V.
Concerning Reincarnation and Karma;
Man's Astral Body and the Spiritual World;
and Ahrimanic Beings
IT is especially
difficult for the soul to recognise that there is something prevailing
within its life which is environment to the soul in the same way as
the so-called outer world is environment to the ordinary senses. The
soul unconsciously resists this, because it imagines its independent
existence imperilled by such a fact; and therefore instinctively turns
away from it. For though more modern science theoretically admits the
existence of the fact, this does not mean that it is as yet fully realised,
with all the consequences of inwardly grasping it and becoming permeated
with it. If, however, our consciousness can attain to realising it as
a vital fact, we learn to discern in the soul's nature an inner nucleus,
which exists independently of everything that may be developed in the
sphere of the soul's conscious life between birth and death. We learn
to know in our own depths a being of which we feel our own self to be
the creation, and by which we also feel that our body, the vehicle of
consciousness, has been created, with all its powers and attributes.
In
the course of this experience the soul learns to feel that a spiritual
entity within it is growing to maturity, and that this entity withdraws
itself from the influence of conscious life. It begins to feel that this
inner entity becomes more and more vigorous, and also more independent,
in the course of the life between birth and death. It learns to realise
that the entity bears the same relation to the rest of experience, between
birth and death, as the developing germ in the being of a plant bears to
the sum-total of the plant in which it is developing: with the difference
that the germ of the plant is of a physical, whilst the germ of the
soul is of a spiritual nature.
The
course of such an experience leads one to admit the idea of repeated
earthly lives. In the nucleus of the soul, which is to a certain degree
independent of the soul, the latter is able to feel the germ of a new
human life. Into that life the germ will carry over the results of the
present one, when it has experienced in a spiritual world after death,
in a purely spiritual way, those conditions of life in which it cannot
share as long as it is enveloped in a physical earthly body between
birth and death.
From
this thought there necessarily results another, namely, that the
present physical life between birth and death is the product of other
lives long past, in which the soul developed a germ which continued
to live on in a purely spiritual world after death, till it was ripe
for entering upon a new earthly life through a new birth; just as the
germ of the plant becomes a new plant when, after having been detached
from the old plant in which it was formed, it has been for a while in
other conditions of life.
When
the soul has been adequately pre-pared, clairvoyant consciousness
learns to immerse itself in the process of the development in one human
life of a germ, in a certain way independent, which carries over the
results of that life into later earthly lives. In the form of a picture,
yet essentially real, as though it were about to reveal itself as an
individual entity, there emerges from the waves of the life of the soul
a second self, which appears independent of and set over the being which
we have previously looked upon as ourself. It seems like an inspirer
of that self. And we as this latter self, then flow into one with our
inspiring, superior self.
Now our
ordinary consciousness lives in this state of things, which is thus
beheld by clairvoyant consciousness, without being aware of the fact.
Once again it is necessary for the soul to be strengthened, in order
that one may hold one's own, not only as regards a spiritual outer world
with which one blends, but even as regards a spiritual entity which
in a higher sense is one's own self, and which nevertheless stands outside
that which is necessarily felt to be the self in the physical world.
The way in which the second self rises out of the waves of the soul's
life, in the form of a picture, yet essentially real, is quite different
in different human individualities. I have tried in the following plays
picturing the soul's life,
“The Portal of Initiation,”
“The Soul's Probation,”
“The Guardian of the Threshold,”
and “The Awakening of the Soul,” to portray how various human
individualities work their way through to the experience of this
“other self.”
Now
even if the soul in ordinary consciousness knows nothing about
its being inspired by its other self, yet that inspiration is nevertheless
there, in the depths of the soul. It is, however, not expressed in thoughts
or inner words; but takes effect through deeds, through events or through
something that happens. It is the other self that guides the soul to the
details of its life's destiny, and calls forth capacities, inclinations,
aptitudes, and so forth within it. This other self lives in the sum-total
or aggregate of the destiny of a human life. It moves alongside of the
self which is conditioned by birth and death, and shapes human life,
with all that it contains of joy and sorrow. When clairvoyant consciousness
joins that other self, it learns to say “ I ” to the total
aggregate of the life-destiny, just as physical man says “ I ”
to his individual being. That which is called by an Eastern word Karma,
grows together in the way that has been indicated, with the other self,
or the spiritual ego. The life of a human being is seen to be inspired
by his own permanent entity, which lives on from one life to another;
and the inspiration operates in such a way that the life-destiny of
one earthly existence is the direct consequence of previous ones.
Thus
man learns to know himself as another being, different from his
physical personality, which indeed only comes to expression in physical
existence through the working of this being. When the consciousness
enters the world of that other being, it is in a region which, as compared
with the elemental world, may be called the world of the spirit.
As
long as we feel ourselves to be in that world, we find ourselves
completely outside the sphere in which all the experiences and events
of the physical world are enacted. We look from another world back upon
the one which we have in a certain sense left behind. But we also arrive
at the knowledge that, as human beings, we belong to both worlds. We
feel the physical world to be a kind of reflected image of the world of
the spirit. Yet this image, although reflecting the events and beings of
the spiritual world, does not merely do this, but also leads an independent
life of its own, although it is only an image. It is as though a person
were to look into a mirror, and as though his reflected image were to
come to independent life whilst he was looking at it.
Moreover,
we learn to know spiritual beings who bring about this independent
life of the reflected image of the spiritual world. We feel them to
be beings who belong to the world of the spirit with regard to their
origin, but who have left the arena of that world, and sought their
field of action in the physical world. We thus find ourselves confronting
two worlds which act one upon the other. We will call the spiritual
world the higher, and the physical world the lower.
We
learn to know these spiritual beings in the lower world through
having to a certain extent transferred our point of view to the higher
world. One class of these spiritual beings presents itself in such a
way that through them we discover the reason why man experiences the
physical world as substantial and material. We discover that everything
material is in reality spiritual, and that the spiritual activity of
these beings consolidates and hardens the spiritual element of the physical
world into matter. However unpopular certain names are in the present
day, they are needed for that which is seen as reality in the world
of spirit. And so we will call the beings who bring about materialisation
the Ahrimanic beings. It appears that their original sphere is the mineral
kingdom. In that kingdom they reign in such a way that there they can
bring fully into manifestation what is their real nature. In the vegetable
kingdom and in the higher kingdoms of nature they accomplish something
else, which only becomes intelligible when the sphere of the elemental
world is taken into account. Seen from the world of the spirit, the
elemental world also appears like a reflection of that world. But the
reflected image in the elemental world has not so much independence as
that in the physical world. In the former, the spiritual beings of the
Ahrimanic class are less dominant than in the latter. From the elemental
world, however, they do develop, amongst other things, the kind of activity
which comes to expression in annihilation and death. We may even say
that in the higher kingdoms of nature the part of the Ahrimanic beings
is to introduce death. So far as death is part of the necessary order
of existence, the mission of the Ahrimanic beings is legitimate.
But
when we view the activity of the Ahrimanic beings from the world
of the spirit, we find that something else is connected with their work
in the lower world. Inasmuch as their sphere of action is there, they
do not feel bound to respect the limits which would restrain their activity
if they were operating in the higher world from which they originate.
In the lower world they struggle for an independence which they could
never have in the higher sphere. This is especially evident in the
influence of the Ahrimanic beings on man, inasmuch as man forms the
highest kingdom of nature in the physical world. As far as the human
life of the soul is bound up with physical existence, they strive to
give that life independence, to wrench it free from the higher world,
and to incorporate it entirely in the lower. Man as a thinking soul
originates from the higher world. The thinking soul which has become
clairvoyant also enters that higher world. But the thinking which is
evolved in, and bound up with, the physical world, has in it that which
must be called the influence of the Ahrimanic beings. These beings desire
to give, as it were, a kind of permanent existence to a sense-bound
thinking within the physical world. At the same time as their forces
bring death, they desire to hold back the thinking soul from death,
and only to allow the other principles of man to be carried away by
the stream of annihilation. Their intention is that the human power
of thought shall remain behind in the physical world and adopt a kind
of existence approximating ever more and more to the Ahrimanic nature.
In the
lower world what has just been described is only expressed through its
effects. Man may strive to saturate himself in his thinking soul with
the forces which recognise the spiritual world, and know themselves
to live and have their being within it. But he may also turn away with
his thinking soul from those forces, and only make use of his thought
for laying hold of the physical world. Temptations to the latter course
of action come from the Ahrimanic powers.
|