Is whatever destiny determines Good?
Whatever is determined by Destiny is good, and that even if some events appear
to be evil, they are actually good, and ugly things are in essence beautiful.
If this is opposed by arguing that calamities and misfortunes that befall man
contradict this, the answer will be as follows:
Even though you, my carnal soul and my friend, feel agonies as a result of
your strong connections with existence and affection toward beings, existence
is entirely good since it generates every beauty and perfection, whilst non-existence
is purely evil since all sins and misfortunes originate in it. Since non-existence
is evil, those circumstances which have a suggestion of non-existence in them
contain some element of evil. Therefore, life, the most brilliant light of existence,
grows in vigor as it revolves in different circumstances. It is purified and
perfected through experience of contradictory events and happenings, and it
produces the desired results through taking on different qualities, and thus
gives testimony to the manifestations of the Divine Names. It is for this purpose
that living creatures go through many states, and experience situations in which
they suffer misfortunes and hardships, so purifying their lives. During each
one of these hardships, they renew the light of their existence, and depart
from the negative darkness of non-existence. Idleness, inertia and monotony
are in quality and as conditions all some aspects of non-existence. Even the
greatest pleasure is reduced to nothing by monotony.
In short: Since life displays the manifestations of God’s Beautiful Names,
everything which occurs in it is beautiful. Let us suppose that an extremely
rich and infinitely skilled clothes de-signer employs an ordinary man as a model
to display his works of art in return for wages. He requires the man to dress
up in a bejeweled and artistically fashioned garment which illustrates the works
of his art and his invaluable wealth. He works the garment on the man, giving
it various forms. In order to display every variety of his art, he cuts it,
changes it, and lengthens and shortens it. How bizarre, then, it would be for
this employee to say, ‘You are causing me trouble. You are making me bow and
stand up. By cutting and shortening this garment which makes me more beautiful,
you are spoiling my beauty’! Does he have the right to tell him, ‘You are acting
unkindly and unfairly?’
In the same way, the Creator causes living creatures to put on the garment
of existence, bejeweled with senses, and reason, intellect and heart. He cuts
out the pattern of that garment to give it new shapes, and adds to it beauties,
and displays the magnificence of His Beautiful Names. Those circumstances which
appear to cause misfortune and pain are actually flashes of the Divine Wisdom
which reflect rays of compassion and contain subtle beauties.
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