Zoroaster — "And the evil ones shall be led to their ruin, but the good ones shall come to th…"
And the evil ones shall be led to their ruin, but the good ones shall come to their reward.
And the evil ones shall be led to their ruin, but the good ones shall come to their reward.
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"A gentle hand can lead even an elephant by a hair."
"Reply to thine enemy with gentleness."
"Beware of lust; it corrupteth both the body and the mind."
"None have I to protect me save Thee; Command for me then the blessings of a settled, peaceful life."
"He who protects the cattle, him Ahura Mazda will protect."
Iranian prophet who founded Zoroastrianism, the first major religion of cosmic dualism between good (Ahura Mazda) and evil (Angra Mainyu). Closely associated with The Buddha (near-contemporary Eastern moral-cosmological revolutionary). For an intellectual contrast, see Friedrich Nietzsche, German philosopher of 'beyond good and evil' — Nietzsche appropriated Zarathustra's name for Thus Spoke Zarathustra (1883) precisely to invert the original's moral cosmology — the historical Zoroaster founded the good-versus-evil framework Nietzsche's character announces the end of.
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Actions carry consequences that eventually catch up with the person who committed them. Those who choose harm, cruelty, or deception end up destroying themselves through the very path they walked, while those who live with honesty, kindness, and integrity receive the rewards their choices earned. Justice is not random or external but built into the moral structure of reality itself, with each person ultimately collecting the outcome seeded by their behavior.
Zoroaster built his entire religious teaching around the cosmic struggle between Asha (truth, order) and Druj (the lie, chaos), with every human choice weighted on this scale. He taught that souls cross the Chinvat Bridge after death, where the righteous pass to paradise and the wicked fall into torment. This quote distills his central doctrine: moral dualism where personal ethical choice determines eternal destiny, a belief he preached as a priest-prophet in ancient Iran.
Zoroaster lived roughly 1500-1000 BCE in ancient Persia, a polytheistic tribal world of nature gods, blood sacrifice, and warrior raids. Moral behavior was tied to ritual correctness and clan loyalty, not personal conscience. By proclaiming one supreme god, Ahura Mazda, and framing life as an individual ethical contest between good and evil, Zoroaster introduced revolutionary concepts that later shaped Jewish, Christian, and Islamic ideas of heaven, hell, judgment, and personal moral accountability.
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