Hindu dharma guides actions towards positive karma by emphasizing moral responsibilities and ethical behavior.
If you follow your Dharma (righteous living) well. And practice ahimsa or Non Violence you will be rewarded for good karma.
Yama or YamaDharmaraju is the god of dharma. He is also the head of narak where people are punished for their bad karma
Dharma Karma was created in 1997.
you in mrs.Jones class?
our actions is called karma, performing is dharma.
In Hinduism Dharma (righteous living) was very essential part of living. If you did not follow your Dharma (righteous living) than according to The Law of Cause and Effect (karma) you will be punished by God.
The Hindu religion is very complicated. Dharma is only apart of it. Dharma means duty and obligation. is belief is a cycle from the hindus. they believe that Dharma is there duty, then they believe that what they did is good and their "gods" think so to that is what is called Karma which means something like this "what comes around goes around". and lastly Samsara. they think that Samsara is there recarnation.
Dharma Karma was created in 1997.
Parisada Hindu Dharma was created in 1960.
Moksha is achieving perfection, completeness of knowledge, which is nothing but God, the ultimate truth. If you keep Dharma and keep doing your Karma, you learn from your experiences and attain knowledge in every birth and finally reach the truth, completeness of knowledge, that is perfection, which is attaining Moksha, No more birth required.
Hindu beliefs depend on the person. But commonly these three can be taken as major beliefs: 1. 'Dharma' (duty and righteous action being more important than belief in Gods and Goddesses. 2. Rebirth according to karma (good and evil deeds). 3. Polytheism.
No. Dharma is one's duty or calling in life; Karma is what you generate by your actions. Very relevant....