The Conditions of Esoteric Training
The conditions
attached to esoteric training are not arbitrary. They are the natural
outcome of esoteric knowledge. Just as no one can become a painter
who refuses to handle a paint-brush, so, too, no one can receive
esoteric training who is unwilling to meet the demands considered
necessary by the teacher. In the main, the latter can give nothing
but advice, and everything he says should be accepted in this sense.
He has already passed through the preparatory stages leading to a
knowledge of the higher worlds, and knows from experience what is
necessary. It depends entirely upon the free-will of each individual
human being whether or not he choose to tread the same path. To
insist on being admitted to esoteric training without fulfilling the
conditions would be equivalent to saying: “Teach me how to
paint, but do not ask me to handle a paint-brush.” The teacher
can never offer anything unless the recipient comes forward to meet
him of his own free-will. But it must be emphasized that a general
desire for higher knowledge is not sufficient. This desire will, of
course, be felt by many, but nothing can be achieved by it alone so
long as the special conditions attached to esoteric training are not
accepted. This point should be considered by those who complain that
the training is difficult. Failure or unwillingness to fulfill these
strict conditions must entail the abandonment of esoteric training,
for the time being. It is true, the conditions are strict, yet they
are not harsh, since their fulfillment not only should be, but indeed
must be a voluntary action.
If this fact be
overlooked, esoteric training can easily appear in the light of a
coercion of the soul or the conscience; for the training is based on
the development of the inner life, and the teacher must necessarily
give advice concerning this inner life. But there is no question of
compulsion when a demand is met out of free choice. To ask of the
teacher: “Give me your higher knowledge, but leave me my
customary emotions, feelings, and thoughts,” would be an
impossible demand. In this case the gratification of curiosity and
desire for knowledge would be the only motive. When pursued in such a
spirit, however, higher knowledge can never be attained.
Let us now
consider in turn the conditions imposed on the student. It should be
emphasized that the complete fulfillment of any one of these
conditions is not insisted upon, but only the corresponding effort.
No one can wholly fulfill them, but everyone can start on the path
toward them. It is the effort of will that matters, and the ready
disposition to enter upon this path.
1. The first
condition is that the student should pay heed to the advancement of
bodily and spiritual health. Of course, health does not depend,
in the first instance, upon the individual; but the effort to improve
in this respect lies within the scope of all. Sound knowledge can
alone proceed from sound human beings. The unhealthy are not
rejected, but it is demanded of the student that he should have the
will to lead a healthy life. In this respect he must attain the
greatest possible independence. The good counsels of others, freely
bestowed though generally unsought, are as a rule superfluous. Each
must endeavor to take care of himself. From the physical aspect it
will be more a question of warding off harmful influences than of
anything else. In fulfilling our duties we must often do things that
are detrimental to our health. We must decide at the right moment to
place duty higher than the care of our health. But just think how
much can be avoided with a little good will. Duty must in many cases
stand higher than health, often, even, than life itself; but pleasure
must never stand higher, as far as the student is concerned. For him
pleasure can only be a means to health and to life, and in this
connection we must, above all, be honest and truthful with ourselves.
There is no use in leading an ascetic life when the underlying motive
is the same in this case as in other enjoyments. Some may derive
satisfaction from asceticism just as others can from wine-bibbing,
but they must not imagine that this sort of asceticism will assist
them in attaining higher knowledge. Many ascribe to their
circumstances everything which apparently prevents them from making
progress. They say they cannot develop themselves under their
conditions of life. Now, many may find it desirable for other reasons
to change their conditions of life, but no one need do so for the
purpose of esoteric training. For the latter, a person need only do
as much as possible, whatever his position, to further the health of
body and soul. Every kind of work can serve the whole of humanity;
and it is a surer sign of greatness of soul to perceive clearly how
necessary for this whole is a petty, perhaps even an offensive
employment than to think: “This work is not good enough for me;
I am destined for something better.” Of special importance for
the student is the striving for complete health of mind. An unhealthy
life of thought and feeling will not fail to obstruct the path to
higher knowledge. Clear, calm thinking, with stability of feeling and
emotion, form here the basis of all work. Nothing should be further
removed from the student than an inclination toward a fantastical,
excitable life, toward nervousness, exaggeration, and fanaticism. He
should acquire a healthy outlook on all circumstances of life; he
should meet the demands of life with steady assurance, quietly
letting all things make their impression on him and reveal their
message. He should be at pains to do justice to life on every
occasion. All one-sided and extravagant tendencies in his sentiments
and criticisms should be avoided. Failing this, he would find his way
merely into worlds of his own imagination, instead of higher worlds;
in place of truth, his own pet opinions would assert themselves. It
is better for the student to be matter-of-fact, than excitable and
fantastic.
2. The second
condition is that the student should feel himself co-ordinated as a
link in the whole of life. Much is included in the fulfillment of
this condition, but each can only fulfill it in his own manner. If I
am a teacher, and my pupil does not fulfill my expectations, I must
not divert my resentment against him but against myself. I must feel
myself as one with my pupil, to the extent of asking myself:
“Is my pupil's deficiency not the result of my own
action?” Instead of directing my feelings against him I shall
rather reflect on my own attitude, so that the pupil may in the
future be better able to satisfy my demands. Proceeding from such an
attitude, a change will come over the student's whole way of
thinking. This holds good in all things, great or small. Such an
attitude of mind, for instance, alters the way I regard a criminal. I
suspend my judgment and say to myself: “I am, like him, only a
human being. Through favorable circumstances I received an education
which perhaps alone saved me from a similar fate.” I may then
also come to the conclusion that this human brother of mine would
have become a different man had my teachers taken the same pains with
him they took with me. I shall reflect on the fact that something was
given to me which was withheld from him, that I enjoy my fortune
precisely because it was denied him. And then I shall naturally come
to think of myself as a link in the whole of humanity and a sharer in
the responsibility for everything that occurs. This does not imply
that such a thought should be immediately translated into external
acts of agitation. It should be cherished in stillness within the
soul. Then quite gradually it will set its mark on the outward
demeanor of the student. In such matters each can only begin by
reforming himself. It is of no avail, in the sense of the foregoing
thoughts, to make general demands on the whole of humanity. It is
easy to decide what men ought to be; but the student works in the
depths, not on the surface. It would therefore be quite wrong to
relate the demand here indicated with an external, least of all
political, demands; with such matters this training can have nothing
to do. Political agitators know, as a rule, what to demand of other
people; but they say little of demands on themselves.
3. This brings
us to the third condition. The student must work his way upward to
the realization that his thoughts and feelings are as important for
the world as his actions. It must be realized that it is equally
injurious to hate a fellow-being as to strike him. The
realization will then follow that by perfecting ourselves we
accomplish something not only for ourselves, but for the whole world.
The world derives equal benefit from our untainted feelings and
thoughts as from our good demeanor, and as long as we cannot believe
in this cosmic importance of our inner life, we are unfit for the
path that is here described. We are only filled with the right faith
in the significance of our inner self, of our soul, when we work at
it as though it were at least as real as all external things. We must
admit that our every feeling produces an effect, just as does every
action of our hand.
4. These words
already express the fourth condition: to acquire the conviction
that the real being of man does not lie in his exterior but in his
interior. Anyone regarding himself as a product of the outer
world, as a result of the physical world, cannot succeed in this
esoteric training, for the feeling that we are beings of soul and
spirit forms its very basis. The acquisition of this feeling renders
the student fit to distinguish between inner duty and outward
success. He learns that the one cannot be directly measured by the
other. He must find the proper mean between what is indicated by
external conditions and what he recognizes as the right conduct for
himself. He should not force upon his environment anything for which
it can have no understanding, but also he must be quite free from the
desire to do only what can be appreciated by those around him. The
voice of his own soul struggling honestly toward knowledge must bring
him the one and only recognition of the truths for which he stands.
But he must learn as much as he possibly can from his environment so
as to discover what those around him need, and what is good for them.
In this way he will develop within himself what is known in spiritual
science as the “spiritual balance.” An open heart for the
needs of the outer world lies on one of the scales, and inner
fortitude and unfaltering endurance on the other.
5. This brings
us to the fifth condition: steadfastness in carrying out a
resolution. Nothing should induce the student to deviate from a
resolution he may have taken, save only the perception that he was in
error. Every resolution is a force, and if this force does not
produce an immediate effect at the point to which it was applied, it
works nevertheless on in its own way. Success is only decisive when
an action arises from desire. But all actions arising from desire are
worthless in relation to the higher worlds. There, love for an action
is alone the decisive factor. In this love, every impulse that impels
the student to action should fulfill itself. Undismayed by failure,
he will never grow weary of endeavoring repeatedly to translate some
resolution into action. And in this way he reaches the stage of not
waiting to see the outward effect of his actions, but of contenting
himself with performing them. He will learn to sacrifice his actions,
even his whole being, to the world, however the world may receive his
sacrifice. Readiness for a sacrifice, for an offering such as this,
must be shown by all who would pursue the path of esoteric
training.
6. A sixth
condition is the development of a feeling of thankfulness for
everything with which man is favored. We must realize that our
existence is a gift from the entire universe. How much is needed to
enable each one of us to receive and maintain his existence! How much
to we not owe to nature and to our fellow human beings! Thoughts such
as these must come naturally to all who seek esoteric training, for
if the latter do not feel inclined to entertain them, they will be
incapable of developing within themselves that all-embracing love
which is necessary for the attainment of higher knowledge. Nothing
can reveal itself to us which we do not love. And every revelation
must fill us with thankfulness, for we ourselves are the richer for
it.
7. All these
conditions must be united in a seventh: to regard life unceasingly in
the manner demanded by these conditions. The student thus makes
it possible to give his life the stamp of uniformity. All his modes
of expression will, in this way, be brought into harmony, and no
longer contradict each other. And thus he will prepare himself for
the inner tranquillity he must attain during the preliminary steps of
his training.
Anyone sincerely
showing the good will to fulfill these conditions may decide to seek
esoteric training. He will then be ready to follow the advice given
above. Much of his advice may appear to be merely on the surface, and
many will perhaps say that they did not expect the training to
proceed in such strict forms. But everything interior must manifest
itself in an exterior way, and just as a picture is not evident when
it exists only in the mind of the painter, so, too, there can be no
esoteric training without outward expression. Disregard for strict
forms is only shown by those who do not know that the exterior is the
avenue of expression for the interior. No doubt it is the spirit that
really matters, and not the form; but just as form without spirit is
null and void, so also would spirit remain inactive if it did not
create for itself a form.
The above
conditions are calculated to render the student strong enough to
fulfill the further demands made on him during this training. If he
fail in these conditions he will hesitate before each new demand, and
without them he will lack that faith in man which he must possess.
For all striving for truth must be founded on faith in and true love
for man. But though this is the foundation it is not the source of
all striving for truth, for such striving can only flow from the
soul's own fountain-head of strength. And the love of man must
gradually widen to a love for all living creatures, yes, for all
existence. Through failure to fulfill the condition here given, the
student will lack the perfect love for everything that fashions and
creates, and the inclination to refrain from all destruction as such.
He must so train himself that not only in his actions but also in his
words, feelings, and thoughts he will never destroy anything for the
sake of destruction. His joy must be in growth and life, and he must
only lend his hand to destruction, when he is also able, through and
by means of destruction, to promote new life. This does not mean that
the student must simply look on while evil runs riot, but rather that
he must seek even in evil that side through which he may transform it
into good. He will then see more and more clearly that evil and
imperfection may best be combated by the creation of the good and the
perfect. The student knows that out of nothing, nothing can be
created, but also that the imperfect can be transformed into the
perfect. Anyone developing within himself the disposition to create,
will soon find himself capable of facing evil in the right way.
It must be
clearly realized that the purpose of this training is to build and
not to destroy. The student should therefore bring with him the good
will for sincere and devoted work, and not the intention to criticize
and destroy. He should be capable of devotion, for he must learn what
he does not yet know; he should look reverently on that which
discloses itself. Work and devotion, these are the fundamental
qualities which must be demanded of the student. Some come to realize
that they are making no progress, though in their own opinion they
are untiringly active. The reason is that they have not grasped the
meaning of work and devotion in the right way. Work done for the sake
of success will be the least successful, and learning pursued without
devotion will be the least conducive to progress. Only the love of
work, and not of success, leads to progress. And if in learning the
student seeks straight thinking and sound judgment, he need not stunt
his devotion by doubts and suspicions.
We are not
reduced to service subjection in listening to some information with
quiet devotion and because we do not at once oppose it with our own
opinion. Anyone having advanced some way in the attainment of higher
knowledge knows that he owes everything to quiet attention and active
reflection, and not to willful personal judgment. We should always
bear in mind that we do not need to learn what we are already able to
judge. Therefore if our sole intention is to judge, we can learn
nothing more. Esoteric training, however, center in learning; we must
have absolutely the good will to be learners. If we cannot understand
something, it is far better not to judge than to judge adversely. We
can wait until later for a true understanding. The higher we climb
the ladder of knowledge, the more do we require the faculty of
listening with quiet devotion. All perception of truth, all life and
activity in the world of the spirit, become subtle and delicate in
comparison with the processes of the ordinary intellect and of life
in the physical world. The more the sphere of our activity widens out
before us, the more delicate are the processes in which we are
engaged. It is for this reason that men arrive at such different
opinions and points of view regarding the higher regions. But there
is one and only one opinion regarding higher truths and this one
opinion is within reach of all who, through work and devotion, have
so risen that they can really behold truth and contemplate it.
Opinions differing from the one true opinion can only be arrived at
when people, insufficiently prepared, judge in accordance with their
pet theories, their habitual ways of thought, and so forth. Just as
there is only one correct opinion concerning a mathematical problem,
so also is this true with regard to the higher worlds. But before
such an opinion can be reached, due preparation must first be
undergone. If this were only considered, the conditions attached to
esoteric training would be surprising to none. It is indeed true that
truth and the higher life abide in every soul, and that each can and
must find them for himself. But they lie deeply buried, and can only
be brought up from their deep shafts after all obstacles have been
cleared away. Only the experienced can advise how this may be done.
Such advice is found in spiritual science. No truth is forced on
anyone; no dogma is proclaimed; a way only is pointed out. It is true
that everyone could find this way unaided, but only perhaps after
many incarnations. By esoteric training this way is shortened. We
thus reach more quickly a point from which we can cooperate in those
worlds where the salvation and evolution of man are furthered by
spiritual work.
This brings to
an end the indications to be given in connection with the attainment
of knowledge of higher worlds. In the following chapter, and in
further connection with the above, it will be shown how this
development affects the higher elements of the human organism (the
soul-organism or astral body, and the spirit or thought-body.) In
this way the indications here given will be placed in a new light,
and it will be possible to penetrate them in a deeper sense.
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