444 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
444 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
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KARMA AND INHERITED SIN
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Many religions explain differences in people's fortunes and native
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endowments as a consequence of some inheritance from the past. This
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inheritance is conceived in two ways, either as karma from past lives or
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as the inherited sins of the fathers. These doctrines encourage us to
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accept our lot in life and to suffer it patiently, in order to work out
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the residue of past deeds and earn merit. Furthermore, they teach that
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the individual is not an island unto himself or herself. Rather, we each
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stand in solidarity with the larger community of the human race and
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necessarily partake of its good and evil within ourselves.
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Karma means action, and all actions have consequences for good or
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ill. In accordance with the theory of reincarnation, which is common to
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the religions born in India, differences in fortune, social position, and
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endowment are the inherited consequences of actions done in previous
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lifetimes. In Hinduism this doctrine affirms the absolute justice of the
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universe with its many inequalities; for who is man to try and change what
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has been fated by his own past deeds?
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The doctrine of karma has been criticized for fostering the
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fatalistic and complacent acceptance of the caste system, poverty, and
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social injustice. But with careful understanding, we may regard karma as
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explaining the inequalities in human life without justifying them. After
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all, if a person escapes from his caste, or a caste is given preferential
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favors by government decree, or the caste system is dissolved altogether,
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may not such also be seen as the fruit of previous good deeds?
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On the other hand, Buddhism cautions against interpreting karma as a
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deterministic principle.1 In Theravada Buddhism, karma is but one among
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twenty-four factors (paccaya) that condition a person's life, and a particular
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tendency due to past karma may be actualized only when other circumstances,
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some under the volitional control of the individual, are conducive to its
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expression. Some Hindu scriptures teach that divine grace can annul and
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supersede the effects of past deeds.2
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In religions which do not accept the doctrine of reincarnation, the
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individual's connectedness to the larger humanity through time may be
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understood through lineage and family rather than through the continuity of a
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single soul inhabiting many past lives. The sins of the fathers, when they
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have not been properly expiated, are passed on and lead to evil consequences
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for subsequent generations. Likewise, an ancestor's merits and good works,
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when they are not reaped as blessings in his own life, will accrue as blessings
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for his descendants. Inherited sin, like karma, is passed on from birth, but
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its transmission is analogous to the transmission of the parents' biological
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endowment rather than through the entry into the womb of a previously incarnate
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soul.
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Individuals are also connected to the larger humanity through
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space; they are a part of the collectives of nation, race, tribe,
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religion, and suffer or prosper with the fortunes of those collectives.
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When a community or a nation sins and faces punishment--war, famine,
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disease, or an epidemic of drugs and crime, each of its members suffer as
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a consequence of belonging to that community even though their personal
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lives may be blameless. We may call this collective sin, and it also
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helps to explain people's unequal fortunes. Inherited sin, karma, and
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collective sin each give a partial explanation for the inequalities of the
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world within which the individual must find his way.
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1See, for example, Anguttara Nikaya i.173-74, p. 682.
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2See Mundaka Upanishad 2.2.9, p. 518; Bhagavad Gita 9.30, p. 519; and Srimad
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Bhagavatam 11.2, p. 507.
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- - - - - - - - - - - -
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Like the waves in great rivers, there is no turning back of that which has
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previously been done.... [The soul is] like a lame man--bound with the
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fetters made of the fruit of good and evil.
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Hinduism. Maitri Upanishad 4.2
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By the delusions of imagination, touch and sight,
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And by eating, drinking, and impregnation there is a birth and development
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of the self.
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According to his deeds (karma)) the embodied one successively
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Assumes forms in various conditions.
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Coarse and fine, many in number,
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The embodied one chooses forms according to his own qualities.
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Each subsequent cause of his union with them is seen to be
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Because of the quality of his acts and of himself.
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Hinduism. Svetasvatara Upanishad 5.11-12
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If it be that good men and good women, who receive and retain this
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discourse, are downtrodden, their evil destiny is the inevitable
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retributive result of sins committed in their past mortal lives. By
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virtue of their present misfortunes the reacting effects of their past
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will be thereby worked out, and they will be in a position to attain the
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Consummation of Incomparable Enlightenment.
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Buddhism. Diamond Sutra 16
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Maitri Upanishad 4.2: Cf. Sutta Nipata 654, pp. 153f.; Dhammapada 127, p.
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187. Svetasvatara Upanishad 5.11-12: Cf. Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 4.4.5-6,
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pp. 187f.
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- - - - - - - - - - - -
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The wise priest knows he now must reap
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The fruits of deeds of former births.
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For be they many or but few,
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Deeds done in coventousness or hate,
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Or through infatuation's power,
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Must bear their needful consequence.
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Hence not to covetousness, nor hate,
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Nor to infatuation's power
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The wise priest yields, but knowledge seeks
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And leaves the way to punishment.
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Buddhism. Anguttara Nikaya iii.33
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"Frequently I have been born in a high family, frequently in a low one; I
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am not mean, nor noble, nor do I desire social preferment." Thus
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reflecting, who would brag about his family or about his glory, or for
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what should he long? Therefore a wise man should neither be glad nor angry
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about his lot: he should know and consider about the happiness of all
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living creatures. Carefully conducting himself, he should mind this: "I
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will always experience blindness, deafness, dumbness, be one-eyed,
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hunchbacked, black, white, and every color; because of my carelessness I
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am born in many births, experience many feelings."
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Jainism. Acarangasutra 2.50-55
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Subha, the son of Toddeya, asked the Exalted One, "What is the
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cause and what is the reason, O Gotama, for which among men and the beings
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who have been born as men there is found to be lowness and excellence?
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For some people are of short life span and some of long life span; some
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suffer from many illnesses and some are free from illness; some are ugly
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and some beautiful; some are of little account and some have great power;
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some are poor and some are wealthy; some are born into lowly families and
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others into high families; some are devoid of intelligence and some
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possess great wisdom. What is the cause, what the reason for which among
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men and the beings who have been born as men there is to be found lowness
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and excellence?"
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"Men have, O young man, deeds as their very own, they are
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inheritors of deeds, deeds are their matrix, deeds are their kith and kin,
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and deeds are their support. It is deeds that classify men into high or
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low status.
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"Here, O young man, some woman or man is a taker of life, fierce,
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with hands stained by blood, engaged in killing and beating, without mercy
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for living creatures. As a result of deeds thus accomplished, thus
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undertaken, he is reborn on the breakup of the body, after death, into a
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state of woe, of ill plight, of purgatory or hell, or if he comes to be
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born as a man, wherever he may be reborn he is of a short life span. This
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course--that he is a taker of life, fierce, with hands stained by blood,
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engaged in killing and beating, without mercy for living creatures, leads
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to shortness of life.
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"Here, on the other hand, O young man, some woman or man gives up
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killing, totally refraining from taking life and abides laying down the
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rod, laying down the weapon, conscientious, endowed with mercy and
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sensitive to the weal of all living beings. As a result of the deeds thus
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accomplished, thus undertaken, he is reborn on the breakup of the body,
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after death, into a happy state, into a heavenly world, or if he comes to
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be born as a man, wherever he is reborn he has a long life span. This
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course--that one gives up taking life and abides laying down the rod,
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laying down the weapon, conscientious, endowed with mercy for living
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creatures, leads to longevity.
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"Here some woman or man is by nature a tormentor of living
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creatures.... As a result of the deeds thus accomplished... wherever he is
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reborn he suffers much from sickness.... But here some woman or man is
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not by nature a tormentor of living beings.... he is free from sickness.
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"Here some woman or man is wrathful.... wherever he is reborn he
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is ugly.... But here some woman or man is not wrathful.... he is
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handsome.
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"Here some woman or man is jealous-minded.... wherever he is born
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he is of little account.... But here some woman or man is not
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jealous-minded.... he has great power.
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"Here some woman or man is not a giver to ascetic or brahmin....
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wherever he is born he is poor.... Here some woman or man is a giver....
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he is wealthy.
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"Thus men have, O young man, deeds as their very own, they are
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inheritors of their deeds, their deeds are their kith and kin, and their
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deeds their support. It is their deeds that classify men into this low or
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high status."
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Buddhism. Majjhima Nikaya iii.202-206, Culakammavibhanga Sutta
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Anguttara Nikaya iii.33: Cf. Garland Sutra 10, p. 188.
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The murderer of a brahmin becomes consumptive, the killer of a cow becomes
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hump-backed and imbecile, the murderer of a virgin becomes leprous--all
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three born as outcastes. The slayer of a woman and the destroyer of
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embryos becomes a savage full of diseases; who commits illicit
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intercourse, a eunuch; who goes with his teacher's wife, disease-skinned.
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The eater of flesh becomes very red; the drinker of intoxicants, one with
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discolored teeth.... Who steals food becomes a rat; who steals grain
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becomes a locust... perfumes, a muskrat; honey, a gadfly; flesh, a
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vulture; and salt, an ant.... Who commits unnatural vice becomes a
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village pig; who consorts with a Sudra woman becomes a bull; who is
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passionate becomes a lustful horse.... These and other signs and births
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are seen to be the karma of the embodied, made by themselves in this
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world. Thus the makers of bad karma, having experienced the tortures of
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hell, are reborn with the residues of their sins, in these stated forms.
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Hinduism. Garuda Purana 5
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In the flower-named city, Pataliputta, in the best part of the
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earth, were two bhikkhunis, members of the Shakya clan, possessed of good
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qualities, one of them called Isidasi, the second called Bodhi, both
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possessed of virtue, delighting in meditation and study, having great
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learning, with defilements shaken off. Seated happily in a lonely place,
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Bodhi asked, "You are lovely, noble Isidasi, your youth has not yet faded.
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Having seen what fault [in household life] are you then intent on
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renunciation?"...
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"Hear, Bodhi, how I went forth. My father was a merchant in
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Ujjeni, and I was his only daughter, dear, charming and beloved. Then a
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wealthy merchant from Saketa sent men to woo me; to him my father gave me
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as a daughter-in-law....
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"I myself adorned my Lord, like a servant-girl. I myself prepared
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the rice gruel; I myself washed the bowl; as a mother to her only son, so
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I looked after my husband. Yet my husband was offended by me, who in this
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way had shown him devotion, an affectionate servant, with humbled pride,
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an early riser, not lazy, virtuous. He said to his parents, 'I shall not
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be able to live together with Isidasi in one house.... She does me no
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harm, but to me she is odious. I have had enough; I am leaving her.'
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Hearing this utterance my father-in-law and mother-in-law asked me, 'What
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offense has been committed by you? Speak confidently how it really was.'
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'I have not offended at all; I have not harmed; I have not said any evil
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utterance; what can be done when my husband hates me?' I said. Downcast,
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overcome by pain, they led me back to my father's house, saying, 'While
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keeping our son safe, we have lost the goddess of beauty incarnate.'
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"Then my father gave me to the household of a second rich man for
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half the bride price for which the merchant had taken me. In his house
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too I lived a month, then he too rejected me, although I served him like a
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slave girl, virtuously. Then my father spoke to one wandering for alms, a
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tamer of others and self-tamed, 'Be my son-in-law; throw down your cloth
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and pot.' He too, having lived with me for a fortnight, returned me to my
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father, saying, 'Give me my cloth and pot and cup; I shall beg for alms
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again.'...
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"When he departed, I thought, 'I shall ask leave and go to die, or
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else I shall go forth.' Then the noble lady Jinadatta, expert in the
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discipline, having great learning, possessed of virtue, on her begging
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round came to my father's house. Seeing her in our house, rising up from
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my seat, I offered it to her; having paid homage to her feet when she had
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sat down, I gave her food. Having completely satisfied her with food and
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drink, I said, 'Noble lady, I wish to go forth.' My father implored me,
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'Stay home and practice the doctrine, child; and with food and drink
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satisfy ascetics and brahmins who come here.' But lamenting, I begged my
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father, 'Evil indeed was the action done by me [the karma leading to my
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misfortune]; I shall destroy it.' Then my father said, 'Attain
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enlightenment and the foremost doctrine and obtain quenching, which the
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best of men have realized.' Saluting my parents and relatives, I went
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forth. In seven days I attained the three knowledges.
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"I know now my own last seven births; I shall relate to you the
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actions of which this misfortune is the fruit and result; listen to it
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attentively. In the city of Erakaccha I was a wealthy goldsmith.
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Intoxicated by pride in my youth, I had sexual intercourse with another's
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wife. Having fallen from there, I was cooked in hell; I cooked for a
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long time; and rising up from there I entered the womb of a female monkey.
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A great monkey, leader of the herd, castrated me when I was seven days
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old; this was the fruit of the action of having seduced another's wife. I
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died in the Sindhava forest and entered the womb of a one-eyed, lame
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she-goat. As a goat I was castrated, worm-eaten, tail-less, unfit,
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because of having seduced another's wife. Next I was born of a cow
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belonging to a cattle-dealer; a lac-red calf. I was castrated after
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twelve months and drew the plough, pulled the cart, and became blind,
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tail-less, unfit, because of having seduced another's wife. Then I was
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born of a household slave in the street, neither as a woman or a man,
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because of having seduced another's wife. In my thirtieth year I died; I
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was born as a girl in a carter's family which was poor and much in debt.
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To satisfy the creditors, I was sold to a caravan leader and dragged off,
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wailing, from my home. Then in my sixteenth year when I had arrived at
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marriageable age, his son, Giridasa by name, took me as a wife. But he
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had another wife, virtuous and possessed of good qualities, who was
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affectionate towards her husband; with her I stirred up enmity. This [my
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misfortunes] were fruit of that last action, that men rejected me though I
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served like a slave girl. Even of that I have now made an end."
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Buddhism. Therigatha 400-447, Isidasi Sutta
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Majjhima Nikaya iii.202-206: Cf. Majjhima Nikaya i.389-90, p. 345.
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If the punishment does not fall on the offender himself, it falls on his
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sons; if not on the sons, on his grandsons.
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Hinduism. Laws of Manu 4.173
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For I the Lord your God am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the
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fathers upon the children to the third and the fourth generation of those
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who hate me, but showing steadfast love to the thousandth generation of
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those who love me and keep my commandments.
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Judaism and Christianity. Exodus 20.5-6
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Loose us from the yoke of the sins of our fathers
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and also of those which we ourselves have committed.
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Hinduism. Rig Veda 7.86.5
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In this world the fate of every posterity is similar to that of its
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ancestors. Neither death leaves of the work of destruction, nor the
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survivors give up their sinful activities. Human beings follow in each
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others' footsteps; groups after groups and nations after nations end their
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days without mending their ways.
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Islam (Shiite). Nahjul Balagha, Sermon 86
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If at death there remains guilt unpunished, judgment extends to the
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posterity.... When parties by wrong and violence take the money of
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others, an account is taken, and set against its amount, of their wives
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and children and all the members of their families, when these gradually
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die. If they do not die, there are disasters from water, fire, thieves,
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and robbers, from losses of property, illnesses, and evil tongues to
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balance the value of their wicked appropriations.
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Taoism. Treatise on Response and Retribution 4-5
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- - - - - - - - - - - -
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Exodus 20.5-6: But compare Ezekiel 18, pp. 681f.
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You who are so powerful as to enter inside the small medicine gourd to
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shelter yourself from danger,
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Have you forgotten your children?
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Have you forgotten your wife?
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The evil seeds a man sows
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Shall be reaped by his offspring.
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Cruelty, like adie irana, is never without repayment.
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However late it is,
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The repayment will come when it will.
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African Traditional Religions. Yoruba Song (Nigeria)
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Happy are the righteous! Not only do they acquire merit, but they bestow
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merit upon their children and children's children to the end of all
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generations, for Aaron had several sons who deserved to be burned like
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Nadab and Abihu, but the merit of their father helped them. Woe unto the
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wicked! Not alone that they render themselves guilty, but they bestow
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guilt upon their children and children's children unto the end of all
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generations. Many sons did Canaan have, who were worthy to be ordained
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like Tabi, the slave of Rabbi Gamaliel, but the guilt of their ancestor
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caused them [to lose their chance].
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Judaism. Talmud, Yoma 87a
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Rabbi Phinehas the Priest said in reference to Proverbs 11.21, "If you
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have fulfilled a command, do not seek its reward from God straightaway,
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lest you not be acquitted of sin, but be regarded as wicked because you
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have not sought to cause your children to inherit anything. For if
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Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob had sought the reward of the good deeds which
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they performed, how could the seed of these righteous men [e.g., Israel]
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have been delivered?"
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Judaism. Midrash, Exodus Rabbah 44.3
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As he passed by, he saw a man blind from his birth. And his disciples
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asked him, "Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born
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blind?" Jesus answered, "It was not that this man sinned, or his parents,
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but that the works of God might be made manifest in him".... As he said
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this, he spat on the gound and made clay of the spittle and anointed the
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man's eyes with the clay, saying to him, "Go, wash in the pool of Siloam."
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So he went and washed and came back seeing.
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Christianity. John 9.1-7
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Even those who are pious and innocent suffer for the misdeeds of others
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through their contact, as fish in a snake-infested lake.
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Hinduism. Ramayana, Aranya Kanda 38
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- - - - - - - - - - - -
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John 9.1-7: Jesus is not denying that there might be inherited sin, but
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that it serves any positive purpose. Our burdens of sin are only the
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contexts in which we may establish faith, that God's grace may shine
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forth.
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- - - - - - - - - - - -
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All of you are pledges for the other: all of you, aye the world, exist
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through the merit of a single righteous man among you, and if but one man
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sin, the whole generation suffers.
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Judaism. Midrash, Tanhuma
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Justice is turned back,
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and righteousness stands afar off;
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for truth has fallen in the public squares,
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and uprightness cannot enter.
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Truth is lacking,
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and he who departs from evil makes himself a prey.
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Judaism and Christianity. Isaiah 59.14-15
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Ibn `Umar reported God's Messenger as saying, "When God causes punishment
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to descend on a people, those righteous ones among them will be smitten by
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the punishment, but afterwards they will be resurrected according to their
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deeds."
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Islam. Hadith of Bukhari and Muslim
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Tanhuma: See Genesis 18.20-33, p. 785, where God destroys the people of
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Sodom and Gomorrah for want of ten righteous men. Cf. Hullin 92a, p.
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1033. Isaiah 59.14-15: Cf. Asa, M.1, pp. 1087f.
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