COVID19! OH, TELL ME MORE ABOUT KARMA

COVID19! OH, TELL ME MORE ABOUT KARMA

Lord, can’t hear you! Speak louder, please!

Covid19 has been awful. Except, I guess, for those who believe it’s a political fabrication. Why do we have to endure so many tragic deaths, watch a world helplessly paralyzed, and be at risk of losing our minds? For almost a whole year I have been asking these questions! Is it because of karma? So far, nothing, not even a hint, Oh, Lord.

Am I left to bow my head to the “wisdom” of those who claim to speak in Your name? If so, I confess, some of their ideas seem to bump hard against reality.  Anyway, here is a sample of what I have heard:

… the outbreak is God’s retribution for gay marriage and abortion.

… Covid is God’s death angel to purge a lot of sin.

… (Texas’ bishop) I encourage the rank-and-file to refuse a vaccine that uses cell lines from the tissue of aborted fetuses, they are immoral.

… (Pope) Covid19 could be nature’s response to climate change.

Estelle Ishigo, Japanese-American Internment Camp (1940-45)

While some of these religious positions seem hardly sensible for a person who appreciates the facts of science, we must accept them for what they are, an expression of religious faith. Again, they show once more why faith and science diverge so much, and so often.

What about us, Spiritists? Where do we stand on these questions? 

Since Covid19 has affected every country, is the virus a punishment for some evil done by humankind? Are those who have died, paying for crimes committed in previous lives?

In the U.S., why are the Black and Latino populations paying the heaviest price? Or in same vein, why is Covid19 killing more of those over 70 than younger populations? The pain has been immense, and the death toll in the US is expected to reach 500,000 people by the end of February.

In The Spirits’ Book there are only veiled references to the responsibility of a community for its actions, and in Action and Reaction, a book by Andre Luiz and Chico Xavier, there is a chapter on collective karma, but only in reference to the crash of a small airplane.  Oh Lord, there doesn’t seem to be enough substance about this in the Spiritist literature, either.

Gobardhan Ash, The Famine of Bengal

Poussin, The Plague Ashdod (1630)

Our spiritual nature is to seek comfort in our philosophical perspectives during times of such disconcerting tragedy.  It is frustrating that we seem to have nothing to serve as a reference here.

Frustrated with my not hearing from you, Lord, I decided to read about the history of cataclysmic natural and social events, and came across something that I consider spectacular.

El Nino, the climate pattern that is responsible for the warming of surface ocean waters, was a major force behind the French Revolution, and the downfall of Louis XVI, in 1789.  An incredible cold winter, and an incredible wet spring destroyed the harvests, causing scarcity of wheat, raising the price of bread, which ended up tipping the country against the royalty and the church. The famine killed over 1.5 million people, and hundreds of thousands died in the street conflicts. The revolution that changed the world order, and gave us the motto “Liberté, Egalité, et Fraternité” was, in great part, driven by atmospheric currents from the Pacific Ocean!

Only now, 230 years later, are we beginning to understand how these forces interacted to trigger one of the greatest movements of social transformation in history. This realization is so humbling, I must confess. It’s just amazing to think how the invisible hands of progress manifest change.

What does it tell me? That our understanding of large-scale phenomena is very limited.

Those who seek comfort in the idea of a collective karma should take a deep breath and accept that long term consequences of some of these cataclysms are unknowable, and trust that there is a fundamental creative force driving our lives, our societies, the earth, and the works of the Universe.

Allan Kardec, certainly puzzled by the traumas of the French Revolution and the series of famines that plagued his own country, writes the following in The Spirits’ Book (Q. 741): Some of the hardships you face are of a collective nature and subject to the designs of Providence. To one degree or another, every person affected by these experiences has something to learn from them, and it’s impossible to avoid them. The best course is to find refuge in resignation and acceptance of a higher purpose.

Oh Lord, perhaps, I am beginning to hear You now. Your designs are unknowable to us. We should just trust Your wisdom. But let me pray this: I hope humanity won’t have to wait for 200 years to appreciate the growth and transformation triggered by Covid19.

Integrative Medicine + Spirit

Integrative Medicine + Spirit

Has the future finally come? Are we entering the era of medicine when the consciousness inhabiting the flesh is addressed by medical science? This “prophecy”, if I may use this word as a non-religious anticipation of the future, has been announced for the last fifty years in the Spiritist literature, especially in the works of Andre Luiz. Pronounced as a harbinger of a new future for the treatment of human diseases, the new medical practitioners would reach into the realities of the soul in order to understand the causes of many diseases that afflict the individual living in the flesh.

But, of course, we are not there yet and the medical sciences may have a long way to go. However, the first glimpses of this ideal are beginning to take shape in the field of Integrative Medicine and Integrative Mental Health. This new vision starts from the premise that the body has an innate ability to heal, and focuses on the treatment of the patient as a whole – body, mind, and spirit. It represents a movement towards a broader definition of health, and a fresh way of fostering a deeper understanding of self. It expands the conventional allopathic practice, by accepting a variety of non-traditional techniques such as: yoga, acupuncture, hypnosis, chiropractic, t’ai chi, meditation, and breathing exercises. The spirit becomes an essential part of medical care.

The need for an integrated approach is even more valuable in the area of mental health, where the dysfunctions of the spirit intervene in many forms of mental health disease. The obstacles for the acceptance of the existence of a spirit inhabiting a human body are still enormous, specially the implication that the spirit has existed before the body and has a history of experiences. However, this is a possibility worthy of consideration as we pursue a broader understanding of mental diseases. Though still in an exploratory stage, many psychiatric hospitals in Brazil have started practicing and researching spiritual techniques for the treatment of some types of psychotic disorders.

Psychosis is a generic term that characterizes disruptions to a person’s thoughts and perceptions, resulting in strange thinking, behaviors and emotions. Hearing voices and seeing things that aren’t there are common examples. Psychosis can also be present in bipolar disorders and depression.

In this video, the leading psychiatrist of a hospital where an integrated mental health approach is utilized describes how the treatment plan is applied including healing work, trance communication, deep prayer, and meditation.

SEARCH FOR MEANING WITH KARDEC

SEARCH FOR MEANING WITH KARDEC

The world has never seemed so surreal for us. Over 40 million affected by the Coronavirus and over one million people dead. Almost every country struggling to protect their populations and unable to stop the spread of an insidious enemy. The fear of death has become a tangible specter in our human reality. People are forced to live alone when mortally ill, perhaps even dying, and to grieve alone. The fear of the end, of extinction, is a source of inescapable anxiety, and deep torment for most. 

Faith in the continuity of life, or the promises of a religion, help us to reconcile with and accept the fear. For the people who recovered from the disease what they experienced in the silent conversations at the border of an unknown future may never be forgotten. And, for them those were days of awakening and reconnection with the Spirit.

And for those who lost the battle, their suffering and the grief of separation from their loved ones, we Spiritists, know is a new beginning. The fear and trauma, the tears and longing, are not erased by miracle, but these souls will gradually learn to live with themselves in another reality.

In these dire times, the message of The Spirits’ Book grows inside us lifting from our soul the existential anxiety, restoring our courage to affirm life, and reconnecting ourselves with our purpose.

SES is proud to launch the third edition of The Spirits’ Book, a timeless classic that has been a source of comfort, of courage, and resilience to millions through the many crises and wars humanity has faced in the last 150 years. A very special opportunity for you, too, to rebuild your courage and faith to get through these difficult times.