II
My dear Friends:
Since we spoke yesterday of
the differentiation of the soul life of the human being into three
parts — the realm of concepts, or of thought, the realm of
emotions, and the realm of will impulses — it should be
interesting to us now to raise the question: How can self-discipline,
the nurture of the soul life, take hold in order to work in the
appropriate way through one's own activity on the right
development and cultivation of these three parts of the soul life?
Here we shall begin with our life of will, of our will impulses, and
shall ask ourselves: What characteristics must we cultivate very
specially if we wish to work in a beneficial way on our will
life?
Most beneficial of all in
our will nature is the influence of a life directed in its entire
character toward a comprehension of karma. We might also say a life
of the soul which strives to develop, as its primary characteristic,
serenity and acceptance of our destiny. And how could one
better acquire for oneself this acceptance, this calmness of soul in
the presence of one's destiny, than by making of karma an actual
content in one's life?
What is the meaning of
making karma a real content of life? This means that — not merely
as a theory but in a living way — when our own sorrow or
the sorrow of another comes to us, when we experience joy or the
heaviest blow of fate, we shall really be fully aware that, in a
certain higher sense, we ourselves have given the occasion for this
painful blow of fate; that is, the development of such a mood as to
accept an experience of joy with gratitude, but also to be clearly
aware, especially in regard to joy, that we must not go to excess,
since it is perilous in a certain way to go to excess in connection
with joy. If we desire to move upward in our development, we can
conceive joy in the following way. For the most part, joy is
something which points to a future destiny, not to one already
past. In human life joy is for the most part something one has not
deserved through previous actions. When we investigate karma by
occult means, we always discover that in most cases the joy one
experiences has not been merited, and that the manner in which we
should view an experience of joy is to accept it gratefully as sent
to us by the Gods, as a gift of the Gods, and to say to ourselves:
The joy which comes to meet us today ought to kindle in us the will
to work in such a way as to take into ourselves the forces streaming
to us through this joy, and to apply these usefully. We must look
upon joy as a sort of prepayment on account for the future.
In the case of pain, on the
contrary, our actions have generally been such that we have merited
this, that we always find the reason in the course of our present
life or in earlier lives. And we must then realize with the utmost
clarity that we have often failed to conduct ourselves in our
external life in accordance with this karmic mood. We are not able so
to conduct ourselves always in external life in the presence of what
causes us pain that our conduct shall seem to be an acceptance
of our destiny. We do not generally have an insight into such a thing
at once — into the law of destiny. But, even though we are not
able to conduct ourselves outwardly in such a way, yet the principal
thing is that we shall do this inwardly.
And even if we have
conducted ourselves outwardly in accordance with this karmic mood,
yet we should say to ourselves in the depths of our souls that we
ourselves have been the cause of all such things. Suppose, for
instance, that some one strikes us, that he beats us with a
stick. In such a case it is generally characteristic for a person to
ask: "Who is it that strikes me?" No one says in such a case: "It is
I that beat myself." Only in the rarest cases do people say that they
punish themselves. And yet it is true that we ourselves lifted the
stick against another person in days gone by. Yes, it is you yourself
who then raised the stick. When we have to get rid of a
hindrance, this is karma. It is karma when others hold
something against us. It is we ourselves who cause something to
happen to us as recompense for something we have done. And thus do we
come to a right attitude toward our life, to a broadening of our
self, when we say: "Everything that befalls us comes from ourselves.
Our own action is fulfilled outwardly even when it seems as if some
one else performed it."
If we develop such a way of
viewing things, then our serenity, our acceptance of our karma
in all occurrences, fortifies our will. We grow stronger in facing
life through serenity, never weaker. Through anger and
impatience do we become weak? In the face of every occurrence
we are strong when we are serene. On the contrary, we become
continually weaker in will through moroseness and an unnatural
rebellion against destiny.
Of course, we must view
within a broad circumference that which we consider as destiny. We
must conceive this destiny of ours in such a way that we say to
ourselves, for instance, that the development of precisely one power
or another at a certain period of one's life pertains also to a
person's karma. And mistakes are often made just here in the
education of children. Here karma comes into contact with the problem
of education, for education is destiny, the karma of the human being
in youth.
We weaken the will of a
person when we expect him to learn something, to do something, for
which his capacities are not yet adequate. In the matter of
education one must have come to see clearly in advance what is
suitable for each stage of life in accordance with the
universal karma of humanity, so that the right thing may be
done. Doing the wrong thing is raising a rebellion against destiny,
against these laws, and is associated with enormous weakening of the
will. It is not possible to discuss here how a weakening of the will
is associated with all premature awakening of the sensual
appetites and passions. It is the prematurely awakened appetites,
instincts and passions which are especially subject to this
law. For making use prematurely of such instrumentalities as those of
the bodily organs is contrary to destiny. All that is directly
against the karma of humanity, all actions opposing the existing
arrangements of nature, are associated with a weakening of the
will.
Since people have been for
a long time without any true fundamental principles of education,
there are many persons in the present population of the world who did
not pass through their youth in the right way. If humanity does
not determine to direct what is most important of all, the
education of youth, according to spiritual-science, there will
arise a race with ever weaker wills — and this not in a merely
external sense. This takes a deep hold in the life of the human
being. Ask a number of persons how they came into their present
occupations. You may be sure that most of them will answer: "Well, we
don't know; we have in some way been pushed into the situation." This
feeling that one has been pushed into something, has been driven into
it, this feeling of discontent, is also a sign of weakness of
will.
Now, when this weakness of
will is brought about in the manner described, still other
results follow from this for the human soul, especially when the
weakness of will is evoked in such a way that states of anxiety, of
fear, of despair are produced at a youthful age. It will be
increasingly necessary that human beings shall possess a
fundamental understanding of the higher laws in order to overcome
states of despair, for it is precisely the mood of despair which is
to be expected when we do not proceed in accordance with the
knowledge of the spirit.
By means of a monistic and
materialistic world view it is possible to maintain only two
generations of persons with strong wills. Materialism can satisfy
just two generations: the one that founded the conception and the
pupils who have received it from the founders. This is the
peculiarity of the monistic and materialistic world view: that the
one who works in the laboratory or the workshop and who founded the
view, whose powers are fully occupied and activated by what he is
building up in his mind, — that he experiences an inner
satisfaction. But one who merely associates himself with these
theories, who takes over a materialism ready-made, will not be able
to attain to this inner satisfaction; and then the despair will work
back upon the culture of the will, and evoke weakness of will.
Weakening of the will, human beings lacking energy, will be the
results of this world view.
The second of the three
aspects of the super-sensible life we mentioned yesterday is that of
emotions. What affects the emotions in a favorable way?
If we take the utmost pains
to acquire an attentive attitude of mind, a marked attentiveness for
what occurs in our surroundings — and do not imagine that
this attentiveness is very generally and strongly developed by
people — this can be of great value to us. I must repeatedly mention a
single illustration. In a certain country the order of the
examinations for teachers was once altered, and for this reason all
the school teachers had to stand the examinations again. The examiner
had to test both old and young teachers. The young ones could be
tested on the basis of what they had learned in the teachers'
colleges. But how should he test the old teachers ? He decided to ask
them about nothing except the subjects which they had themselves been
teaching year after year in their own classes, and the result showed
that very many of them had no notion of the very subjects they
themselves had been teaching!
This attentiveness, this
habit of following with vital interest the things that occur in one's
environment, is most beneficial especially in the cultivation of the
emotions.
Now, the emotions, like
everything else in the soul, are connected in a certain way with the
will impulses; and, when we influence our emotional life in an
unfavorable way, we may thus influence indirectly the will impulses.
We nurture our emotions in a favorable way when we place ourselves
under the law of karma in the matter of our anger and our passions,
when we hold fast to karma. And this we find in what occurs in our
environment. We find it, for example, when any one does the opposite
of what we had expected. We may then say to ourselves: "All right;
that is simply what he is doing!" But we may also become angry and
violent, and this is a sign of weakness of will.
Outbursts of violent temper
hinder the development of the emotions and also the will, and have
also a far more extensive influence, as we shall see at once. Now,
anger is something that a person does not by any means have under his
control. Only gradually can he master the habit of becoming angry.
This can come about only gradually, and a person must have patience
with himself. To any one who believes he can achieve this with a turn
of the hand I must repeat the story of a teacher who took very much
to heart the task of ridding his pupils of anger. When he was faced
by the fact, after constant endeavors in this direction, that a boy
still became angry, he himself became so angry that he threw
the ink bottle at the child's head. A person who permits
himself to do such a thing must think for many, many weeks about
karma.
What this signifies will
become clear to us if we take this occasion to look a little more
deeply into the life of the human soul. There are the two poles in
the soul life, the life of will on the one hand and that of thoughts,
of conceptions, on the other. The emotions, the feelings of the
heart, are in the middle. Now, we know that the life of man
alternates between sleeping and waking; and, while the human being is
awake, his life of thoughts and conceptions is especially active. For
the fact that the will is not very wide awake can become clear to any
one who observes closely how a will impulse comes about. We must
first have a thought, a concept; only then does the will thrust
upward from the depths of the soul. The thought evokes the will
impulse. When the human being is awake, he is awake in thought, not
in the will.
But occult science teaches
us that, when we sleep, everything is reversed. Then the will is
awake and is very active, and thought is inactive. This cannot be
known by the human being in, a normal state of consciousness, for the
simple reason that he knows things only by means of his thoughts and
these are asleep. Thus he does not observe that his will is active.
When he rises to clairvoyance and arrives at the world of imaginative
representations, he then observes that the will awakes at the moment
when thinking falls asleep. And the will slips into the pictures that
he perceives and awakes these. The pictures are then woven out of
will. Thus the thoughts are then asleep but the will is awake.
But this being awake in our
will is connected with our total human nature in a manner entirely
different from the connection of our thoughts. According as the
person works or does not work, is well or ill, according as he
develops serenity or is hot-tempered, does the will become healthy or
unhealthy. And according as our will is healthy or unhealthy
does it work in the night on the condition of our life, even into the
physical body. Very much depends upon whether the person develops a
mood of serenity during the day, acceptance of his destiny, and thus
prepares his will so that this will may be said to develop a pleasant
warmth, a feeling of well-being, or whether, on the other hand, he
develops anger. This unhealthiness of the will streams into the body
during the state of sleep at night and is the cause of numerous
illnesses, whose causes are sought for but not found because the
resulting physical illnesses appear only after the lapse of years or
even decades. Only one who surveys great stretches of time can
see in the manner indicated the connection between conditions of the
soul and of the body. Even for the sake of bodily health, therefore,
must the will be disciplined.
We can also influence our
emotions through serenity and acceptance of our karma so that they
work beneficially even upon our bodily organization. On the other
hand, in no other way do we injure this organization more than
through apathy, lack of interest in what is occurring around us. This
apathy is spreading more and more; it is a characteristic which
constitutes the final reason for the fact that so few persons take an
interest in spiritual things. It may be supposed that objective
reasons lead to the adoption of a materialistic view of life.
There are really by no means such great objective reasons for a
materialistic view of life. No, it is apathy; no one can be a
materialist without being apathetic. It is a lack of attention to our
surroundings. Any one who observes his environment with alert
interest is confronted on all sides with that which can be harmonized
only with spiritual knowledge. But apathy deadens the emotions and
leads to weakness of will.
Furthermore, special
significance attaches to the characteristic called obstinacy — the
attitude of mind that insists inflexibly upon one thing or
another. Unhealthy emotions can also bring about obstinacy.
These things are often like the serpent that bites his own tail. All
that we have mentioned may be caused by obstinacy. Even persons who
go through life very inattentively may be very obstinate.
Persons who are altogether weak-willed are often discovered to be
obstinately persisting in something when we had not expected it, and
the weakness of will becomes constantly more marked if we do not
strive to overcome obstinacy. It is precisely in persons with weak
wills that we find this quality of obstinacy. On the other hand, when
we endeavor to avoid the development of obstinacy, we shall see that
in every instance we have improved our emotions and strengthened our
wills. Every time that we actually are goaded by an impulse to be
obstinate but refuse to yield to it, we become stronger for the task
of confronting life. We shall observe the fruits if we proceed
systematically against this fault; through struggling to overcome
obstinacy we attain to inner satisfaction. Especially does the
nurturing of our emotions depend upon our struggling in every
way to overcome obstinacy, apathy, lack of interest. In other
words, interest and attentiveness in relation to the
environment foster both the feelings of the heart and also the will.
Apathy and obstinacy have the opposite effect.
For a sound emotional life,
we have the fine word Sinnigkeit,
[Sinnigkeit is scarcely translatable in one
English word. It signifies the gift or capacity of inventive, or
creative, fantasy.]
Being creatively fanciful means that
something of that character occurs to one. Children ought to
play in such a way that the fantasy is stimulated, that the
spontaneous activity of their souls is stimulated, so that they
have to reflect about their play. They ought not to arrange building
blocks according to patterns: this merely develops pedantry, not
creative fantasy. We are developing creative fantasy when we
let children do all sorts of things in sand, when we take them into
the woods and let them form little baskets out of burs, and then
stimulate them to make other things of burs stuck together. Things
which cause a certain inventive talent to expand nourish creative
fantasy. Strange as it may seem, such cultivation of creative fantasy
brings serenity of soul, inner harmony, contentment into human
life.
Moreover, when, we go to
walk with a child, it is good to leave him free to do whatever he
will, provided he does not become too badly behaved. And, when the
child does anything, we should manifest our pleasure, our
participation and interest; we should not be unresponsive or
lacking in interest in what the child produces out of his own inner
nature. Even when instructing a child, we should connect what we
teach him with the forms and processes of nature. When children reach
an older stage, we should not then occupy .them with riddles or
puzzles taken from newspapers; this leads only to pedantry. On
the contrary, the observation of nature offers us the opposite
of what is afforded by the press for the cultivation of the emotional
life. A serene heart, a harmonious life of feeling, determines not
only the mental health but also that of the body, even though long
stretches of time may intervene between cause and effect.
We come now to the third
aspect of the super-sensible life, to thinking. As to this, we nurture
it, make it keen, especially by the development of characteristics
which seem to have nothing whatever to do with thinking, with the
concepts. By no method do we develop good thinking better than by
complete absorption and insight, not so much through logical
exercises but by observing one thing and another, using for this
purpose processes in nature, in order to penetrate into hidden
mysteries.' Through absorption in problems of nature and of humanity,
through the endeavor to understand complex personalities, through the
intensifying of attentiveness, do we render our thinking sagacious.
Absorption means striving to unravel something by thinking, by
conceiving. In this connection, we shall be able to see that such
absorption of the mind has a wonderfully good effect in later
life.
The following example is
taken from life. A little boy showed his mother remarkable aspects of
his observation, which were associated with extraordinary absorption
and capacity for insight. He said: "You know, when I walk on the
streets and see persons and animals, it seems as if I had to enter
into the persons and the animals. It happened that a poor woman met
me, and I entered into her, and this was terribly painful to me, very
distressing. (The child had not seen any sort of destitution at
home, but lived in altogether good circumstances.) And then I entered
into a horse and then into a pig." He described this in detail, and
was stimulated in extraordinary degree of compassion, to
special deeds of pity, through this feeling entrance into others.
Whence does this come, this expansion of one's understanding
for other beings? If we think the matter over in this case, we are
led back into the preceding incarnation, when the person in question
had cultivated the absorption in things, in the secrets of things,
that we have described.
But we do not have to wait
till the next incarnation for the results which follow the
cultivation of absorption. These come to manifestation even in a
single life. When we are induced in earliest youth to develop all of
this, we shall be possessed in later life of a clear, transparent
thinking, whereas otherwise we develop a scrappy, illogical thinking.
It is a fact that truly spiritual principles can bring us forward in
our course of life.
During recent decades there
have been few truly spiritual fundamental principles of
education, almost none at all. And now we are experiencing the
results. There is an extraordinary amount of wrong thinking in our
day. One can suffer the pains of martyrdom from the terribly
illogical life of the world. Any one who has acquired a certain
clairvoyance does not have in this connection simply the feeling that
one thing is correct and another incorrect, but he suffers
actual pain when confronted by illogical thinking, and a sense
of well-being in connection with clear, transparent thinking. This
signifies that he has acquired a feeling for such things, and this
enables him to decide. And this is a far truer differentiation when
one has actually reached this stage. This gives a far truer judgment
as to truth and untruth. This seems unbelievable, but it is true.
When something erroneous is said in the presence of a clairvoyant
person, the pain which rises in him shows him that this is illogical,
erroneous. Illogical, thinking is spread abroad in
extraordinary volume; at no time has illogical thinking been so
widespread as precisely in our time, in spite of the fact that people
pride themselves so much on their logical thinking. Here is an
example that may well seem somewhat crass, but is typical for the
habit of passing through experiences without interest or thought.
I was once traveling from
Rostock to Berlin. Into my compartment entered two persons, a
gentleman and a lady. I sat in one corner, and wished only to
observe. The gentleman was very soon behaving in a strange
manner, though he was otherwise probably a well educated
person. He lay down, sprang up again in five minutes; then again he
groaned in a pitiable manner. Since the lady considered him ill, she
was seized by pity, and very soon a conversation was in full course
between them. She told him that she had clearly observed that he was
ill, but she knew what it meant to be ill, for she was ill also. She
said she had a basket with her in which she had everything that
was curative for her. She said: "I can cure anything, for I have the
remedy for everything. And just think what a misfortune has befallen
me! I have come from the far interior of Russia all the way here to
the Baltic Sea, in order to recuperate and to do something for my
ailment, and, just as I arrive, I find that I have left at home one
of my important remedies. Now I must turn back at once, and this hope
also has been in vain."
The gentleman then narrated
his sufferings, and she gave him a remedy for each of his illnesses,
and he promised to do everything, making notes about all. I think
there were eleven different prescriptions. She then began to
enumerate all of her illnesses one by one; and he began to show his
knowledge of what would cure them: that for one ailment she
could be helped in a certain sanatorium, and for another in another
sanatorium. She, in turn, wrote down all the addresses and was only
afraid that the pharmacies might be closed for Sunday when she
arrived in Berlin. These two persons never for one moment noticed the
strange contradiction that each knew only what might help the other
one, but for himself and herself knew no means of help. This
experience gave these two educated persons the possibility of bathing
in a sea of nonsense that streamed forth from each of them.
Such things must be clearly
visualized when we demand that self-knowledge shall give insight. We
must demand of self-knowledge that it shall develop coherence in
thinking, but especially absorption in the matter in question. All
these things work together in the soul. Such scrappy thinking has the
inevitable effect, even though only after a long time, of making the
person morose, sullen, hypochondriacal about everything, and
frequently we do not know where the causes of this are to be found.
Insufficient cultivation of absorption and insight makes one sullen,
morose, hypochondriacal. What is so extremely necessary to thinking
seems to have nothing to do with it. All obstinacy, all self-seeking,
have a destructive effect upon thinking. All characteristics
connected with obstinacy and selfishness — such as ambition,
vanity, — all these things that seem to tend in a very different
direction make our thinking unsound, and act unfavorably upon our
mood of soul. We must seek, therefore, to overcome obstinacy,
self-seeking, egoism; and cultivate, on the contrary, a certain
absorption in things and a certain self-sacrificing attitude
toward other beings. Absorption, a self-sacrificing attitude, in
regard to the most insignificant objects and occurrences have a
favorable effect upon thinking and upon one's mood. In truth,
self-seeking and egoism bring their own punishment through the fact
that the self-seeking person becomes more and more discontented,
complains more and more that he comes off badly. When any one feels
this way about himself, he ought to place himself under the law of
karma and ask himself, when he is discontented: "What
self-seeking has brought this discontentment upon me?"
In just this way can we
describe how we may develop and how injure the three parts of the
soul life, and this is extraordinarily important. We see, therefore,
that spiritual-science is something which lays deep hold upon our
life. It lays deep hold upon our life because a true observation of
spiritual principles may lead us to self-education, and this is of
the utmost importance for our life, and will become of ever
increasing significance to the extent that the time in man's
evolution has passed when human beings were led by the Gods from
above, from the higher worlds. In ever increasing measure, men will
have to do things of themselves, without being directed and led.
With regard to what the
Masters have taught about our working our way upward to Christ, Who
will appear even in this century on the astral plane, a greater
understanding of this advance for humanity can be achieved only in
this way: that the human being shall ever increasingly impart his own
impulses to himself. Just as we explained to you yesterday that human
beings gradually work their way upward to Christ, so must we
gradually perfect in freedom our thinking, feeling, and will
impulses. And this can be achieved only through self-mastery,
self-observation. Just as in earlier times, in ancient clairvoyance,
the impulses were given to men from above by the Gods, so will man
determine his own way in later times through the new clairvoyance. It
is for this reason that Anthroposophy appears precisely in our time
in order that mankind may learn to develop soul characteristics in
the right way. Thus does man move forward in his life to meet what
the future will bring. Only in this way can we understand what must
one day appear: that is, that those who are shrewd and immoral will
be cast out and rendered harmless.
The characteristics
mentioned are important for every human being. But they are of such a
nature that they are especially important to those who are determined
to strive to reach rapidly in rational ways those characteristics
which are to become more and more necessary for humanity. For this
reason it is the Leaders of human beings who strive to achieve this
development in very special measure as regards themselves, because
the highest attainments can be reached only by means of the highest
attributes.
In highest degree of all is
this development carried through, as an example, by that
individuality who once ascended to the rank of a Bodhisattva, when
the preceding Bodhisattva became a Buddha, and who has, since that
time, been incarnated once in nearly every century; who lived as
Jeshu ben Pandira, herald of the Christ, a hundred years before
Christ. Five thousand years are needed for his ascent to the rank of
a Buddha, and this Buddha will then be the Maitreya Buddha. A Bringer
of the Good will he be, and this for the reason that (as can be seen
by those who are sufficiently clairvoyant) he succeeds, by most
intense self-discipline, in developing to the utmost those powers
which cause to emanate from him such magical moral forces as enable
him to impart to souls through the word itself feelings of the heart
and morality. We cannot as yet develop on the physical plane any
words capable of doing this. Even the Maitreya Buddha could not do
this at present — could not develop such magical words. Today
only thoughts can be imparted by means of words.
How is he preparing
himself? By developing in the highest possible degree those qualities
which are called the good qualities. The Bodhisattva develops in the
highest degree what we may designate as absorption, serenity in the
presence of destiny, attentiveness to all occurrences in one's
surroundings, devotion to all living beings, and insight. And,
although many incarnations will be needed for the future Buddha, yet
he devotes himself during his incarnations primarily to giving
attention to what occurs even though what he now does is relatively
little, since he is utterly devoted to the preparation for his future
mission.
This will be achieved
through the fact that a special law exists with regard to just this
Bodhisattva. This law we shall understand if we take account of the
possibility that a complete revolution in the soul's life may occur
at a certain age.
The greatest of such
transformations that ever occurred took place at the baptism by John.
What occurred there was that the ego of Jesus, in the thirtieth year
of his life, abandoned the flesh and another ego entered: the Ego of
the Christ, the Leader of the Sun Beings.
A similar revolution will
be experienced by the future Maitreya Buddha. But he experiences such
a revolution in his incarnations quite differently. The Bodhisattva
patterns his life on the life of Christ, and those who are initiated
know that he manifests in every incarnation very special
characteristics. It will always be noted that, in the period
between his thirtieth and thirty-third years, a mighty revolution
occurs in his life. There will then be an interchange of souls,
though not in so mighty a manner as in the case of Christ. The "ego"
which has until then given life to the body passes out at that time,
and the Bodhisattva becomes, in a fundamental sense, altogether a
different person from what he has been up to that time, even though
the ego o does not cease and is not replaced by another, as was true
of the Christ.
This is what all occultists
in common call attention to: that he cannot be recognized before this
time, before this revolution. Up to this time — although he will
be absorbed intensely in all things — his mission will not be
especially conspicuous; and even though the revolution is certain to
occur, no one can ever say what hat will then happen to him. The
earlier period of youth is always utterly unlike that into which he
is transformed between his thirtieth and thirty-third years.
Thus does he prepare for a
great event. This will be as follows: The old ego passes out and
another ego then enters. And this may be such an individuality as
Moses, Abraham, Elijah. This ego will then be active for a certain
time in this body; thus can that take place which must take place in
order to prepare the Maitreya Buddha. The rest of his life he then
lives in such a way that he continues to live with this ego which
enters at that moment.
What then occurs is like
complete interchange. Indeed, that which is needed for the
recognition of the Bodhisattva can occur. And it is then known that,
when he appears after 3,000 years, and has been elevated to the rank
of Maitreya Buddha, his “ego" will remain in him but will be
permeated inwardly by still another individuality. And this will
occur precisely in his thirty-third year, in the year in which
occurred in the case of Christ the Mystery of Golgotha. And
then will he come forth as the Teacher of the Good, as a great
Teacher who will prepare the true teaching of Christ and the true
wisdom of Christ in a manner entirely different from that which is
possible today.
Spiritual-science is to
prepare that which will one day take place upon our earth.
Now, it is possible for any
one in our time to adopt the practice of cultivating those
characteristics which are injurious to the emotional life, of
cultivating apathy, etc. But this results in a laxity in the
emotions, a laxity in the inner soul life, and the person will no
longer be able to discharge his task in life, will no longer be able
to fulfill it. For this reason every one may consider it a special
blessing if he can acquire for himself a knowledge of things that are
to occur in future. Whoever has the opportunity today to devote
himself to spirit knowledge, enjoys a gift of grace from karma.
For having a knowledge of
these things gives a foundation for security, devotion, and peace in
our souls, for being serene in soul, and looking forward with
confidence and hope to what faces us in the coming millennia of the
evolution of humanity. All who can know these things should consider
this a special good fortune, something which evokes the highest
powers of the human being, which can kindle like fire everything in
his soul that seems at the point of being extinguished or is in a
state of disharmony, or approaching destruction. Enthusiasm,
fire, rapture become also health and happiness in the outer life.
He who earnestly acquaints
himself with these things, who can develop the needed absorption in
these things, will surely see what they can bring to him in happiness
and inner harmony. And, if any one in our Society does not yet find
this demonstrated in himself, he should for once surrender himself to
such knowledge that he shall say:
"If I have not yet felt
this, the fault lies in me. It is my duty to immerse myself in
the mysteries about which we can learn today. It rests upon me
to feel that I am a human being, one link in a chain which has to
stretch from the beginning to the end of evolution, in which are
bound together as links all human beings, individualities,
Bodhisattvas, Buddhas, Christ. I must say to myself: ‘To feel
that I am a link therein is to be conscious of my true worth as a
human being.’ This I must sense; this I must feel."
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