Âtman, Conscience,<br />

* Twenty-three centuries later Kant falling over this crux postulated his<br />

“twelve categories,” or shall we say “emanations,” and <strong>the</strong>reby started revolving<br />

once again <strong>the</strong> Sephirothic Wheel of Fortune.<br />

131

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