Lecture Seven
We
are all the time coming nearer to an understanding of those
elements in the lives of individuals that can give us an
inkling of the place of karma in their personal existence. In
order to reach this goal in the course of these lectures it
will be my task to-day to indicate how karma can be
investigated by Initiation-science, to begin with through
actual experience of karma, and how man — at first
without Initiation-science but with a certain intimate capacity
for observing life — can develop insight into the potency
of karma. Let us remember here what I have said about memory
and thoughts which stream up in their multitudes from the
depths of the world of soul, some summoned by our own activity,
some rising up freely. They are thoughts which give us a
picture, shadowy and more or less abstract it is true, but for
all that a picture of our earthly life since birth. Attention
has recently been drawn to what a man loses if he loses his
memory. He is then still able to act quite sensibly and
reasonably, but he does not act out of the context of his whole
life; he acts as if at the point of time when his action begins
he remembers nothing of his life hitherto; he acts, in fact, as
if he had come into the world as a skilful, intelligent,
rational individual but as if his life hitherto had simply not
been spent on this Earth. From this we see how for the
ordinary-level consciousness of to-day, the Ego is anchored,
grounded, in the memory but in the case referred to can no
longer find its bearings along the path of memory leading
through this earthly life.
But
what does this memory amount to? Let us compare it with the
actual experience of the reality from which the memory comes to
us. We have our place in life, we go through life with its joys
and sorrows, find ourselves interwoven in our experiences
with the whole of our being. But just compare the intensity of
feeling that accompanies an actual experience with the shadowy
remembrance preserved in the soul. We need only take an
especially significant event in life, for instance, the death
of a friend who was particularly dear to us, or the death of
father or mother, at a time when such a happening would be an
exceptionally deep experience. Let us compare the full
intensity of the event and the moment when it was experienced,
with the shadowy memories that come to us ten years later! And
yet we must have these shadowy memories in order to be aware of
the continuity, the intrinsic value and reality of our Ego in
earthly life. But is it not evident from this how the Ego,
which can find no bearings in earthly life without memory,
really experiences itself in a shadowy way, how it is anchored
in what actually sinks down every night into
unconsciousness? As a matter of fact we do not experience
our ‘I,’ our Ego, with very great intensity in ordinary-level
consciousness on Earth. The real Ego of life that is not
immediately present grows more and more akin to thought,
although we know that it is connected with the Ego of to-day.
Experience of the present has intensity but this intensity is
absent from experiences that have become remembrance. So that
we can say: (a drawing was made) if this is our
perceptive soul, our spirit, which are in living intercourse
with all that streams in upon us from the outside world, behind
this Ego we experience in shadowy recollection what remains to
us of it. The characteristic feature of this memory is that
feeling and also impulses of will are more and more sifted out
of it. However intense our feelings may have been on the
occasions referred to, the death of someone extraordinarily
dear to us, for instance, yet the memory picture which remains
has become dim, more and more devoid of feeling. And even less
is there any continuance of what we then undertook out of our
will-impulses under the impression of the moment! Feeling and
will fade away; the calm memory-picture, a mere shadow of what
we actually experience, is all that remains as a rule. And we
can exist in the land of Earth only if this shadow of an
experience remains with us. Our relation to memory is one
thing, to present experience quite another.
But
we can approach direct experience in another way, not as we
usually do; we can ask new questions about our experiences. It
must be admitted that if we look back on life it assumes a
remarkable aspect. Let us ask ourselves what we really are at
the present moment with our knowledge, with the quality
of our feeling, the energy of our will. And if we return to our
experiences with these newly asked questions, we shall discover
how poor we should be, after having reached a certain age in
life, if our previous experiences had not been there! If
we look back, more particularly to many experiences of youth
and relate the remembrance of them to the present day —
how happy they were! If we often look back over our life we can
say to ourselves something highly significant for the
present moment. We can say: we owe the facility with which we
adapt our soul, perhaps even our physical constitution with
more or less dexterity to life, to the circumstances that in
youth we were able to live happily, not suffering from
depression, that we were led to much that gave us joy. These
impressions of joy in the soul endow us in later life with a
certain happiness, although it is drawn down into deeper
regions of our being. Let us now ask how much of what life
brings us in the way of inner deepening, how much of this is to
be attributed to our sorrows, our sufferings? And let us also
ask: what can arise in the soul if we look at our life with
these questions in mind? We must give the answer to these
questions not with the intellect, but with feeling. And feeling
answers: I must be thankful to all that has come into my life
because only thereby have I become the being I am and with whom
I more or less identify myself. I cannot know whether
otherwise I might have been of even less account. I can
only be thankful to life, because I have become what I am
through its joys and sorrows.
This question must be answered with a feeling of
thankfulness to life. And it means a great deal if this
thankfulness for earthly existence finds its way into the human
soul. If certain deepenings of the soul are achieved and life
is judged not out of emotion but out of the soul in its purity,
then this thankfulness always arises. Though much of what life
has brought us may be deplored, yet in many respects the regret
is the expression of a complete error. For if what is regretted
had not taken place we should not be what we actually are. The
feeling that we can have about life amounts ultimately to this
thankfulness. Thankfulness may also be felt even when we are
not entirely in agreement with life, when we would like to have
had more from our existence. We can also be thankful if we are
given a small cake by someone from whom we might have expected
the present of a large one. The fact that we had expected a
large cake must certainly not weaken our thankfulness. And so
it can truly be said that whatever, in our opinion, life has
denied us — and this opinion may after all be erroneous
— it has at all events brought us something. For what it
has brought us we must develop the feeling of thankfulness. But
when in all earnestness we develop the feeling of thankfulness
— we need only reflect on this and it will be readily
understood — there must be thankfulness for something
else. Anyone who has developed thankfulness to life will be
led, through this thankfulness itself, to recognition of the
invisible spiritual Bestowers of life and to the transformation
of memory in loving devotion to them.
The
most beautiful way for one's personality to be led to the
super-sensible is when the path leads through thankfulness to
life. Thankfulness is also a way into the super-sensible and
finally it becomes veneration and love for the life-bestowing
spirit of man. Thankfulness gives birth to love and when love
is born from thankfulness to life it opens the heart to the
spiritual Powers permeating all existence. And as life began
with our birth and we cannot possibly begin to be thankful to
life merely from our birth as we then already obviously
possessed certain qualities, it is therefore quite certain that
thankfulness to life leads out of this life into pre-natal
existence. In order to be fully aware of what I am now saying
it must in any case be proved in actual life. If thankfulness
develops out of unprejudiced observation of life, let us test
whether love that quickens insight into the spirit is not
actually born from this thankfulness, and we shall find that it
is so. The question arising here can indeed only be answered
through life itself, but life answers as I have indicated.
When, however, through actual experiences we develop
thankfulness and love to the life-bestowing spiritual Powers
our feeling is quite different from anything associated with
memory. We experience vividly, with intensity; in
memory our experiences become pale shadows. Memory owes its
existence to our experiences; but we now come to something that
is mightier than our ordinary Ego.
When we consider the experiences that have come to us we are
not concerned merely with our shadowy memories; we are
concerned with something mighty, not with the shadow of our Ego
flowing through time, but with the creator of this earthly Ego.
Outside on every hand are the events to which we owe our
existence, and when we consider these events we must
acknowledge them to be powerful creators of our earthly Ego. We
stand in the middle of them with our momentary, present Ego;
behind us, if we look into our soul, are shadowy after-images
of our experiences; before us, there is weaving destiny, the
successive experiences of destiny which have formed and
moulded our Ego. The transition from thinking to feeling
belongs in fact to this vivid feeling of the shaping of
destiny, for thankfulness and love can be experienced only in
the realm of feeling. It is to this thankfulness and love that
there comes a presentiment of an irrevocable destiny.
When we have divined the existence of this ruling destiny,
having experienced thankfulness and love, we begin to
feel the power of the events that have made us what we are.
Think of someone of forty years of age: he has made his mark.
In order to take an extreme example, let us say that he has
become a great poet — after all there have been such
people! ... I might also say, not to go far afield, a noted
physiologist, or physicist, but I will take an imaginary
example. This man looks back to his eighteenth year; he goes
through the events from his fortieth back to his eighteenth
year and finds that at the age of eighteen he failed in his
leaving examination. At that time it had been a great grief to
him. But he had been obliged to arrange his life differently,
for he had not enough money to repeat the year, or to go
through the wide world as a student who had failed in his
examination. Everything was already prepared! Had he passed the
examination he would have become an excellent financial
inspector, have done an immense amount of work, but have had no
time to develop the facilities and powers lying in the
underground of his soul. Of course it can be said that if these
powers of phantasy exist they are so strong that in any case
they would break through the financial activities! This can be
said in the abstract, and is invariably said, but it is not
true. Many a poet owes his special temperament and what he has
become to the circumstance that something of the nature I have
indicated happened to him. He will be grateful — if he
sets any value on having become a famous poet — to the
examiners who ‘failed’ him and did not hinder the course of his
life by giving him ‘excellent’ in each subject. Whatever life
has been, when we take it in its reality and not sentimentally
we can certainly develop this thankfulness and acknowledge that
we have been forged by the destiny that goes with us or against
us. But at all events we must undergo this feeling in order to
see destiny as it were weaving as living reality before us.
Here I should like to interpolate how the same experiences come
to one who possesses Initiation-knowledge, one who can therefore
see into the spiritual world. He directs his gaze — which
has already been sharpened by the Imaginative and Inspired
knowledge he possesses and about which you can read in the book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds
— he directs his gaze to some particular experience. One who
has intensified and strengthened his knowledge can direct his gaze
with particular intensity to any experience he is
undergoing at the present moment. If a man has
Initiation-knowledge he is affected by the experience not less
but more strongly than if he has no such knowledge. From the
fact that he apparently undergoes experiences with much greater
composure than a man who has not this knowledge it must not be
concluded that he is less deeply moved by them. He is much more
strongly affected than the other. It is only that he has
acquired the power to look with composure and objectively
at the hard experiences of life; deep down in his being he
feels them more significantly than does the other. So when a
man endowed with Imagination and Inspiration has experiences
they are intense and strong; and because he has practised the
relevant exercises in this and in the preceding life he can
transform the experiences into pictures full of content, into
actual Imaginations.
In
what does this transformation consist? It consists in the fact
that not only does what the eyes see of the events and
experiences, stand there, but that the deeper spiritual
connections become evident and a picture which is also carried
about with one when the experience has passed, arises; the
experience has passed but the picture is immediately
present. The experience is intense and through
Imagination the spiritual connections play into it. The
soul is strongly stirred and it is then possible to look into
the spiritual reality and to retain the experience. If a night
goes by, the experience, which has become more intense because
the astral body and the Ego go out of the physical body, is
carried into the spiritual world. What has been experienced in
the physical world with the physical and etheric bodies
together can be experienced in the spiritual world only with
the Ego and astral body; but then, on waking, it is driven back
again into the physical body. But it is not brought back as if
by the ordinary consciousness which is restricted to memory
which gradually fades away. It is carried back in such a way
that one's whole being is permeated as with a phantom; it is
carried with one in full objectivity, in all intensity, and it
resounds with the reality of another human being standing
bodily before one.
And
then again two or three days or nights pass. Then, after these
two or three days or nights the following happens: what was
first carried into the spiritual world by the Ego and astral
body and has been brought back so that it is quickened and
vibrates in the physical body, yes, even becomes articulate and
stands behind the experiences as the ruling destiny. The
experiences are not alone; they are now coloured by what
produced them in former earthly lives, by the forecast of how
they will go on working in the earthly lives to come. Just as
we put memory as a shadowy image behind us, one who has
Initiation-knowledge puts experiences in front of him so that
they are clearly there before him. But they become as
transparent as glass and behind them, like a mighty cosmic
memory, stands the evolving karma, the objectivised memory. And
one becomes aware that man not only has within him the shadowy
memories of earthly life but that his karma is engraved around
him in the cosmic ether, the Akashic Chronicle. Within is
shadowy memory, without is the cosmic memory of our destiny
through the lives on Earth even although it remains unknown to
the ordinary-level consciousness.
Our
passage through the world may be sketched like this (a sketch
was made). We walk over the ground of the Earth bearing within
us shadowy memories. If we were to picture to ourselves a human
being with these shadowy memories in him we should have to
picture them as a little cloud in the region of his head
— where the head passes over into the body —
gradually becoming more and more shadowy towards the body. As a
human being moves through the world he is surrounded by an
etheric aura in which all his experiences are inscribed but
also everything that is inscribed in him from the previous
earthly life. We have an inner memory and we have the world's
memory outside us. Every human being is surrounded by this
aura. Not only is the present life engraved in us by way of
memory, but round about us the earthly lives of man are
engraved. It is not always easy to decipher this memory, but it
is there. The deciphering is difficult and in the instances of
which I have spoken to you during the last few days, the
deciphering was not easy to convert into knowledge. But
everything is there. Man has not only a memory within
him but an auric memory around him. It is not possible in a
single moment to call up a remembrance of what one has passed
through in life. The remembering always requires several days.
Here, waking up and going to sleep must also come into play, as
I have described. It can never be said that as some experience
has been undergone one should necessarily remember how it was
affected by earlier lives on Earth. It must be fixed in the
mind clearly and imaginatively, permeated with
inspiration; and then one must wait until it reveals
itself. One must never speculate about the spiritual world in
research, never invent anything, but only make the preparations
for enabling something to reveal itself from the spiritual
world. Anyone who believes he can force the spiritual world to
reveal this or that to him will be very greatly mistaken;
nothing but errors will come of it. Preparation must be made
for what one may hope to receive out of the spiritual world
more or less by grace.
Such is the path of knowledge which with Initiation-science can
reveal karma. It reveals that each human being bears karma as a
kind of aura around him. But through the path of thankfulness
in life I have described it is possible to have an inkling of
the karma a man carries around him in this way. This inkling of
being enclosed in a karmic-auric mantle can come to one. It
will take more than a period of a few days as would be possible
with Initiation-knowledge, but it will come about gradually in
the course of more intimate self-observation — often with
respect to experiences lying in the far past, to which we turn
our gaze. But if a certain event of our past life is mature
enough for us to recognise that the forces of preparation in
earlier earthly lives are playing into it, then we certainly
have an inkling of the truth. Unfortunately, however, it is
rare to-day for a man to penetrate so deeply into his own soul
that he achieves this grasp of his own experiences or even
comes near to developing the feeling of thankfulness. People
to-day take life far too externally. They rush through life
without pausing quietly to realise the nature of their various
experiences. If one has grown up with a certain
perception of the cosmic significance of human life, it may
sometimes seem quite remarkable how far individuals are from
being what they imagine themselves to be, how often they are
simply borne along by life without making any strong individual
impression.
Here too I should like to speak of concrete cases. I once came
across a history teacher, who was a very clever man and also
gave his pupils this impression. It might be said that when he
chose to do so he lectured with a certain inner enthusiasm
which lent emphasis to his words and when the right moment
came, enthusiasm for him as a teacher was aroused in his
pupils. There was something remarkable about him. I saw him at
the time when he could arouse real enthusiasm among his pupils.
But then life got the better of him; he became slack, and the
enthusiasm that formerly permeated his lectures was no
longer there. He read aloud from books, supposing that the
pupils did not know them and would not come across them. But
one day a pupil went up to the rostrum and saw the book from
which he had been reading, whereupon all the pupils bought it,
learnt its contents thoroughly and became excellent scholars.
At last he became so superficial that he no longer knew what he
was telling the pupils in his class. This transformation came
about in a relatively short time, and one could not help being
amazed to see how ineffectual he was after having quite
recently been able to generate such enthusiasm. A few more
years went by and the same teacher of whom I once heard a
number of pupils say with the characteristic enthusiasm of
youth: ‘There's a man for you! He is really enthusiastic about
history ... one can learn something from him!’ — this man
ended quite remarkably, in a life of stagnation and
triviality. In a few years he had degenerated to such an extent
that he was obliged to live outside the town where he had been
a teacher; he was so little respected that it was impossible
for him to live in the town.
Such a change for the worse in destiny seems a great riddle and
if life is taken earnestly enough it is through such cases that
one begins to ask questions about karma. For very many other
human beings seem to jog along in the same old groove,
undergoing no such radical changes. To genuine spiritual
knowledge such destinies as the one of which I have told you
become great problems. Through spiritual knowledge we are led
on the one hand to the great problems which in the lecture
yesterday, at the end of a series of incarnations, brought us
to Woodrow Wilson, but on the other hand, in the life
immediately surrounding us we are led in thought to the great
questions of human destiny. If we observe an example of this
kind quite without prejudice we make the discovery that surely
it cannot have its origin in the present life! And there will
be countless other, quite different cases, where no such twists
of destiny take place. We must therefore set to work with the
strong desire to understand such questions of destiny. And
other cases arise. I will give another example. These examples
always seem to me to have been placed in my own path in order
to give my conception of karma the right colouring.
I
also came to know another man personally — also a
teacher. He was even more revered than the one of whom I have
spoken, quite extraordinarily revered by his pupils. They
believed him to be the greatest sage at present existing in the
world. This was the impression made upon his numerous pupils
— not upon all, not, for instance, upon myself, but that
is a personal matter and is not characteristic. And now a most
remarkable thing happened. One could have believed from the
relation of this man to his pupils — he had thrown
himself into his teaching with all enthusiasm, with every fibre
of his soul — that it apparently satisfied him. Yet one
suddenly discovered that he was extremely glad not to be
obliged to teach any longer; he had been appointed Director of
a much less important school than the one in which he had
formerly taught. He was delighted to be able to carry out the
business of Director which was much more trivial work than
actual teaching. And the most striking and surprising thing of
all was that this same man, who could speak inspiringly about
Homer and Aeschylus, who presented geography in a
wonderful way to his pupils, that this same man ended in
trivial party-political circles. It was absolutely
incomprehensible!
I
am bringing this forward only as an example for I could add any
number more to the two cases of which I have spoken. They would
be personalities about whom one has the feeling that their Ego
has been little affected by life. They stand there as
personalities upon whom life has little effect; it has touched
them externally only. If it touched them when they were still
near their training-college examination or during their
University training when they listened with enthusiasm, then
they were full of zest. If life has led them to trivialities,
then they accommodate themselves to the trivial, and are
contented too; nothing touches their souls at all deeply. If it
were a matter of cleverness, of intelligence ... well, how many
people would be Anthroposophists to-day! Millions of
individuals to-day are clever enough to grasp Anthroposophy.
What hinders them in our time from coming to Anthroposophy is
that in their souls they take life superficially, letting life
flow past in its depths, its superficialities, its banalities.
They can be unimportant school-reformers for a time and after
that sit all day in cafes and play billiards, without a single
pause from morning until night. Such things do indeed go on in
our modern life.
Here the great question arises as to why this happens. In the
case of many souls it becomes apparent in what a remarkable way
such circumstances have come about. A whole number of
personalities such as those described through the two examples,
lead one back into the early Christian centuries, when they had
their most important previous incarnations. One is led to those
centuries when in the South and also already to some extent in
Middle Europe, Christianity had assumed the form which later on
it has still in many ways retained. It was a time when, as I
have shown in the book
Christianity as Mystical Fact,
the Mystery-wisdom out of which Christianity had grown, had
faded away. The Mystery-wisdom had contained the experience of
the Cosmic Christ, the knowledge that the Christ had proceeded
from the Sun, which is a spiritual reality in the Cosmos, and
had come to the Earth in order to be for the Earth that which
He has indeed become. This knowledge which extends from the
Earth into realms of cosmic spirituality existed among
influential Christians in the first century and faded away in
the fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh centuries
A.D. Then it faded away so
thoroughly that to-day it has come to the point — but it
began at that time — when the strongest rebuke levelled
against the conception of Christ held by Anthroposophy is that
Anthroposophy regards Christ as a Cosmic Being, as a Sun Being.
Everywhere among our opponents it is accounted to be
Anthroposophy's greatest crime that it has a cosmological
conception of Christ. It is said that this is a warming-up of
what once existed as Gnostic Christianity. — Now people
have no idea whatever of what Gnostic Christianity is. For with
the exception of a few fragments such as the Pistis Sophia,
from which little can be learnt, the Gnosis has become known to
posterity only through the writings of its opponents. Hence
nothing is really known about it. And now think about this
question: if nothing were to remain known of Anthroposophy
except the writings of my present opponents, if everything were
destroyed except their writings — what would be said
about Anthroposophy in times to come? Many critics endeavour to
treat the numerous anthroposophical books in existence as the
Gnostic writings were treated. If these critics were to
succeed, nothing would remain except the writings of opponents.
It would be to them that people would turn in the first place
— to purely antagonistic literature! That would be
extremely interesting! External research into the Gnosis had
nothing to go on except the writings of opponents! So it is
simply nonsense to talk about the ancient Gnosis having been
raked up, for nobody could do such a thing without knowledge of
the Gnosis derived from its authentic writings, but these have
been lost! It cannot be understood from works mostly written by
opponents and nothing else has come down to posterity. But even
so, to connect the Christ with the Spirit of the Cosmos is
accounted to be the greatest sin. In any real conception of the
Gospels, every page, every sentence points to the cosmic nature
of Christ. But that conception has gradually been rooted out.
And it was at the time when the Gnosis had been most thoroughly
exterminated that those individuals who when they come again
to-day do not get to grips with life, were for the most part
incarnated. In that previous incarnation, when they were
already clever and intelligent the culture of the age prevented
them from knowing anything about the Earth's connection with
the spiritual life in the Cosmos. It was because they stumbled,
as it were, through life, thinking of the Earth as enclosed in
itself with nothing but physical stars to be seen outside that
in the next incarnation they can only turn to meet the impacts
of real life with stumbling steps.
And
so we look into the destiny of men. We discover that the
culture of the age exercised this influence upon a very large
number of human beings, that it made them superficial and they
come to the present incarnation already with the tendency to
superficiality as I have described to you. For that is how you
experience these men, who once, in an earlier incarnation lost
connection with the spirit-powers in the Cosmos; in the
incarnation following the decisive one referred to, they cannot
find the connection with earthly life. But thoughts about karma
must do more than introduce mere reflections into our life,
they must bring will, activity. We must therefore bear
constantly in mind: How will it be in the future, if to the
inability to grasp the Spirit in the Cosmos is added the
inability to grasp earthly life, if men's attitude to the
trivialities of life is no different from their attitude to the
deep realities of life? Then indeed the study of karma becomes
a serious matter. It can thrive among us only if pursued with
the greatest earnestness.
My
wish to-day was to consider karma more from the aspect of
feeling.
|