rossum; you say, “Karma, is an impersonnal force” and that the “gods” must obey it (or else suffer the consequeces), and yet it is a spiritual aspect of existance.
Correct.
You say there is no concept of sin in buddism,
Correct. There is neither sin nor the forgiveness of sin.
there are no intrinsically evil actions because there is no All-Powerful Creator to make an objective, moral law.
Karma
is the moral law. The Sanskrit
karma means “action”, it is paired with
phala, “result”. Actions have results. Your actions now and in the past will have results now and in the future.Mind precedes all conditions,
mind is their chief, they are mind-made.
If you speak or act with an evil mind then suffering will follow you,
as the wheel follows the draught ox.
Mind precedes all conditions,
mind is their chief, they are mind-made.
If you speak or act with a pure mind then happiness will follow you,
as a shadow that never leaves.
The question is, since this ‘karma’ is not an infinitely powerful force and it is not All-Knowing, there is a limit to it’s effect, buddists might “beat” karma in certain circumstances and avoid the natural consequences until they die a natural death.
Karma may, or may not, be “infinitely powerful”, it is “powerful enough”. Karma may, or may not, be “All-Knowing”, it is “knowing enough”. Is gravity “infinitely powerful”? Is gravity “All-Knowing”? You are approaching this in the wrong way, you are starting from an Abrahamic position and taking out God; that does indeed result in nonsense. Buddhism does not start from the Abrahamic position. Think of karma as more like gravity and ask your questions of gravity. That will probably get you closer to the answer. As the Dhammapada says, the consequences of your actions are unavoidable, “suffering
will follow you”, “happiness
will follow you.” You cannot escape the consequences of your actions by dying, Buddhism believes in reincarnation so all unresolved karma is carried over into your next life.
So a buddist might be ingenius enough to figuire out how to brutally rape, torture, and kill his wife and three young daughters and collect the insurance money from their deaths and you wouldn’t say that the buddists did anything objectively evil?
Killing is wrong, it is the first of the five moral rules. Anyone who does that will unavoidably reap some extremely unpleasant consequences either later in this life or in some future life. Actions have consequences.
Since you say there is no All-Powerful Creator God, then does it follow that people do not have any inalienable Rights or correspnding responsibilities?
All rights are in practice alienable by a sufficiently powerful government or similar entity. Do people have an inalienable right to vote? How was it then that women were generally unable to vote before the twentieth century? What differentiates an “inalienable right” from an “alienable right”. Should all prisoners be given their liberty because liberty is an “inalienable right”? Please define what you mean here.
Since this force is not infallible, what happens when it gets it wrong and makes innocent people suffer,
Again, look at gravity. Is gravity infallible? Does gravity ever ‘get it wrong’? Karma does not make mistakes any more than gravity does. It is us who make mistakes by failing to take karma (or gravity) into account when we act.
or in the case of Jesus Christ, who never sinned, why should he have died as he did?
Please think this through a little more. There is no sin in Buddhism. Jesus never sinned. Adam never sinned. You have never sinned. I have never sinned. Nobody has ever sinned because there is no sin. You need to leave behind your Abrahamic assumptions when thinking about Buddhism.
Jesus was probably a Bodhisattva so either His suffering was the result of karma from His previous lives, as with the Buddha’s disciple
Maudgalyayana, or is was an
upaya, a skillful means to teach those around Him.
All he did was good, he never wronged anyone, if his reward is in heaven, how does a finite, not all-powerful force give infinite reward?
Karma does not give infinite rewards, or punishments. All the Buddhist heavens and hells are temporary, though some are very long lasting. Nirvana is infinite, but is not attained by karma alone. Karma can prevent you attaining nirvana but in order to get there other techniques, such as meditation, are used. Right Action, Right Speech and Right Livelihood are only three sections of the Eightfold Path.
rossum