Rebirth and Karma
by Lama Zopa Rinpoche
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Question: Do you have to believe in reincarnation to attain
enlightenment?
Lama Zopa Rinpoche: Forget about
belief; it’s
impossible to attain enlightenment without realizing the
fact of reincarnation, or rebirth.
In the East, in the West,
black, white, yellow, in whatever kind of body we find
ourselves, most of us were born without
choice, without freedom. There’s a reason that we have
to experience rebirth without choice, a life without freedom.
First of all, this lack of control of our rebirth itself
is what the Buddha meant by suffering; similarly, death without
control is also suffering. So, the suffering of uncontrolled
rebirth and death has a cause, and the cause was created
before this life began. The result—uncontrolled suffering
rebirth and death—and their principal cause can’t
be born together any more than a mother and her child can
be born together.
Question: Is it karma?
Lama Zopa Rinpoche:
Yes, it’s karma, and
this principal cause, this karma, was created before; not
necessarily in the immediately preceding
life but possibly over many lifetimes.
So, forget about enlightenment,
even to attain nirvana, the complete cessation of suffering,
you have to understand
the nature of suffering and that the mind is beginningless.
The entire path to liberation is based on that. If you don’t
understand that the mind is beginningless, your understanding
is limited; but if you do, you’ll automatically understand
the existence of past and future lives.
Therefore, an understanding
of beginningless mind and reincarnation is fundamental
to the discovery of the nature of problems
and of the utmost need in preparing your mind for spiritual
realizations.
But it’s not a question of believing in
reincarnation; it’s a question of investigating reality to see whether
or not it exists. That’s the most important thing:
trying to see clearly whether it exists or not.
If past and
future lives are actual objects of existence, it’s nonsensical for you to try not to believe in them.
It’s like looking at your car, which is parked right
over there, and trying to believe it’s not there. All
you’re doing is making yourself more ignorant. It’s
like covering your eyes in order not to see something that
exists. It just limits your own understanding.
Ignorance is
the mind that does not perceive objects that really exist.
This is the connotation of the term “ignorance” to
Tibetan lamas, the great Indian pandits and Guru Shakyamuni
Buddha himself. And ignorance is the main obstacle to the
attainment of enlightenment.
Enlightenment means omniscient
mind, the fully-knowing mind; a state of mind that fully
sees every single thing that exists—all
noumenal and phenomenal existence—and completely realizes
every past, present and future thing and event, without missing
even an atom. This completely purified state of omniscient
mind is what is meant by enlightenment.
What’s the purpose of gaining such a state of mind?
It’s not for yourself but for you to be able to bring
all living beings to the state of everlasting happiness by
showing them all the different paths and methods according
to what suits their various levels of mind, with complete,
unobstructed understanding of all their thoughts and desires.
Anyway,
if past and future lives do exist, an understanding of this
is of the utmost need, especially if you want to
attain enlightenment, but if you think there are no past
and future lives, then there’s no reason for your trying
to attain enlightenment in this lifetime or seeking a new
way of life.
If there were no past and future lives, there
would be no karma. What is karma? Karma is any action of
body, speech
and mind; it’s that which creates a relationship between
cause and effect, that which brings effect from cause. In
other words, it’s karma that causes us to circle through
cyclic existence.
So, if there were a beginning to life, there would also be
a beginning to karma, but there’s no such karma. Why
does karma have no beginning? Because the creator of karma—for
example, the negative karma that forces us to circle endlessly
through death and rebirth—has no beginning; such karma
is created by ignorance, which itself is beginningless. Since
the mind is beginningless, ignorance is also beginningless.
This
present rebirth was created by karma. That karma was created
by previous lives’ ignorance. There’s
no such karma that we experience that was not created by
us, that was created by some other, separate being, such
as God. For instance, it’s impossible for me to experience
any karma that I myself did not create; it’s impossible
for me to experience the result of a cause that I myself
have not created. For example, I can’t experience the
result of my father’s killing yaks; he himself has
to experience the suffering result of that karma. Any suffering
that he experiences can only be the result of causes that
he has created. Similarly, any happiness that he experiences
can also only be the result of causes created by him.
It’s good to think about it like this: if the mind
had a beginning, then ignorance and the result it brings,
suffering, would also have a beginning. Then, what would
be the reason for the existence of ignorance? If this life
had a beginning, then karma, ignorance and suffering would
also have a beginning and there’d be no reason to seek
an inner method, to practice meditation, which is different
from, which transcends, worldly activities, ordinary actions.
There’d be no reason to pursue higher, pure activities.
Why not? Because if ignorance and suffering had a beginning,
they’d end by themselves.
If life had a beginning, karma would also have a beginning.
Then it would be possible to experience the result of karma
that you yourself had not created. But nothing can exist
without being created; without a creator, how can creation
exist? If this initial karma had been created not by oneself
but by another, it would be possible, for example, for me
to enjoy the pleasure of somebody else’s eating a delicious
piece of steak; or for somebody else to travel to exotic
places and for me to experience the pleasure of that.
However, I am the creator of my present life’s karma;
I am the creator of this life. I created the karma for my
present rebirth in a previous lifetime. Therefore, previous
lives exist, and so, by extension, do future ones.
Lama Zopa
Rinpoche gave this reply during the Fifth Kopan Meditation
Course, November 1973. Edited from the Lama
Yeshe Wisdom Archive by Nicholas Ribush. First published
in Mandala, September/November 2003. The entire transcript
of the Fifth Kopan Meditation Course is available in our
Members' Area.
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