THE CONNECTION BETWEEN THE SPIRITUAL AND THE PHYSICAL WORLDS, AND HOW
THEY ARE EXPERIENCED AFTER DEATH
Berlin, 7th December, 1915.
In every domain Spiritual Science has to show us the connection
between the spiritual worlds and the world which we perceive through
our senses while in our earthly bodies, and which we seek to grasp
through intellectual thoughts. In several lectures we have been
especially occupied in considering the connection that exists between
the life led by man as a soul between death and rebirth, and the life
he passes here, while incarnated in a physical body. We must
continually bear firmly in mind that man, so long as he lives within
his physical body, directs his thoughts to that sphere which he has to
experience after death and before rebirth. We direct our thoughts to
that sphere, not in order to satisfy mere curiosity, but because we
have always been able to convince ourselves through our Spiritual
Science, that in turning our thought to that other world, we are able
to make a contribution to this world, by ennobling and invigorating
the conceptions needed for our acting, thinking, feeling, etc. We must
hold firmly to the thought that many of life's secrets can only be
solved if we have the courage to approach what may be called the
riddle of death. Now to-day, in order to consider the connection
between the spiritual and sense world, from a special standpoint, we
may commence with a trivial observation, yet one which contains
profound feeling. We shall start from the fact of which we have often
spoken, the fact that man goes through the gate of death. I repeat, we
start from something which is of every-day occurrence but is connected
with very deep experiences, gripping man in the depths of his soul. As
you know, when we stand face to face with a man here in the physical
world, we form thoughts which can unite us to him. We surround him
with feelings of sympathy, or antipathy, etc. We feel either
friendship or enmity for him. Briefly, we form here in the physical
world a certain relation to another man. This relation may arise
through ties of blood, or it may be brought about by the preferences
which occur in daily life. All this can be comprehended in the
expression, The relation of man to man. Now, when a man
with whom we have been united through various ties leaves the physical
world and passes through the gates of death, at first there remains to
us the memory of this man, that is, a number of feelings and thoughts
have arisen as a result of our relation to him, and which we ourselves
have experienced. But since he passed away from us through the gates
of death these thoughts and feelings which united us with him, now
live on in a very different manner. While he lived with us here on the
physical plane, we knew that at any time, in addition to the relation
our souls had formed to him, the outer physical presentment itself
might also appear; we knew that we could bring our inner experience to
bear upon this outer reality of his. And if at any time by some means
the man changed, we had to expect that the feelings we formerly had
towards him would also change in one way or another. We do not often
think of the radical difference it makes when suddenly, or even not
suddenly, the moment comes, when henceforward we can only carry in our
soul the memory of our friend, when we know, Never more will our
eyes see him, or our hands grasp his. The picture we formed of
him remains fundamentally as already fixed. But a radical change
appears in the relation of the two people. As has been said, it may
sound trivial, but it cuts deeply into the inner life in each
individual case, when a human soul which formerly impressed us from
without by means of its physical embodiments, becomes nothing but a
memory.
Let us now compare such a memory with others which we construct from
our experience. A great part of our physical life is lived in memory.
We know what we ourselves have experienced; we know, for instance, the
events which have occurred to us and for which we have retained ideas.
We know that we can revert to times now past through these thoughts,
times in which the events in question took place. But now, if we
examine the contents of the greater part of these recollections, we
find that in our thoughts we bear something within us which is no
longer here, past events, events which as reality we can no longer
meet with in the external world, for they belong to the past. If we
have absorbed some of the thoughts of Spiritual Science, then the
memory of our dead, or of one who has gone through the gates of death,
is quite different to our psychic gaze. We then hold thoughts in us,
but these thoughts are fixed on reality a reality certainly not
accessible to us in the external physical world, but existing in the
spiritual world. That to which those thoughts are directed is present,
although it cannot enter the sphere of our vision; but there is quite
a different conception in our memory from the mere remembrance of what
occurred here, in the physical world. Now, if we observe the fact
involved in this, in relation to the entire Cosmos, we can then say
that we carry in our souls thoughts of a being who is in the spiritual
world. Now we know, and this must be especially clear to us from the
considerations pursued here in the last three lectures, we know that
not only does the longing of souls incarnated here ascend to the
spiritual world, but that the consciousness of those who have passed
through the gates of death, and who are now living in the intermediate
world between death and rebirth, also extends to what transpires here
in the physical world. We can say: Those discarnate souls who live in
the spiritual world, receive into their consciousness, from the
physical world, that which their spiritual gaze and their spiritual
vision directed down to earth, enables them to perceive. I pointed out
in one of the last lectures how souls still incarnated here in
physical bodies can be perceived by the so-called dead, and
distinguished from souls who are already discarnate and living in the
intermediate stage, between death and rebirth. I explained that souls
living in the spiritual world must continually be active in order to
get any perception. For instance, they may be aware that another soul
is quite near them, but in order to perceive it, they must exert inner
activity. They have, as it were, to construct a picture. The picture
will not appear of itself, as it does here, in the physical world. In
the spiritual world comes first the thought of an existing
presence; and then one must, as it were, inwardly experience
this existing entity, so that the picture may arise. The process is
reversed; for there is a significant difference in the construction of
the picture, which refers to those souls already in the spiritual
world, and the picture of such as are still incarnate on the earth;
the discarnate soul must produce the picture of a soul that is already
in the spiritual world entirely from itself, and it must be thoroughly
active in so doing: but it may remain more passive in reference to a
soul still living on the earth, and then the picture rather comes to
it. The effort made is much slighter as regards a soul living on the
earth, than with one already discarnate; less inner activity is
necessary, and this represents the distinction between the two, to
those souls living between death and rebirth. If you grasp this, you
will realise that after the soul has passed through the gates of death
and lives the life of the spiritual world, it not only beholds the
Beings of the Higher Hierarchies, and the other human souls living
with it in the spiritual world, but there also appears the world of
souls to which it was related before going through the gates of death.
The important distinction must be firmly retained, that while man here
on earth has that which constitutes earth existence actually around
him, and can only comparatively speaking grasp the other world in
spirit, this is reversed on entering the spiritual world. What the
soul can there see of itself, without an effort, is our world; and
from there it is the other world; but the soul must exert
itself to make its own world, the world in which it then is, always
perceptible, and must always construct it for itself. Thus when man is
in the spiritual world, it is that world on which he must continually
work; and what is then to him the other world always
arises as if of itself. But now within this other world,
which for us on earth is this world, there appear the human souls,
with that which lives in them; especially those human souls with whom
relations were established during life on earth. These human souls
appear. Now within this sea of spiritual perception which we make
here, in our souls, of the other world there occasionally
appear the memories of those who have gone through the gates of death.
Picture this very clearly to yourselves. Let us suppose that we lived
in a time in which nobody could remember any dead person; the dead
would still perceive these human souls in which there lived no
memory of the dead. In this ocean of spiritual perceptions which the
discarnate souls can see, are preserved the memories of the dead. They
live within it. That is something which through man's free will and
love here is added to what the dead can always see from the other
side. Thus it is something added.
Now here again we come to a point when important questions arise to
the spiritual investigator. Here is one question which the spiritual
investigator must investigate. Of what significance is it to one who
has gone through the gates of death when he now sees embedded in the
souls ebbing and flowing in our world, the memories which these souls
streaming by have of the dead? When he perceives these memories what
do they mean to him? Now in spiritual investigation when such a
question arises it must first of all be thoroughly experienced. One
must live into it. If one begins to speculate as to a possible
solution to such a question, as to a possible answer, one will
certainly arrive at a false conclusion. For the effort of the ordinary
brain-fettered understanding gives, as a rule, no solution. That can
only be ascertained through inner activity. The answers to questions
relating to the enigmas of the spiritual world descend from the
spiritual world as by an act of grace. One must wait. There is really
nothing else to be done but to live with the question and meditate on
it again and again. Let it live in the soul with all the feelings
aroused by it, and then calmly wait; wait till one is worthy
that is the right word worthy to receive an answer from the
spiritual world. And, as a rule, this comes from quite a different
quarter than one would expect. Thus the answer comes from the
spiritual world at the right moment, that is, at the moment when one
has sufficiently prepared one's soul to receive the answer. As to
whether it is then the right answer, can as little be decided
theoretically, as can any statement concerning physical reality;
experience alone can furnish the criterion. To those who are always
denying spiritual reality by saying, That cannot be proved; and
everything must be proved, I should like to put one question:
Would it have been possible to prove the existence of a whale in the
physical world if none had ever been discovered? Nothing can be
proved, unless it can be shown in the same way as a reality; even in
the spiritual world one must experience that which is reality.
Now that which enters one's consciousness as the solution, may of
course appear in many different forms, according to the preparation
one has made in one's soul. The truth may present itself in many ways,
but nevertheless it must be experienced as the truth. For example, if
one lets the above question live aright in the soul, there then
appears, apparently from quite a different quarter, a picture, an
inner picture, which, I may say, gives one an inner impression of
offering something concerning the solution of the riddle in question.
The picture may arise of a man who allows himself to be photographed,
or has his portrait painted. The principle point in the picture will
be some physical thing, an image of this physical thing, and there
finally arises all that pertains to the realm of art, to the artistic
presentation. Now, if you consider how physical life runs its course,
you know that in physical life man is confronted with the outer
occurrences of nature, the external beings, and events of nature. They
run their course and expire. It is similar with all human concerns,
with what man attends to and plans for his necessities, and so on:
with what he makes as history. But beyond all this man seeks something
which really has nothing to do with the immediate necessities of the
world. The human soul is aware that if nature and history merely ran
their course in connection with the satisfaction of human needs, life
would become barren and desolate. Man creates here in physical
existence something above and beyond the course of nature and
necessity. He does not merely feel the need of seeing a certain
landscape, but also of copying it. He so arranges his life that anyone
connected with him can get one or more copies of it. Starting from
this we can think of the whole realm of art as something that man
creates here which is higher reality than the ordinary reality
pertaining to nature and history. Just think what the world would miss
if there were no Art, if Art did not add that which she can produce
from her own sources to that which is self-existing. Art creates
something which, one may say, need not of necessity exist. If she were
not there, all the necessities of nature might still go on. One may
suppose that even if no single copy of nature had been made and no
artistic representation, life would still pursue its course, from the
beginning to the end of the earth. We can picture to ourselves all
that men would then be without. But theoretically, it might be
possible for our earth to be punished through the inability to evolve
any Art. We have in Art something extending beyond life. Think of all
that Art has created in the world, and also of the progress of man
through the world; there you have in a sense two parallel progressive
processes: the necessities of nature and history, and the stream of
Art which is inserted in them.
Now just as Art, in a sense, brings as by enchantment a spiritual
world into the world of physical reality, so another world conjures up
into the world of those who have gone through the gates of death,
these memories which fill our souls here. As far as the dead are
concerned the world here might run its course without any memories
living in the souls here, memories born of love and all our human
relationships. But then the world of the dead would be to them as a
world would be to us in which we could find nothing
transcending ordinary reality. That is an extraordinarily significant
connection; for, through the thoughts of love, through the memories,
and all that thus transpires in our souls in connection with those no
longer in the physical world, there is created for the dead something
analogous to artistic creation here. And whereas here in the physical
world a man must bring forth artistic creation out of his own soul,
must contribute something out of his own being; to those now in the
spiritual world, the opposite must occur. It must be brought to them
from their other world from the souls still incarnated here
from the souls whom they can contemplate more passively than those
already with them in the spiritual world. That which the course of
nature and history would be to us, if it ran on simply of itself,
without Art, without everything man creates above and beyond the
immediate reality, such would our world be for the dead, if the souls
still on the physical plane retained no memories of them.
Now, such things as these are not really known in the physical life of
man. We may put it thus! These things are not known by the ordinary
consciousness, but the deeper subconsciousness is aware of them. And
life is always directed in accordance with this. Why has a value
always been laid by human communities on the celebration of All Souls
Day, and days for the dead? And those who cannot share in the usual
memorials for the dead, have nevertheless, their own days set apart
for this. Why is this? Because in the depths of man's subconsciousness
there lives what may be called a dim knowledge of what takes place in
the world by keeping alive the memory of the dead. When the receptive
soul of the seer celebrates All Souls Day, or a Sunday devoted to the
dead, or some similar day when many people come together full of the
memories of their dead, he sees the dead participate in the ceremony;
it is to them, with certain natural differences, as it is here when on
our globe people visit a cathedral and behold those forms which they
could never see unless something had been created out of the artist's
imagination, unless something had been added to physical existence; it
is the same when they hear a symphony, or music of that sort.
Something is reproduced in all these memories, which, in a sense,
transcends the ordinary level of existence. And as Art inserts herself
into the physical course of human history, so do these memories insert
themselves into the picture of their world which the souls between
death and rebirth receive. In such customs, which are formed in human
communities, that secret knowledge contained in the depths of the soul
finds expression. And many a worthy custom is connected with this
deeper sub-consciousness. We feel greater reverence for the
connections of life when we can permeate them with what Spiritual
Science offers to us, than if we are unable to do this. Each time that
a dead person contacts a remembrance of himself in the soul of a man
who was in some way connected with him here, it is always as if
something streamed over to him which beautified his life, and enhanced
its value. And as to us here, beauty comes from Art, so to the dead,
beauty streams to them from what rays forth out of the hearts and
souls of those who keep them in memory.
That is one connection between the world here and the spiritual world
there. And this thought is closely connected with that other thought,
which should arise from much of what can be cultivated in Spiritual
Science, the thought of the value and importance of earth life.
Spiritual Science does not lead us to despise the earth, with all that
it can bring forth; it leads us rather to consider life as a part of
the whole life of the Cosmos, as a necessary part, which is arranged
in conformity with what is active in the spiritual world, and without
which the spiritual world would not appear in its perfection. And
henceforth when we turn our attention to the fact that from out of our
physical world must spring forth beauty for the dead, we are struck by
the thought that the spiritual world would lack this beauty, if there
were no physical world, with the human souls who, while still in the
body, were able to evolve thoughts full of feeling and sentiment for
those no longer in this world. It signified a great deal, when in
olden times, whole peoples over and over again devoted themselves
reverently at their festivals to the thought of their great ancestors,
and united in feeling for the memory of their great forefathers. It
was of extreme significance, when they inaugurated such memorial days.
For it always meant the flashing up of something beautiful for the
spiritual worlds, that is, for the souls living there between death
and rebirth. And while here on earth it is not very rational, to put
it mildly, to take special pleasure in one's own portrait;
nevertheless for the dead it is important to find their image in those
souls who still remain here. For we must bear well in mind that our
earth-man appears very different to us when we consider him from the
standpoint of the spiritual, from the standpoint of the dead. We have
often emphasised this. Here we are enclosed within our skin. What we
designate as we, as I, that which is most
precious to us, is shut in by our skin. This holds good even for the
most selfless people; perhaps it holds good for them to a higher
degree than for those who consider themselves less selfless. First and
foremost we value that which is shut up inside this skin; then comes
the rest of the world. We regard that as our outer world. But the most
significant thing is that when we are outside our bodies we are one
with the outer world and live in it. I have often described this going
forth, this expansion of oneself over the outer world. And that which
then bears the same relation to us as does the outer world now, is
just what we have experienced here between birth and death. In a sense
we can say that the outer world becomes our inner world, and what is
now our inner world then becomes our outer world. Hence that
significant experience on entering the land of the spirit, Thou
art That, described in my book
Theosophy.
We then look back at our external world here, which is encompassed by our Ego.
But there the soul unable to be as egoistic as it was here, looks back on
the thoughts which appear, as thoughts of itself. That is, as it were,
the external world that confronts it, which is really incorporated
into the compass of what we can designate as the
Beautiful, that which exalts one. There comes into this
which has become an outer world consisting of the memory of all
we have undergone between birth and death something which does
not live in this, does not belong to this life of ours, but lives in
other souls and relates itself to us. That really means the insertion
of something transcending ourselves, transcending our outer world,
just as here some work of art rises above the ordinary reality which
exists in itself. And just as it is improper for a man here to be in
love with himself, and also with his own portrait, so there it is
quite natural for a man to stand in that sort of relation to what
arises as an image in the souls left behind the other
presentation of himself to stand before that picture, just as
here we stand before a landscape and compare it with the scene itself.
Thus when this question comes before the soul, one is shown the
presentment of the man and his picture, and from this one finds a way
of answering the question. Speculation as a rule does not help at all,
one must learn to wait, to wait patiently. In reality one should only
trouble oneself about the question relating to the spiritual world,
for the answers can only be given to the human soul as by a revealing
act of grace.
In this lecture I have pointed out that certain arrangements, such as
memorial festivals and days of remembrance as organised by men, are
connected with a profound knowledge, outside the range of ordinary
consciousness. That rests in the fact that man has in the depths of
his soul, a dim but comprehensive knowledge I have repeatedly
touched upon this and that he actually draws the knowledge
embraced by his consciousness from out of this comprehensive wisdom. I
have pointed out how clever we should really be if we could with our
ordinary consciousness embrace everything included in the astral body.
This astral body goes through life wiser, in a much higher sense than
we usually believe. We do not value the wisdom of our astral body
because we are quite unaware of it, but we can at least form some idea
of its comprehensive wisdom, if we place the following before our
souls.
Our lives are lived, as we might say, in the daytime. Now, we judge
events very little according to their connections. If we consider them
in their setting, many things would seem very, very different to us.
Consider this: Suppose we made a plan, we propose doing something, and
we decide in the morning what we intend doing during the evening. At
midday something occurs which prevents us fulfilling the evening plan.
We are really vexed that we are not able to carry it out. We think how
much finer and better it would have been if we had been able to
accomplish that particular thing. The astral body, however, with its
more embracing but subconscious knowledge, is of a different opinion!
In such a case the astral body often says: Yes, if you fulfil
what you had intended for the evening, you will be put in a position
in which you may perhaps fall and break your leg. Of course it
may be quite possible that we absolutely cannot avoid this; and if we
accomplish in the evening what we have arranged, there may previously
be a combination of circumstances that brings about the breaking of
our leg. We do not know of this in our ordinary consciousness, but the
astral body perceives it. And it therefore leads us into a position in
which we ourselves prevent the fulfilment of the evening programme.
The intervention which vexes us so much, is sometimes caused by this
extraordinary wise knowledge of the whole setting of our life. It is
not born of chance, but arises entirely from the wisdom of our astral
body, of which we remain unconscious, as regards our ordinary
consciousness. If we could only see why we do some things and omit
others, perhaps because we cannot do otherwise, or are led away first
to something else if we could perceive all that, we should see
that there is always a connection in our life which proceeds from
something within us, wiser than we are in our ordinary consciousness.
It is a part of our life's arrangement, but the whole purpose is not
perceptible. But as soon as we rightly hold the thought in our minds
of our connection with the spiritual world, the matter will then
become clear to us. Over us there is a Being that in a limited sense
belongs to us, a Being of the Hierarchy of the Angels, our Guardian
Angel. Indeed, at the present time we always turn at the beginning of
our lectures to the Guardian Spirits of those who have to fulfil the
severe demands of the time outside in the world. Now, this Guardian
Spirit of ours sees the whole connection. For a long time there has
been a feeling in human consciousness that certain connections,
imperceptible to us, are perceived by our Guardian Angel. Occasionally
the following takes place: The boundary between what we can see and
what we cannot see with ordinary consciousness, varies. There are,
indeed, persons here, who go through life with a certain inner
satisfaction, for no matter what comes to them they submit, because
they believe in a ruling wisdom. They are permeated with a feeling
that even things which may cause annoyance are also dominated by a
ruling wisdom. It is often very difficult to believe in a ruling
wisdom, when something happens which absolutely interferes with our
plans. But one of those very impulses which may easily bring us well
into connection with the workings of the spiritual world, consists in
our feeling ourselves cared for by this ruling wisdom, without thereby
becoming indolent or lazy, without believing that this wisdom works
independently for us individually. Thus the boundary is movable; and
in reference to our actions, and to forming of intentions, it varies
greatly. In ordinary consciousness there are certainly impulses of an
intimate and delicate nature. How often does it happen that we plan
something for a later time; then something occurs, and we feel that we
must do this which will really hinder the later action. We have the
feeling to act as immediate necessity demands and to set about the
matter with a certain delicacy, for we know if we set about it roughly
that it will disperse and vanish before us. We all have to a greater
or less degree within us, besides the self on which our freedom
depends, a second self that wants to feel its way through life, and
believes it attains far more through what it gropes for, than through
what it can strictly measure by intellect. The boundary is movable.
But at certain times the boundary is even more adjustable. And now
comes a point which should be correctly grasped with reference to
practical life. There are persons and in a certain respect we
are all gripped by that which rules in such people there are
persons who have a sort of longing, a sort of passion to order their
life aright, so to traverse the paths of life that they can order it
correctly. Let us take an exceptional case. Suppose a man you know
forms a friendship for another. You may say: I really cannot
understand why he has formed this friendship. I cannot make it out. No
real affinity exists between these two, yet he does all he can to
approach this man. It seems incomprehensible; and only a long
time afterwards we see the reason. The man in question may need the
other for something much later on. He formed a friendship with him,
not because he found something in him which gave him pleasure; he did
not form this friendship for its own sake, but as a means to something
which would apply later. He regulated his life rightly. Through
forming that friendship he attained some prospect, through which his
friend could later help him in some situation. And the consequence is
that something actually takes place through the help of the so-called
friend which could not otherwise have occurred. If you apply this
thought to life, you will see how often it occurs, that people arrange
something which they do not immediately desire, but they wish it so
arranged, because they will have need of its after-effects. Thus we
must say that there are people who, in the adjustment of their life
show an enormous subtlety we cannot call this wisdom; we should
feel an inner objection to calling it wisdom. But these people display
great cunning in doing something at an earlier stage of their life
which cannot profit them in any way at the time, but can only do so at
some later epoch. And we may express the following feeling: I
really did not think so and so was so clever, for when I approached
him and exchanged thoughts with him or was in his society he really
seemed much too stupid to order his life so cleverly. Now that
comes about because what a man carries in his astral body can be much
cleverer than his ordinary consciousness. And if he strongly checks
his egotism and drives it down to the sphere of unconsciousness, if he
does not live in accordance with a certain primitive instinct, but, as
it were, allows his egotism to dominate, it then lays holds of his
subconsciousness: and that other man that dwells in us all, but who as
a rule trains us to take life in a more natural and direct manner,
then guides him to organise his life, and to create beforehand the
conditions for something later. Then we see the astral body ruling
with its cleverness; but permeated, not by what usually dominates in
life, but by the egotism forced out of the ordinary consciousness down
into the astral consciousness. And we see such a man apparently going
through life with much more, of what we might call calculation, than
should come to him from his ordinary consciousness. There are many
dangerous sides to the evolution of the human soul. And it is very
important to become aware of this: that the moment we meet what is
ordinarily unconscious in us, we must try not to approach it with too
much egotism. Therefore, the avoidance of egotism in the development
towards the spiritual worlds must again and again be emphasised. For
beneath our ordinary consciousness there really rules something which
may be permeated by the consciousness of our Guardian Spirit from the
Hierarchy of the Angels. Then arises that which to the ordinary
consciousness makes a man seem to act without reflection, but which is
nevertheless subject to a certain law. I expressed this law very
simply in one of the Mystery Plays by letting one of the characters
say: The heart must often direct our Karma. And if one
transcends that which the heart indicates as Karma, and lets reason
prevail, then reason sometimes administers a strong dose of egotism.
Or it may be that egotism so prevails that we find man more subtle
than he seems to be, judging by his ordinary consciousness. In that
case he has pressed the egotism down into his astral body. Then comes
something into the working of his soul, not now from the regular
Beings of the Hierarchy of the Angels but something Luciferic, which
enables the man to embrace a wider sphere than he could consciously do
at this present stage of his evolution. Thus we see that what must of
necessity be strongly emphasised, when one is approaching spiritual
evolution, is really something delicate and intimate; for we must of
course strive to expand our consciousness, but in doing so, we should
always take care to obliterate the hindrance that is created when our
egotism is removed either into a deeper or a higher sphere of
consciousness.
You may ask: How can we do this? It is very easy to say
that we should not remove egotism from our ordinary consciousness. But
how are we to avoid doing this? Well, this cannot be done by rules,
but solely through widening one's interests. When a man extends his
interests he is always in some way already fighting his egotism. For
with each new interest we acquire we go a little beyond ourselves.
Therefore, we strive for Spiritual Science in this manner; that is, we
are taught not only to pay attention to what man so willingly listens
to because of his egotism, but to have our interests really extended.
How often does the demand arise, again and again: Why are the
books written in a way so difficult to understand? Could they not be
written in a simpler fashion? And someone or another makes
suggestions as to how these books could be written for the people and
made popular. One must really beware of gaining such popularity, for
it only enhances egotism. If it were made so easy to enter Spiritual
Science then each one could enter without overcoming his egotism. But
in the work accomplished spiritually by the efforts we have to make,
we get rid of a little of our egotism; we enter what we wish to
acquire through Spiritual Science in a more hallowed frame of mind if
we have had to take trouble over it, than if it had been presented to
us in quite an easy and popular form. For example, a person has come
home and said: There are so many people who have to work all day
long. If these people have to sit down in the evening to read these
difficult books, they do not get on very well. For such as these there
ought to be books quite easy to read. To this I had to answer
and quite correctly: Why should one prevent these people
from applying even the little time at their disposal to reading such
books as are purposely written with full regard to spiritual
conditions? Why should they occupy the little time they have in
reading books which may be more convenient, but which trivialise the
matter even textually? For it is just because these books do not
place the soul in the right attitude, that they drag down into the
trivial life that which should lead one away from it, even as regards
the nature of the experience connected with another sphere.
It will become of special importance in Spiritual Science that we
should bear in mind not only the What (the matter) but the
How (the manner): that we should really bestir ourselves
gradually to acquire ideas of a world quite different from the
ordinary physical world, and thus gradually to accustom ourselves to
form conceptions different from those we can build so comfortably in
the physical world. And now, in conclusion, I should like to mention a
concept which we shall require in our next lecture. But I shall
mention it to-day, so that you may see that it is well to assimilate
new words for that which transpires in the spiritual world.
We have a word which expresses the manner of a man's life between
birth and death, which expresses this life as it strikes us. We see
the young child fresh and rounded, its inner life flowing through its
outer form; teeming, as we say, with inner life, up to a certain year
when life pours itself into the outer form. Then comes a time when the
inner life ceases to flow, when we become wrinkled and things change
with us. In short, we can follow up this outer life from birth to
death in the changes presented by the physical body as life runs its
course. We call this growing old for the quite trivial reason that
when we are born the physical body is young, and when we die it is
old. Now with the etheric body the case is really quite different. Our
etheric body is old, if we can use the word at all in this connection,
it is old through the forces by which it is fashioned at conception or
birth. It is already old when we begin our physical life. It is then
already formed and chiseled out, it has a great many inner formations
(they are movements, yet inner formations); these are taken from it as
life proceeds. But on the other hand the life force is enhanced; it is
young when we grow old. While we say of the physical body we
are aging of the etheric body we must say we are growing young.
And it is well to use this expression. We really grow young as regards
our etheric body, for at our birth its whole forces are directed to
all that is enclosed in the human skin. When at a certain age we pass
through death, the etheric body enters into a certain relationship
with the whole Cosmos. It recovers the forces which have been taken
from it. The moment we became children its connection with the Cosmos
was broken. It had then to send all its forces into the small space
enclosed in the human skin. It was compressed, as it were, to one
point of the Cosmos. Now the etheric body revives, and gradually takes
it place in the Cosmos in proportion as the physical body ages.
Although somewhat of an exaggeration, we may say when we become
wrinkled, the etheric body becomes chubby and again becomes an image
of the external force, the creative, abounding force, in the same way
as the physical body is an expression of this force at the beginning
of childhood. We grow young as regards our etheric body. Thus it will
gradually become necessary to coin words wherewith really to grasp the
absolutely different relations of the spiritual world, It is important
that we should acquaint ourselves with this radical difference in the
whole perception of the spiritual world, as opposed to the physical
world. We shall start our considerations next time from this point.
From the fighters' courage,
From the blood of battles,
From the mourners' suffering,
From the people's sacrifice,
There will ripen fruits of Spirit
If with consciousness the soul
Turns her thought to Spirit Realms.
|