What word should Catholics use instead of "karma" for a certain kind of situation?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Maxirad
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
That’s the origin of the word “karma” for sure. But the current understood definition of the term has changed.

The vastly increased usage of the word indicates it is no longer as closely associated with the pagan faiths of the Indian Subcontinent where the term originated.
Google Ngram Viewer
I think worrying that it’s sinful to use the word “karma” is borderlining on scrupulosity.
 
Last edited:
There is nothing impropper about using “Karma” in this context. It is a metaphor.
 
Right. English doesn’t have a word that conveys the same thing. Similar, close, but not the same.
 
Do you at least agree that words, in general, can mean different things in different contexts?
I would say that ignorance of what karma actually means results in people misusing it to simply mean what goes around comes around.
 
Okay, do you think language evolves over time?

My point is that if enough people “misuse” a word over time, and the new meaning is widely accepted, then eventually you no longer have a misuse but a legitimate alternative use of the word.
 
Last edited:
Doesn’t matter. “Karma” contradicts Church teachings and Christianity in general. It is directly linked to reincarnation. It is not a word Catholics should use.
Would you use any of these words/phrases?

A sysphean task.

Tantalizing

Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune, Pluto

Herculaean feat

Fury

Achille’s heel
 
40.png
BoomBoomMancini:
Do you at least agree that words, in general, can mean different things in different contexts?
I would say that ignorance of what karma actually means results in people misusing it to simply mean what goes around comes around.
The word has changed. That’s not “misuse”. Language is fluid.

Fun (fool)
fond (weak minded)
smug (well kept)
clue (yarn)
Fizzle (to fart)
myriad (exactly 10,000)
meat (any solid food)
 
The word has changed. That’s not “misuse”. Language is fluid.
Exactly.

That’s why terms on Kavanaugh’s 1980’s calendars have different meanings now than they do today.

Living languages do that, morph and change. Some of the words which weren’t offensive at all when I was kid are today.

And that’s what makes the Latin vs. Vernacular debate what it is in regards to liturgy. Latin had stable meanings for the words- living languages can change the meaning of the prayers over time when keeping the same words. Doesn’t mean there isn’t good reason to have the vernacular, but that using the vernacular requires a lot more maintenance.
 
40.png
Xanthippe_Voorhees:
The word has changed. That’s not “misuse”. Language is fluid.
Exactly.

That’s why terms on Kavanaugh’s 1980’s calendars have different meanings now than they do today.

Living languages do that, morph and change. Some of the words which weren’t offensive at all when I was kid are today.

And that’s what makes the Latin vs. Vernacular debate what it is in regards to liturgy. Latin had stable meanings for the words- living languages can change the meaning of the prayers over time when keeping the same words. Doesn’t mean there isn’t good reason to have the vernacular, but that using the vernacular requires a lot more maintenance.
Actually, English is somewhat unique this way. Not all languages are as fluid as English, but English being a predominant world language is more prone to changes both regional and with time. It’s much more likely to be influenced by other languages and utilize them rather than build a word of it’s own for a new concept.

There are languages (in the far east) that are spoken and haven’t changed in hundreds of years due to the structure of, and influences on, that language.
 
kar·ma

ˈkärmə/

noun
  1. (in Hinduism and Buddhism) the sum of a person’s actions in this and previous states of existence, viewed as deciding their fate in future existences.
2, destiny or fate, following as effect from cause.

/////////

For Christians, “you reap what you sow.”

Jim
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top