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Encyclopedia of Spiritual Knowledge

 

 

Articles of encyclopedia

Agni Yoga

Ahimsa

Arrogance

Asana

Assemblage Point

Ashtanga Yoga

Atman

Avatar


Babaji

Bhagavad Gita

Bhakti Yoga

Brahman

Bubbles of Perception

Buddhi

Buddhi Yoga


Chakras

Christ

Clairvoyance

Cocoon

Compassion

Consciousness

Сreator


Dantyans

Daya

Dharana

Dhyana


Emotions

Eon

Ethics


Gautama Buddha

God

Gunas


Haich, Elisabeth

Hara

Hatha Yoga

Hermes Trismegistus

Hesychasm

Holy Spirit


Indriyas

Ishvara


Jesus Christ

Jiva

Juan Matus


Karma

Karma Yoga

Killing-Free Nutrition

Krishna

Kriya Yoga

Kundalini


Lada

Latihan

Laya Yoga

Loka


Mahadouble

Mahatma

Man

Manas

Maya

Meaning of Life

Meditation

Meditative Running

Meridians

Messiah

Monasticism

Multidimensional Space


Nagual

“NAM-Meditation”

Nirodhi

Nirvana


Paramatman

Patanjali’s Scheme

Philokalia

Places of Power

Prakriti

Pranayama

Pratyahara

Pride

Psychic Self-Regulation

Purusha

Pythagoras


Raja Yoga


Samadhi

Sathya

Sathya Sai Baba

Sattva

Selfhood

Shambala

Shavasana

Soul

Spiritual Heart

Sunna

Sufi Practices

Sufism

Surya

Svara

Svarog


Tao

Tao Te Ching

Te

Thoth-the-Atlantean

Tonal and Nagual

Total Reciprocity

Turiya


Vainglory

Varnas

Vegetarianism


Winter Swimming


Yama and Niyama

Yidam

Yoga



Compassion

Compassion is the main ethical principle of one’s relationships with other people and with all living beings, even with non-incarnate ones. This is the main aspect of love on the Earth and the first criterion in the ethical work.

Doing of unnecessary harm to people or to other beings can never be justified in the eyes of God.

But what harm can be considered “necessary”? For example, to cause pain or other damage to criminals when repelling their criminal deeds or defending other people from them. Another example is to punish children that frolic dangerously for themselves and for others. Also — restricting mentally diseased people. And so on.

But revenging oneself cannot be justified: this is an egocentric reaction of the offended lower self that must not be allowed.

The one who realized the true love cannot cause pain to an animal for a meaningless reason. Such a person cannot eat corpses of killed animals: in their dead bodies there is the pain of their death.

For example, Jesus expressed discontent, when He was hinted about the possibility to taste a “sacrificial” lamb at Passover: “Do you think that I am going to eat with you meat at Passover?” (Epiphanius, Haer., 22:4). Neither He nor His disciples ate bodies of animals except for fish; this follows from the words of apostle Peter (Acts 10:10-14).

However, they did kill and eat fish. This is understandable: Jesus did not suggest to people too hard “upheavals” in the stereotypes of their lives. He could not say to fishermen: do not eat fish — fishermen would not listen anymore to such a preacher.

Yet, for modern people it is possible to accept the principle of Love-Compassion as an ethical concept and to follow it as widely and completely as possible within the limits of rationality.

For example, it makes no sense to ponder over whether it is allowed or not to kill a rabid dog or a wolf that attacks man, to kill mosquitoes, gadflies, ticks, etc.

There is also no point in hesitating whether one has a right to kill plants for food, for building a fire, for construction, or to use milk products and eggs for food — we cannot develop on the Earth without doing this. And one’s food must be adequate, with a complete set of indispensable amino acids.

However, killing or maiming plants for no meaningful reason is a different thing: for example, to pick “automatically” a leaf and throw it, to gather a bouquet of flowers, or to buy (to cut) a fir-tree for New Year or Christmas and admire how it dies. This is a meaningless death: people kill these plants not for the reason of survival and development, but out of fancy, because “everybody does this”, or because “I want it!”.

The true compassion originates from awareness that all of us — even vegetal creatures — are God’s children of different age, brothers and sisters of His one  family. We all have objectively equal interests in the universe; we all are one.

“Do not let each man look upon his own things, but each man also on the things of others. Let in you be the same disposition as was in Christ Jesus” (Philip 2:4-5).
 

See also:

Killing-Free Nutrition
 

External links:

Thus Spoke Buddha (selection of quotations)
 


 

 


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