Reincarnation and Karma
Berlin, 15th February 1906
There are riddles of the world in which somebody takes an
interest who wants to deeper penetrate into the structure and
texture of our existence. Such riddles of the world are, for
example, these: where from do materials and forces come, where
from does life come into the world? Where from the
purposiveness of nature, where from consciousness? How have we
to assess the question of the origin of language, how the
question of the riddle of the free will? These questions force
themselves to somebody who wants to deeper penetrate into the
understanding of existence indeed, questions which are not far
from an advanced, educated intelligence. But before these
questions there are more obvious, big human questions which
have no theoretical, no scientific value at first, but which
force themselves, which allow us to look up from the works and
efforts of life at that which we want to call the imperishable
compared to the transient. These questions are connected with
that which meets us wherever we go, with that which must face
us everywhere in the world as a riddle. These are questions on
whose reply not only the satisfaction of our theoretical or
scientific interest depends, but it also depends on them
whether we have strength, courage and assurance in life,
whether we have hope for a prosperous future of the human race
and the single human being.
Such vital matters face us if we turn our look at the immediate
existence of the human being, if we see how one is equipped at
his birth with a low ability and strength and is inclined by
these dispositions and talents. With it, we can foresee how he
is condemned to a wretched, miserable existence that he has to
carry on between birth and death. He may be born into a family
so that he seems to be condemned to misery already without any
guilt due to the circumstances and facts. The other is born
into a family which makes sure from the start that he has a
happy existence full of joy; he has talents and abilities so
that we can say, he accomplishes something great and
significant in his life. All that and other things embrace the
big and immediate riddles, if we consider life, as it faces us,
impartially. The great worldviews and their preachers always
tried hard to solve these riddles of existence. However, in
every new time the riddles of existence need a new solution.
Not as if the old truth is no longer true, it does not concern
this, but the fact that thinking and feeling of the human
beings change, that the feeling of the soul changes more than
one assumes usually, that one does not put other questions, but
that one puts the old questions differently. The theosophical
or spiritual-scientific approach to life, spreading out for
thirty years in educated cultures, tries to solve the riddles
of existence in such a way that the modern human being can be
satisfied with such a solution.
There are two spiritual-scientific concepts that should form
the object of our issue today and give answer to the raised
questions: the idea of reincarnation or of the repeated earth
lives, and the idea of karma or the big principle of existence.
The spiritual-scientific worldview wants to answer the riddles
of existence with these both ideas as the physical researcher
answers his questions from knowledge, not from mere belief.
What the spiritual-scientific worldview wants to give has the
same character as what the remaining research wants to offer.
The only difference may be that for the understanding of the
scientific truth preconditions are necessary. A certain
scientific basis also belongs almost to the complete popular
scientific representation. However, the theosophical or
spiritual-scientific worldview is understandable for every
human being. It satisfies every human being, from the simple,
naive mind which is only able to follow the questions and
answers with sensation and feeling up to the most sophisticated
sage who approaches these matters with the biggest doubt at
first and who — if he only has the patience and
perseverance to come to grips with these matters — finds
his satisfaction. They all find not only satisfaction, not only
that releasing feeling which approaches us in the soul if we
have longed a long time for getting an answer to any question
— who knows this feeling knows something about the
intimate happiness of the soul —, but also concerning the
vital matter it gives something quite different. There does not
come into consideration what satisfies our thirst for
knowledge, but something that gives us the assurance of life,
something that should not give an answer only for single but
for all soul forces.
Because we deal with so important and basic questions today,
let me say first, in which sense the spiritual-scientific
answers are to be understood based on life. One often counters
the spiritual scientist, out of an entire misunderstanding:
bring forward proof of that which you state there if we should
believe you what you say about higher, spiritual worlds and
about matters that are inaccessible to the usual senses of
experience at first. — The spiritual scientist can
appropriately answer only: nobody needs to believe me, from
nobody I ask more than trust in my assertions, because there
cannot be such proofs of the spiritual-scientific truth as one
normally demands them. Who demands them does not understand the
character and the sense of the spiritual-scientific truth.
Life delivers the proofs of the spiritual-scientific truth and
life delivers them if not only we look with the senses here
within that which our own eyes, ears, and our sense of touch
teach us, but life in its entirety up to the highest spiritual
parts of life. If anybody comes and says: I do not believe what
you tell there, because this may be anything that you have
devised, this may be fantasies —, and one can answer:
well, believe it, believe that the spiritual scientists are the
biggest swindlers of the world. However, something else is
between belief and disbelief. This is an impartial listening.
— Take a drastic proof. Take a map of Asia Minor. A man
says, this is no map of Asia Minor, you have thought up this.
— One can only answer to him: well, never mind, but
remember what I have shown to you on this map, take note of it,
and memorise it. If you come to Asia Minor once, you see that
it is right. — The same applies to the
spiritual-scientific teachings. No one needs to believe them.
If only we want to observe carefully and impartially, there are
enough proofs of it in life, also for that life when we have
passed the gate of death, when we are on the other side.
One
has to answer the old questions in a new way. Still in the 17th
century, it was not only a superstition of the big mass, but
also a common conviction of all learnt people who believed to
understand something of natural sciences that not only quite
low animals, but also even earthworms can grow out of ordinary
river mud. One thought this generally. One did not have the
conviction that an earthworm must come from an earthworm, but
one believed that it originated from mud. The Italian scientist
Redi (Francesco R., 1626-1697) put up the sentence: life comes
only from life. Never comes life from lifelessness. The
earthworm originates not from the mud, but by a reproduction of
an earthworm. — So young is this conviction! Thus, the
human race advances concerning truth. Everybody would be
regarded as a fool today who believed that earthworms could
grow out of mud. What Redi expressed at that time — who
escaped the destiny of Giordano Bruno by the skin of his teeth
—, applies to the spiritual-scientific worldview today.
As well as it was contrary to the ways of thinking at that time
to admit that life must come from life, the teaching of
reincarnation is contrary to the present ways of thinking.
Some run literally wild by the spiritual-scientific truth as in
those days the human beings ran wild if anybody stated that the
earthworms do not grow out of mud. In the same sense, like that
which I have stated now the spiritual-scientific worldview
says, spirit and soul come only from spirit and soul. If folly
does not win over reason, there is no doubt that in two
centuries exactly just as the scientific truth, the
spiritual-scientific worldview will have seized all
circles.
What does it mean that spirit and soul come only from spirit
and soul? Spirit and soul face us if we consider the destiny of
the human being how it depends on external facts, on
dispositions and abilities, on the overall character. Only
someone who is not able to observe the fine, intimate
peculiarities of a human soul in its becoming, who only has a
sense of the coarse physical can deny that we see something
growing up in the child that can be explained just as little
from a non-mental, a non-spiritual as the earthworm from mud.
Schiller's nose, Schiller's red hair and some other of his
physiognomy are indeed explicable by bodily inheritance,
exactly as the carbon particles and the oxygen particles in the
earthworm come from other carbon particles and oxygen particles
of the surroundings.
The
lifeless parts of the earthworm come from the lifeless parts of
the surrounding nature and the physical parts of our body come
from the physical surroundings. However, we can explain
Schiller's abilities and talents from the surroundings just as
little as the earthworms from the mud. Nevertheless, it does
not depend on Schiller. He is given only as a radical example.
It applies to every human being, also to the simplest, that he
develops gradually from the type. It is impossible to derive
the individual from the physical inheritance. One can see that
easily. Try to understand once how Goethe's saying applies
here,: “Nature, mysterious in day's clear light, lets
none remove her veil, and what she won't discover to your
understanding you can't extort it with levers and with
screws” (Faust I). This is nothing for pliers and
microscope. Have a look at the child how it faces you in the
first months and years. On its face expresses itself what it
has from father, mother, and ancestors. The general-human
expresses itself, the type, the character of the clan, of the
family. We often say, the mild trait of the child comes from
the father, from the mother, from uncle or aunt.
However, when we see the child growing up, a strange change
takes place that is visible to a subtler sense. What we can
perceive as the confluence of father, mother, grandmother et
cetera like an imprint changes and takes shape from its inner
being. What lives in the core one cannot derive from father and
mother expresses itself gradually in the traits. The more
something individual is in the soul that is above the type, the
more the soul creates in the body from inside and transforms
it. How could one explain the face of a great thinker, of a
great world benefactor by inheritance who works from his inside
and enriches the world with anything new? From the face, you
can see how the human being outgrows the mere type. In every
human being, just a spiritual essence reveals itself, which is
not born out of physical inheritance, but is born into it. If
you cannot lead back this spiritual core to father and mother,
to the ancestors, we must be able to lead it back to something
spiritual. Soul and spirit come from the soul and spirit. There
is only the idea of development, the idea of repeated
incarnations. The being that impresses its traits to the child
already existed, was already repeatedly in a body. There you
find an explanation of soul and spirit just as you find an
explanation of the earthworm if you say, the earthworm has
originated from an earthworm and not from mud or sand. Once
there was something imperfect, however, we cannot go into it in
this talk.
How
does spiritual science explain the perfect and the imperfect in
the mental-spiritual realm? As well as the small plasmodium
originated, according to Haeckel from simple living conditions,
and as the following animal formed bit by bit by the
development of the external physical figure, we can say about a
perfect soul that it gradually formed from an imperfect soul
which became more perfect bit by bit. The imperfect savage with
his childish soul has preserved that figure of our soul through
which we had to go to raise ourselves to the spiritual figure
of our soul. On the other hand, compare the soul of an average
European with the soul of a human being as Darwin still met
one. The soul of a modern human being has concepts of good and
bad, of right and wrong, of false and true.
Darwin wanted once to make clear to a savage who was still a
cannibal: you are not allowed to eat a human being, because it
is bad. — The savage looked at him peculiarly and said,
why? Where from can you know this without having eaten him? If
we have eaten him, we know whether he was good or bad. —
Thus, you have an imperfect soul that develops more and more
completely. Our soul comes into the world not as a baby, but
this soul has developed in imperfect incarnations first where
it had understood nothing of good and bad but the pleasant and
the disagreeable to the palate and the like. It developed
through such stages and advanced to our level through many
incarnations. We carry our soul in ourselves with the abilities
and forces, which we have, with the destiny, which it
experiences. We see more precisely if we come again in another
incarnation on earth; we appear more perfect on earth, until
that stage is attained on which we are able to ascend to a
higher and more divine existence of which we do not need to
speak today. There are indeed still other explanations of
existence than the teaching of reincarnation, but this can
solely solve the riddles of human existence.
A
core of existence faces us in that human being about whom we
say that he goes through many lives, through repeated lives.
The materialistically minded says to us that mind and soul are
only attachments to the body, developed only from the body; the
thoughts and language are only higher forms of that which we
meet also in the physical-animal realm. The materialist brings
us to mind that our most elated moral ideals, our holiest
religious feelings are nothing but the results of our physical
organization. On the contrary, the spiritual-scientific
worldview shows us that everything that rests in our souls is
our everlasting essence, which formed its body step-by-step.
The physical-bodily comes from the spiritual-mental: this is
the teaching of the spiritual-scientific worldview, which
becomes clearer and clearer, the more you immerse yourselves in
it. It is a teaching that is not based on blind faith, although
— if one wants to show it popularly in one short hour
— one can outline it only briefly and cannot introduce in
it extensively. However, it is a teaching that is founded as
certainly and firmly like any scientific teaching. It works
with the same methods, only in the spiritual realm, as the
sensuous science in the physical realm.
Spiritual science speaks of the fact that the human being
consists of a higher and a lower nature, and that his lower
nature — when he walks through the gate of death —
is given back to those elements, which it belonged to. The body
is handed over to the earth; other parts are handed over to
other elements. However, an everlasting essence is in the human
being that always takes on a new human figure and form like the
lily as a species always takes on new forms, while it goes
repeatedly through the grain to come to a new life.
This teaching of reincarnation of the being, which shows us the
development in the spiritual realm as the higher counter-image
of the development in the sensory realm, leads us to see those
finer, more intimate things in the human being. We speak of the
fact that this essence of the human being contains a triple
basic being, that it is of triple nature. We speak of the fact
that something exists in the deepest inside of the human beings
that is quite undeveloped with the normally educated people,
exists only embryonic. We call this innermost essence of the
human being atman or spirit man. With the most human beings, it
is not even visible by vision.
The
second member of this spiritual essence of the human being is
the buddhi. In English, we would call it life spirit. This
second element in the human soul is something that is expressed
with the most developed human beings, with the leaders of
humanity in a certain way. We can describe this life spirit in
a certain way. This buddhi of the highest glory and sublimity
inhabited the old religious founders, Hermes, Buddha,
Zarathustra and — in the extreme — Christ Jesus. If
I make clear what this buddhi signifies in the spiritual realm,
I can do it only by a symbol. One must behold the spiritual
either, or one has to sum up the everlasting in a symbol, like
Goethe does who says: “All that is transitory, is only a
symbol.” I would like to give such a symbol of buddhi. If
you imagine the usual productive strength in the usual sensuous
life, combined with love, but not with receptive love, but with
devoted love: this is buddhi. There is in nature no other
symbol than the hen, which sits on the egg, conjuring up a new
life with its own warmth, sacrificing its own existence in love
for the new life. Now imagine this transferred to the
spiritual, imagine an individuality who produces the big,
propelling forces, the spiritual impulse in the human nature
for the further development in such a way as I have just
described, then you have it.
The
element of Christian feeling and sensation had been a basic
strength since two millennia. It flowed as blessing through the
Western hearts and fulfilled them with bliss. Did Christ not
generate it and did it not exist in Christ? Was it not brought
into this world with the highest glory, showing that
spiritually, which lives in the sensuous, the devoted love
which creates — which does not create a human being, but
spiritual love which brings forth the universal wisdom, for
centuries? Imagine this element in the human nature, and then
we have what we call Christ in the Christian mysticism,
Chrestós in the Greek mysticism, buddhi in the Eastern
mysticism, the life spirit in its highest potentiality.
Everybody who feels something of that which it means to produce
spiritually what is incorporated as a force in the human
development, everybody who feels something of it has a feeling
of spiritual, bright clearness like that which expresses itself
here below by a symbol, the true blissful sensation with which
the chicken sits on the egg. This is buddhi. It exists in every
single human being to a certain extent, at least as
disposition.
The
third soul force is that by which we understand the world. It
would be brainless in the highest degree to believe that one
could get water out of a vessel if no water is in it. However,
such brainless people are those who say that they can get the
wisdom of the world if it is not there. The astronomer tries to
calculate and to understand the wisdom in the universe. The
world is to be understood only by wisdom. Would it not be the
biggest folly to want to take wisdom from the universe unless
wisdom were in it? If not wisdom were given, we could never get
wisdom there. The universe is created by the same wisdom by
which we want to understand it. This is the third element that
flows through the whole world. This is the manas. In English,
it is translated best of all saying: wisdom is born out of the
world, our spirit self is this third element. If you take these
three things: atman, buddhi, manas, and then you have the
deepest essence of the human being. Then you have what walks
from incarnation to incarnation what is imperfectly formed with
the savage where this triad also exists on a low level, up to
where we see it with the modern human being, up to the great
leader of humanity. The human being walks from incarnation to
incarnation, from the cultured man up to the spiritually not
only ideal, but also holy leader of humanity, up to Francis of
Assisi, Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153) or others. The student
can completely get to know the passage through the repeated
earth-lives by the way the human beings stand side by side in
this development.
What I have stated expresses itself in the whole human being to
somebody who sees more intimately. I have said, this essence of
the human being exists only as disposition with the normally
educated person. It becomes perfect. However, what we form from
our essence today formed and created us from the outset. Thus,
we see this tripartite being, this essence working in the human
being unconsciously at first and then consciously. Just now I
have only mentioned an example how the inner being expresses
itself in the physiognomy of the thinker. Not only in the
steady physiognomy, but also in the gesture and in the mobility
of the traits the essence expresses itself. They are
accordingly formed bit by bit, depending on the essence growing
out with the child. Spiritual research, occultism gives you the
coherence of this tripartite being of the human being and that,
which is expressed externally in his body, in his instrument.
The so-called occultist says, with the man the spirit
self-expresses itself in the traits at first. Buddhi develops
in his organ of speech, lives in his voice, preparing future
levels. The third force, atman, lives in man's gesture, in the
movement of his hands. I said, in the organ of speech and in
the voice the second member, buddhi, or Christ, lives as you
have seen just now. The Christian mysticism expressed this the
deepest in John's Gospel where you read: “In the
beginning the Word already was. The Word was in God's presence,
and what God was, the Word was.” John directly calls the
speech Christ. In the female nature, it is somewhat different.
Of course, I would like to say nothing against the absolute
gender equality practiced in theosophy. Atman, buddhi, manas
are the same with the man and with the woman. They have nothing
to do with the gender, however, with the external figure. With
the woman manas comes into its own in the speech, buddhi in the
gesture of the hands, and atman appears in the whole body.
These are the so-called occult differences between the male and
the female figures, not between the essence of man and
woman.
What is now this idea of reincarnation compared with the
principle of karma? Karma comes from or is connected at least
with the Sanskrit word karnoti that means acting, doing, and
working. It is exactly the same stem like in Latin
“creare,” create. Creare, do and create is the
same. Karma and creating is the same, expressed only in two
different languages. Now we want to realise what one calls
karma. Karma is called, in English expressed, activity,
becoming, and action. With a simple example, let me make clear
what one calls karma. Imagine, you work on anything from
morning to night. Then you go to bed, sleep the whole night
through, and get up in the morning again. If now you say to
yourself, what I have worked yesterday does not concern me, I
start afresh today, and then you are brainless, are you not?
Nevertheless, the only possibility is that you take up in the
morning again, what you have left in the evening, saying to
yourself, this is my work and where I have stopped yesterday, I
must resume today. What does that mean? That only means that my
destiny of today is determined by my work of yesterday.
Yesterday I have created my destiny of today. With it the whole
concept of karma is given. Every being makes his future
destiny.
Take another example. Once animals walked into dark caves.
Something peculiar occurs to these animals. They lose their
sight. The food juices move to other parts of the body that
they need them more than the eyesight. The result is that the
faculty of seeing withdraws, the animals become blind. What do
we have before ourselves if we see these animals producing
blind generations repeatedly? There we must say, in the
blindness of the animals we have the effect of the fact that
the animals have moved into dark caves. By which have these
animals created their present figure? By their preceding
action. Nothing else is karma, as if one prepares his future
destiny by his work in the past. Cause and effect are always
connected. If the human being goes through a life on earth
between birth and death, he commits a number of actions. He
goes in the interim through death and new birth and enters a
new life then. It is as well as if we wake up and take up again
what we have left in the evening. What we have sowed in the
past life on earth, we harvest this as a fruit in the new life
on earth. If we he have made a bad, disgusting destiny in the
past life, the effect of our own actions faces us in the new
earth-life.
If
we have caused anything bad to a person, he appears to us in
the new life again and causes something bad to us as
compensation. If a person faces me and commits anything bad to
me, I can suppose that I had already been together with him in
a previous earth-life and caused that which he now does. Thus,
the destiny of the single human being becomes more transparent
and explicable with the help of the big principle of karma, and
the biggest riddle of life, which meets us at every turn,
receives light and solution. Now I get an explanation why one
is born in the deepest need and misery and why such a
disgusting destiny affects him apparently undeservedly. It is
the same as if someone has not done his work properly. He is
condemned by the bad preparation of yesterday to do bad work
again today. Thus, the same applies if I say that anybody who
lives in need and misery now himself caused it in a previous
life. I also know that nothing remains without effect. That has
its effect in the coming life, which I do well or wrongly. The
effect in the world is connected with the cause, the
observation of the stars and the sun teaches that. The same
applies also to the astral and spiritual worlds. What we do now
is compensated in a later life. The biblical saying is right:
“God is not to be fooled, everyone reaps what he
sowed” (Galatians 6:7). —
Paul as an initiate knew why he especially pronounced such
words. This is the big world principle that leads the human
destiny. Now I know very well that it is also necessary to get
an idea how this principle works, and about which I would still
like to say some words. Who has heard some of my talks, already
knows what I want to indicate herewith. If we look at the human
being with spiritual sense, he does not face us as this
physical body, but we know that this physical body is only one
part of the big being, that behind him something is that Paul
calls the spiritual body and that the spiritual scientist calls
the etheric body. The etheric body is like a portrayal of the
physical body, or better vice versa, the physical body is a
portrayal of the etheric body. This is the second member of the
human being, the etheric body. The third member is the astral
body, that which the human being bears in himself as joy and
sorrow, instincts, desires, passions, everything that faces us
if a human being faces us that we do not see or perceive,
however, with sensuous-physical means. What do we see if a
human being stands in front of us? We see the skin, its colour
and so on.
The
anatomist can look with physical means still at bones, at
muscles, nerves et cetera, but the desire and pain, instincts,
and passions that are also in the same room are not
sense-perceptible. One calls this the astral body and in it
only the spiritual being of the human being exists which we
call our ego, the bearer of our self-consciousness. While we
have this, we become on our part again the bearers of atman,
buddhi, manas, of that which I have described as spirit self,
life spirit, and spirit man.
The
animal already has the astral body. It has desire, joy, and
pain. What exists, however, in the highest configuration with
the leaders of humanity and exists as disposition with all
human beings is the everlasting essence of the human being who
advances from incarnation to incarnation. If now the human
being dies, what remains there and what passes? The physical
body, what one sees with eyes and can feel with hands is handed
over to the earth. The etheric body is merged in the general
life ether, namely not long after we have gone through death.
The third member is the astral body on which the human being
has already worked. Take such a soul that lives in the
civilised human being, there you have the inner essence and the
sum of his desires and passions. With the savage, on the first
stage of incarnation, atman, buddhi, manas have worked a little
on the instincts. Hence, they are still animal. What does the
spiritual essence do? It works perpetually, while it improves
the animal passions. The civilised human being differs from the
savage because his astral body is no longer animal. Then the
human being dies and goes to the astral and spiritual
worlds.
One
sees there what was still in him as desire from the first-time
incarnation. If the human being enters incarnation for the
first time, the animal passions are not purified. He eats his
fellow men et cetera. Then the results appear. He starts
roughly understanding something. We suppose the radical case
that he says to himself if I can eat the other, he also can eat
me. He understands that he can be also eaten up. The
consequence becomes clear to him at the last minute, and there
the first moral consciousness dawns on him. Then he purifies
his desire by the judgement that he has formed, and this
judgment comes from his spiritual essence. His judgment appears
with the second incarnation as disposition. He has become
somewhat nobler. He is now purifying his passions and desires
more and more. He enhances them from incarnation to
incarnation. That really happens if the human being dies. The
physical body is delivered to the earth; the etheric body is
merged in the life ether. What happens now with the human
being, what takes place now?
Not
only the ability to look clairvoyantly at the world but already
the intellect could teach somebody who thinks deeper what must
happen. The human being is disembodied, he has no physical
body. What has he done, however, throughout his whole life? He
has the conveniences of food by the sense of taste throughout
the whole life.
This convenience of food, the taste of the dishes, the palatal
pleasure is mental. The palate itself is physical. If the human
being did not have the physical, he could not get the mental
pleasure. If he had no physical ear, he could not hear, had he
no physical eye, he could not see. We perceive everything that
we perceive with the physical senses at first. The modern human
being can perceive nothing without his physical senses. He is
used to them. He is used to satisfying such wishes that can be
satisfied by the sense organs. The habit to have wishes, to
have pleasures, remains, the means by which he can satisfy them
disappear; tongue, eyes and ears disappear. He does no longer
have them. Now he misses them after death. He is still
thirsting for the pleasure, which can only be satisfied by the
sense organ. The result is that the human being comes to a
state of consciousness after death, which consists in breaking
the habit of being satisfied only by the sense organs. The soul
must stop asking for sensuous satisfaction, has to purify
itself beyond that which satisfied it on earth and can be
satisfied only by sensuous, physical means. That is kamaloka in
the theosophical worldview. We know it as the purgatory. One
can compare that not improperly, which the human being
experiences there, to a feeling of burning thirst, to a kind of
burning privation. This is the state after death. The suitable
means is not there sensuous-physical after death; the organ is
not there by which the thirsting soul can be satisfied. If a
soul has finished this connection with the physical in the
course of years in the kamaloka, it lives in the spiritual
world, to which it belongs as soul. It takes that along into
the spiritual world. The spiritual-scientific worldview calls
this spiritual world devachan or spirit land. What does the
soul take along?
The
purified desires and passions are now spiritualised. If the
human being was incarnated on earth, he takes what he has
gained to the devachan and processes it there for a new
earth-life. A strength of life has to emerge from his
experience. It is not enough that the human being experiences
anything. Consider the difference between the experience and
strength of life exactly. If an undeveloped soul finds out by
consequence that it is impossible to eat his fellow man without
putting himself in danger and damaging himself, if this faces
the soul as experience, then it is this experience that must be
transformed into strength, so that an inner voice exists: you
are not allowed to eat a human being.
This becomes will, the voice of conscience, which becomes more
and more perfect, the more embodiments we have experienced.
Experience changes into will, in the voice of conscience in the
course of our incarnations. You know now what the human being
does in the devachan. In the kamaloka, he purifies himself, in
the devachan; he transforms the experiences, which he had, to
strength for the next earth-life to appear as a powerful,
inner, individual nature. Hence, you can perceive it if an
undeveloped soul appears in the savage; you can perceive this
in his gestures and traits, in the movements of his hands as
something typical. The more incarnations we have lived through,
the more our individual comes out. What is elaborated? The
experiences of his former incarnations which become his
character.
You
can raise another question: why does the human being not
remember his former incarnations? — This question has
little sense if it is put in such a way. You immediately
realise this. It is in such a way, as if anybody comes and
says: the human beings are called human beings, and a
four-year-old child stands before us which is innumerate
—, and now he says: this child is innumerate, however, it
is a human being, so the human beings are innumerate. —
However, this is a question of development. Every human being
arrives at that level once where some advanced persons have
already arrived who can remember their former earth-lives. If
he cannot remember, it is because he must acquire this ability
to himself first, as the child acquires the ability of reading,
calculating, and writing. The human being is not allowed to let
destiny pass himself in dullness if he wants to achieve the
point of view by these experiences to remember his former
earth-lives. How does this recollection of the former
earth-lives appear?
This life is bound to the fact that the human being has
developed as much as possible of his inner spiritual essence.
The more free and independent from sensuousness the human being
has become in this life, the more he lives in the soul, the
less he is dependent on the pleasures provided by the senses,
the more he approaches the state where he recognises himself in
the former states. However, how should such a human being
remember former earth-lives? Examine only once what normally
fulfils a usual human being. Only that which the sensuous view
offers! Of course, this disappears, because a recollection of
former earth-lives is not possible. Not before the human being
leads a life in his divine self, he remembers in the same
extent what he has experienced in his former incarnations, and
those who become engrossed in the spiritual life are certainly
reincarnated with a recollection of the spiritual life.
Another objection is normally done against the teaching of
karma. One says, well, it is the old principle of fate. Now one
says, the human being has prepared everything for himself in
his former earth-life. Destiny and character are thereby
determined irreversibly. There is no longer freedom nor free
will. There we are subject to fate. — If anybody said so,
this would be as clever, as if anybody wanted to say: here I
have a cashbook. On the left, I have all debits, on the right
all credits. If I add both sides, a certain number results. If
I subtract both figures, the profit or the loss arises as a
result. If I add this on one side again, we have a balance.
— Indeed, this is also with a life balance. The good
actions are on one side, the bad and foolish actions on the
other. There is also a life account with the life balance as
there are accounts and balances in the accounting. Imagine now
a businessman who said, my annual accounts are done, I am no
longer allowed to register anything, I am no longer allowed to
bargain, because everything that I am still allowed to do is
predetermined by the previous registrations.
The
same would be if the human being said, I am no longer allowed
to commit new actions. The registrations and the balancing do
not forbid him this. Just as little as the accountancy forbids
the businessman to do new deals, just as little the karma
forbids him good or bad actions. At every moment, we can
register new posts; at every moment, we can increase the debit
side and the credit side. Some people also say, if I help
anyone who is in need and misery, I intervene in his karma.
However, I am not allowed to do this. — This is not true.
You can help the person to register new and good posts in his
karma and to transform his life account to a favourable one.
What you register as laziness, neglect, and fatalism is not
connected so positively with the principle of karma. However,
something else is connected with it.
If
you see a chemist going to his laboratory, he will maybe go in
with the idea: if I bring together sulphur, oxygen, and
hydrogen in a certain way, sulfuric acid originates according
to an irrevocable principle. Nothing is to be argued against
this principle. However, the chemist can also omit to carry out
the mixture, he can do it or not. The principle does not impair
his free will at all. Nevertheless, the principle gives him the
certainty that that really happens which shall happen. You
cannot get carbonic acid one time and sulfuric acid the other
time from the same mixture. The principle allows us to build on
a certain effect. That also applies to karma. The principle of
karma can keep us from no action, but there is the certainty
that a right and fair balance must take place in life that
every good action must have its good effect and every clever
action its corresponding effect. The fact that everything
happens according to a spiritual principle gives us the
certainty. It shows us that nothing is accidental that we do
but that everything we do is done in such a way that we can
build on a right world connection.
Thus, this principle of karma is not only a scientific
principle, not something that satisfies the theoretical
interest only, but something that contains the solution of the
riddle of life, the riddle of the world. It gives strength and
certainty in life, it works in such a way that we know that
everything in this life is connected according to a principle
that is recognised more and more that we interpret
unconsciously at first and then more and more consciously. Not
only is the urge for knowledge satisfied with the
spiritual-scientific worldview. Something else is given, namely
strength, courage, and certainty. Not only one tells something
of our determination to us, but at the same time we get the
possibility to live according to our determination, to live in
such a way that we advance to a more and more perfect
existence. The solution of the riddle of life is not dogmatic
and doctrinal, but full of life and mind-impregnated because of
the facts of the principles of karma and reincarnation.
All
those who looked deeper in nature, in the nature of the
spiritual life found more or less this principle of karma and
reincarnation. Giordano Bruno was a supporter of the principle,
and when from a dullness a new intellectual culture emerged,
Lessing (Gotthold Ephraim L., 1729-1781, writer, philosopher,
dramaturg) concluded his wisdom in the teaching of
reincarnation. I know that many people do not want to criticise
Lessing. However, if one likes to praise him, they will not go
along. It is strange towards a great man that one only accepts
from him what suits one. This also applies to Giordano Bruno
and Goethe with whom one regards these ideas as senility or the
like. We see that also our German theosophy is deeply
penetrated by this view. Only today, only since some decades it
is possible again to inform in public about this view. For the
centuries of the new development, this was not possible because
the human culture had another task as I have already
explained.
The
teachings of karma and reincarnation appeared in the dawn, and
also these great spirits were only able to announce them
figuratively, symbolically, they understood them full of life.
Where life could become explicable to them in its deepest
depths, they often pointed with big life humour to this truth,
to this everlasting principle of reincarnation that determines
what we now experience between birth and death. Goethe pointed
to it when he wanted to explain his deep soul friendship to
Mrs. von Stein saying, “Oh you were my sister or my woman
in past times.” However, Goethe also expresses the
principle of karma like other great spirits. He expresses the
fact that we enter the world according to our disposition
following the principle of cause and effect like everything in
the world in the nice words:
As on the day that lent you to the world
The sun stood to greet the planets,
You instantly thrived and continued to do so
In accordance with the law by which you made your appearance.
Thus, you must be, you cannot escape yourself,
Thus, sibyls and prophets have already spoken,
And no passage of time nor any can break into bits
A moulded form that develops as it lives.
(From: Primal Words. Orphic. Daimon)
However, he said the deepest what he had to say figuratively,
among other things, in the beautiful poem where he compares the
human soul with the water and the human destiny with the wind.
He compares with that which flows along from embodiment to
embodiment in the life stream; and the destiny is the wind,
which lets the soul surge up and down in perpetual waves. As
every following wave is dependent in its figure on the
preceding one, the soul is depending on its previous figure,
and as well as the wind becomes always new, in the life account
of the human being always something new is registered.
“Soul of man, how you resemble water! Destiny of man, how
you resemble the wind!” he says at the end of the poem
where he downright shows the reincarnation in the earth-life.
“The soul of man resembles water, it comes from heaven,
it rises to heaven, and it must descend back to earth, in
eternal alternation.” Goethe shows the soul that way. It
comes from the spiritual world, descends to the earth, goes
back to heaven and comes again in a new incarnation
The soul of man
resembles water:
it comes from heaven,
it rises to heaven,
and it must descend
back to earth,
in eternal alternation.
The pure jet
streams from the lofty,
steep rock wall,
then falls as charming droplets
in cloudy waves
on the smooth rock,
and, gently received,
it bubbles with a veil of mist
and a quiet murmur
down to the depths.
If cliffs loom up
to meet its plunge,
it foams indignantly,
in stages,
into the abyss.
In its flat bed
it moves quietly down the meadowy valley
and in the smooth lake
all the heavenly bodies
cool their faces.
Wind is the wave's
amorous lover
wind stirs foaming waves
up from the very bottom
Soul of man,
how you resemble water!
Destiny of man,
how you resemble the wind!
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