VIII.
Concerning the Guardian of the Threshold and some Peculiarities
of Clairvoyant Consciousness
AS far
as his experiences in the physical world are concerned, man is outside
the spiritual world, in which, as has been stated in the preceding pages,
his real being is rooted. The part played by physical experience in human
nature is realised when we consider that for clairvoyant consciousness,
which enters the supersensitive worlds, it is necessary to strengthen
those very forces of the soul which are acquired in the physical world.
If this strengthening has not taken place, the soul feels a certain
timidity in entering the supersensible world. It even tries to avoid
an entrance by seeking proofs of its impossibility.
But
if the soul finds that it is strong enough to enter, if it recognises in
itself the forces which allow it, after entering, to maintain itself there
as an independent being, and to experience in its field of consciousness
not only thoughts but beings, as must be the case in the elemental and
spiritual worlds, then the soul also feels that only by life in the
physical world has it been enabled to gather those forces. It realises
the necessity of being led through the physical world on its journey
through the universe.
The realisation
of this especially results from the experience in thoughts through which
clairvoyant consciousness passes. On entering the elemental world, the
consciousness becomes filled with beings who are perceived in the form
of pictures. In that world it is not able to develop with regard to
these beings an inner activity of the soul similar to that which is
developed in thought-life within the physical world. Yet it would be
impossible to find one's way as a human being within the elemental world
if we did not enter it as thinking beings. We might certainly behold
the beings of the elemental world without thinking about them, but we
should not know what any of them really were. We should be like a man
looking at writing which he cannot read; he sees with his eyes exactly
the same thing as is seen by one who can read it, but it only has meaning
and substance for the latter.
Nevertheless
clairvoyant consciousness during its sojourn in the elemental world
exercises by no means the same kind of thought-activity as is carried
on in the physical world. Rather is it the case that a thinking being
— such as man — in the act of beholding the elemental world
also perceives the meaning of its beings and force, while a non-thinking
being would see the pictures without understanding their meaning and
essence.
On
entering the spiritual world, the Ahrimanic beings, for instance,
would be taken for something quite different from what they really are
if they were beheld by the soul of a non-thinking being. It is the same
with the Luciferic and other beings of the spiritual world. The Ahrimanic
and Luciferic beings are only beheld by man in their true reality if
he contemplates them from the spiritual world with clairvoyant sight
which has been strengthened by thinking.
If
the soul did not arm itself with adequate power for thought, the
Luciferic beings, when seen from the spiritual world, would take possession
of the world of clairvoyant pictures and bring about in the contemplating
soul the illusion that it was penetrating ever more deeply into the
spiritual world which it was really seeking, whereas actually it would
be sinking deeper and deeper into the world which the Luciferic forces
desire to prepare similar to their own being. The soul would certainly
feel itself becoming more independent, but it would be adapting itself
to a spiritual world not in keeping with its own nature and origin.
It would be entering a spiritual environment foreign to it.
The
physical world conceals from view such beings as the Luciferic
ones. Therefore, within that world they are not able to mislead the
consciousness. They are simply non-existent as far as this consciousness
is concerned, and, not being misled by them, it is able to strengthen
itself adequately by thought. It is one of the instinctive peculiarities
of healthy consciousness that it only desires to enter the spiritual
world in proportion as it has sufficiently strengthened itself in the
physical world for beholding the spiritual world. Consciousness clings
to the way in which it experiences itself in the physical world. It
feels itself to be in its own element when it can experience itself
by means of the thoughts, feelings, emotions, etc., which it owes to
the physical world. The tenacity with which consciousness clings to
this kind of experience is especially apparent at the actual moment
of entering supersensible worlds. Just as a person at particular moments
of his life clings to dear memories, so at the entrance to supersensible
worlds do there of necessity ascend from the depths of the soul all
possible affections of which the individual is capable. We then become
aware how strongly we cleave to that life which connects man with the
physical world. This attachment to earth-life then appears in its full
reality, stripped of our usual illusions. At the entrance to the
supersensible world, and, as it were, at the first supersensible
achievement — a certain self-knowledge is brought about, of which
we can previously have had scarcely any idea. And we see how much we have
to leave behind if we really desire to enter knowingly into that world in
which, after all, we are always actually present. What we have made of
ourselves as human beings, consciously and unconsciously in the physical
world comes before the soul with the most vivid distinctness.
The
result of this experience is often that all further attempts at
penetrating into super-sensible worlds are abandoned. For we then clearly
realise the necessity of changing our way of thinking and feeling, if
our sojourn in the spiritual world is to be successful. We have to make
up our minds to develop quite a different attitude of soul from the
one that has hitherto been ours, or, in other words, a different attitude
must be added to the one we have already acquired.
And yet — what
is it that really happens at the moment of entering the supersensible
world? We see the being which we have always been; but we do not now
see it from the physical world, from which we have always seen it hitherto;
we see it, free from illusions, in its true reality, from the standpoint
of the spiritual world. We behold it in such a way that we feel ourselves
permeated with those powers of cognition which are able to measure it
according to its spiritual worth. When we see ourselves thus, it becomes
plain why we hesitate about consciously entering the supersensible world;
the degree of strength becomes apparent, which it is necessary to
have before entering it. We see how, even with knowledge, we keep at
a distance from that world. And the more accurately we thus see through
ourselves, the more strongly do those affections come to the front by
means of which we desire to continue to keep our consciousness in the
physical world. Our increased knowledge entices those affections out
of their lurking-places in the depths of the soul. We must, however,
recognise them, for only by so doing are they overcome. But even when
recognised they still manifest their power in quite a remarkable way.
They desire to subdue the soul, which feels itself drawn down by them
as if into unknown depths. The moment of self-recognition is a serious
one. Far too much philosophising and theorising about self-knowledge
goes on in the world. The soul's gaze is thereby rather turned away from,
than drawn towards, the earnestness connected with real self-knowledge.
And yet, in spite of this necessary earnestness, it affords a great
satisfaction to know that human nature is so ordered that its instincts
prevent it from entering the spiritual world before it is able to develop
within itself, as self-experience, the necessary state of maturity.
What a satisfaction it is that the first momentous meeting with a being
of the supersensible world is the meeting with our own being in its
true reality which will guide us further in human evolution.
We
may say that there is hidden within man a being that keeps careful
watch and ward on the boundary which has to be crossed at the entrance
to the supersensible world. This spiritual being, hidden in man, which
is man himself, but which he can as little perceive with ordinary
consciousness as the eye can see itself, is the guardian of the threshold
of the spiritual world. We learn to recognise him at the moment at which
we are not only actually he, but are also confronting him, as though we
were standing outside him, and he were another being.
As
with other experiences of supersensible worlds, it is the strengthened
and reinforced faculties of the soul which make visible the guardian
of the threshold. For, setting aside the fact that the meeting with
the guardian becomes raised into knowledge by clairvoyant spiritual
sight, that meeting is not an event which happens only to the man who
has become clairvoyant. Exactly the same fact as is represented by this
meeting happens to every human being every time he falls asleep, and
we are confronting ourselves — which is the same thing as standing
before the guardian of the threshold — for so long as our sleep
lasts. During sleep the soul rises to its supersensible nature. But
its inner forces are not then strong enough to bring about consciousness
of itself.
In
order to understand clairvoyant experience, especially in its early
beginnings, it is particularly important to bear in mind that the soul
may already have begun to live in the supersensible world before it is
able to formulate to itself any knowledge worthy of the name. Clairvoyance
at first appears in a very subtle way, so that often, inasmuch, as they
expect to see something almost tangible, people do not heed clairvoyant
impressions which are flitting by, and will in no way recognise them
as such. In this case the impressions sink into oblivion almost as soon
as they appear. They enter the field of consciousness so slightly that
they remain quite unnoticed, like tiny clouds on the soul's horizon.
On
this account, and because people for the most part expect clairvoyance
to be quite different from what it at first is, it often remains
undiscovered by many earnest seekers after the spiritual world. In this
respect too the meeting with the guardian of the threshold is important.
If the soul has been strengthened just in the direction of self-knowledge,
this very meeting may merely be like the first gentle flitting-by of
a spiritual vision; but it will not be so easily consigned to oblivion
as other supersensible impressions, because people are more interested
in their own being than in other things.
There
is, however, no need at all that the meeting with the guardian
should be one of the first clairvoyant experiences. The soul may be
strengthened in various directions, and the first of such directions
may bring other beings or events within its spiritual horizon before
the meeting with the guardian takes place. Yet this meeting is sure
to occur comparatively soon after entering the supersensible world.
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