Thursday , 15 January 2026
enpt

A X-mas message. Why do our actions matter.

a more mature and refined mind choose to look within before accusing others.

There is the human law, created by us, convenient, changeable, partial, and limited. It is imperfect, no doubt, yet still necessary to sustain coexistence and prevent chaos.

There is also the Divine Law, natural, impersonal, impartial, and eternal. It does not respond to our opinions nor adjust itself to our interests. it simply operates, silently and precisely.

The Divine Law is direct and clear. It reminds us that everything we do returns to us. When we act wrongly, even if there is an immediate material gain, the consequences belong to us. On the other hand, when we act rightly, even if others are benefited, the merit is inseparable from the one who chose to act with nobility and generosity. And, most important, this law neither punishes nor rewards, it merely reveals what we have done, knowingly and unknowingly.

Essentially, this knowledge is a light that invites deep reflection, and it is capable of transforming societies where offenses, attacks, insults, and other expressions of intolerance have become accepted habits, almost automatic behaviors.

We must know that, believing that violence and hatred, whether emotional, intellectual, physical, or moral, can lead to true social, political, or economic advancement says more about our own limitations, ignorances, and fears than about the world around us.

On the other hand, a more mature and refined mind choose to look within before accusing others. And, from this self-reflection, they build societies that discover broader and more integrated paths of growth, harmony and tolerance because they recognize, consciously or not, the presence of the Divine Law in every choice they make.


Pune, December 25, 2025.

Photo by Tim Marshall on Unsplash

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