VI
Dornach, March 2, 1924
N
continuing our studies on karma, we are under the necessity, at
the outset, of casting a glance at the manner in which karma
intervenes in the evolution of man, how destiny, which
intervenes with the free deeds of man, is really fashioned in
its physical reflection out of the spiritual world.
To
begin with, I shall have to tell you today a few things about
that which is connected with the human being in as far as he
lives on earth. This earthly man — during these lectures
we have been studying him in regard to the various members of
his being. We have distinguished in him the physical body, the
ether body, the astral body, the ego organism. We can, however,
by directing our gaze upon him, just as he stands before us in
the physical world, perceive the membering of the human being
in yet another way.
Today
we intend — quite independently of what we have already
been discussing — to consider a certain membering of the
human being, and we shall try to build a bridge between what we
discuss today and that which we already know.
If we
consider the human being as he stands before us on the earth,
simply according to his physical form, then this physical form
has three clearly differentiated members. This differentiation
is, however, not usually observed, because that which
asserts itself as science nowadays really looks at things and
facts in a merely superficial way. It has no sensibility for
what reveals itself when things and facts are considered with a
perception inwardly illumined.
We
have, to begin with, the human head. Even outwardly considered,
this human head shows itself as something quite different from
the remainder of the human form. We need but turn our
attention to the formation of the human being out of the
human embryo. The first thing we can see developing in the body
of the mother as human embryo is the head organization.
The
whole human organization takes its start from the head, and
everything else in the human being which afterwards flows into
his configuration is, actually, an appendage-organ of the
human embryo. As physical form, the human being is a head in
the beginning. The rest are appendage-organs. And the functions
which these appendage-organs assume in later life —
such as breathing, circulation, nutrition — are, in the
first period of the embryonic existence, activities proceeding
not from within the embryo, but from without inward, out of the
body of the mother, through organs which afterwards fall off,
organs which are no longer present later in the human
being.
Figure IX
The
human being is, at the outset, entirely head. The rest is
appendage-organ. We do not exaggerate in the following
sentence: The human being is in the beginning head; the rest
is, so to speak, appendage-organ. Since that which at first was
appendage-organ later on grows and gains in importance for the
human being, his head finally loses its sharp distinction from
the rest of the organs.
But
this gives only a superficial characterization of the human
being. For in reality he is, also as physical form, a threefold
being. All that which actually constitutes his first form
— the head — remains throughout his earthly life a
more or less individual member. We fail merely to recognize
this; nevertheless, it is a fact.
You
will say: Indeed, one ought not to divide the human being in
such a way that we behead him, as it were, chop off his head.
That this happens in Anthroposophy was only the belief of
Professor “Blank” who reproached Anthroposophy for
dividing men into head, chest organs, and limb organs. But this
charge is not true; it is not at all a fact; for in what is
outwardly head configuration, lies only the main outer
expression of the head configuration. Man remains completely
“head” throughout his whole life. The most
important sense organs — the eyes, ears, the organs of
smell, the organs of taste — are, to be sure, in the
head, but the sense of warmth, for example, the sense of
pressure, the sense of touch, are spread out over the whole
human being. That is precisely because the three members of the
human organism are not to be differentiated spatially, but only
in such a way that the head formation mainly appears in the
outwardly formed head, while in reality it permeates the entire
human being. And this is true also for the rest of the members.
The head is, throughout man's earthly life, in the big toe, in
so far as the big toe possesses a sense of touch or a sense of
warmth.
Thus
we have characterized, to begin with, the one member of the
human being's essential nature, that human nature which
confronts us as something sensuous. In my books I have
designated this organization also as the nerve-sense organism
in order to characterize it more inwardly. This, then, is one
member of the human being, the nerve-sense organism.
The
second member of the essential nature of the human being is all
that manifests in rhythmical activity. You cannot say of the
nerve-sense system that it finds expression in rhythmic
activity, for example, in the perception of the eye; for in
that case you would have to perceive one thing at a certain
moment, then another, then a third, then a fourth, and then
return again to the first, and so on. In other words, there
would have to be a rhythm in your sense perception. But that is
not the case. Observe on the other hand the main characteristic
of your breast organism. There you will find the rhythm of
breathing, the rhythm of circulation, the rhythm of digestion,
and so forth. There, everything is rhythm.
Rhythm, with its organs of rhythm, is the second thing to
develop in the human being; and it also extends over the whole
human being, though its chief external manifestation is in the
organs of the breast. The whole human being, again, is a lung;
yet lung and heart are localized, so to speak, in the organs so
named. The whole human being, indeed, breathes; you breathe in
every spot of your organism. People speak of skin respiration.
Only, in the activity of the lung is respiration mainly
concentrated.
The
third human organism is that of the limbs — the limb
organism. The limbs terminate in the breast organism. In the
embryonic stage of existence, they appear as appendages. They
are the latest to develop. They are, however, the organs which
are chiefly connected with metabolism. The metabolic process
finds its chief stimulus through the fact that these organs are
put into motion, perform most of the work in the human being.
We have thus characterized the three members that appear to us
in the human form.
But
these three members are intimately connected with the soul life
of the human being. His soul life can be divided into thinking,
feeling, and willing. Thinking finds its physical expression
chiefly in the head. But it has its physical organism also in
the entire human being, because the head exists, in the way I
have just described, throughout the entire human being.
Feeling is connected with the rhythmic organism. It is a
prejudice, indeed even a superstition on the part of modern
science to assume that the nervous system has directly to do
with feeling. The nervous system has nothing directly to do
with feeling. The respiration and circulation rhythms are the
organs of feeling, and the nerves only transmit the fact that
we cognize our feelings, that we experience them. The feelings
have their organism in the rhythmic system, but we should know
nothing of our feelings if the nerves did not procure for us
percepts of them. And because the nerves procure for us these
percepts of our feelings, modern intellectualism creates the
superstition that the nerves themselves are tin* organs of
feeling. This is not the case.
But,
when we consciously observe our feelings, as they arise out of
our rhythmic organism, and compare them with the thoughts which
an* bound to our head, to our nerve-sense organism, then
— if we are able to observe at all — we shall
perceive the same difference between our thoughts and our
feelings that exists between our daytime thoughts which we have
in waking life and our dreams. Our feelings have no greater
intensity in consciousness than dreams. They only have a
different form; they only make their appearance in a different
way. When you dream in pictures, your consciousness lives in
pictures. But these pictures, in their picture character, have
the same significance — although in another form —
as our feelings. Thus, we may say that we have the clearest
consciousness, the most illumined consciousness in our
visualizations, in our thoughts. We have a kind of dream
consciousness in regard to our feelings. We only believe that
we have a clear consciousness of our feelings; we have no
clearer consciousness of our feelings than we have of our
dreams. If on awaking from sleep we recollect our dreams and
form of them wide-awake visualizations, we do not seize
hold of the dream. The dream is far richer than our
visualization of it afterwards. In like manner is the world of
feeling infinitely richer than our mental pictures of it, which
we make present to our consciousness.
Figure X
And
completely immersed in sleep is our willing. This willing is
bound to the limb-metabolic organism, to the motor organism.
All that we really know of our willing are the thoughts. I form
the visualization: I shall take hold of this watch. Just try to
think quite sincerely that you form the visualization: I shall
take hold of this watch. Then you do take hold of it. What
proceeds from your visualization, your thought, right down into
the muscles and finally leads to something which again appears
as a visualization — your taking hold of the watch,
which is a continuation of the first visualization — what
lies between the thought of the intention to act, and the
thought of its fulfilment, what occurs in your organism, all
these activities remain just as unconscious as your life
in the deepest dreamless sleep.
We do
at least dream of our feelings, but from our impulses of will
we have nothing but what we have from our sleep. You may say: I
have nothing at all from sleep. Well, I do not speak now from
the physical standpoint; even from the physical standpoint it
is, indeed, entirely senseless to say that you have
nothing at all from sleep. But psychically, too, you have a
great deal from your sleep. If you were never to sleep, you
would never reach your ego consciousness.
You
need only realize the following: When you remember the
experiences you have had, then you say that you are going
back in time, that from the present you go further back in
time. Indeed, you imagine that it is a fact that you go further
back in time. But it is not so at all. In reality you only go
back to the moment when you awoke from sleep the last time.
(See
Figure X.)
Then you have fallen asleep. What lies there
between is eliminated. And then in the interval from the last
time you fell asleep back to the time before the last when you
woke up, memory appears again. So the matter continues on, back
in time. And by looking back, you must really always insert the
periods of unconsciousness. In doing so we must insert
unconsciousness for one third of our life. We do not pay
attention to this. But it is just as if you had a white plane
with a black hole in the center. (See
Figure XI.)
You see the
black hole, in spite of the fact that there are no forces
present. Thus, in looking back in memory, in spite of the fact
that it contains nothing from life's reminiscences, you see,
nevertheless, the blackness — the nights, through which
you have slept. There your consciousness strikes against this
blackness continually, and that impels you to call yourself an
I, an ego.
Figure XI
If
this really continued on and you were to knock against nothing,
you would never gain an ego consciousness. Thus we can, indeed,
say that we benefit from sleep. And just as we benefit from our
sleep in the ordinary earth life, do we benefit from the sleep
which rules in our willing. We sleep through that which really
takes place in us with every act of will. But in it there lies
the true ego. Just as we receive our ego consciousness through
the black void (see
Figure XI),
so does our ego lie in that
which sleeps in us during the act of will — the ego,
however, which passed through our former earth lives.
That
is where karma holds sway. Karma rules in our willing. In our
willing all the impulses from our preceding earth life hold
sway; only, even in the waking human being, they are sunk in
sleep.
Thus,
when we visualize the human being as he confronts us in earth
life, a threefold membering of his organism is observable: the
head organism, the rhythmic organism, and the motor organism.
That is a schematic division. Each member belongs in turn to
the whole man. Visualizing is bound to the head organism,
feeling is bound to the rhythmic organism, and willing to the
motor organism. Our state while visualizing is
wakefulness, while feeling is dreaming. Our state in
which willing, in which the will impulses take place is sleep,
even during our waking life.
Now,
in the head — that is, in our visualizing — we must
distinguish two things; we must discover, as it were, a more
subtle membering of the head. This more subtle membering leads
us to distinguish what we have as momentary visualization by
virtue of our having intercourse with the world, from what we
have as memory.
You go
through the world, constantly forming visualizations, mental
images, according to the impressions you receive from the
world. But it remains possible for you to call up these
impressions again out of your memory. The visualizations you
form in your intercourse with the world at present are not
differentiated inwardly from the visualizations aroused to life
when memory becomes active. In one case they come from without,
and in the other from within. It is, indeed, a naive thought to
imagine that memory works in the following way: I now confront
a thing or event, form a visualization, a mental picture of it;
this visualization sinks down into me somewhere, into some sort
of pigeon-hole, and, when later I remember, I take it
again out of the pigeon-hole. There are, indeed, whole
philosophies which are able to describe how the visualizations
sink down beneath the threshold of consciousness, then are
fished out again in the act of recollecting. These are naive
concepts.
There
is, of course, no such pigeon-hole in which our visualizations
lie when we remember them. Nor is there any such place in us
where they are moving about and whence, when we remember them,
they walk up again into our head. All these things are utterly
non-existent, nor is there any explanation in their favor.
The
facts are rather as follows, you need only to reflect on the
following: When you wish to exercise your memory, you
often do not work merely with your powers of visualizing, but
you bring to your aid very different means. I have seen people
memorizing who exercised their power to visualize just as
little as possible, but carried on vehement outer
movements accompanying their speech (arm movements) again
and again:
And
it undulates, surges, and roars and hisses
[Und es wallet und woget und brauset
und zischt.
A well-known line of German poetry. (Tr.)]
Thus,
people memorize in this way, and in so doing the least possible
thinking occurs. And in order to add a further stimulus —
And it undulates, surges, and roars and hisses
— they beat their forehead with their fists. Even
this happens. It is definitely a fact that the visualizations
we form as we occupy ourselves with the world are as evanescent
as dreams. On the other hand, what emerges out of memory are
not visualizations which have sunk below into us, but something
quite different. Were I to give you some notion of it, I should
have to draw it thus (see
Figure XII).
This is, naturally, only
a kind of symbolic figure. Imagine the human being as a seeing
being. He sees something. I shall not describe the process more
exactly; that could be done, but for the moment we do not need
it. The human being sees something. It passes through his eye
(see
Figure XII),
through the optic nerve into the organs into
which the optic nerve then merges.
We
have two clearly distinct members of our brain: the more
external brain, the gray matter; and, beneath it, the white
matter. The white matter terminates in the sense organs, the
gray matter lies within it; it is far less developed than the
white mass. “Gray” and “white” are, of
course, only approximate terms. But even thus crudely
anatomically considered, the matter is as follows: The objects
make an impression on us, pass through our eyes, and on into
the processes that take place in the white matter of the
brain.
On the
other hand, our visualizations have their organs in the gray
matter (see
Figure XII)
which, incidentally, has quite a
different cell structure. Therein our visualizations glimmer
and vanish like dreams. They glimmer, because the impressions
are occurring underneath.
If you
were dependent upon having the mental images sink down into
you, and you then had to call them up again in memory, you
would remember nothing at all, you would have no memory. The
fact is like this: At the present moment, let us say, I see
something. The impression of it — whatever it may be
— sinks into me, the white matter of the brain acting as
the medium. The gray matter functions by dreaming in its turn
of the impressions, making pictures of them. These are only
transitory pictures; they come and go. That which remains we do
not visualize at all at this moment, but that goes down into
our organism. And when we remember, we look within; down there
below, the impression remains.
Thus,
when you see something blue, then an impression of blue sinks
down into you (below, in
Figure XII),
here (above, in
Figure XII)
you form the visualization of blue. It is transitory.
Then, after three days, you
observe in your brain the impression which has remained. Now,
by looking inward, you visualize the blue. The first
time, when you saw the blue from without, you were stimulated
from outside by the blue object. The second time, when you
remember, you are stimulated from within, because the blueness
portrayed itself within you. In both cases, the process is the
same. It is always a perception. Memory, too, is a perception.
So that our day-waking consciousness is actually to be found,
as it were, in the visualizing process; but, beneath the
visualizing, certain processes are going on which also rise
into consciousness through visualizing, namely, through the
memory visualizations. Below this visualizing lies
perceiving,
Figure XII
the
actual perception, and only below this lies feeling. Thus, we
can distinguish more intimately between the processes of
visualizing and perceiving in our head organism, our
thought organism. That which we have perceived we can then
remember. But it remains, indeed, very unconscious; only in
memory does it rise into consciousness. What really takes place
in the human being is actually no longer experienced by him.
When he perceives, he experiences the visualization. The effect
of the perception penetrates him. Out of this effect he is able
to awaken the memory. But then the unconscious has already
begun.
In
reality it is only here, in this region — where in
waking-day consciousness we visualize — there only
do we ourselves exist as human beings. There only are we really
aware of ourselves as human beings (see
Figure XIII).
Where we
do not reach down with our consciousness (we do not even reach
the causes of our memories) there we are not aware of ourselves
as human beings but are incorporated into the world. It is just
as it is in the physical life. You inhale, the air you now have
within yourself was a short while ago outside, it was the air
of the outer atmosphere; it is now your air. After a short
time, you give it back again to the world; you are one with the
world. The air is now outside you, now inside you, now without,
now within. You would not be a human being were you not united
with the world in such a way that you possess not only that
which is
Figure XIII
present within your skin, but that by means of which you
yourself are connected with the whole surrounding atmosphere.
And just as you are thus connected on your physical side, so
are you connected on your spiritual side — the
moment you descend into the nearest sub-conscious region, the
region out of which memory arises — so are you connected
with that which we call the third Hierarchy, Angeloi,
Archangeloi, Archai. Just as you are connected through your
breathing with the air, so are you connected through your
head organism, the lower head organism, with the third
Hierarchy. The outer lobes of the brain, consisting of gray
matter, only and solely belong to the earth. What is beneath
(the white matter) is connected with the third Hierarchy,
Angeloi, Archangeloi, Archai.
Now
let us descend into the region, psychologically speaking, of
feeling; corporeally speaking, of the rhythmic organism,
out of which the dreams of our feeling life arise. There we do
not at all possess ourselves as human beings; there we are
connected with what constitutes the second Hierarchy —
the spiritual beings who do not incarnate in any kind of
earthly body, but who remain in the spiritual world. They,
however, send unceasingly their currents, their impulses, that
which streams from them as forces, into the rhythmic organism
of the human being. Exusiai, Dynamis, Kyriotetes — these
are the beings whom we bear within our breast.
Just
as we bear our human ego only in the outer lobes of our brain,
so do we bear the Angeloi and Archangeloi, directly beneath
this region, but still within the head organism. That is the
scene of their earthly activities; there the starting-points of
their activity are to be found.
In our
breast we bear the second Hierarchy — Exusiai, and so
forth; there in our breast are the starting-points of their
activity. And if we now descend into the sphere of our motor
organism, if we enter our movement organism, then in this
sphere the beings of the first Hierarchy are active —
Seraphim, Cherubim, Thrones.
The
transmuted food-stuffs, the food-stuffs we have eaten,
circulate in our limbs, undergo there a process which is a
living combustion process. For, if we take just a single step,
there arises in us a living process of combustion, a
burning up of that which was outside us. We are connected with
it. Through our limb and metabolic organism, we are connected
as human beings with the lowest, and yet it is precisely
through the limb organism that we are connected with the
highest. With the first Hierarchy, with the Seraphim, Cherubim,
Thrones, we are connected by that which permeates us with
spirit. Now the great question arises — it may sound
trivial in that I clothe it in earthly words, but there is
nothing else I can do — the question arises: With
what are they occupied — these beings of the three
successive Hierarchies, while they are among us —
with what do they occupy themselves?
The
third Hierarchy — Angeloi, Archangeloi, and so forth
— concerns itself with that which has its physical
organism in the head; this Hierarchy occupies itself with our
thinking. Were it not concerned with our thinking, with that
which takes place in our head, we would have no memory in
ordinary earth life. The beings of this Hierarchy retain in us
the impulses which we receive with our perceptions. They
underlie the activity which manifests itself in our
recollection, manifests itself in memory. They lead us through
our earth life within this, our first unconscious region.
Now
let us proceed to the beings of the second Hierarchy —
Exusiai, and so forth. They are the beings we encounter when we
have passed through the gate of death, in the life between
death and a new birth. There we encounter the souls of the
departed human beings who lived with us on earth; but we
encounter there, above all, the spiritual beings of this second
Hierarchy also, it is true, those of the third Hierarchy, but
the second Hierarchy is more important. We work with them
during the time between death and a new birth upon all that we
have felt in our earth life, all that we have transplanted into
our organism. In union with these beings of the second
Hierarchy, we elaborate our next earth life.
When
we stand here on the earth, we have the feeling that the
spiritual beings of the divine world are in us. When we
are there beyond in the sphere between death and a new birth,
we have the reverse thought. The Angeloi, Archangeloi and so
forth, who guide us through our earth life in the manner
indicated, live on the same plane with us, so to speak, after
our death. Directly underneath are the beings of the second
Hierarchy. With them we work on the forming, the shaping,
of our inner karma. And all that I told you yesterday about the
karma of health and disease we elaborate with these beings, the
beings of the second Hierarchy.
And if
we look still deeper in the time between death and a new birth,
that is, if we, as it were, look through the beings of the
second Hierarchy, then below we discover the beings of the
first Hierarchy, Cherubim, Seraphim, and Thrones. As
earthly human beings, we seek the highest Gods above us. We
seek as human beings between death and a new birth in the
profoundest depths below us for the highest Divinity attainable
by us. And while we are working with the beings of the second
Hierarchy, dab- orating our inner karma between death and a new
birth, that inner karma which afterwards appears reflected in
the healthy or diseased constitution of our next earth life,
while we are engaged in this work, while we work with ourselves
and with other human beings upon the bodies which will then
appear in our next earth life, the beings of the first
Hierarchy are occupied below in a peculiar way. We behold that.
They stand within a certain necessity in regard to their
activity, in regard to a part, a small part, of their activity.
They must imitate — for they are the creators of the
earthly — that which the human being has molded during
his earth life but imitate it in a quite definite way.
Think
of the following: In his will, the human being performs certain
deeds on earth. The will belongs to the first Hierarchy. Be
these deeds good or bad, wise or foolish, the beings of the
first Hierarchy — Seraphim, Cherubim, Thrones —
have to mold the counterparts of these deeds in their own
sphere.
You
know, my dear friends, we live together. No matter, whether the
things we do together are good or evil, for all that is good,
for all that is evil, the beings of the first Hierarchy must
shape the corresponding counterparts. Among the first
Hierarchy all things are judged, but also shaped and fashioned.
While we work on our inner karma with the second
Hierarchy and with the departed human souls, we behold
between death and a new birth what Seraphim, Cherubim, and
Thrones have experienced through our earthly deeds.
Indeed, my dear friends, here upon earth the blue sky with its
cloud formations and sunshine arches overhead, and at night, as
the starry heavens, it vaults above us. Between death and a new
birth, the activity of the Seraphim, Cherubim, and Thrones
vaults beneath us. And we gaze down upon these Seraphim,
Cherubim, and Thrones just as we here look up to the clouds, to
the blue heaven, to the star-strewn heaven. Beneath us we
behold the heavens formed of the activity of Seraphim,
Cherubim, and Thrones. But what kind of activity is it? While
we live between death and a new birth, we behold the Seraphim,
Cherubim, Thrones performing the activity which results as the
just and compensating activity from our own deeds on earth
— our own and the earthly deeds lived through with other
human beings. The Gods are obliged to exercise the compensating
activity, and we behold it as our heavens which are now beneath
us. In the deeds of the Gods we behold the consequences of our
earthly deeds, whether good or bad, wise or foolish. And by
looking downward we relate ourselves, between death and a new
birth, to the reflection of our deeds in the same way as in
earthly life we relate ourselves to the vaulting heaven above
us.
We
carry our inner karma into our inner organism. We bring it back
with us onto the earth as our faculties and talents, our genius
and our stupidity. What the Gods fashion there beneath us, what
they must experience in consequence of our earth lives,
confronts us in our next earth life as the facts of destiny
which come to meet us from without. We may say that what we
pass through to which we are asleep carries us into our destiny
in our earth life. But in this lives what the Gods in question,
those of the first Hierarchy, had to experience as the
consequences of our deeds in their domain during the time
between our death and a new birth.
One
always feels the need of expressing such things in pictures.
Let us imagine ourselves standing somewhere in the physical
world. The sky is overcast; we behold the clouded sky. Soon
thereafter, a rain begins to trickle down; the rain is falling.
What previously hovered above us we now see on the dripping
fields, on the dripping trees. If we look back, with the eye of
the initiate, from human life into the time we passed through
between our last death and our last birth, we then see therein,
first of all, the forming of divine deeds, the consequences of
our own deeds in our last earth life. We then see how this
spiritually rains down and becomes our destiny.
If I
meet a human being who has significance for me in earth life,
who has a determining influence upon my destiny, what occurs
with (his meeting of the other human being has been previously
experienced by the Gods as a result of what I have had in
common with him in a former earl h life. If I am transferred
during my earth life to some locality important to me or placed
in some important calling, all that comes to me thus as outer
destiny is a likeness of what the Gods have experienced —
Gods of the first Hierarchy — as a consequence of my
former earth life, during the time when I was myself between
death and a new birth.
Indeed, if you think abstractly, then you think: “There
we have the former earth lives; the deeds of the former earth
lives work across into the present. Previously they were
causes; now they are effects.” With this we cannot think
very far; we have actually little more than words when we make
this statement. But behind what we thus describe as the law of
karma lie the deeds of the Gods, experiences of the Gods; and
behind all that lie the other facts.
If we
human beings approach our destiny only through feeling, then we
look up, according to our faith, either to the Gods or to some
Providence, upon which we feel the course of our earth
life depending. But the Gods — those whom we know as the
beings of the first Hierarchy, Seraphim, Cherubim, and Thrones
— have, as it were, a reverse religious confession. They
feel their necessity lies with men on earth whose creators they
arc. The aberrations human beings suffer, and the progress they
enjoy, must be equalized by the Gods. And what the Gods prepare
for us as our destiny in a subsequent life they have already
lived through before us.
These
truths must be found again through Anthroposophy. Out of a
consciousness not fully developed, they were perceived by
mankind in an erstwhile instinctive clairvoyance. The ancient
wisdom contained such truths. Then only a dim feeling about
them remained. In much that meets us in the spiritual life of
mankind, there is still a dim feeling for these things. You
need only remember the verse by
Angelus Silesius
which you will also find quoted elsewhere in my writings. To a narrow
religious understanding it sounds like an impertinence:
Without me, God could not a moment live at most.
Came I to naught, must He from need give up the ghost.
Ohn' mich könnt' Gott ein Nu nicht leben.
Würd' ich zunicht, müsst' er vor Not den Geist aufgeben.
Angelus Silesius went over to Roman Catholicism and as a
Catholic wrote such verses. To him it was still clear that the
Gods are dependent on the world, just as the world is dependent
on the Gods, that this dependence is something mutual, and that
the Gods must direct their life according to the life of human
beings. But the divine life acts creatively and has its effect
in turn in the destiny of human beings. Angelus Silesius, dimly
feeling, but not knowing the exact truth, said:
Without me, God could not a moment live at most.
Came I to naught, must He from need give up the ghost.
World and Godhead depend on one another and work into one
another. Today we have seen this interactivity in the
example of human destiny, of karma.
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