November 24, 1910 Berlin
Sleep has
often been celled the younger brother of death. This simile
illustrates the path pursued by the human spirit more
perfectly than might be supposed, if it is only viewed
superficially, for it give an idea of the way in which the
various incarnations through which the human spirit passes
are connected together.
In my
articles on "Reincarnation and Karma from the standpoint of
Modern Natural Science" (contained in the magazine
“Lucifer Gnosis”, — number 5 and 6) it
was shown that when the present natural scientific method
of thinking is carefully followed to its conclusion it
leads to the ancient teaching of the evolution of the
eternal human spirit through many lives. From this
knowledge the question necessarily arises: How are these
many lives connected one with another? In what sense is the
life of a human being the effect of his former lives and
how does it become the cause for later embodiments?
In this
respect the phenomenon of sleep affords an illustration of
the connection existing between cause and effect. It is
possible that many who think themselves great scientist
will find the following explanations quite
“unscientific.” This is comprehensible, for one
who has no experience of the super sensible realms, and who
at the same time has not be necessary reserve and modesty
to admit that he can still learn something, is bound to
make this objection. He should not say that the things here
brought forward are “contrary to reason,” and
that they cannot be proved by the intellect. The intellect
can do nothing more than combine and systematize facts.
Facts may be experienced but they cannot be proved by the
intelloct, A person cannot prove the existence of a whale
by means of the intellect; he must either see one for
himself, or accept the description given by those who have
seen one. This is the case too with super-sensible facts.
If a person is not sufficiently advanced to see them for
himself, he must accept the description given by others. I
can assure you the super-sensible facts I am about to
describe are, to those whose higher senses are opened, just
as “real” as a whale.
Now to our
illustration. I rise in the morning. My continued activity
has been interrupted by sleep. If there is to be order and
connection in my life, I cannot resume this activity in the
morning in any way I choose. The preliminary conditions for
what I have to do today were laid down by what I did
yesterday. What I did yesterday makes my destiny today that
is true in the fullest sense of the word. I myself have
laid down the causes, to which I must add the effects. I
find these causes again after I have been temporarily
withdrawn from them. They belong to me, although I was for
a time separated from them.
The effects
of my experiences of yesterday along to me also in another
way. I have become changed by them. Let us suppose I have
undertaken something in which I have only half succeeded. I
have thought over the reason why this partial failure
happened. If I have something similar to do again, I avoid
the recognized failure. I have therefore gained a new
capacity. In this way my experiences of yesterday are the
causes of my capacities today. My past is bound to me, it
lives on in my present and will follow me into my future.
Through my past I have made the position in which I find
myself at present, and the order of life demands that I
remain connected with this position. It would be senseless
under normal conditions if I were not to occupy a house
that I have had built for me.
If the
effects of my actions were not to be my destiny of today I
should not have had to waken this morning but be
created anew out of nothing; and the human spirit would
have to be newly created, it would have to
originate out of nothing, if the results of its earlier
lives were not connected with its later ones. Indeed man
cannot live and any other condition than the one produced
by his previous life. He cannot do it, any more than the
animals which, after wandering into the caves of Kentucky,
have lost the power to see, are able to live anywhere else
than in these caves. Through the act of wandering into
these caves that have made the conditions for their later
life. When a being has once been active, it is as a result
no longer isolated, it has placed itself in its actions,
and all that it becomes his free from that time connected
with the results of those actions. This connection of a
being with the results of its actions is the Law of Destiny
or Karma which governs the whole world; Karma is activity
which has become destiny.
Sleep is a
good picture of death, for during sleep we are really
withdrawn from the field of action upon which our destiny
awaits us. While we are asleep events continued in this
field of action upon which our destiny awaits us. While we
are asleep events continue in this field. For a time we
have no influence upon this stream of events, yet we find
the effects of our actions again, and we have to connect up
with them. Our personality really embodies itself
anew each morning in our world of action. What was
separated from us during the night is laid upon us, as it
were, during the day.
Thus it is
also with our actions in former incarnations. Their results
are incorporated in the world in which we were embodied;
but they belong to us, just as the life in the caves
belongs to the creatures which, on account of this life,
have lost the power to see. These creatures are only able
to live when they again find the environment to which they
have adapted themselves, and in the same way the human
spirit can only live in the environment which through its
actions it has made for itself.
The human
body is ensouled anew, as it were, every morning. Natural
scientists admit that something takes place here which they
cannot comprehend if they only consider the laws they have
discovered in the physical world.
Du Bois-Reymond,
in his lecture on
“The Limits of the Knowledge of Nature,”
says,
“If a brain which for some
reason is unconscious, one that is asleep for instance,
were examined by natural science (Du Bois-Reymond says
‘astronomically’), it would no longer contain
any mystery, and also if the rest of the body were
scientifically examined, the whole human machine with its
breathing, it's heart beat, its metabolism, its warmth
etc., up to the nature of matter and force, could be fully
explained. We can understand a man who is sleeping
dreamlessly. We can also understand the world until
consciousness dawns in the; but at this point it
becomes absolutely incomprehensible. And this is the case
also with the sleeping human being as soon as the first
dream-picture rises within him.”
This cannot be
otherwise, for what the natural scientist here describes as
sleeping dreamlessly, is the only part of man that is
subject to physical laws, but for the moment it is ensouled
again it follows the laws of the soul life. When asleep the
human body follows physical laws; when man awakes the light
of reasonable action flashes like a spark into the purely
physical existence. It is quite in accordance with the idea
of the natural philosopher Du Bois-Reymond to say: we may
examine every part of the sleeping body, but we shall not
be able to find the soul in it. The soul continues the
course of its logical actions where it left off before
going to sleep. Thus man belongs — even according to
this consideration — to two worlds. In the one he
lives bodily, and this bodily life can be followed by the
thread of physical laws; in the other he lives mentally,
and we cannot discover anything about this mental life by
means of physical laws. If we wish to study the one life we
must follow the laws of natural science, but if we wish to
comprehend the other must learn the laws of reasonable
action, logic, jurisprudence, economics, aesthetics
etc.
The
sleeping human body, which is governed only by physical
laws, can never do anything that belongs to the sphere of
the laws of reason. It is the human spirit which carries
these laws of reason into the physical world, and to the
extent that it has done so does it find them again when
after a pause of sleep it resumes the thread of its
activity.
Let us for
a moment consider our illustration of sleep. The
personality must connect itself with its deeds of yesterday
if its life is not to be senseless. It could not do this i
it did not feel itself connected with these actions. I
could not today resume my activity of yesterday if
something from this was not still within me. If today I had
forgotten all I experienced yesterday I should be a new man
and could not connect myself with anything. It is my
memory that enables me to connect myself with my
deeds of yesterday. My memory binds me to the effects of my
actions. What in the true sense belongs to my mental life
— e.g. logic — is the same today as yesterday.
This also applies to what did not yesterday, in fact never,
entered into my field of vision. My memory binds my logical
actions of today with my logical actions of yesterday. If
it depended solely upon logic we could in fact begin a new
life each morning, but that which binds us to our destiny
is preserved in the memory.
So I find
myself in the morning to be really a threefold
being. I find my body again which during my sleep
has obeyed merely physical laws. I find myself, my human
spirit again, which today is the same as
yesterday, it possesses today the gift of reasonable action
as it did yesterday. And I find all which yesterday, in
fact my whole past, has made out of me, stored up in the
memory.
This gives
us a picture of the threefold nature of man. In each new
embodiment a man finds himself in a physical organism which
is subject to the laws of external nature. In each
embodiment too he is the same human spirit, and as such he
is the eternal entity in the various embodiments.
Body and Spirit confront each other.
There must be something between them — just as the
memory is between my deeds of yesterday and those of today
— and this is the soul.
(Each of
these parts — soul and spirit — is again
subdivided into three, as explained in my books
“Theosophy”
and
“An Outline of Occult Science,”
so that man appears to be formed out of nine parts:–
Body
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1. Physical Body
2. Etheric or life Body
3. Sentient or astral Body
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Soul
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4. Sentient Soul
5. Intellectual Soul
6. Spiritual Soul
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Spirit
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7. Spirit Self
8. Life Spirit
9. Spirit Man
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During the
life in the physical world the sentient body and the
sentient soul intermingle, so does the spiritual soul and
Spirit Self. This makes it seem as if the nine parts were
reduced to seven.)
The soul
preserves the results of my actions in former lives. It
causes the spirit in a new embodiment to appear as what
former lives have made out of it.
Such are
the relations between body, soul and
spirit. The spirit is eternal. The body is subject
to birth and death according to the laws of the physical
world. The soul brings these two together again and again
by weaving the destiny out of the deeds.
For the
comparison of the soul with the memory it is also possible
to refer to modern natural science. In the year 1870 the
scientist
Ewald Hering
published an essay entitled,
“Memory, a universal function of Organized Matter.”
And
Ernst Haeckel
agrees with Hering's views. In his work
“Uber die Wellemzeugung der
Lebensteilchen” he says: “Deeper reflection
convinces us that unless we except the idea of an
unconscious memory in living matter the most important and
vital functions are quite inexplicable.” The capacity
of imagination, the formation of idea, thought and
consciousness, of practice and habit, nourishment and
propagation, depends upon the functions of unconscious
memory, whose activity is infinitely more important than
that of the conscious memory. Hering says quite rightly
that it is to the memory we all almost all we are and have.
Haeckel attempts to trace back the processes of heredity in
living beings to this unconscious memory. The circumstance
that the daughter is like the mother, that she inherits her
characteristics from the mother, will therefore depend upon
the unconscious memory of the living organism, which in the
course of propagation preserves the remembrance of earlier
forms. We will not now enter into the question as to what
part of Hering's or Haeckel's views is scientifically
tenable: what is important for us in our present study is,
that the scientist finds himself forced when he searches
beyond birth and death, when he must assume something that
survives death, to postulate a principle which she
conceives to be like the memory. He reaches out naturally
to a super sensible force, when the laws of physical nature
do not suffice.
In addition
it must be noticed that we are only dealing here with a
comparison, a simile; it must not be thought that by
‘soul’ we understand something that is exactly
the same as conscious memory. In ordinary life also
conscious memory is not always in play when we make use of
the experiences of the past. We have the fruits of these
experiences within us, even if we do not always consciously
remember the experiences. Does a person remember all the
details by means of which he learned to read and write?
Indeed has he ever been fully conscious of all these
details? Habit, for example, is a kind of unconscious
memory. The comparison with the memory is only made to draw
attention to the soul, which comes between body and spirit,
and is the mediator between the eternal being in the
physical body which is subject to birth and death.
The
reincarnating spirit Lions in the physical world the
results of its actions as its destiny, and the soul which
is bound up with it connects it with this destiny. Someone
might now inquire: how can the spirit find the results of
its deeds, for when it reincarnates it is placed in a
perfectly different world from the one it was in before?
This question is based upon a very superficial conception
of the linking up of destiny. If I leave Europe to live in
America I find myself in new surroundings, and get my life
in America will depend entirely upon my preceding life in
Europe. It's in Europe I had been a mechanic my life in
America will shape itself quite differently from what it
would had I been a bank manager. In the one case I shall
probably have machinery around me in America and in the
other bank papers. In each case my previous life determined
my environment; it draws to itself as it were, out of the
whole surrounding world, the things that are related to it.
This applies also to my spirit-soul. It surrounds itself of
necessity within that which it was associated in a previous
life. For no one can deny the likeness between sleep and
death, — no one who was aware that he is dealing only
with a comparison, although the most appropriate one. The
immediate course of events takes care that in the morning I
shall find the conditions I myself created the preceding
day. When I reincarnated I shall find an environment
corresponding to the results of my deeds in the preceding
life, for this is provided by the relationship existing
between my reborn spirit-soul and the things of this
environment.
What brings
me into this environment? Primarily the qualities of my
spirit-soul in the new incarnation. I only possess these
qualities through the deeds of my former life having
imprinted them in the spirit-soul. These deeds and
therefore are the real cause of my being born in certain
conditions. And what I do now will be the cause of my
meeting this or that condition in a future life. Thus a man
really makes his own destiny. This destiny remains
incomprehensible to him only as long as he considers the
one single life by itself and does not look upon it as one
in a series of lives.
We may
therefore say that nothing can happen to a person in life
except that her which he has himself made the conditions.
Only through insight into the law of destiny doesn't become
comprehensible why the good must often suffer, and why the
wicked may be fortunate. This apparent injustice in one
life vanishes when the view is extended over many. We must
not, however, picture the law of destiny simply as an
ordinary judge, or as being carried out in the way justice
is administered in the state. That would be as if one were
to imagine God as an old man with a white beard. Many fall
into this mistake. Especially do the opponents of the idea
of destiny start from such erronous suppositions. They
fight against the conceptions which they presume the
believers in destiny or karma possess, not against those
really held by them.
——————
What is
man's relation to the surrounding physical world when he
enters into a new incarnation? It depends upon two
circumstances. First, that in the interval between the two
incarnations he has taken no part in the physical world,
and secondly, what his development has been during this
interval. It is clear from the outset that nothing can flow
into this development from the physical world. It
can therefore only draw all that takes place in its out of
it self, or out of the super-sensible world. While embodied
it was entangled in the physical world of facts, after
disembodiment is withdrawn from the direct influence of
this world of facts and only retains from it what we have
compared to the memory. This “remains of
memory” consists of two parts. These become apparent
when we consider what has contributed towards its
construction.
The Spirit
has lived in the body and hence, through the body, has come
into contact with the outer world. This relation was
expressed in the fact that by means of the body, impulses,
desires and passions have developed, and that through
these, external actions were performed. The body causes man
to act under the influence of impulses, desires and
passions, and these produce effects in two directions. On
the one hand they give stamps to the external actions which
a person performs, and on the other they form his personal
character. The action I perform as a consequence of my
desire, and I myself am as personality that which these
desires bring to expression. The action passes over into
the outer world; desire remains in my soul — like the
concept in my memory. And as the idea-picture in my memory
is strengthened by each new similar impression, so also are
the desires of strengthened by each new action I perform
through their influence. Therefore, because of my existence
in the body, a number of impulses, desires and passions are
in my soul. The sum-total of these desires is described as
the “body of desire.” This body of desire is
closely connected with physical existence, for it
originates under the influence of the physical body. From
the moment, therefore, when the spirit is no longer
incarnated the body of desire can no longer continue its
development. The spirit must liberate itself from the body
of desire in so far as through it it has been connected
with the one physical life. After the physical life follows
another in which this liberation takes place. It might be
asked: Is not this body of desire also destroyed after
death? The answer is, No! To the extent to which the desire
outweighs the satisfaction at any moment of physical life,
to that extent does the desire still exist when the
possibility of satisfying it has ceased. Only the man who
wishes nothing at all from the sense-world has no surplus
of desire above satisfaction. Only one who has no wishes
dies without retaining a number of longings in his soul.
The desire is carried by the soul through death must
afterwards it gradually die away. The state in which this
takes place is called: the sojourn in the realm of desire.
It may easily be seen that this condition must last the
longer the more a person has felt himself bound up with the
sense life.
The second
part of the “remains of memory” is formed in
another way. Desire draws the spirit towards the past life;
this other part points him towards the future. Through its
activity in the body Spirit has made itself acquainted with
the world to which this body belongs. Each fresh effort,
each new experience increases this acquaintance. As a rule
a person does anything better at the second attempt than at
the first. The experience imprints itself upon the spirit
as an increase in its capacities. Thus our experience
affects our future, and when we no longer have
opportunity to pass through experiences, the results of
these experiences continues as “remains of
memory.” But no experience could affect us had we not
the capacity to learn something from it. What an experience
signifies to our future on the way in which we are able to
receive it and what we can make out of it. To
Goethe and at
variance with something different from what it was to his
valet, and it had an entirely different result in the
former from what it had in the latter. What capacities we
acquire through an experience depends therefore upon the
mental work we do in connection with the experience. A
certain moment of life I always have within me a sum of
results of my experiences, and this forms the foundation
for my capacities which develop in consequence. When the
human spirit passes out of the body at death he possesses a
number of experiences. He takes these over into the super
sensible life. If no bodily link now connects him with
physical existence, and if he has also stripped off the
wishes which bind him to this physical existence, then the
fruits of his experiences remain in him. And these fruits
are quite free from the direct influence of the
past life. The spirit can now only see what it can
make out of them for the future. After the spirit has left
the “place of desire” it is in a condition in
which the experiences of former lives change into
seed-talents, capacities etc. — for the future. The
life of the Spirit in this condition is described as the
sojourn in the “Abode of Bliss.” (Bliss
describes a state in which all care about the past is
forgotten and the heart simply beats for the future.) It is
self-evident that this condition will as a rule last longer
the greater the prospect at death of the acquirement of new
capacities. Naturally it is not a question here of setting
forth all the knowledge relating to the human spirit, we
only wish to show how the law of destiny operates in
physical life. For this purpose it is sufficient to know
what the spirit takes over with it out of the physical life
into super sensible conditions, and what it brings back
again to a new incarnation. It brings, in the form of
qualities of it being, the results of the experiences
gained in former lives.
In order
that the range of this may be perceived we need only give a
single example to make the process clear.
Kant target=_blank>Kant says:
“Two things fill me with ever-increasing admiration;
the starry heavens above me and the moral law within
me.” Every thoughtful person will admit that the
starry heavens have not originated from nothing, but have
gradually developed. It was constant self who, in 1755, in
an important work, try to explain the gradual formation of
a cosmos. But just as little may we accept the fact of the
moral law without an explanation. This moral law also has
not originated from nothing. In the first incarnation
through which man passed the moral law did not speak in him
as it spoke and Kant. Primitive man acts entirely in
accordance with his desires. He takes with him the
experiences gained from such action into the super sensible
conditions. They're the development of higher capacity, and
in the next incarnation it is not merely desire that works
in him, but this is already guided by the results of
previous experiences. And many incarnations are necessary
before man, who was originally slave of his desires,
confronts his environment with the refined moral law which
Kant describes as something upon which he looks with just
as much admiration as he does at the starry heavens.
——————
The
environment into which a person is born at a new
incarnation brings to him the results of his deeds as his
destiny. He himself enters into this environment with the
past these he has formed in the supersets will conditions
out of his former experiences therefore the oftener he has
incarnated, or the greater his efforts have been in his
previous incarnations, will his experiences in the physical
world as a rule be at a higher stage. By this means his
pilgrimage through the incarnations will be an upward
development. The treasures collected in his spirit as the
result of his experiences will grow greater and greater,
and he will approach his environment and his destiny, in a
more mature condition. This makes him more and more the
ruler of his destiny, for this is exactly what he gains out
of his experiences; he learns to understand the laws of the
world in which these experiences are gathered. At first the
spirit is unfamiliar with the surrounding world, it gropes
in the dark, as it were; but with each new incarnation it
grows lighter about it. The spirit acquires knowledge, it
learns the laws of its environment; in other words it does
more and more with consciousness than it formerly
did a mental condition. The constraint of the environment
becomes less and less, the spirit is able to determine
itself more and more. But the spirit which does this is the
free spirit. An action in the Fulbright light of
consciousness is a free action. (In my book
“The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity,”
London 1922, I have endeavored to show the nature of the free human
spirit.) the complete freedom of the human spirit is the
ideal of its development. One should not ask: is
man free or unfree? Philosophers who put the question
concerning freedom in this manner can never arrive any
clear idea about it, for man in his present condition is
neither free nor unfree. He is on the way to
freedom; he is partly free and partly unfree. He is free to
the extent that he has acquired knowledge, consciousness of
the laws of the world. These circumstance that our destiny
comes to us in the form of an absolute necessity is no
hindrance to our freedom, for when we act we
approach this destiny with the amount of independence we
have games for ourselves. It is not destiny that asked, but
we act in accordance with the laws of this
destiny.
When I
strike a match, fire is produced in accordance with
necessary laws, but it is I who set these necessary laws
and motion. In the same way I can only perform an action in
accordance with the necessary laws of my karma or destiny,
but it is I who set these necessary laws into activity. And
through my deeds new karma is created, just as fire
continues to burn according to necessary laws of nature
after I have kindled it.
This throws
light upon another doubt that may arise regarding the
action of the law of karma. Someone might say: if karma is
in unalterable law, then it is useless to help anyone, for
what happens to a person is the result of karma and it is
absolutely necessary for this or that to befall
him. Of course one cannot do away with the effects of karma
that a human spirit has created for itself in the former
incarnations, but the point is, how he meets this karma,
and what new karma he creates under the influence of the
old. If I help him I can bring it about that through his
actions he gives a favorable turn to his karma; if I
refrain from helping him, perhaps the opposite may occur.
It will however depend upon whether my health is wise or
unwise.
The
progress of the human spirit through incarnation after
incarnation brings about its higher development. This is
expressed in the fact that the world in which the
incarnation takes place is understood by the spirit more
and more; but to this world along the incarnations
themselves. Also in regard to these the spirit advances
from the condition of unconsciousness to that of
consciousness on the path of development lies the point at
which a man is able with full consciousness to look back at
his incarnations. This is a concept that make easily be
ridiculed, and it is of course extremely easy to criticize
it disparagingly, but one who does so has no idea of the
nature of such truths. Ridicule and criticism place
themselves like a dragon before the door of the sanctuary
within which they can be recognized. But as regards truths
that will only be realized by man in the future it is quite
evident that he cannot recognize them as facts at the
present. There is only one way to convince oneself of their
reality, and that is, to make efforts to attain to this
reality.
Answers to A Few Questions on
Karma
Question:
According to the law of reincarnation, is one to understand
that the human individuality possesses its tendencies,
capacities etc., as a result of its former lives? Does not
the fact that tendencies and capacities such as moral
courage, musical talent, etc. are directly handed down from
parents to children contradict this?
Answer:
With the right idea regarding the laws of reincarnation,
re-embodiment and karma there is no contradiction to be
found in the above question. Only those qualities of a
person that belong to his physical and etheric bodies can
be inherited from parents. The etheric body is the vehicle
of all the vital phenomena, the forces of growth and
reproduction, and everything connected with it can be
directly inherited. What is bound up with the so-called
soul-body is not inherited to the same extent. Under this
head is to be understood a certain disposition in the
feelings. Whether a person has good site,
well-developed hearing etc., can depend upon whether his
ancestors possess these qualities and bequeathed them to
him. On the other hand no one can transmit to his
successors that which is connected with the really
spiritual being of man, for instance, the keenness and
accuracy of his concepts, the reliability of his memory,
the moral sense, the developed faculty for knowledge and
art, etc. these are qualities that remain enclosed in his
individuality, and come to light in his next incarnation as
capacities, tendencies, character etc.
It must
also be remembered that the environment into which the
reincarnating spirit enters is not accidental, it is
definitely connected with his karma. Suppose, for example,
a person has acquired in his former life tendency towards a
morally strong character. It's allies in his karma that
this tendency shall be manifested when he is reincarnated.
It could not possibly be manifested if he were not too
incarnate in a body which is of a certain quality; but this
bodily quality must be inherited from the ancestors the
incarnating individuality is drawn by an indwelling force
of attraction towards those parents who can give it be
suitable body. This depends upon the fact that before
reincarnation this individuality connects itself with those
forces of the astral world which tend towards certain
physical conditions. Thus the man is born into the family
that can bequeath to him the bodily conditions
corresponding to the tendencies within him. It then seems
in the example of moral courage, as if this itself were
inherited from the parents; in reality the man has through
his individual nature sought out the family which enables
him to manifest moral courage.
In the
above example it may also be the case that the
individualies of the children and of the parents were
already connected in previous lives, and on that account
have come together again. The karmic laws are so
complicated that a true judgment can never be formed merely
from the outer appearance. It can only be arrived at in a
measure by one before whose spiritual sense-organs the
higher worlds lie partly open. One who, in addition to the
physical body, is able to provide the means whereby these
mental qualities of the children can develop.
Question:
“Does Anthroposophy say, there is no such thing as
chance? I cannot imagine for example, that when at a
theater fire 500 people are burnt to death, this was in the
karma of each one of them!”
Answer: The
laws of karma are so complex that no one should wonder if
some fact seems at first sight to human intellect to be
opposed to the general validity of this law. It should be
remembered that the intellect is schooled primarily in our
physical world, and that in general it is only accustomed
to admit only what it has learned in this world. But the
laws of karma belong to higher worlds. Hence if one thinks
of any event that happens to a person as being brought
about by, in the same way as one perhaps thinks of justice
in the earthly physical life alone, one must necessarily
meet with contradictions. We must understand that a common
experience affecting a number of persons in the physical
world, may signify something absolutely different and
higher worlds to each single one of them. Naturally the
reverse may also be the case, namely, that common ties may
result in earthly experiences in common. He alone who is
able to see clearly in the higher worlds can say what the
facts of the matter are in each case. When the karmic ties
of 500 people so work out that these people perish in a
fire, the following cases are possible:
1. The
karmic ties of these 500 people may have nothing whatever
to do with one another. A common misfortune is then related
to the karma of each of these persons in somewhat the same
way as the silhouette of a 500 persons on a wall is related
to the thoughts and feelings of these people.
Perhaps an hour before these people had nothing in common,
and again in an hours time they will perhaps have nothing
in common. What they have experienced by meeting together
in a large hall will have a particular result for each one.
Their being together is expressed in the above-mentioned
common silhouette, but one who from this silhouette wished
to conclude that these persons belong together would be
quite mistaken.
2. It is
possible that the common experience of the 500 persons has
nothing whatever to do with their karmic past, but that
through this common experience something is prepared that
will lead them together in the future. These 500 persons
may in the far future start a common enterprise; through
this calamity they have been brought together for higher
worlds. Spiritual investigators know, for example, that
society is now being formed over their origin to the
circumstance that the persons who come together have
experienced a common calamity in a far-distant past.
3. It may
be result of former wrongs committed by these persons in
common, — But there are also numberless other
possibilities, — for example, it might be a
combination of all three.
To speak of
‘chance’ in the physical world is certainly not
unjustified. Although it is true that if all worlds are
taken into consideration there is no ‘chance,’
it would be wrong to reject the word chance when speaking
merely of the connection of things in the physical world.
Chance in the physical world is brought about through the
fact that in this world events take place in outer space.
They must, inasmuch as they take place in space, obey the
laws of space. But in this space certain external things
may meet, which inwardly have nothing to do with one
another. As little as my face is really distorted because
it appears to be so in an uneven mirror, so little need the
causes which make a tile all from the roof and injure a
person just as he is passing, have anything to do with the
karma originating from his past. The mistake here made is,
that many think of karmic condition connections too simply.
They presume, for example, that if this person has been
injured by a tile he must karmically have deserved it. But
this is not necessarily the case. In light every man is
continually meeting with experiences which have nothing
whatever to do with his merit or his fault in the past.
Such experiences are balanced correctly in the future. What
happens to me today unmeritedly will be compensated to me
in the future. One thing is certain; everything is balanced
karmically. But whether an experience which happens to a
person is the result of his karmic past, or the cause of
his karmic future, can only be determined by an examination
of each case, and that cannot be done by the intellect
which is bound up with the physical world, but solely by
spiritual observation and experience.
Question:
Is one to understand according to the teaching of
reincarnation and karma that a highly developed human soul
is born again in a helpless, undeveloped child? Too many to
thought that one will have to begin again and again with
the stage of childhood is unbearable and illogical.
Answer: How
a person is able to work in the physical world depends
entirely upon the physical instrument he possesses. For
example, higher ideas can only be expressed in this world
if there is a fully developed brain. Just as the pianist
must wait until the pianoforte maker has so far perfected
the piano that he can express his musical ideas upon it, so
must the soul wait with its capacities gained in previous
lives until the forces of the physical world have built up
the bodily organs so far that they can become an expression
for these capacities. The forces of nature must go
their way, and the soul must also go its way. But
from the beginning of human life there is a cooperation
between the forces of the soul in those of the body. The
soul works in the still plastic and supple body of a child
so that later it can be a vehicle of the forces gained in
earlier lives. It is absolutely necessary for the reborn
human to enter into a new life with all previous
attainments he would not harmonize with his environment. He
has of course gained his capacities and powers under
entirely different conditions in an entirely different
environment. If he were simply to enter the world in his
former condition he would be a stranger in it. Therefore
the period of childhood is there to establish harmony
between the old conditions and the new. How would even an
exceedingly clever man belonging to Roman times up here in
the world of the present day if he were simply born into
this world with the powers he had attained? A force can
only be utilized when it is in harmony with the
environment. For example, if a genius is born, the power of
genius is already in the part of his inner being called the
causal body, but the intellectual soul and the soul body,
the body of feeling, are capable of being molded, they are
still plastic. These two parts of a human being are now
developed. The causal body works from within, and the
environment from without. When this work has been done
these two parts can then be the instruments of the
capacities that have been acquired. There is therefore
nothing illogical or unbearable in the thought of being
born as a child, it would be far more unbearable to be born
as a full-grown man into a world in which one is a
stranger.
Question:
Are two consecutive incarnations similar to each other, so
that for example an architect will be born again as an
architect, and a musician as a musician?
Answer:
That may be the case, but it is not necessarily
so. It happens sometimes, but it is by no means the rule. A
false conception may be formed on this subject if a
person's ideas of the laws of reincarnation depended too
much upon external things. For example, a person likes
southern countries, and on this account imagines that in a
previous life he must have been a Southerner. But such
inclinations do not affect the causal body, they only apply
to the one life. That which works over from one incarnation
into another must lie deeper down in the nature of the
human being. Take, for example, a musician. The spiritual
harmonies and rhythms which express themselves in tones
reach into the causal body. The tones themselves belong to
the outer physical life, they are in that part of the human
being which is born and dies. The higher part of the
soul-body which in one life is the suitable apparatus for
tone may in the next life be the apparatus for the
perception of the conditions of number and space.
Therefore the musician may in the next life become a
mathematician. This circumstance makes it possible for a
man in the course of his incarnations to become a versatile
of being by going to the most varied experiences. But, as
we have said, there are exceptions to this rule, and these
exceptions can be explained when one knows the laws of the
spiritual world.
Question:
When through disease of the brain a person is condemned to
idiocy, how is this to be regarded karmically?
Answer:
Things such as visa should be considered from the
standpoint of occult experience and not from speculation
and hypothesis. This question shall therefore be answered
by an example taken from life. A man was condemned in a
previous life to lead a dull, apathetic existence on
account of an undeveloped brain. In the interval between
his death and a new birth he was able to work upon all the
depressing experiences of such a life — being knocked
about, and the unkindness of people — and he was
reborn as a great philanthropist. A case such as this shows
clearly how mistaken a person could be if he were to relate
everything that happens to him in life simply to the past.
He can by no means always say: This destiny comes from this
or that fault in the past; he would just as often have to
think: this experience is not in any way related to the
past but is rather the cause for a karmic compensation in
the future. An idiot need not have earned this fate through
his deeds in the past, but the karmic results of his fate
in the present life will certainly be reaped in the future.
Just as in the case of a merchant his balance on any
particular day is determined according to the figures in
his cash-book, but he can always make fresh receipts and
expenditures, so in the life of an individual new deeds and
strokes of fate can come in, although his life's account is
quite definite at any given moment. Therefore, must not be
considered as something that cannot be influenced, it is
absolutely consistent with freedom and with the will of
man. Karma does not demand a surrender to an unalterable
fate, on the contrary, it brings the certainty that no
deed, no experience of man is without result or takes place
in the world without law, it is a just, compensating law.
Were there no karma, caprice would rule in the world, but
with if I can know that each of my actions, each of my
experiences dovetails into the whole governed by law. My
action is free, its effect is governed by law. It is a free
act of the merchant when he does a certain piece of
business, but the result of this business fits into his
balance according to law.
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