LECTURE FIVE
THE BLESSING OF THE DEAD Paris, May 26, 1914
We have
now reached a stage in human development where the study of spiritual
matters must be based on the same foundations as the study of nature
was three or four centuries ago.
[ Note 1 ]
Spiritual science intends
to achieve similar things for knowledge of the spirit as Copernicus,
Galileo, and Giordano Bruno did for the understanding of physical
nature in their own time.
[ Note 2 ]
Of course, the systematic
exploration of the spirit in our age encounters the same kind of
resistance and hostility as the study and the concepts of the natural
sciences did then. Spiritual science will be assimilated into our
culture as slowly and with just as much difficulty as the natural
sciences were.
We will investigate the
spirit with processes of the human mind that are still unknown today,
or at least unpopular with most people. Clairvoyant research, as we
can call these processes, provides the foundation for spiritual
science, and I am speaking to you today on that basis.
Clairvoyant research is
discredited by the countless prejudices people have against it, and
also by the widespread misuse of the term “clairvoyant
investigation.” That is why I want to say right now that I am
not speaking from the standpoint of the occult knowledge so often
promoted by charlatans these days, but based on the kind of
clairvoyant, esoteric knowledge that can be supported even by people
firmly grounded in serious research in the natural sciences who base
their knowledge on genuine scientific facts. In terms of its inner
logic, its mode of thinking, spiritual science belongs to the stream
of modern thinking that includes the natural sciences. The two differ
only in the areas they research. The natural sciences examine the
world of nature, the physical phenomena around us, while spiritual
science studies an area that must necessarily remain hidden to the
natural sciences, namely, spiritual experience, and spiritual beings.
It is impossible to investigate spiritual facts and spiritual beings
with the same abilities and methods that have allowed the natural
sciences to celebrate ever greater triumphs in the course of the last
few centuries. To investigate nature, we use only those mental powers
and abilities we have because of the way we are put into this world,
and because other people have taught them to us.
This combination of innate
and acquired abilities is totally sufficient for the natural
sciences, but it cannot provide knowledge of the spiritual world. For
that we must use faculties that slumber, that are latent, to use a
scientific term, in the depths of our soul during our everyday life.
We do not immediately apply
the methods and procedures used to explore the outer world in our
investigations as spiritual researchers. Rather, we work with them on
the abilities and forces in the depths of our soul to make them
effective in the spiritual world. These capabilities help us to
understand the higher worlds only when they have been drawn out by
ordinary human efforts.
For example, in everyday
life and in conventional science, we learn about the external world
through ideas we develop in our soul, but as researchers of the
spirit, we first have to work with our thinking deep within us to
develop abilities that are quite different from those we normally
have. Spiritual science is basically in accord with the natural
sciences, as we can see in its attempt to enter the spiritual world
through spiritual chemistry. We cannot tell from the looks of it that
water can be split into hydrogen and oxygen. Though water is liquid
and does not burn, hydrogen is a combustible gas — clearly
something quite different from water. We can use this as a metaphor
for the spiritual process I am about to explain.
People are a combination of
soul-spiritual and material-physical elements, just as water is a
combination of hydrogen and oxygen. In “spiritual chemistry,”
we must separate the soul-spiritual from the material-physical
elements just as water can be separated into hydrogen and oxygen.
Clearly, just looking at people will tell us little about the nature
of the soul-spiritual element.
The methods we use to
separate the soul-spiritual from the material-physical in us —
and this experiment of spiritual chemistry can be carried out only
within us — are concentration and meditation. Meditation and
concentration are not some kind of miraculous mental performance, but
the highest level of mental processes whose lower, elementary levels
we find also in our everyday life. Meditation is a devotion of the
soul, raised to limitlessness, as we may experience in the most
joyful religious feelings. Concentration is attentiveness, raised to
limitlessness; we use it at a more basic level in ordinary life. By
attentiveness in everyday life we mean not allowing our ideas and
feelings to range freely over anything that catches our attention,
but pulling ourselves together so that our soul focuses our interest
on something specific, isolating it in our field of perception. There
are no limits to how far this attentiveness can be increased,
particularly by voluntarily focusing our soul on certain thoughts
supplied by spiritual science. Ignoring everything else, all worries
and upsets, sense impressions, will impulses, feeling, and thinking,
we can center our inner forces completely on these thoughts for a
certain amount of time. The content of what we are concentrating on
is not as important as the inner activity and exercise of developing
our attentiveness, our powers of concentration.
Focusing, concentrating the
forces of the soul in this way is crucial. And regular training,
often involving months, years, or even decades, depending on
individual predisposition, is necessary for the soul to become strong
enough to develop inner forces. Qualities otherwise merely slumbering
in the soul are now called up by this boundless enhancement of
attentiveness, by concentration. In the process we must develop the
capacity in our soul to feel that through this inner activity the
soul is increasingly able to tear itself away from the physical body.
Indeed, this tearing away, this separation of the soul and spirit
from the physical-material element, will happen more and more often
as we continue the activities I have described. In the limited scope
of a lecture, I can only briefly outline this principle of
concentration, but you will find detailed descriptions of the
individual exercises in my book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment,
translated into French as
L'Initiation..
[ Note 3 ]
Through practicing these
methods we will learn to understand the meaning of the sentences,
I experience myself as a soul-spiritual being. I am active in myself
without using my senses or my limbs. I have experiences independent
of my body. We have made progress when we can perceive our own
body with all its physical attributes as separate and independent of
our soul and spirit, just as we see a table or a chair in physical
life. This is how we can begin to separate the soul's ability to
think and form ideas from its physical tools, namely, the nervous
system and the brain. Thus, we learn to live in thinking and the
forming of ideas, fully aware that we are outside the nervous system
and the brain, the physical instruments we normally use for these
processes.
To put it more concretely,
let me add that our first experience in this self-development is the
realization that in thinking we live as though outside our head. We
live in our weaving thoughts just as we do when we use our brain, but
we know for sure that these thoughts are outside our head. The
experience of immersing ourselves again in the brain and the nervous
system after having been outside the head for some time remains
indelibly with us. We feel the resistance of the substance of brain
and nervous system such that the soul-spiritual that emerged from
those physical organs needs to use force to reenter them. This is an
unforgettable moment.
The method I have described
also allows us to release the feeling and will activities of the
soul, which is necessary for true spiritual research. To achieve
this, we must raise devotion to the infinite. This enhanced devotion,
which is also called meditation, is similar to what happens when we
sleep. The sense organs are laid aside in sleep; there is no activity
of the senses, and the limbs are at rest. While we sleep, we are
given over to the general course of the world without contributing
anything through our I, thinking, feeling, and willing to the course
of events. We are unconscious in sleep; our consciousness dissolves
into general darkness and obscurity. In meditation, we must
voluntarily create the state sleep causes as natural necessity. The
only difference is that sleep leads to a loss of consciousness, but
intensified devotion leads to an enhanced awareness. As spiritual
researchers, we must be able to silence our senses at will. We must
divert them from all impressions of the external world and suppress
the activity of our organs and limbs as we do in sleep. In terms of
our body, we have to behave just as in sleep. However, in sleep we
sink into unconsciousness, but in enhanced devotion controlled by our
will we awaken into the divine-spiritual stream of cosmic forces. To
this level of consciousness we then reach, our everyday consciousness
is what sleep is to our ordinary state of consciousness.
If we persevere and
patiently train our soul, we will be able to separate out, through a
kind of spiritual chemistry, another soul capacity, namely, our
thinking, so that it continues only in the soul-spiritual sphere.
Similarly, through devotion we can gradually separate out that power
of the soul we use in language, in speaking. As I am speaking to you
now, I am using a soul-spiritual force that flows into my nerves and
speech organs and uses them. Through the exercises described above,
we can unfold this same power when the entire speech and nervous
system are completely inactive. In this way, we discover in the
depths of our soul a faculty we know nothing of in our everyday life,
because it is employed in speech and the use of our speech organs.
When we are not using this faculty, it lies dormant deep within our
soul, but in spiritual research, it is drawn up and separated by
spiritual chemistry, so to speak, from our physical speaking. If we
learn to live in this weaving, hidden activity of language creation,
we can recognize what we may call, perhaps inaccurately, the
perception of the inner word, the spiritual word. As soon as we can
control this hidden power, we can also detach our thinking and
feeling from our personality, leave ourselves behind, and enter the
spiritual world. Then we can perceive feeling and willing outside
ourselves just as we did within us. We begin to know beings of will
and feeling in the spiritual world, and we can perceive our own
willing and feeling only when they are immersed in these beings.
Clairvoyant perception
begins with the emancipation of the power of our thoughts from the
physical body and continues with the freeing of our thinking and
feeling. Clearly, then, we can know and truly experience encounters
with other spiritual beings only by leaving our body and by immersing
our own feeling and willing soul in the spiritual world. In view of
the widespread opposition to spiritual science in our time, it is
risky to give concrete examples; yet it is a risk I am willing to
take. I am sure you will not mind that it is an example from my
personal experience. After all, our own experiences are the examples
we know best since they are the only ones where we are actually
present for every detail.
Some time ago I had to solve a problem in my work.
[ Note 4 ]
I knew very well that the
capacities I can develop in accordance with my constitution in this
life would not suffice to perform the task, which was to understand
the mentality of a certain historical period. I knew exactly what
questions I had to answer, but I also realized that no matter how
much I exerted my thinking, my thoughts were not strong enough to
gain insight into this problem. It was like wanting to lift a weight
but lacking the strength to do so. I tried to define the issue as
clearly as possible and to develop the active will to find a solution
one way or another. As far as I could, I tried to feel vividly the
particular qualities of that period. I tried to get a vivid sense of
its greatness, its color, and to project myself completely into that
period. After I had repeated this inner soul activity often enough, I
could feel a foreign willing and feeling enter my own. I was as sure
of its presence as I am that the external object I see is not created
by my looking at it, but exists independent of me and makes an
impression on me.
From a materialistic point
of view, people can easily object that this was nothing but an
illusion, a deception, and that I did not know I was drawing out of
my own soul what I thought were external influences. To avoid falling
prey to illusion, hallucination, and fantasies in this field, we need
true self-knowledge. Then we will begin to know what we can and
cannot do. Self-knowledge, particularly for the researcher of the
spirit, means knowing the limits of our abilities. We can train
ourselves in self-knowledge in the way described in my
above-mentioned book, and then we will be able to distinguish between
our own feeling and will and the external feeling and will entering
them from the spiritual world. We will reach the stage where not
being able to tell the difference between our own feeling and willing
and that from outside will seem as absurd as not being able to
distinguish between hunger and bread. Everyone knows where hunger
stops and bread begins; just as everyone knows that hunger itself
does not make bread appear — desirable as this would be from a
social standpoint. True self-knowledge enables us to differentiate
between the hunger of our own feeling and willing and what comes to
meet them from the spiritual world (as hunger is met with bread).
Once the outside feeling and will have penetrated our own, the two
will continue to exist in us side by side.
In my case, the close
relationship between my feeling and willing and what I recognized as
external feeling and willing fertilized my thinking. As a result,
thoughts appeared in my mind as gifts of the external feeling and
willing and solved the original problem of investigating a certain
historical epoch.
What happens there in our
spiritual experience runs counter to a similar process in the
physical world. When we meet people in the physical world and get
together with them, we first see them, then speak to them, and
exchange ideas. The opposite happens in the spiritual experience I
have described; there we observe thoughts in ourselves and have the
feeling that a foreign feeling and will are present. Then we perceive
a separate spiritual individuality as a real, separate being, but one
that lives only in the spiritual world. Then, we gradually get to
know this individuality in a reverse process to meeting someone in
physical life. In the spiritual sphere, we approach the individual
through the foreign feeling and willing we find within us, and get
closer to the personality by being together with it.
I found out that in my case
the foreign feeling and willing that fertilized my own thinking came
from an individual I had known well and who had been torn from our
circle of friends by her death a little more than a year ago.
[ Note 5 ]
She had died at a relatively early age, in her best mid-life
years, and had taken unused life energy into the spiritual worlds.
The feeling and willing that entered my own originated in the
intensity of this unused life energy. Generally, people live to a
ripe old age and use up their vitality during their lifetime.
However, if they die relatively young, this strength remains as
unused potential and is available to them in the spiritual world.
These life forces that were not used in our friend's short life
enabled me, because of our friendship, to solve a problem which
required her strength.
What I earlier called “the
capacity of the inner word” leads to such revelations of the
spiritual world as this one of a dead person. At the same time, this
capacity allows us to look beyond our life enclosed between birth and
death, or between conception and death, and gain insight into human
life extending into infinite periods of time through repeated earth
lives. Then we can understand the life of those we were very close
to, as I was to our dead friend.
As we get to know ourselves
or another person through the soul faculties I have described, we
discover not only the physical life between birth and death, but the
spiritual human being who structures his own body, lives in repeated
incarnations on earth, and between each death and new birth in the
spiritual world. Now you will easily understand that I could gain
deeper insight into the soul-spiritual being of our dead friend
because she stood before my soul as a spiritual being.
The process of getting to
know another being in the spiritual world is the reverse of that in
the physical realm. At first, we learn how to be together spiritually
with the other being, and then we come to know the being itself as a
spiritual being. And then entering the spiritual world becomes a
reality.
To return to our example,
it became clear that during an earlier incarnation in the first
Christian centuries, the friend whom we knew in her short life here
had taken in much of that Christian culture. However, she had not
been able to digest it all because of the restrictions of the time,
and entered this life with the undigested material. It burst the
confines of this incarnation, but remained present as life energy.
And now through my connection with her, I was blessed with insight
into the period my work was concerned with, the age in which our
friend had lived in a past incarnation.
It doesn't matter that many
people in our age make fun of what I have just described and belittle
an attitude that guides us thus into the spiritual world. If you have
developed yourself along these paths, you know that when you
accomplished something you could not possibly have done by yourself,
it was because specific spiritual beings helped you. In addition,
your view of the world will expand because you will know that you
cannot expect hunger to produce bread, and because you know that the
power of spiritual beings has entered into your own abilities. As our
view into the sphere of the dead widens, our insight into the
spiritual world also deepens through the methods I have described and
finally encompasses concrete events and beings that are just as real
as the physical world around us.
People do not mind our
talking about the spiritual world in general terms; they admit there
is a spiritual realm behind the sensory one. But they are less
tolerant if we talk about concrete beings in the spiritual world whom
we perceive just as we do beings of the mineral, plant, animal, and
human kingdoms. However, if we do not shy away from developing our
slumbering soul forces, we find that it is just as wrong to talk
about the spirit in general terms, or in vague pantheistic terms, as
to speak about nature in general terms. For example, if walking
across a meadow and looking at flowers, perhaps some day lilies here,
violets there, and so on, we would point to them and not say their
names but instead just “this is nature, that is nature, and
there is nature; everything is nature and more nature” —
that is no different from talking about spirit, spirit, and more
spirit in a vaguely pantheistic way. We can understand the spiritual
world only if we really know the individual beings living there and
what happens between them.
In objection to the
possibility of knowing the spiritual world people often claim that
harboring such fantasies about the realm of the spirit simply runs
counter to intelligent behavior in the physical world. Although this
conclusion seems justified on the basis of the capacities of human
intelligence, it can be sustained only as long as one is ignorant of
the extensive power of the intellect, that is, the power of human
thinking, as we can know it through spiritual research.
To return to our example,
imagine someone has the task to develop certain ideas here on earth.
He learns how to encounter a spiritual being, in this case, a dead
person who adds his or her thinking — now modified by the
spiritual world almost into willing that thinks and thinking that
feels — to the human individual's thinking and feeling. The
intelligent ideas the dead individual wants to produce emerge in the
human being on earth. The deceased possesses feeling and willing,
just as on earth, as well as other soul capacities not developed on
earth. Therefore, the dead have the desire to connect their thinking
and feeling with human thoughts. That is why they unite with the
person on earth. As the thinking, feeling, and willing of the dead
penetrate the living person, ideas are stimulated. Thus, the dead can
experience these ideas, something they could not do on their own.
That is why they communicate with human beings on earth. However,
this communication and stimulation of ideas is possible only if our
thinking has been freed from the nervous system and the brain, that
is, if we have developed thinking independent of the brain.
As we liberate our thinking
from the body, we feel as though our thinking were snatched away from
us, as though it expanded and spread out in space and time. Thinking,
which we normally say takes place inside us, unites with the
surrounding spiritual world, streams into it, and achieves a certain
autonomy from us similar to the relative independence of the eyes,
which are set in their sockets rather like autonomous organs. Thus,
although our liberated thinking is connected with our higher self, it
is so independent as to act as our spiritual organ of perception for
the thoughts and feelings of other spiritual beings. Its function is
thus similar to that of our eyes. Gradually, the thinking processes,
normally limited by our intelligence, become independent from our
being as spiritual organs of perception.
To put it differently, what
we experience subjectively, what is comprised by our intelligence,
namely, our outer thinking, is nothing but shadowy entities, thought
entities, mere ideas reflecting external things. When thinking
becomes clairvoyant and separates from brain and nervous system, it
begins to develop inner activity, a life of its own, and to stream
out, as our own experience, into the spiritual world. In a sense, we
send the tendrils of our clairvoyant thinking out into the spiritual
realm and, as they become immersed in this world, they perceive the
will that feels and feeling that wills of the other beings in that
realm.
After what we have said
about self-knowledge as a necessity on the path of spiritual
development — and from this it follows that modesty is a must —
allow me to comment on clairvoyant thinking, and please do not think
me presumptuous for saying this. When we enliven our thinking through
clairvoyant development, it becomes independent and also a very
precise and useful tool. True clairvoyance increases the precision,
accuracy, and logical power of our thinking. As a result, we can use
it with more exactness and close adaptation to its subject; our
intelligence becomes more practical and more thoroughly structured.
Therefore, the clairvoyant can easily understand the scope of
ordinary scientific research, whereas conventional science requires
bringing out ... [text missing] of the mind. It is easy to see why
modern natural science cannot comprehend the findings of clairvoyant
research, but those who have developed true clairvoyance can
comprehend the full significance of the achievements of the natural
sciences. There can be no question, therefore, of spiritual science
opposing conventional science; the other way around is more likely.
Only clairvoyant development can organize the power of the mind,
making it inwardly independent, alive, and comprehensible. That is
why the materialistic way of thinking cannot penetrate to the logic
that gives us the certainty that clairvoyant knowledge really does
lead to perception of the spiritual world.
The example of my
clairvoyant experiences with a dead person shows that intelligence
and thinking are specific qualities of souls living in a physical
body, of human beings on earth. The deceased wanted to connect
herself with a human being so that what lived in her in a completely
different, super-sensible way could take the form of intelligent
thoughts. The dead individual and the living person were thinking
their thoughts together in the head of the latter, as it were.
As specifically human
qualities, intellect and thinking can be developed only in human
beings on earth, and they allow even people who are not clairvoyant
to understand the results of clairvoyant research. You see, our
independent thinking becomes the spiritual eye, as it were, for the
perception of the spiritual world. Supersensible research, which uses
this spiritual eye for clairvoyant thinking, has found that this eye
is active, that the spiritual feelers are put out in all directions,
but our physical eyes only passively allow impressions to come to
them. When we as spiritual researchers have taken the revelations of
the super-sensible world into our thinking, they continue to live in
our thoughts. We can then tell other people about what we have taken
pains to bring into our living thought processes, and they can
understand us if they do not allow materialistic prejudices to get in
the way.
There is a sort of inner
language in the human soul that normally remains silent. But when
concepts enter the soul, which the spiritual researcher acquires by
allowing his or her will and feeling to be stimulated by the
spiritual world and its beings, this language responds immediately
with an echoing sound. Careful and thorough study of spiritual
science will gradually silence the objection that the spiritual
researcher's reports of the realm of the spirit can only be believed
because they cannot really be understood. People will see that human
intelligence is indeed able to understand information from the
spiritual world, but only if it is the result of true spiritual
experiences and true spiritual research. They will realize that it is
wrong to say human intelligence does not suffice to comprehend
revelations from the spiritual world and that therefore they have to
be accepted on authority. They will come to know that the only
obstacle to such understanding is to have preconceived notions and
prejudices.
Eventually, people will
treat information from the spiritual world as they treat the insights
of, say, astronomy, biology, physics, and chemistry. That is, even if
they are not astronomers, biologists, physicists, or chemists, they
accept the scientists' findings about the physical world on the basis
of a natural feeling for truth, which we may call a silent language
of the soul.
The harmony between
intelligence and clairvoyance will become much more obvious, and then
people will admit that clairvoyant research approaches the world of
spiritual beings and processes with the same attitude that also
motivates the natural sciences. In view of the considerable
opposition to spiritual science, it will comfort us to know that our
modern culture will eventually come to the point Giordano Bruno did.
Looking up to the blue vault of the sky, which people then considered
to exist exactly as they perceived it, Bruno declared that they saw
the blue dome of the sky only because that was as far as their vision
reached. They themselves in a way imposed that limit; in reality
space extends into infinity. The limits people saw so clearly, based
on the illusion of their senses, were created by the limitation of
their vision.
You see, now and in the
future, the spiritual researcher will have to stand up before the
world and say that there is also a firmament with regard to time, the
time between birth and death. We perceive this firmament of time
through the illusion of the senses. In fact, we create it ourselves
because our spiritual vision is limited, just as in earlier times
people “created” the blue firmament of space. Space
extends endlessly beyond the blue dome of the sky, and time also
continues infinitely beyond the boundaries of birth and death. Our
own infinite spiritual life is embedded in this infinite time
together with the rest of spiritual life in the world.
The time will come when
people will realize that clairvoyant research strengthens and deepens
our intelligence, producing a more subtle and refined logic. Such
improved understanding will silence many, seemingly justified,
current opinions on spiritual science claiming that the philosophical
writings of several authors prove that our cognitive and intellectual
capacities are limited. After all, aren't the reasons these
philosophers present to prove the limits of human cognition
convincing? Are they not logical? How can researchers of spiritual
science hope to refute these convincing, logical arguments for the
limits of our capacity to know?
The time will come when
people will see the lack of substance and precision in such logic,
when they will understand that something can be irrefutably correct
as philosophical argument, and yet be completely refuted by life.
After all, before the discovery of the microscope or the telescope
people might very well have “irrefutably” proven that
human eyes can never see a cell. Still, human ingenuity invented the
microscope and the telescope, which increased the power of our eyes.
Similarly, life has outdistanced the irrefutable proof of the
philosophers. Life does not need to refute the arguments of this or
that philosopher. Their proofs may be indisputable, but the reality
of life must progress beyond them by strengthening our cognitive
capacity and spiritual understanding through spiritual instruments.
In the present state of our
culture with its prevailing belief in the incontrovertibility of the
philosophers' proofs, these things are not generally or readily
accepted. However, as our culture continues to develop, it will reach
a higher logic than the one supporting these proofs of purely
external philosophy. This higher logic will be one of life, of life
of the spirit, of insights based on spiritual science. A time will
come when people, while still respecting the accomplishments and
discoveries of the natural sciences as much as we do now, will
nevertheless realize that for our inner life these marvelous
achievements have brought more questions than answers. If you study
biology, astronomy, and so on, you will see that they have reached
their limits. Do these sciences provide answers? No, they are really
only raising questions. The answers will come from what stands behind
the subject matter of the natural sciences. The answers will come
from the sources of clairvoyant research.
To summarize, let me repeat
that the world extends beyond the realm of the senses, and behind the
sensory world we find spirit. In spiritual science, the spirit
reveals itself to clairvoyant perception, and it is only then that we
can see the divine nature of the magnificent sensory world around us.
The world is vast, and the spirit is the necessary counterbalance to
the physical world. A proper perspective on our future cultural
development reveals that in trying to understand the world in its
entirety, people will strive not for a one-sided exploration of the
natural world, as many now assume. Instead, people will seek to unite
science, intellect, and clairvoyant research. Only in this union will
people truly come to understand themselves and their own spirit. Only
then will they realize solutions to the world's future riddles, never
to be solved completely, and feel satisfaction in that knowledge.
Those who have taken the
true impulse of spiritual science to heart can sense even now in our
culture the yearning and the latent urge in many souls to go beyond
the immediate and sensory in science. Through use and inner
assimilation of the capacities the sciences have created in recent
centuries, these souls long to be strengthened so that they can live
in the spiritual worlds from where alone can come true satisfaction
for the human soul.
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