Dharma Sastra is a combination of the most profound principles covering every aspect of existence – past, present, future and beyond. The sages who lived in our land thousands of years ago had the ability to receive divine vibrations and give them shape in Sanskrit – a language known for its richness in grammar and phonetics. Does that sound like spiritual fiction? Well, it isn’t, if one looks at the analogy of a radio set picking up invisible electromagnetic signals from a far-off radio station and converting them back to melodious music.
Hindu Dharma is a combination of philosophy and rituals. The modern thought process finds rituals irrelevant and I have often been asked whether we can retain the great precepts and do away with mindless rituals. I would only say that rituals, which can be defined as Vedic practices, are the means to ensure that precepts are assimilated and ingrained, and hence have a great deal of meaning and purpose.
The Law of Karma, known as Karma theory, is a strong, and sometimes cold, intimidating principle to many. But one can find an identical theory operating in any other Life Science: the theory of cause & effect, of action & reaction. The Law of Karma is just that.
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