EL,
Stuttgart, 11-23-'13
Why is it
that an esoteric still hasn't arrived at vision in higher worlds even
though he's done his concentration and meditation exercises for
years? To answer this question clearly we'll now imagine what
meditating really is. When we want to meditate we want to turn away
from outer things, we don't want them to have any influence on our
thoughts any more, they're not supposed to disturb us in our
devotion to spiritual things. But, outer events and thoughts
about them constantly push in front of our meditating
soul; they want to divert us from our meditation, they defend
themselves against our devotion, so that we have to fight this with
all of our willpower. Now if we want to find out who is defending
himself against our better will the following example can perhaps
clarify things. Let's imagine that a stranger approaches us and
says: You are a fickle person. In 99 out of 100 cases we would be
very disturbed about this, because until now we thought that we
were a very good esoteric, who had seriously examined his inner life
as far as his defects are concerned, and now a stranger comes and
says the opposite.
Just as the
stranger steps before us, so in all the thoughts that push in between
our meditation something is placing itself before us which we think
that we don't know, and yet it's our own self that reveals itself in
all these thoughts and shows us how fickle we really are and how
little we can free ourselves from our daily worries and desires. For
what always presses into us during our meditation, when we have the
wish to separate ourselves from outer things and to unite
ourselves with spiritual things, is our streaming desire life.
It constantly streams into our thinking in pictures of our daily life
and it defends itself when we want to connect ourselves with
the spiritual realm.
It can be
good for us that this is so, since we get to know ourselves in our
continually inflowing desire life, in all of these pictures and
thoughts; it must bring us to self-knowledge — that we've
exercised very cursorily till now. But mostly we'll still look for
all kinds of excuses, because we don't want to accuse ourselves, and
that's why we still can't look into the spiritual world. Our
desire-ego pulls a veil in front of it. If we would turn our
attention away from the events and experiences of our desire life, if
we would turn our ego towards the spiritual and direct our whole
devotion towards it, we would then have been successful a long time
ago. If we would only direct as much attention to our
meditation as one uses for all kinds of conversations that one has in
social life or for news about one's dear fellow men, we would then
make rapid progress in our knowledge of higher worlds, we would then
push back our ego that's defending itself.
Our
thoughts are nothing but memories of previous events, and these events
are nothing but the desires that we've felt. If they hadn't become
pleasure for us we wouldn't have preserved them in our memory. If one
examines one's memory one will find that everything that gave one the
most pleasure is engraved in it. Everything that we remained
indifferent to, that we didn't enjoy has disappeared from our
memory, just as a child no longer remembers the little details of
what he learned in school later on, because he wasn't interested in
them, and so they don't become very deeply imprinted in his memory.
What we must
also apply in our esoteric development is devotion. The method that
we use in meditation isn't that important, and we shouldn't
want to meditate a lot so that we can have a lot of experiences
in the spiritual world, for thereby we would only see our own wishes,
and Lucifer would gain control over us. It's not easy to get
away from this world of Lucifer and Ahriman. If we think that we've
exercised thorough self-knowledge, but are still looking for excuses,
then it's Ahriman who's standing beside us. When we look for excuses
if someone tells us: You did this or that badly, — then that's
Ahriman just as much. We love Lucifer and Ahriman too much, they
accompany us our whole life long just because we love them so. And
why do we like them so much? An example may clarify this. With what
does a mother quiet her crying child? She caresses him and produces a
pleasant awareness of his body in him. Likewise Ahriman and
Lucifer bring us in contact with the world's things around us that
give us so much pleasure. We feel a pleasant stimulation through the
light rays that they let fall on objects and that then radiate back
from the things and touch us, just as the crying child feels his
mother's caresses. Lucifer and Ahriman caress us by magically
weaving light rays over the world's things, and our eyes become aware
of things by touching the rays.
These powers
also assert themselves in modern science and philosophy, as for
instance in a conversation of one of Schopenhauer's pupils with
Nietzsche. Deussen says that denial of the will conditions
life, whereas Nietzsche said that ennoblement of the will leads to
life. Now if one would look at the first statement exactly and think
about it one would have to say that denial of the will doesn't lead
to life but to death, for a drinker or tramp who lives out denial of
the will in his desires and doesn't keep them under control, who
affirms every pleasure that's offered to him in life — he will
not attain life, but will come to an early death, whereas one who
strives for ennoblement of the will, who rays out the forces of a
healing germ with which his rays unite, — he'll be healthy and
in tune with life. Scholars thought that they were looking through
good glasses in Deussen's statement, whereas they were really looking
through wooden glasses. Here again we see how Ahriman places himself
before men, for they love him so much that they don't let go of him.
Men go to church and pray to the beings they love. We often have
Christ's name on our lips when we mean Ahriman. We have to make all
of this clear to ourselves, for we must see Lucifer and Ahriman
in all of our deeds and omissions and namely there where these two
powers want to place themselves before our meditation to keep
us from looking into the spiritual world. For the moment has come
when we must try to form spiritual organs of clairvoyance in us and
develop ourselves for spiritual knowledge, so that these organs
don't dry up and waste away. We must slowly and gradually grow into
the spirit out of which we're born:
Ex Deo nascimur.
At life's
beginning that originates in the Godhead we were still permeated by
divine-spiritual forces that work up to the change of teeth at age
seven. That's the way everything is renewed in man, the old is pushed
out by the new, new hairs push out the old ones, the nails are cut
and they grow again. The spiritual forces that worked at the
up-building and growth of the child have come to an end with
the milk teeth, and now other forces or beings begin to work at an
up-building for the present incarnation, but with this the
deterioration and dying of organs begins immediately. They
gradually die, and also every thought that a man thinks causes
destruction in brain cells, so that matter is dedicated to slow dying:
In Christo morimur.
We grow towards the spirit slowly. Our hair becomes white, all our
organs pass over into the spirit slowly, our whole body strives
towards spiritualization and it'll arise again in the spirit:
Per Spiritum Sanctum reviviscimus.
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