bobcat
Well-known Member
- Location
- Northern Calif
We've all heard the phrase that "You reap what you sow", with the general understanding that undesirable consequences are the natural outcome of bad behavior, and it seems rather sound. Somewhat similar to Karma.
By the same token, we recognize that bad things can happen to good people and good things can happen to bad people. You may even be one of those good people who has endured a lot of grief, and yet you know others who are basically not so good, and they seem to prosper, and like the story of Job in the Old Testament, you wonder: "why me"?
Both Senaca and Marcus Aurelius seemed to be in agreement that both death and life, honor and dishonor, pain and pleasure, wealth and poverty all happen equally to good men and bad, and therefore should not be considered as either bad or good. They are only perceived that way in the mind, but a good person stays detached from things not under their control, so they don't view them that way.
It seems that both of these principles are at odds, and that there is no appointed guardian of the good man's luggage. But if that is true, then how do we accept the premise that you reap what you sow?
By the same token, we recognize that bad things can happen to good people and good things can happen to bad people. You may even be one of those good people who has endured a lot of grief, and yet you know others who are basically not so good, and they seem to prosper, and like the story of Job in the Old Testament, you wonder: "why me"?
Both Senaca and Marcus Aurelius seemed to be in agreement that both death and life, honor and dishonor, pain and pleasure, wealth and poverty all happen equally to good men and bad, and therefore should not be considered as either bad or good. They are only perceived that way in the mind, but a good person stays detached from things not under their control, so they don't view them that way.
It seems that both of these principles are at odds, and that there is no appointed guardian of the good man's luggage. But if that is true, then how do we accept the premise that you reap what you sow?