By Dimitrios Manos on Monday, 24 June 2019
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Is karma only a conscious law in the case of those who have awakened consciousness to a significant degree, or is it a conscious law for all intellectual animals, regardless of the degree to which their consciousness is awakened?
Karma is a mechanical function of nature that operates automatically: however, the hierarchies of divinity have their hands upon the mechanism. They do this out of compassion.
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4 years ago
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Karma is a law of nature, no matter the state of consciousness. It applies to everything, on every level.

To be conscious of it, one must awaken.
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4 years ago
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Karma is a law of nature, no matter the state of consciousness. It applies to everything, on every level.

To be conscious of it, one must awaken.


I understand both of these things. (On an intellectual level.)

But Master Samael says that karma itself is a conscious law.

I guess what I'm asking is: is it a conscious law in all circumstances? Are there no instances in which karma is a purely mechanical law?

Master Samael says that even the gods make mistakes, and the gods have a consciousness that is not only awakened, but fused with Spirit.

I know that karma does not err. But if it is in fact a conscious law, it must operate at a level that is beyond the consciousness of the gods. Is this a correct statement?

And if karma is an infallible law, (conscious or not), why is it necessary for gods, who are presumably fallible (ie, the Lords of Karma) to preside over it?

Are the Lords of Karma only there to negotiate the karma of awakened beings in accordance with the highest law, which is love?
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4 years ago
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Your questions are answered in this work:
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1 year ago
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