LECTURE 6
Asceticism and Illness
Berlin, 11th November 1909
Human
life swings between work and idleness. The activity we are to
discuss today, known as asceticism, is regarded either as work or as idleness
according to the preconceptions of one person or another. An objective,
unbiased study, such as Spiritual Science demands, is impossible unless we
observe how what is called asceticism — in the highest sense excluding
misuse of the word — influences human life, and either helps or harms
it.
It is quite
natural that most people today should have a somewhat false idea of what the
word asceticism ought to mean. In its original Greek form it could apply as
well to an athlete as to an ascetic. But in our time the word has acquired a
particular colouring from the form taken by this way of life during the
Middle Ages; and for many people the word has the flavour that Schopenhauer
gave it in the 19th century.
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Today the word is again acquiring a certain
colouring through the manifold influences of oriental philosophy and
religion, particularly through what the West usually calls Buddhism. Our task
in this lecture is to find the true origin in human nature of asceticism; and
Spiritual Science, as characterised in previous lectures, is called upon to
bring clarity into this discussion, the more so because its own outlook is
connected with the original meaning of the Greek word,
askesis.
Spiritual
Science and spiritual research, as they have been represented here for some
years, take a quite definite attitude towards human nature. They start from
the postulate that at no stage in the evolution of mankind is it justifiable
to say that here or there are the limits of human knowledge. The usual way of
putting the question, “What can man know, and what can he not
know?”, is for Spiritual Science misdirected. It does not ask what man
can know at a certain stage in his evolution; or what the boundaries of
knowledge are at that stage; or what remains hidden because at that time
human cognition cannot penetrate it. All these matters are not its immediate
concern; for Spiritual Science takes its stand on the firm ground of
evolution, in particular the evolution of human soul-forces. It says that the
human soul can develop. As in the seed of a plant the future plant sleeps and
is called forth by the forces within the seed and those which work on it from
without, so are hidden forces and capacities always sleeping in the human
soul. What we cannot know at one stage of development we may know later, when
we have advanced a little in developing our spiritual faculties.
Which are the
forces that we can develop in ourselves for a deeper understanding of the
world and the attainment of an ever-wider horizon? That is the question asked
by Spiritual Science. It does not ask where the boundaries of our knowledge
are, but how man can surpass the bounds that exist at any given period by
developing his capacities. Not through vague talk, but in a quite definite
way, it shows how man can surpass the cognitive faculties that have been
bestowed on him by an evolutionary process in which his own consciousness has
not participated. In the first instance, these faculties are concerned only
with the world perceived by our senses and grasped by our reason. But by
means of the forces latent in the soul, man is able to penetrate into the
worlds which are at first not open to the senses and cannot be reached by a
reason bound up with the senses. In order that we may from the beginning
avoid the charge of vagueness, I will describe quite briefly what you will
find given fully in
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds: How is it Achieved?
When we speak of
passing beyond the ordinary bounds of knowledge, we must take care not to
wander off into the blue, but rather find our way from the solid ground under
our feet into a new world. How is it to be done?
In the normal
human being of today, we have an alternation of the two conditions called
“waking” and “sleeping”.
[ 36 ]
Without going into
details, we may say that for ordinary knowledge the difference lies in this,
that while man is awake, his senses and the sense-bound intellect are
under constant stimulus. It is this stimulus which wakens his external
cognition, and during waking hours he is given up to the external
sense-world. In sleep we are removed from that world. A simple logical
consideration shows that it is not irrational for Spiritual Science to
maintain that there is something in human nature which separates itself
during sleep from what we usually call the human body. We know that for
Spiritual Science the physical body, which can be seen with the eyes and
touched with the hand, is only part of man. He has a second part, the
so-called etheric or life-body. When we are asleep, the physical and etheric
bodies remain in bed, and we separate from them what we call the
consciousness body or — don't be put off by the terminology — the
astral body, the bearer of desire and pain, pleasure and sorrow, of impulse
and passion. In addition we have a fourth part, one which makes man the crown
of earthly creation: the ego. These last two parts split off during sleep
from the physical and the etheric bodies. A simple consideration, as I said,
can teach us that it is not irrational for Spiritual Science to declare that
what we have as pleasure and pain, or as the ego's power of judgment, cannot
vanish during the night and be reborn anew every morning, but must remain in
existence. Think, if you will, of this withdrawal of the astral body and the
ego as a mere picture; in any case it is undeniable that the ego and the
astral body withdraw from what we call the physical and the etheric
bodies.
Now the peculiar
thing is that these inmost parts of the human being, the astral body and the
ego, within which we live through what we call soul-experience, sink
down during sleep into an indefinite obscurity. But this means simply that
this inmost part of the human being needs the stimulus of the external world
if it is to be conscious of itself and of the external world. Hence we can
say that at the moment of falling asleep, when this stimulus ceases, man
cannot develop consciousness in himself. But if, in the normal course of his
existence, a human being were able so to stimulate the inner parts of his
being, so to fill them with energy and inner life, that he had a
consciousness of them even when there were no sense-impressions and the
sense-bound intellect was inactive and free from the stimulus of the external
world, he would then be able to perceive other things than those which come
through the stimulus of the senses. However strange and paradoxical it may
sound, it is true that if a man could reproduce a condition which on the one
hand resembles sleep, and yet is essentially different from it on the other,
he could reach super-sensible knowledge. His condition would resemble sleep in
not depending on any external stimulus; the difference would be that he would
not sink into unconsciousness but would unfold a vivid inner life.
As may be shown
from spiritual-scientific experience, man can come to such a condition: a
condition of clairvoyance, if the word is not misused, as it so often is
today. I will give you briefly one example of the numerous inner exercises
through which this condition can be attained.
If we wish to
experience this condition safely, we must always start from the external
world. The external world gives us mental images, and we call them true if we
find that they correspond with external facts. But this kind of truth cannot
raise us above external reality. Our task, therefore, is to bridge the gulf
between external perception and a perception which is independent of the
senses and yet can give us truth. One of the first stages towards this form
of knowledge is concerned with pictorial or symbolic concepts. As an example,
let us take a symbol which is of use for spiritual development, and expound
it in the form of a conversation between a teacher and his pupil.
In order to make
his pupil understand this kind of symbolic picture,
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the teacher might
speak as follows: “Think of the plant, how it is rooted in the earth
and grows from it, sends forth green leaf after green leaf and develops to
flower and fruit.” (We are not here concerned with ordinary scientific
ideas, for, as we shall see, we are not discussing the essential difference
between man and plant, but trying to get hold of a useful pictorial idea).
The teacher may continue: “And now look at man. He certainly has a
great deal that is not present in the plant. He can experience impulses,
desires, emotions, a whole range of concepts which can lead him up the ladder
from blind sensation and instinct to the highest moral ideals. Only a
scientific fantasy could attribute similar consciousness to plants and to
men; but on a lower level a plant has certain advantages. It has certainty of
growth, without possibility of error, while man can deviate at any moment
from his right place in the world. We can see how in his whole structure he
is permeated with instincts, desires and passions which may bring him into
error, delusion and falsehood. In contrast, the plant is in substance
untouched by these things; it is a pure, chaste being. Only when man has
purified his whole life of instinct and desire can he hope to be as pure on
his higher level as the plant is in its certainty and security on the lower
level.”
Then we can pass
to a further picture. The plant is permeated with the green colouring matter,
chlorophyll, which steeps the leaves in green colour. Man is permeated with
the vehicle of instincts and emotions, his red blood. That is a sort of
evolution upwards, and in its course man has had to accept characteristics
not found in the plant. He must hold before his eyes the high ideal of one
day attaining on his own level to the inner purity, certainty and
self-control of which we have a picture at a lower level in the plant. So we
may ask what we must do in order to rise to that level.
Man must become
lord and master of the instincts, passions and cravings which surge around,
unsought, within him. He must grow beyond himself, kill within him all that
normally dominates him, and raise to a higher level all that is dominated by
the lower. This is how man has developed from the plant, and all that has
been added since the plant stage he must look on as something to be
conquered, in order to derive from it a higher life. That is the proper
direction of man's future, indicated by Goethe in the fine stanza:
Whoever cannot say
Die and renew thyself!
On our dark earth will be
A mournful guest!
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This does not
mean that man must kill his instincts and emotions, but that he cleanses and
purifies them by removing their mastery over him. So, in looking at the
plant, he can say: “Something in me is higher than the plant, but I
have to conquer and destroy it.”
As a picture of
what we have to overcome in ourselves, let us take that part of the plant
which is no longer capable of life, the dry wood, and set it up in the form
of a cross. The next task is to cleanse and purify the red blood, the vehicle
of our instincts, impulses and cravings, so that it may be a pure, chaste
expression of our higher being, of what Schiller meant when he spoke of
“the higher man in man”. The blood will then be, as it were, a
copy in man of the pure sap which flows through the plant.
“Now”
— the teacher will resume — “let us look at
a flower in which the sap, rising up continuously, stage by stage, through
the leaves, finally merges into the colour of the flower, the red rose.
Picture the red rose as an image of your blood when your blood has been
cleansed and purified. The sap of the plant pulses through the red rose and
leaves it without impulses or desires; but your impulses and desires must
come to be the expression of your purified ego.” Thus we supplement our
picture of the wood of the cross, which symbolises what we have to overcome,
by hanging a garland of red roses upon the cross. Then we have a picture, a
symbol, which does not appeal only to dry reasoning, but by stirring our
feelings gives us an image of human life raised to the level of a higher
ideal.
Someone may now
say: Your picture is an invention which corresponds to nothing true. All that
you conjure up, the black cross and the red rose is mere fancy. Yes,
undoubtedly, this picture, as brought before the inner eye of anyone who
wishes to rise into spiritual worlds, is an invention. That is just what it
has to be! Its purpose is not to portray something that exists in the
external world. If that were its function, we would not need it. We would be
satisfied with the impressions of the outer world that come to us directly
through our sense-perceptions. But the picture we create, though its elements
are drawn from the external world, is based on certain feelings and ideas
that belong to our own inner being. The essential thing is that we should be
fully conscious of each step, so that we keep a firm hold on the threads of
our inner processes; otherwise we should be lost in illusion.
Anyone who wants
to rise to higher worlds through inner meditation and contemplation does not
live only in abstract pictures, but in a world of concepts and feelings which
flow from these pictures he creates. The pictures call forth a number of
activities in his soul, and by excluding every external stimulus he
concentrates all his powers on contemplating the pictures. They are not meant
to reflect external circumstances, but to awaken forces that slumber within
him. If he is patient and perseveres — for progress comes slowly
— he will notice that quiet devotion to pictures of this kind will give
him something that can be further developed. He will soon find that his inner
life is changing: a condition emerges that is in some respects akin to sleep.
But while sleep brings a submergence of conscious soul-life, the devotion I
have mentioned, and meditation on the symbolic pictures, cause inner forces
to awaken. Very soon he feels that a change is going on within him, although
he has excluded all impressions of the outer world. So through these quite
unrealistic symbols he awakens inner forces, and he soon realises that he can
put them to good use.
Someone may
object again by saying: “That is all very well, but even if we develop
these forces and really penetrate into the spiritual world, how can we be
sure that what we perceive is reality?” Nothing can prove this except
experience, just as the external world can be proved to exist only by
experience. Mere concepts can be very strictly distinguished from perceptions
and the two categories will be confused only be someone who has lost touch
with reality. Especially in philosophical circles today, a certain
misunderstanding has been gaining ground. Schopenhauer,
[ 39 ]
for instance, in
the first part of his philosophy starts with the assumption that the world of
man is a concept. Now you can see the difference between a percept and a
concept by looking at your watch. As long as you are in contact with your
watch, that is percept; if you turn round, you have a picture of the watch in
your mind; that is concept. In practical life we very soon learn to
distinguish between percept and concept, or we should go badly astray. If you
picture a red-hot iron, however hot it is, you will not be burnt, but
if you touch it you will soon realise that a percept is something other than
a concept.
It is the same
with an example given by Kant;
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from a certain point of view it is
justified, but during the last century it has been the source of much error.
Kant tried to upset a certain concept of God by showing that there is no
difference in content between the idea of a hundred shillings and a hundred
real shillings. It is wrong, however, to maintain that there is no difference
in the content, for then it is easy to confuse a perception, which gives us
direct contact with reality, with the content of a mere concept. Anyone who
has to pay a debt of a hundred shillings will soon find out the
difference.
It is the same
with the spiritual world. When we awaken the forces and faculties which are
latent within us, and when around us is a world we have not known before, a
world which shines out as though from a dark spiritual depth, then someone
who enters this realm uninitiated might well say that it is all illusion and
auto-suggestion. But anyone who has had real experiences on this level will
be well able to distinguish reality from fantasy, just as in ordinary life we
can distinguish between an imaginary piece of hot steel and a real
one.
Thus we can see
that it is possible to call forth a different form of consciousness. I have
given you only one brief example of how inner exercises can work on the
sleeping faculties of the soul. Of course, while we are still practising the
exercises, we do not see a spiritual world; we are occupied in awakening the
faculties required. In some circumstances this may last not merely for years,
but for a whole life or lives. In the end, however, the result of these
exercises is that the sleeping forces of cognition are awakened and directed
towards a spiritual world, just as we have learnt to adapt the eye with the
help of unknown spiritual powers to observing the external world. This work
on one's own soul, this development of the soul to the stage of perceiving a
world in which we are not yet living but to which we gain access through what
we bring to it — this training can be called
asceticism
in the true sense of the word. For
in Greek the word means working on oneself, making oneself capable of
accomplishing something, transforming sleeping forces into active ones. This
original meaning of the word can still be its meaning today if we refuse to
be led astray by the false use of the term which has become common down the
centuries. We shall understand the true meaning of asceticism as described
here, only if we remember that the purpose of this working on oneself is to
develop faculties which will open up a new world.
Now, having
discussed asceticism in relation to the spiritual world only, it will be
helpful to see how the term applies to certain activities in the external
world. There it can signify the training of certain forces and capabilities
which are not going to be used immediately for their final purpose, but are
first to be exercised and made ready for it. An example close at hand will
illustrate this, and will also show how an incorrect use of the term can have
harmful results. The term can be rightly applied to military manoeuvres; this
is quite in keeping with the original Greek usage. The deployment and testing
of military forces on these occasions, so that in real war they may be ready
and available in the right numbers — that is asceticism exercise.
Whenever forces are not used for their final purpose, but are tested in
advance for efficiency and reliability, we have asceticism. Manoeuvres bear
the same relation to warfare as asceticism does to life in
general.
Human life, I
said earlier, swings between work and idleness. But there are all sorts of
intermediate stages: for example, play. Play, when it really is play, is the
opposite of asceticism. And from its opposite one can see very well what
asceticism is. Play is the active use of energies in the outer world for the
sake of immediate gratification. The material of play is not, so to speak,
the hard, unyielding substance of the external world that we encounter during
hours of work. In relation to our energies it is malleable, amenable to our
exertions. Play is play only when we do not knock up against the resistance
of outer forces, as we do in work. Play is concerned with a direct release of
energies which are transformed into achievement, and therein lies the
satisfaction we get from it. Play does not prepare us for anything; it finds
fulfillment in and through itself.
It is just the
opposite with asceticism, if we take the term in its proper sense. In this
case no gratification is gained from anything in the outer world. Whenever we
combine things in asceticism, if only the cross and the red roses, the
combination is not significant in itself, but only in so far as it calls our
inner forces into activity, an activity which will find application only when
it has ripened fully within ourselves. Renunciation comes in because we work
inwardly on ourselves while knowing that at first we are not to be stimulated
by the outer world. Our aim is to bring into activity our inner forces, so
that they may be applied to the outer world later on. Play and asceticism,
accordingly, are opposites.
How does
asceticism, in our sense of the word, enter practically into human life? Let
us keep to a sphere where asceticism can be practised both in a right and in
a wrong way. We will take the case of someone who makes it his aim to ascend
into spiritual worlds. If, then, a super-sensible world comes by some means or
other to his attention, whether through another person or through some
historical document, he may say: There are statements and communications
concerning the super-sensible worlds, but at present they are beyond my
comprehension; I lack the power to understand them. Then there are others who
reject these communications, refuse to have anything to do with them. What is
the source of this attitude? It arises because a person of this type rejects
asceticism in the best sense of the word; he cannot find in his soul the
strength to use the means I have described for developing higher faculties.
He feels too weak for it.
I have
repeatedly emphasised that clairvoyance is not necessary for understanding
the findings of clairvoyant research. Clairvoyance is indeed necessary for
gaining access to spiritual facts, but once the facts have been communicated,
anyone can use unprejudiced reason to understand them. Impartial reason and
healthy intellect are the best instruments for judging anything communicated
from the spiritual worlds. A true spiritual scientist will always say that if
he could be afraid of anything, he would be afraid of people who accept
communications of this kind without testing them strictly by means of reason.
He is never afraid of those who make use of unclouded intelligence, for that
is what makes all these communications comprehensible.
However, a man
may feel too weak to call forth in himself the forces necessary for
understanding what he is told concerning the spiritual world. In that case he
turns away from all this through an instinct for self-preservation which is
right for him. He feels that to accept these communications would throw his
mind into confusion. And in all cases where people reject what they hear
through Spiritual Science, an instinct of self-preservation is at work; they
know that they are incapable of doing the necessary exercises — that
is, of practising asceticism in the true sense. A person prompted by the
instinct for self-preservation will then say to himself: If these things were
to permeate my spiritual life, they would confuse it; I could make nothing of
them and therefore I reject them. So it is with a materialistic outlook which
refuses to go a step beyond the doctrines of a science it believes to be
firmly founded on facts. But there are other possibilities, and here we come
to a dangerous side of asceticism. People may have a sort of avidity for
information about the spiritual world while lacking the inner urge and
conscience to test everything by reason and logic. They may indulge a liking
for sensationalism in this field. Then they are not held back by an instinct
for self-preservation, but are driven on by its very opposite, a sort of urge
for self-annihilation. If anyone takes something into his soul
without understanding it, and with no wish to apply his reason to it, he will
be swamped by it. This happens in all cases of blind faith, or when
communications from the spiritual worlds are accepted merely on authority.
This acceptance corresponds to an asceticism which derives not from a healthy
instinct for self-preservation, but from a morbid impulse to annihilate the
self, to drown in a flood of revelations. This has a significant shadow-side
in the human soul: it is a bad form of asceticism when someone
gives up all effort and chooses to live in faith and in reliance on
others.
This
attitude has existed in many forms in
many epochs. But we must not assume that everything which looks like blind
faith is so. For example, we are told that in the old Pythagorean Mystery
Schools
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there was a familiar phrase: The Master has said. But this never
meant: The Master has said, therefore we believe it! For his students it
meant something like this: The Master has said; therefore it demands that we
should reflect on it and see how far we can get with it if we bring all our
forces to bear upon it. To “believe” need not always imply a
blind belief springing from a desire for self-annihilation. It need
not be blind belief if you accept communications springing from spiritual
research because you trust the researcher. You may have learnt that his
statements are in strictly logical form, and that in other realms, where his
utterances can be tested, he is logical and does not talk nonsense. On this
verifiable ground the student can hold a well-founded belief that the
speaker, when he is talking about things not yet known to the student, has an
equally sure basis for his statements. Hence the student can say: I will
work! I have confidence in what I have been told, and this can be a guiding
star for my endeavours to raise myself to the level of the faculties which
will make themselves intelligible of their own accord, when I have worked my
way up to them.
If this healthy
foundation of trust is lacking and a person allows himself to be stirred by
communications from the invisible worlds without understanding them, he will
drift into a very wretched condition that is not compatible with asceticism.
Whenever a person accepts something in blind faith without resolving to work
his way to an understanding of it, and if therefore he accepts another
person's will instead of his own, he will gradually lose those healthy
soul-forces which provide the inner life with a sure centre and endow us with
a true feeling for what is right. Lies and a proneness to error will beset a
person who is unwilling to test inwardly, with his reason, what he is told;
he will tend to drown and to lose himself in it. Anyone who does not allow
himself to be guided by a healthy sense of truth will soon find how prone he
is to lies and deceptions even in the outer world. When we approach the
spiritual world we need to reflect very seriously that through this surrender
of our judgment we can very easily fall into a life which no longer has any
real feeling for truth and reality. If we seriously practise the exercises
and wish to train our inner powers, we must never give up bringing before our
souls the kind of knowledge I have been describing.
We can now
penetrate further into what may be called the ascetic training of the soul in
a deeper sense. So far we have considered only people who are not capable of
developing these inner forces in a healthy way. In one case a sound instinct
of self-preservation made a person refuse to develop these forces because he
did not want to develop them; in the other case a person did not absolutely
refuse to develop them, but he refused to bring his judgment and intelligence
to bear on them. In all such cases the impulse is always to remain on the old
level, at the old standpoint. But let us suppose a case where a person really
does try to develop these inner faculties, and makes use of such forms of
training as those we have described. Again there may be a dual result. It may
be the result we always aim at, where Spiritual Science is taken seriously
and worthily. A person will then be guided to develop his inner forces only
in so far as he is capable of using them in a right and orderly way. Here,
then, we are concerned with how a person has to work on himself — as is
described in greater detail in my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds: How is it Achieved?
— in order to awaken the faculties
which will open the spiritual world to his inner sight. But at the same time
he must be competent to discipline his faculties and to establish the right
balance between his work on himself and his dealings with the outer world.
The necessity of this has been proved by spiritual researchers down the
ages.
If a person
fails to apply his inner forces properly to his handling of the outer world
and gives way to an almost uncontrollable urge to develop his soul-powers
more and more to bring about all possible movement in his soul, so
that he may thereby open his spirit-eyes and spirit-ears; and if he is too
indolent to absorb slowly and in the right way the available facts of
Spiritual Science and to work on them with his reason, then his asceticism
may do him great harm. A person can develop all sorts of faculties and powers
and yet not know what to do with them or how to apply them to the outer
world. This, indeed, is the outcome of many forms of training and it applies
to those who fail to pursue energetically the methods we have described,
whereby the student is continually strengthening himself.
There are other methods with a
different aim: they may be more comfortable but they can easily cause harm.
Such methods aim at doing away with the hindrances imposed on the soul by the
bodily nature, in order to enhance the inner life. This was in fact the sole
endeavour of mediaeval ascetics, and it survives in part today. Instead of
true asceticism, which sets out to give the soul an ever-richer content,
false asceticism leaves the soul as it is and sets out to weaken the body and
to reduce the activity of its forces. There are indeed ways of damping down
these forces, so that the functioning of the body gradually weakens, and the
result may then be that the soul, though itself remaining weak, gets the
upper hand over the weakened body. A correct asceticism leaves the body as it
is and enables the soul to master it; the other asceticism leaves the soul as
it is, while all sorts of procedures, fasting, mortifications and so on, are
used to weaken the body. The soul is then relatively the stronger and can
achieve a kind of consciousness, although its own powers have not increased.
That is the way of many ascetics in the Middle Ages: they kill the vigour of
the body, lower its activities, leave the soul as it is, and then live in the
expectation that the content of the spiritual world will be revealed to them
with no contribution on their part.
That is the
easier method, but it is not a truly strengthening one. The true method
requires a person to cleanse and purify his thinking, feeling and willing, so
that these faculties will be strengthened and able to prevail over the body.
The other method lowers the tone of the body, and the soul is then supposed
to wait, without having acquired any new capacities, until the divine world
flows into it.
You will find
plenty of references to this method under the heading of
“asceticism” in the Middle Ages. It leads to estrangement from
the world and is bound to do so. For at the present stage of human evolution
there is a certain relationship between our capabilities of perception and
the outer world, and if we are to rise above this stage we can do so only by
heightening our capabilities and using them to understand the outer world in
its deeper significance. But if we weaken our normal forces, we make
ourselves incapable of maintaining a normal relationship with the outer
world; and especially if we tone down our thinking, feeling and willing and
give our souls over to passive expectation, something will then flow into our
souls which has no connection with our present-day world, makes us strangers
there, and is useless for working in the world. While the true asceticism
makes us more and more capable in our dealings with the world, for we see
more and more deeply into it, the other asceticism, associated with the
suppression of bodily functions, draws a person out of the world, tends to
make him a hermit, a mere settler there. In this isolation he may see all
sorts of psychic and spiritual things — this must not be denied —
but an asceticism of this kind is of no use for the world. True asceticism is
work, training for the world, not a withdrawal of oneself into remoteness
from the world.
This does not
imply that we have to go to the opposite extreme; there can be accommodation
on both sides. Even though it is true in general that for our period in human
evolution a certain normal relationship exists between the external world and
the forces of the soul, yet every period tends to drive the normal to
extremes as it were, and if we want to develop higher faculties we need pay
no attention to opposition that comes from abnormal trends. And because we
find the opposition in ourselves, we can under certain circumstances go
rather further than would be necessary if the times were not also at
fault.
I say this
because you have perhaps heard that many followers of Spiritual Science lay
great stress on a certain diet. This does not at all imply that such a mode
of life can do anything for the attainment or even the understanding of
higher worlds and higher relationships. It can be no more than an external
aid, and should be seen only in relation to the fact that anyone wishing to
gain understanding of the higher worlds may find a certain obstacle in the
customs and conventions he has to live with at the present day. Because these
conventions have drawn us down too deeply into the material world, we must go
beyond the normal in order to make the exercises easier. But it would be
quite mistaken to regard this as a form of asceticism which can be a means of
leading us to higher worlds. Vegetarianism will never lead anyone to higher
worlds; it can be no more than a support for someone who thinks to himself: I
wish to open for myself certain ways of understanding the spiritual worlds; I
am hindered by the heaviness of my body, which prevents the exercises from
having an immediate effect. Hence I will make things easier by lightening my
body. Vegetarianism is one way of producing this result, but it should never
be presented as a dogma; it is only a means which can help some people to
gain understanding of the spiritual worlds. No-one should suppose that a
vegetarian way of life will enable him to develop spiritual powers. For it
leaves the soul as it is and serves only to weaken the body. But if the soul
is strengthened, it will be able though the effects of vegetarianism to
strengthen the weakened body from the centre of its own forces. Anyone who
develops spiritually with the aid of vegetarianism will be stronger, more
efficient and more resistant in daily life; he will be not merely a match for
any meat-eater but will be superior in working capacity. That is the very
opposite of what is believed by many people when they say of vegetarians
within a spiritual movement: How sad for these poor folk who can never enjoy
a little bit of meat!
So long as a
person has this feeling about vegetarianism, it will not bring him the
slightest benefit. So long as a desire for meat persists, vegetarianism is
useless. It is helpful only when it results from an attitude that I will
illustrate with a little story.
Not very long
ago, someone was asked: “Why don't you eat meat?” He replied with
a counter-question: “Why don't you eat dogs or cats?”
“One just can't”, was the answer. “Why can't you?”
“Because I would find it disgusting.” “Well, that is just
what I feel about all meat.”
That is the
point. When pleasure in eating meat has gone, then to abstain from meat may
be of some use in relation to the spiritual worlds.
Until then,
breaking the meat-eating habit can be helpful only for getting rid of the
desire for meat. If the desire persists, it may be better to start eating
meat again, for to go on tormenting oneself about it is certainly not the
right way to reach an understanding of Spiritual Science.
From all this
you can see the difference between true and false asceticism. False
asceticism often attracts people whose sole desire is to develop the inner
forces and faculties of the soul; they are indifferent towards gaining real
knowledge of the outer world. Their aim is simply to develop their inner
faculties and then to wait and see what comes of it. The best way of doing
this is to mortify the body as far as possible, for this weakens it, and then
the soul, though itself remaining weak, can see into some kind of spiritual
world, however incapable it may be of understanding the real spiritual world.
This, however, is a path of deception, for directly a person closes off his
means of return to the physical world, he encounters no true spiritual world,
but only delusive pictures of his own self. And these are what he is bound to
encounter as long as he leaves his soul as it is. Because his ego keeps to
its accustomed standpoint, it does not rise to higher powers, and he puts up
a barrier between himself and the world by suppressing the functions which
relate him to the world. It is not only that this kind of asceticism
estranges him from the world; he sees pictures which can deceive him as to
the stage his soul has reached, and in place of a true spiritual world he
sees a picture clouded over by his own self.
There is a
further consequence which leads into the realm of morality. Anyone who
believes that humility and surrender to the spiritual world will set him on
the right course of life fails to see that he is involving himself most
strongly in his own self and becoming an egoist in the worst sense, for it
means that he is content with himself as he is and has no wish to progress
any further. This egoism, which can degenerate into unrestrained ambition and
vanity, is the more dangerous because the victim of it cannot see it for
himself. Generally he looks on himself as a man who sinks down in deepest
humility at the feet of his God, while really he is being played on by the
devil of megalomania. A genuine humility would tell him something he refuses
to recognise, for it would lead him to say to himself: The powers of the
spiritual world are not to be found at the stage where I am standing now: I
must climb up to them; I must not rest content with the powers I already
have.
So we see the
results of the false asceticism which relies primarily on killing off
external things instead of strengthening the inner life: it conduces to
deception, error, vanity and egotism. In our time, especially, it would be a
great evil if this course were followed as a means of entering the spiritual
world. It serves merely to engross man in himself. Today the only true
asceticism must be sought in modern Spiritual Science, founded on the firm
ground of reality. Through it a person can develop his own faculties and
forces and thus rise to a comprehension of a spiritual world which is itself
a real world, not one that a man spins round himself.
This false
asceticism has yet another shadow-side. If you look at the realms of
nature around us, leading up from plants through animals to man, you will
find the vital functions changing in character stage by stage. For example,
the diseases of plants come only from some external cause, from abnormal
conditions of wind and weather, light and sunshine. These external
circumstances can produce illness in plants. If we go on to consider animals,
we find that they also, if left to themselves are greatly superior to human
beings in their fund of natural health. A human being may fall ill not only
through the life he leads or through external circumstances, but also as a
result of his inner life. If his soul is not well suited to his body, if the
spiritual heritage he brings from earlier incarnations cannot adapt itself
completely to his bodily constitution, these inner causes may bring about
illnesses which are very often wrongly diagnosed. They can be symptoms of a
maladjustment between soul and body.
We often find
that people with these symptoms are inclined to rise to higher worlds by
killing off their bodily nature. This is because the illness itself induces
them to separate their souls from bodies which the soul has not fully
permeated. In such people the body hardens itself in the most varied ways and
closes in on itself; and since they have not strengthened the soul, but have
used its weakness in order to escape from the influence of the bodily nature,
and have thus drawn away from the body the health-giving strengthening forces
of the soul, the body is made susceptible to all sorts of ailments. While a
true asceticism strengthens the soul, which then works back on the body and
makes it resistant to illness coming from outside, a false asceticism makes a
person vulnerable to any illness of that kind.
That is the
dangerous connection between false asceticism and the illnesses of our time.
And it is this that gives rise in wide circles, where such things are easily
misunderstood, to manifold errors as to the influence a spiritual-scientific
outlook can have on those who adopt it. For people who seek to come to a
sight of the spiritual world by way of a false asceticism are a fearful
spectacle for onlookers. Their false asceticism opens up a wide field of
action for harmful influences from the outer world. For these people, far
from being strengthened to resist the errors of our time, are well and truly
exposed to them.
Examples of this
can be seen in many theosophical tendencies today. Merely calling oneself a
“Theosophist” does not automatically guarantee the ability to act
as a spiritual impulse against the adverse currents of the present time. When
materialism prevails in the world, it is to some extent in tune with the
concepts which are formed in observing the sense-world. Hence we can say that
the materialism which applies to the external world and knows nothing of a
spiritual world is in a certain sense justified. But in the case of an
outlook which sets out to impart something about the spiritual world and
takes into itself a caricature of the materialistic prejudices of our day
because it is not founded on a real strengthening of spiritual forces, the
result is much worse. A theosophical outlook permeated by contemporary errors
may in some circumstances be much more harmful than a materialistic outlook;
and it should be remarked that thoroughly materialistic concepts have spread
widely in theosophical circles. So we hear the spiritual spoken of not as
Spirit,
but as though
the spirit were only an infinitely refined form of nebulous matter. In
speaking of the etheric body, these people picture only the physical refined
beyond a certain point, and then they speak of etheric
“vibrations”. On the astral level the vibrations are still finer;
on the mental level they are finer still, and so on. “Vibrations”
everywhere! Anyone who relies on these concepts will never attain to the
spiritual world; he will remain embedded in the physical world to which these
concepts ought to be confined.
In this way a
materialistic haze can be thrown over the most ordinary occasions in daily
life. For instance, if we are at a social gathering which has a pleasant
atmosphere, with people in harmony, and someone remarks on it in those terms,
that may be a humdrum way of putting it; but it is a true way and leads to a
better understanding than if at a gathering of theosophists one of them says
how good the vibrations are. To say that, one has to be a theosophical
materialist with crude ideas. And for anyone with a feeling for such things,
the whole atmosphere goes out of tune when these vibrations are said to be
dancing around. In these cases one can see how the introduction of
materialistic ideas into a spiritual outlook produces a horrifying impression
on outsiders, who may then say: These people talk about a spiritual world,
but they are really no different from us. With us, the light waves dance;
with them the spiritual waves dance. It is all the same
materialism.
All this needs
to be seen in its true light. Then we shall not get a wrong idea of what the
spiritual-scientific movement has to offer in our time. We shall see that
asceticism, by strengthening the soul, can itself lead to the spiritual world
and so bring new forces into our material existence. These are forces that
make for health, not for illness; they carry healthy life-forces into our
bodily organism. Of course it is not easy to determine how far a given
outlook brings healthy or unhealthy forces with it, for the latter are
strongly evident, as a rule, while healthy forces are usually not noticed.
However, a close observer will see how persons who stand in the stream of
true Spiritual Science are fertilised by it and draw from it health-giving
forces which work right down into the physical. He will see also that signs
of illness appear only if something alien to a spiritual stream is introduced
into it. Then the result can be worse than when the alien influence takes its
course in the outer world, where people are shielded by conventions from
carrying certain errors to an extreme.
If we see things
in this light, we shall understand true asceticism as a preparatory training
for a higher life, a way of developing our inner forces; and we shall then be
taking the good old Greek word in its right sense. For to practise asceticism
means training oneself, making oneself strong, even “adorning”
oneself
(sich schmucken),
so that the world can see what it means to be human. But if asceticism leads
you to leave the soul as it is and to weaken the bodily organism, the effect
is that the soul is sundered from the body; the body is then exposed to all
sorts of harmful influences and the asceticism is actually the source of all
manner of ailments.
The good and bad
sides of egoism will emerge when we come to consider its nature. Today I have
shown how true asceticism can never be an end in itself, but only a means of
reaching a higher human goal, the conscious experiencing of higher worlds.
Anyone wishing to practise this asceticism must therefore keep his feet
firmly planted on solid ground. He must not be a stranger to the world in
which he lives, but must always be extending his knowledge of the world.
Whatever he can bring back from higher worlds must always be measured and
assessed in relation to his work in the world; otherwise those who say that
asceticism is not work but idleness could well be right. And idleness can
easily give occasion for false asceticism, especially in our time. Anyone,
however, who keeps a firm foothold on the earth, will regard asceticism as
his highest ideal in relation to so serious a subject as our human faculties.
Our ideas can indeed rise high if we have before us an ideal picture of how
our faculties should work in the world.
Let us look for
a moment at the opening of the Old Testament: “And God said, Let there
be light.” Then we hear how God caused the physical sense-world to
arise day by day from the spiritual, and how at the end of each day God
looked at his creation and “saw that it was good.”
Similarly we
must maintain our healthy thinking, our reliable character, our unerring
feelings on the firm ground of reality, in order that we may rise to higher
worlds and discover there the facts which give birth to the entire physical
world. Then, when as searchers we come to know the spirit, and when we apply
to the world around us the forces we have developed and see how well adapted
to it they are, we can see that this is good. If we test the forces we have
acquired through true asceticism by putting them to work in the world, then
we have the right to say: Yes, they are good.
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