MAN
AND THE WORLD OF STARS
I
The Spirit-Seed of Man's Physical Organism.
Walking, Speaking and Thinking,
and Their Correspondences in the Spiritual World.
Dornach, November 26, 1922
THESE lectures will deal with the two states of life
through which man passes: in the spiritual world between death
and a new birth, and in the physical world between birth and
death.
I
want to remind you today of certain matters to which your
attention was directed in recent lectures here. I said that
during the very important period stretching between death and a
new birth, man finds himself in the spiritual world with an
essentially higher kind of consciousness than he has during his
physical life on Earth.
When we are living here on Earth in our physical body, the
earthly consciousness that is connected with the senses and
nerves depends upon the whole organism. We feel ourselves as
human beings in as much as within the boundary of our skin we
have brain, lungs, heart, and the systems connected, with these
organs. Of all this we say that it is within our being.
On the other hand we feel ourselves connected with what is
around us through our senses or through our breathing, or again
through the taking of food. When we are living between death
and rebirth we cannot, however, speak in the same sense of what
is ‘within’ us. For directly we pass through the gate of death,
even directly we go to sleep, the conditions of our existence
are such that the whole universe may be designated as our inner
being.
Thus whereas here on Earth our constitution as human beings is
revealed by our organs and their interaction inside our skin,
during sleep unconsciously but between death and a new birth in
full consciousness, our inner nature is revealed to us as if it
were a world of stars. We feel ourselves related to the world
of stars in such a way that of the Beings of the stars we say
that they are our inner nature, just as here on Earth we say
that the lung or heart belong to our inner physical nature.
From the time of going to sleep until that of waking, we have a
cosmic life; from death until a new birth we have a
cosmic consciousness. That which here on Earth is our
outer world, particularly when we gaze out into the
cosmic expanse, becomes our inner being after death.
What, then, is our outer world in that spiritual existence? It
is what is now our inner nature. We fashion what is then
our outer world into a kind of spirit-seed from which our
future physical body on Earth is to spring into existence.
Together with the Beings of the Higher Hierarchies we elaborate
this spirit-seed, and at a certain point of time in our life
between death and a new birth, it is there as a spirit-entity,
bearing within it the forces which then build up the physical
body, just as the seed of the plant bears within it the forces
which will eventually produce the plant. But whereas we picture
the seed of the plant to be minute and the plant itself large
in comparison, the spirit-seed of the human physical body is,
so to speak, a universe of vast magnitude — although in
the strict sense it is not quite accurate to speak of
‘magnitude’ in this connection.
I
have also said that at a certain point this spirit-seed falls
away from us. From a certain point of time onwards we feel: in
association with other Beings of the Universe, with Beings of
the Higher Hierarchies, we have brought the spirit-seed of our
physical organism to a definite stage of development; now it
falls away from us and descends into the physical forces of the
Earth with which it is related and which come from the father
and the mother. It unites with the human element in the stream
of heredity and goes down to the Earth before we, as beings of
spirit-and-soul, ourselves descend. Thus we still spend a
certain period — although a short one — in the
spiritual world when the nexus of forces of our physical
organism has already gone down to the Earth and is shaping the
embryo in the body of the mother.
It
is during this period that we gather together from the cosmic
ether its own forces and substances and so build up our etheric
body to be added to our astral body and ego. Then, as a being
of ego, astral body and etheric body, we ourselves come down to
the Earth and unite with what the physical body — the
seed of which was sent down earlier — has now become.
To
anyone who observes this process closely, the relation of man
to the Universe becomes very clear, above all if attention is
directed to three manifestations of human nature to which
reference has often been made here and at other places —
I mean the three manifestations of human nature by virtue of
which man becomes the being that he is on Earth.
When we are born we are quite different from the beings we
afterwards become. It is on the Earth that we first learn to
walk, to speak, and to think. The
will that remains dim between birth and death, and
feeling that remains half dim, are already present in a
primitive form in the very tiny child. The life of feeling,
although it is concerned entirely with the inner functions, is
present in the very earliest years of childhood. The life of
will is also present, as is proved by the movements, however
chaotic, made by the little child. The reason why the life of
feeling and the life of will become different at a later stage
of existence is that thinking gradually begins to
permeate feeling and will, making them more mature.
Nevertheless they are already present in the tiny child.
Thinking, on the other hand, is developed by the child only on
Earth, in association with other human beings and in a certain
sense under their instruction. And it is the same with the
faculties of walking and speaking, which in reality are
acquired before the faculty of thinking.
Anyone who has a sufficiently deep feeling for what is truly
human will realize, simply by observing how the child develops
through walking, speaking, and thinking, what a tremendously
important part is played by these three faculties in the
earthly evolution of man. But man is not only an earthly being;
he is a being who belongs not only to the Earth with its forces
and substances, but equally to the spiritual world; he is
involved in the activities proceeding between the several
Beings of the Higher Hierarchies. It is, so to speak, only with
a part of his being that man belongs to earthly existence; with
the other part he belongs to a world that is not the material
world perceptible to the senses. It is in that other world that
he prepares his spirit-seed. Let it never be imagined that
man's achievements in culture and civilization on the Earth,
however complex and splendid they may be, are at all comparable
with the greatness of what is achieved by him together with the
Beings of the Higher Hierarchies in order to build this
wonder-structure of the human physical organism. Nevertheless,
what is thus fashioned — first of all in the spiritual
world and, as I explained, sent down to the Earth before
the man himself descends — is differently constituted
from the being who is afterwards present here on Earth between
birth and death.
The
spirit-seed of his physical body built up by man in the
spiritual world is imbued with forces. Its whole structure
which afterwards unites with the physical seed — or
rather, which becomes the physical seed of the human
being by taking substances from the parents — is endowed
with all kinds of qualities and faculties. But there are three
faculties for which the spirit-seed receives no forces at all
in the spiritual world. These three faculties are: thinking,
speaking, and walking — which are essentially
activities of man on the Earth.
Let
us take walking, and everything that is related to it. I might
describe it as the process whereby man orientates himself
within the sphere of his physical existence on Earth. When I
move my arm or my hand, that too is related to the mechanism of
walking, and when a tiny child begins to raise itself upright,
that is an act of orientation. All this is connected with what
we call the Earth's force of gravity, with the fact that
everything physical on the Earth has weight. But we
cannot say of the spirit-seed that is built up between death
and a new birth that it has weight or heaviness. —
Walking, then, is connected with the force of gravity. It is,
in fact, an overcoming of gravity, an act through which we
place ourselves into the field of gravity. That is what happens
every time we lift a leg to take a step forward. But we do not
acquire this faculty until we are already here on Earth; it is
not present between death and a new birth although there is
something that corresponds to it in that world. There too we
have orientation but it is not orientation within the field of
gravity, for in the spiritual world there is no force of
gravity, no weight. Orientation in that world is of a purely
spiritual character. Here on the Earth we lift our legs to
walk, we place ourselves in the field of gravity. The
corresponding process in the spiritual world is that of
becoming related to some Being of the Higher Hierarchies,
belonging, let us say, to the rank of Angel or Archangel. A man
feels himself inwardly near in soul to the influence of a
Being, say, of the Hierarchy of the Angels, or of the Exusiai,
with whom he is then working. This is how he finds his
orientation in the life between death and a new birth. Just as
here on the Earth we have to deal with our weight, in yonder
world we have to deal with what proceeds from the several
Beings of the higher Hierarchies by way of forces of sympathy
with our own human individuality.
The
force of gravity has a single direction — towards the
Earth; but what corresponds to the force of gravity in the
spiritual world has all directions, for the spiritual
Beings of the Hierarchies are not centralized, they are
everywhere. The orientation is not geometrical like the
orientation of gravity, towards the center of the Earth, but it
goes in all directions. According to whether man has to build
up his lung or perform some other work together with the Beings
of the Hierarchies, he can say to himself: The Third Hierarchy
is attracting me, or the First Hierarchy is attracting me. He
feels himself placed into the whole world of the Hierarchies.
He feels himself, as it were, drawn to all sides, not
physically, as through the pull of gravity, but spiritually, or
also, in some cases, repelled. This is what corresponds in the
spiritual world to physical orientation within the sphere of
gravity on the Earth.
Here, on the Earth, we learn to speak. This again belongs to
our inherent nature, but within the spiritual world between
death and a new birth we cannot speak; the physical organs
needed for speech are not there. In the spiritual world between
death and a new birth, we have, however, the following
experience. — We feel ourselves in rhythmically
alternating conditions; at one moment we have contracted, as it
were, into our own being; our higher consciousness also
contracts. Between death and a new birth there are times when
we shut ourselves within ourselves, just as we do while we are
asleep on Earth. But then we open ourselves again. Just as on
the physical Earth we direct our eyes and other senses out
towards the Universe, so in that other world we direct our
spiritual organs of perception outwards to the Beings of the
Hierarchies. We let our being stream out, as it were, into the
far spaces, and then draw it together again.
It
is a spiritual breathing process, but its course is such that
if we were to describe in earthly words, in pictures derived
from earthly life, what man says to himself there in the
spiritual world, we should have to speak somewhat as follows:
I, as a human being in the spiritual world, have this or that
to do. I know this through the powers of perception I have in
the spiritual world between death and a new birth. I feel
myself to be this human being, this individuality. As I breathe
out on Earth, so do I pour myself out in soul into the Universe
and become one with the Cosmos. As I breathe in on Earth, so do
I receive back into myself what I experienced while my being
was poured out into the Cosmos. — This is constantly
taking place between death and a new birth.
Let
us think of a man feeling himself enclosed within his own being
and then as though expanded into the cosmos. At one moment he
is concentrated in himself and then has expanded into the
Universe. When he draws into himself again it is just as when
we breathe in the air from the physical spaces of the
Universe.
Now
when we have poured our being over the Cosmos and draw it in
again, it begins — I cannot express it otherwise —
it begins to tell us what it was that we embraced when our
being was outspread as it were, in the cosmic expanse. When we
draw our being together again it begins to tell us what it is
in reality, and we then say, between death and a new birth: The
Logos in whom we first immersed ourselves — the
Logos is speaking within us.
Here on the Earth we have the feeling that in our physical
speech we shape the words when we exhale. Between death and a
new birth we become aware that the words which are outspread in
the Universe and reveal its essential nature, enter into us
when our being is inbreathed and manifest themselves within us
as the Cosmic Word. Here on Earth we speak as we breathe
out; in the spiritual world we speak as we breathe in. And as
we unite with our own being what the Logos — the Cosmic
Word — says to us, the Cosmic Thoughts light up
within our being. Here on Earth we make efforts through our
nervous system to harbor earthly thoughts. In the spiritual
world we draw into ourselves the Cosmic Thoughts out of the
Cosmic Speech of the Logos when our being has been spread over
the Universe.
Now
try to form a vivid conception of the following. Suppose that
you say to yourself between death and a new birth: I have this
or that to do ... all that you have experienced hitherto makes
you aware that you have this or that task to perform. Then,
with the intention of performing it, you spread your being into
the Universe; but the process of expansion is actually one of
orientation.
When you say to yourself here on Earth that you must buy some
butter ... that too signifies an intention. You set out for
Basle to buy your butter there, and bring it home with you.
Between death and a new birth you also have intentions —
in connection, of course, with what has to be achieved in that
other world. Then you expand your being; this is done with the
intention of acquiring orientation — it may be that you
are drawn to an Angel or perhaps to a Being of Will, or to some
other Being. Such a Being unites with your own expanded being.
You breathe in; this Being communicates to you its
participation in the Logos and the Cosmic Thoughts connected
with this Being light up within you.
When the spirit-seed of man comes down to the Earth (as I have
said, he himself remains a little while longer in the spiritual
world), he is not organized for thinking or speaking in the
earthly sense, nor for walking in the earthly sense, when
gravity is involved; but he is organized for movement and for
orientation among the Beings of the Higher Hierarchies. He is
not organized for speaking but for enabling the Logos to
resound within him. He is not organized for the shadowy
thoughts of earthly life, but for the thoughts that become
radiant in him, within the Cosmos.
Walking, speaking, and thinking here on the Earth have their
correspondences in the spiritual world: in the orientation
among the Hierarchies, in the resounding of the Cosmic
Word, and in the inner lighting up of the Cosmic
Thoughts.
Picture vividly to yourselves how man goes out after death into
the wide space of the Cosmos. He passes through the planetary
spheres around the Earth. I have spoken of these things in
recent lectures here. He passes the Moon-sphere, the
Venus-sphere, the Mercury-sphere, the Jupiter-sphere, the
Saturn-sphere. Having passed right out into the Cosmos he will
see the stars always from the other side. You must picture the
Earth and the stars around it. From the Earth we look up to the
stars; but when we are in the Cosmos we look from outside
inwards. The forces that enable us here on Earth to see the
stars, give us the physical image of the stars. The forces that
enable us to see the stars from the other side, do not allow
them to appear to us as they do here, but from that other world
the stars appear to us as spiritual Beings. And then, when we
leave the planetary spheres — I am obliged to use earthly
expressions — then, as conditions now are in
world-evolution (the ‘now’ is, of course, a cosmic ‘now’ of
lengthy duration), we realize with the understanding acquired
through the higher consciousness belonging to our life between
death and a new birth, what an infinite blessing it is for us
that the forces of Saturn not only shine inwards into the
planetary world of the Earth, but also outwards into the cosmic
expanse. There, of course, they are something altogether
different from the tiny, insignificant, bluish rays of Saturn
that can be visible to us here on Earth. There they are
spiritual rays, radiating out into the Universe — even
ceasing to be spatial; they radiate into a sphere beyond
space. They appear to us in such a way that between death
and rebirth we look back in gratitude to the outermost planet
of our earthly planetary system (for Uranus and Neptune are not
actual Earth planets; they were added at a later stage). We are
aware that this outermost planet not only shines down upon the
Earth but out into the far spaces of the Cosmos. And to the
spiritual rays which it radiates out into the Cosmos we owe the
fact that we are now divested of earthly gravity, divested of
the physical forces of speech, divested of the physical forces
of thought. Saturn, as it radiates out into cosmic space is in
very truth our greatest benefactor between death and a new
birth. Regarded from a spiritual standpoint it constitutes, in
this respect, the very antithesis of the Moon-forces.
The
spiritual Moon-forces keep us on the Earth. The spiritual
Saturn-forces enable us to live in the wide expanse of the
Universe. Here, on Earth, the Moon-forces are of very special
significance for us as human beings. I have explained that they
play their part even in the everyday happening of waking from
sleep. What the Moon-forces are for us here on Earth, the
Saturn-forces that radiate into the Universe from the outermost
sphere of our planetary system are for us between death and a
new birth. You must not picture that from one side Saturn
radiates towards the Earth and from another out into the
Universe. It is not so. The physical Saturn appears like a
hollow in this sphere of the cosmic Saturn which radiates,
spiritually, into cosmic space. And from a certain point of
time onwards after death, what thus radiates outwards hides
everything earthly from us — hides it all with light.
Here on Earth, man is under the influence of the spiritual
Moon-forces; between death and a new birth, he is under the
influence of the Saturn-forces. And when he descends again to
the Earth he draws himself away from the Saturn-forces and
enters gradually into the sphere of the Moon-forces. What
happens then?
As
long as man is related to the sphere of the Saturn-forces
— and Saturn is helped by Jupiter and Mars which have
special functions to perform of which I shall speak on some
future occasion — as long, therefore, as man is under the
influence of Saturn, Jupiter and Mars, he is a being who does
not strive to walk or speak or think in the earthly sense, but
to find his orientation among spiritual Beings, to experience
the Logos resounding within him, to have the Cosmic Thoughts
lighting up within him. And with these inner aims and
intentions the spirit-seed of the physical organism is, in very
truth, dispatched to the Earth.
In
effect, the human being who is descending from the spiritual
worlds to the Earth has not the least inclination to be exposed
to earthly gravity, to walk, or to bring the organs of speech
into movement so that physical speech may resound, neither has
he any inclination to think with a physical brain about
physical things. He has none of these faculties. He only
acquires them when, as a physical spirit-seed, he is sent down
from the sphere of the Saturn-forces to the Earth, passes
through the Sun-sphere and then enters the other planetary
spheres — the spheres of Mercury, Venus and Moon. The
Mercury, Venus, and Moon-spheres transform the cosmic
predisposition for spiritual orientation, experience of the
Logos and lighting up of Cosmic Thoughts inwardly, into the
rudimental faculties of walking, speaking, and thinking. And
the actual change is effected by the Sun, that is to say, the
spiritual Sun.
Through the fact that man enters the sphere of the Moon —
and the Moon-forces are helped by those of Venus and Mercury
— through this, the heavenly predispositions for
orientation, for experience of the Logos, and for Cosmic
Thought, are transformed into the earthly faculties. Thus to a
child here on Earth, as he begins to raise himself upright from
the crawling position, we ought in truth to say: Before you
were received into the spheres of Mercury, Venus and Moon,
yonder in the heavenly spheres you were organized for spiritual
orientation among the Hierarchies, for inner experience of the
resounding Logos, and for inner illumination with Cosmic
Thoughts. You have accomplished the metamorphosis from yonder
heavenly faculties into earthly faculties in that you passed
through the whole planetary sphere, and transformation of the
Heavenly into the Earthly was wrought by the Sun.
But
while this is happening, something else of tremendous
significance takes place. Passing from the heavenly into the
earthly realm, the human being experiences one side only of the
etheric world. The etheric world extends through all the
spheres of the planets and the stars. But the moment the
heavenly faculties are transformed into the earthly, the human
being loses the experience of the Cosmic Morality.
Orientation among the Beings of the Higher Hierarchies is
experienced not merely as a manifestation of natural laws but
as moral orientation. Likewise the Logos speaks in the
human being not in an a-moral way as do the phenomena of Nature
— for although they do not speak in an anti-moral way,
they speak ‘a-morally.’ The Logos speaks morality; so too the
Cosmic Thoughts light up as bearers of morality.
Saturn, Jupiter and Mars — this must be said despite the
horror it will cause to physicists — Saturn, Jupiter and
Mars contain, as well as their other forces, forces of moral
orientation. It is only when man transforms the heavenly
faculties that have been characterized into walking, speaking,
and thinking that he loses the moral elements. This is of
immense importance. When here on Earth we speak of the ether
— in which we live when we are approaching the Earth in
order to be born — we ascribe to the ether all kinds of
qualities. But that is only one side, one aspect, of the ether.
The other aspect is that it is a substance working with a moral
effect. It is permeated through and through with moral
impulses. Just as it is permeated with light, so it is
permeated with moral impulses. In the earthly ether these
impulses are not present.
Yet
man as an earthly being is not altogether bereft of the forces
within which he lives between death and a new birth. Even if by
some decree in the divine World-Order, man on the Earth had no
inkling whatever that as well as having a physical nature he
ought also to be a moral being, it might conceivably be that
his earthly faculties of walking, speaking, and thinking would
be dimly felt to correspond to a heavenly Orientation, a
heavenly Logos, a heavenly illumination with Cosmic Thoughts.
True, without some inner stimulus man knows very little on
Earth of these heavenly correspondences of his earthly
faculties; but for all that he has faint inklings of them. If
there were no after-effects of the Heavenly here on Earth,
every link binding man with the spiritual world would have been
forgotten, leaving not a single trace. Even conscience would
not stir. — I will take my start from something quite
concrete, and although what I shall now say will seem strange
to begin with, it is in exact accordance with facts established
by spiritual research.
Think of the Earth with the air around it; farther outward is
the cosmic ether, gradually passing over into the spiritual
sphere. Here on the Earth we inhale and exhale the air. This is
the rhythm of breathing. But out yonder we pour our being into
the Cosmos, receiving into ourselves the Logos and the Cosmic
Thoughts. There we let the World, the Universe, speak in us.
This too takes place in rhythm — in a rhythm determined
by the world of the stars. Out in the Cosmos there is also
rhythm. As human beings on the Earth we have the rhythm of
breathing, which is related in a definite way to the rhythm of
blood-circulation: four pulse-beats to one breath. In yonder
world, we breathe out and breathe in again spiritually; this is
cosmic rhythm. As men on Earth our life depends upon the fact
that we take a definite number of breaths a minute and have a
definite number of pulse-beats a minute. Out in the Universe we
live in a cosmic rhythm, in that we breathe in, as it were, the
moral-ethereal world; we are then within ourselves. And when we
breathe it out again we are united with the Beings of the
Higher Hierarchies.
Just as here in our physical body inside our skin, regular
movements are set going rhythmically, so out in the universe
the course and the positions of the stars set the cosmic rhythm
into which we pass between death and a new birth. We live in
the air, and in the air unfold our breathing rhythm with its
extraordinarily true regularity. If the rhythm is irregular,
this betokens illness for man. Out in the Universe —
although we have first to pass through intermediate cosmic
space — we experience the cosmic rhythm inasmuch as we
are then living in the cosmic ether, permeated as it is with
the moral element. Thus there are two different rhythms: human
and cosmic. In truth they are both human rhythms, for the
cosmic rhythm is the human rhythm between death and a new
birth.
On
the Earth, the Universe has, so to speak, the rhythm proper to
mankind; in yonder world it has the rhythm in which we
ourselves participate between death and rebirth. What, then,
lies between the two? The rhythm proper to mankind gives us the
faculty between birth and death to speak human words, to master
human language. Cosmic rhythm enables us between death and a
new birth to let the Cosmic Word resound within us. The Earth
endows us with the gift of speech. The Universe, the spiritual
Universe, gives us the Logos. You will realize that conditions
are utterly different in the sphere where cosmic rhythm gives
us the Logos, from conditions here on the Earth, where we
articulate the human word in the air.
What, then, constitutes the boundary between the one realm and
the other? Looking out into the physical world we have no
perception of the cosmic rhythm. There is inner law and order
in each realm, so what is it that lies between them? Between
them — if I may put it so — is the boundary at
which the cosmic rhythm breaks in that it is coming too near
the Earth; between them is that which, in certain
circumstances, may also bring the human breathing-rhythm into
disorder. Between them, in effect, are all the phenomena
pertaining to meteorology. If on the Earth there were no
blizzards, storms, wind, cloud formations, if the air did not
contain, in addition to oxygen and nitrogen for our breathing,
these meteorological phenomena which are always there, however
clear the air may appear to be — then we should look out
into the Universe and be aware of a different rhythm —
actually the counterpart of our breathing rhythm, only
transformed into infinite grandeur. Between the two spheres of
the World-Order lie the chaotic phenomena of wind and weather,
separating the cosmic rhythm and the human breathing rhythm
from each other.
Man
on the Earth is subject to gravity. He co-ordinates his gait,
every movement of his hands with this force of gravity. Out in
the Universe the forces are altogether different. Orientation
there is in all directions; the lines of force run from Being
to Being of the Hierarchies. What is between the two? As
meteorological phenomena are between heavenly rhythm and human
rhythm on Earth, what is between the cosmic force that is the
opposite of gravity and earthly gravity?
Now
just as meteorological phenomena lie between the two rhythms,
so between the force of gravity and the opposite heavenly force
of orientation there lie the volcanic forces, the forces
which manifest in earthquakes. These are irregular
forces.
(Note by translator. At this point in the lecture, Dr.
Steiner referred to the report alleging that Easter Island, far
out in the Pacific Ocean with its marvellous relics of ancient
civilizations had been destroyed by a terrible earthquake. It
will be remembered that the report was afterwards found to have
been incorrect.)
When viewed from the standpoint of the Cosmos in the way I have
described, the forces working in meteorological phenomena are
intimately connected with our breathing processes. What takes
place in the operations of volcanic forces is connected with
the forces of gravity in such a way that it would really seem
as though from time to time the supersensible Powers were
taking back fragments of the Earth by interfering with the laws
of gravity and casting into chaos what the forces of gravity
have gradually built up, in order to take it back again.
All
earthly formations built up by the force of gravity are subject
to these terrestrial phenomena. But whereas in the
manifestations of weather the elements of air, warmth, and
water are astir, in this case it is the solid and the watery
elements that are involved. Here we have to do with forces that
lead beyond the sphere of the regular laws of weight and
gravity and which in course of time will do away with the
Earth.
Now
as well as the meteorological and volcanic manifestations there
is a third kind of which I shall speak on another occasion.
Ordinary science does not really know what to make of volcanic
phenomena and often gives an explanation similar to the one I
read just now in connection with the appalling earthquake which
affected Easter Island. The author of an article on what was
said to have happened was a geologist — therefore one
possessed of expert knowledge in that particular domain. Having
referred to what had happened, he added: When we reflect about
the cause of these phenomena which recur from time to time and
cause such destruction, we must include this recent earthquake
in the category of tectonic tremors of the Earth. — What
does this tell us? ‘Tectonic tremors of the Earth’ are tremors
which cause an upheaval among portions of the Earth. So if we
are to speak of the cause of such an upheaval, we must speak of
the upheaval! Poverty comes from pauvreté!
It
is indeed a fact that in order to see the connections between
these things, we must approach the Spiritual. The moment we
pass from the realm of ordinary natural law in some sphere
— that of gravity, for example, or of rhythmic phenomena
in the ether — the moment we pass from this into what is
an apparent chaos (although through this chaos we are led into
higher realms of the Cosmos) ... in other words, if we are to
understand volcanic and meteorological phenomena, we
must turn towards the Spiritual.
Happenings in world-existence that seem to be purely fortuitous
— for so we call them — are revealed in the
spiritual realm in their lawful setting. It is through the
working of the meteorological domain that we, as human beings
between birth and death, are taken out of the sphere in which
we live between death and a new birth. If instead of the many
abstractions current at the present time we are to speak
concretely, we may say: In the Heavens man lives in a
World-Order that is hidden from him here on Earth through the
fact that he is involved in the meteorological phenomena of the
surrounding atmosphere. The meteorological domain is the
dividing-wall between what man experiences on the Earth and
what he experiences between death and a new birth.
In
this way I want, if I can, to show you the realities of these
things, not merely to talk round them.
|