Lecture Nine
Let
us compare what we learn through direct experiences about our
relation to life between birth and death with what we must feel
inwardly about the connection between our moral behaviour,
thoughts and acts and the consequences of this behaviour. We
began these evening lectures with just such studies and we will
conclude with the same theme.
When on the one hand we consider how our moral deeds proceed
from our purposes, from our whole attitude of soul, we realise
that if we observe ourselves without prejudice, one category of
our actions must be described as morally good, fit to become
part of the world-order; the other category is of actions
that must be described as morally bad, morally imperfect,
unworthy to become part of the world-order. But whatever comes
to pass through men cannot have a momentary significance only
— this is admitted by everybody. And the same
applies to the world of Nature. Everything has its
effects, its consequences, becomes the cause of something or is
itself the effect of something. Human life would certainly not
be in keeping with the course of world events if what it
embraces were not also cause and effect. But whereas we can be
completely satisfied when we observe Nature and clearly
perceive cause and effect, we certainly cannot be satisfied
about the connection between our moral experiences and the
course taken by the world-order. There appears to be no direct
connection in the physical happenings between what ought to be
the result of the moral disposition of our soul and what
actually comes to pass in the course of physical fife. And if
we consider happenings in wider circles of people we see that a
man who in respect of his soul-life seems to be morally good,
encounters misfortune and evil in the world, while a man who
seems inwardly weak and immoral may encounter external
events that are in no way a requital for what is harboured in
his soul. In short, we find no connection between what a man
experiences as his destiny and the essential quality of his
will. It could be called an irresponsible illusion if anyone
were to deceive himself that in the one life on Earth the
destiny he encounters is in any way the effect of his moral
will. The bad can be fortunate, the good unfortunate. These two
statements really summarise that characteristic of earthly life
which makes it incomprehensible, to begin with, to human
faculties. And we shall see from this that man, as he is now
placed in the world, is himself not in a position to
bring about the consequences answering to his deeds. In
the single life on Earth morality remains an inner disposition,
an inner attunement of the soul; it cannot become directly
manifest in outer physical reality. Admittedly, the inner
disposition of the soul can be a direct result of the moral
attitude. We can be inwardly contented with our good conduct,
in spite of being hit by misfortune that is in crass contrast
to what we have actually done; but the experience brought about
in this way remains in the realm of the soul. Man must
acknowledge that in physical life he is not in a position to
bring to outward manifestation in the world the inner, moral
content of his soul.
When we study karma as we have been doing during the last few
days, seeing how earlier lives work over into later
incarnations, we realise that in the moral sphere of the life
of soul the earlier is inwardly connected with the later. Put
briefly, however, this means that here, in physical life on
Earth, man has a constitution which forces back his moral
conduct into the realm of soul, does not allow it to take
effect in one earthly life. In a single earthly life man
is powerless to give effect to the moral content he bears in
his soul. His physical corporality, his etheric substantiality,
make him powerless. In the life between death and a new birth,
however, he becomes as powerful as here in physical life he is
powerless. But if in his physical fife the physical and etheric
bodies render him powerless, there must be something in the
life between death and a new birth that enables him to give
effect to this soul-content, to make it a reality there, and
physical reality too in later lives on Earth. On Earth we live
in our physical and etheric bodies amid the kingdoms of Nature
and it is what we have to take from Nature for these bodies
that renders us powerless. With our own being of
soul-and-spirit which passes through the gate of death we
become powerful after death because we are then united with the
Beings of the higher Hierarchies, just as on Earth we are
united with the kingdoms of Nature. The Beings of the
Hierarchies belong, as we know, to three realms: to the lowest
realm belong the Archai, Archangeloi, Angeloi; to the middle
realm belong Exousiai, Dynamis, Kyriotetes; to the highest
realm belong Thrones, Cherubim, Seraphim. In the course of
these lectures we have learnt how man lives between death and a
new birth with the inmost essence of the stars and hence with
these higher Hierarchies. But in order that the moral content
of the soul may come to expression in life on Earth, the
following must take place.
It
is true that, to begin with, we have to retain in our soul the
effects of our moral attitude of thought, feeling and will; we
have to wait until in the life between death and a new birth we
are vouchsafed the help of the Beings of the higher
Hierarchies. What lies in our soul is first carried through the
spiritual world, emerges again in a new earthly life and
appears then in the form in which it is right to appear. For
what should we be if in earthly life we could bring to direct
fulfilment the moral content of our soul? We should not
be typical men of terrestrial life! Just imagine that you bore
within your soul a moral content that quite justifiably you
considered could be capable of creating a favourable
world-situation and that you could actually bring it about.
What would you be then? You would be magicians, not typical men
of the Earth! For when a power of spirit-and-soul is brought to
direct expression, that is an essentially magical achievement.
In our present cycle of existence man is no magician in the
single life between birth and death. But he is a magician when,
together with the Beings of the Hierarchies, he is active
between death and a new birth and is able to continue these
activities when he again descends into life on Earth. The
karmic development through these two entirely different modes
of existence is in fact the process where the human being works
magically. The physical human being standing before us in external
life is membered — as I have shown at the end of the book
Von Seelenratseln
(Riddles of the Soul)
[See
The Case for Anthroposophy.
Steiner/Barfield, (Rudolf Steiner Press).]
— into the nerves-senses man, the
rhythmic man and the metabolic-limb man. Metabolism and limbs
are connected; when we use our limbs, metabolism is activated
and must continue; forces in man must be used up.
Metabolism must continue in inner experience too. But
both are related. When we observe the human metabolic system as
it operates in the physical body, we may be tempted at first to
regard it as man's lowest system. There are people who claim to
be idealists because they have accustomed themselves to look
down with a certain superciliousness upon the metabolic-limb
system. It is the lowest system, the system that the
respectable idealist would prefer to be without. But without it
earthly life would be impossible; it is the system that
represents man in his imperfection in earthly life.
Now
the facts of the matter are these. In the physical human form
the metabolic-limb system is the lowest and therefore has
little to do for what is essentially human in earthly
life, but it is connected in this earthly fife with the Beings
of the highest Hierarchy, the Thrones, the Cherubim, the
Seraphim. As we move about the world or work with our hands, in
this mysterious activity the activity of the Thrones, Cherubim
and Seraphim is present. These Beings remain helpers when man's
life continues between death and a new birth. They remain
helpers. Now it is quite erroneous to believe that the moral
content of the soul proceeds from the head. In reality,
regarded from a higher point of view, man's head is by no means
such a tremendously important organ. The head is really more or
less a mirror of the external world, and if we had the head
alone we should know about nothing except the external world.
The head simply reflects the external world. The experiences of
the head are mirrorings, reflections of the external world. Our
inner, moral impulses do not proceed from the head but from the
region of the metabolic-limb system, not, however, from the
physical system but from its constitution of soul-and spirit
wherein Thrones and Cherubim and Seraphim are living.
And
so to acquire a right view of man we must picture the
following. — (a drawing was made). This third member of
man's constitution, the metabolic-limb system, seems at first
to be imperfect, indeed it might be said that in respect of its
physical and etheric organisation it is unworthy of the human
being. But something else lies within it, or rather this system
lies within something else; the Thrones live within it, the
Cherubim weave within it, the Seraphim flame within it. When
man passes through the gate of death, everything that underlies
the physical metabolic-limb system falls away from him and with
his ego he remains in the realm wherein he previously existed,
namely in the realm of the Thrones, Cherubim and Seraphim. He
then separates from them but they continue to develop the moral
quality of the soul. Here on Earth man looks upwards, to the
Heavens, in order to divine a higher reality, a
spiritual-super-sensible reality. He does this as long as he is
on the Earth. If he is living between death and a new birth he
looks downwards and beholds what the moral content of his soul
becomes as a result of the deeds of the Cherubim, Seraphim and
Thrones. There below, when he descends again to the Earth, the
consequences are fulfilled; there the Cherubim, Seraphim
and Thrones are working to bring about the fulfilment of the
spiritual reality.
And
so, after we have become attentive to it, we see how in a
magical way man sends the consequences of his deeds of the
present into the next earthly life.
Now
that we have considered the metabolic-limb system, let us turn
our attention to its polar opposite, the nerves-and-senses
system. This, of course, extends through the whole organism but
is established primarily in the head. We will therefore
consider the human head. It is a fact that through the head man
experiences only a reflection of the existing external world.
His thoughts, his mental conceptions in which alone, as I have
said, he is really awake, are actually only reflections from
outside by way of the head. But when a man masters Initiation
Science, at first through Imaginative knowledge, then, as you
know, through its metamorphosis into knowledge through
Inspiration and then through Intuition, he is able to
look into his earlier lives on Earth — but he sees them
then in their spiritual form. In the spiritual world,
knowledge itself is reality. And the experience of a man who
with genuine Initiation-knowledge is able to look into earlier
earthly lives is that he is living not only, say, on June 15th,
1924, but is himself present through the course of the earlier
lives; he not only looks into those earlier lives but he looks
back upon his whole being. It is not abstract, theoretical
observation but direct identification with his own former
existence. His inner life is greatly stirred when he begins to
experience his earlier earthly lives. But this experience makes
it possible to change the focus of his world-outlook. What is
the usual focus of a world-outlook? The usual focus is the
head. This head with its physical organisation as the
foundation, this head which was yours in previous earthly lives
and in the immediately preceding life, cannot be made the focus
of your world-outlook when you have once experienced earlier
incarnations, for it has long since passed away. Only the
spiritual principle that was present in the head can be made
the focal starting-point of a world-outlook. Initiation
therefore consists in this: through going back into his former
existence on Earth, man spiritualises himself. All
clairvoyance in the best sense of the word actually means going
back into earlier earthly lives. To be initiated means not to
remain within the limits of the present life but to look at the
things of the world with the faculties that were ours in
earlier earthly existence. Whereas in the ordinary course we
are such imperfect beings in earthly life that we see only the
external physical world, the beings we were in earlier
existences had already become clairvoyant. And as a rule when
we experience the immediately preceding incarnation we make the
discovery that the person we were then was already much nearer
perfection.
How
does it come about that what we could have become after
the earlier life has not been achieved? Why is this? You see,
if as human beings having nothing but a head we were to pass
from one earthly life to another, we should be as perfect in
the later life as in the former, but we have the other systems
as well as the head. And since the magical principle in man
lies in the metabolic-limb system which in turn works in karma,
karma brings the head across from one earthly life to another.
Thus karma is directly active in the formation of the
head. And if we begin to develop an unprejudiced view of man in
this field, we shall gradually learn to read a great deal about
his karma from the physiognomy of his head. To look at the
human head with the ordinary consciousness of today is
just the same as taking Goethe's Faust and beginning
“I—h-a-v-e—s-t-u-d-i-e-d—a-l-a-s...”
because then one knows only the letters and cannot read. When
we have learnt to read we shall understand what these strange
signs mean. As I said once before, this trivial fact brings it
about that whereas we should otherwise see only about thirty
different shapes of letters in books, we have Goethe's
Faust, Hegel's Logic, the Bible, and so on,
simply because we have learnt to read. In the same way we can
learn to read the living things around us. The progress from
merely spelling the form of the human head and reading
it leads into the secrets of the karma of that particular
person. As regards the outwardly perceptible form of the
head we may say that every human being has his own particular
head; no single individual has exactly the same shaped head as
another. Although individuals often look alike, they are
not alike in respect of their karma. In the head-formation the
karma of a man's past is revealed to physical sense-perception.
In the metabolic-limb system lies future karma;
spiritually concealed, invisibly it is there. So that if we
speak of man in the spiritual sense we can say: Man is so
constituted that on the one hand he makes his past karma
visible and on the other hand he bears his future karma
invisibly within him.
In
this way we can eventually acquire an inwardly spiritual view
of the human being. Man's metabolic-limb system is inferior in
respect of its physical and etheric nature only, for in that
system live the Beings of the highest Hierarchy. When we
consider the physical-material aspect of the head it is
undoubtedly the most perfect system because it bears within it,
externally and visibly, what works over spiritually from
earlier earthly lives. The head is generally the most highly
valued, but it is not the most perfect in a spiritual respect.
For whereas Thrones, Cherubim and Seraphim live in the
metabolic-limb system, in the head-system live Archai,
Archangeloi, Angeloi. It is they who stand behind everything we
experience with our head in the physical world of sense. They
live in us, in our head-system, and are active behind our
consciousness; they encounter the effects of the physical world
and mirror them back, and we become conscious only of the
reflections. What we are aware of in our head-system is only
the semblance of the activities of the Archai, Archangeloi and
Angeloi. (A drawing was made). If I am to continue this diagram
I must say: the Archai, Archangeloi and Angeloi are working, at
the other pole, in the head-system. — I always use the
nomenclature of the earlier Christian world-conception in which
the spiritual connection was still intact, although the
spiritual Beings may just as well be given other names.
Between the nerves-and-senses system which is based primarily
in the head and the metabolic-limb system, man has the rhythmic
system in which everything that is active between the lungs and
the heart is contained. In all this activity live the Beings of
the Hierarchy of the Exousiai. Dynamis, Kyriotetes.
In
concluding our studies of karma we are led again to the
realisation that while man faces the three kingdoms of Nature
here on Earth, behind him are the spiritual kingdoms of the
Hierarchies, one above the other. And as here on the Earth his
physical body encompasses him and prevents him from bringing to
fulfilment by magic the moral forces of his soul, after death
the world of the Hierarchies receives him and enables him to
make effective magically for the next incarnation what he
cannot achieve in one earthly life. When a man passes over from
one earthly life to the next he would in all circumstances, if
his further evolution were to proceed consistently, develop
clairvoyance with the head-system yielded by the former life;
Archai, Archangeloi and Angeloi would lead him to clairvoyance.
Hence if a man is to have insight into spiritual reality
— insight that without an iota of superstition or
charlatanry can be called clairvoyance — he must be able
to project himself with a certain cosmic consciousness
into his previous life on Earth, although in the external world
he has progressed to his present incarnation.
Thus, if someone is living, let us say, in the twentieth
century, he uses the body which this century can provide and
for knowledge he must avail himself of the head. He cannot be
clairvoyant. But let us suppose he were transported into a
previous earthly life, say in the tenth or eleventh century, as
the result of his meditative exercises now, in this twentieth
century. He is not the same person as he was at that earlier
time, but through his own forces he has brought it about
spiritually that now, in the twentieth century, he is the man
he was in that earlier epoch — a clairvoyant personality.
Clairvoyance can reveal this clearly to Initiation-knowledge
during life in the physical world. When we look closely into
human life, however, it is revealed to clairvoyant
consciousness that in the deeper impulses of a man's
nature, in the deeper foundations of his soul, what was present
in a former incarnation rises up again in a different form. It
is therefore essential, if we wish to approach in earnest such
matters as the working of karma, that earthly experience must
be of a more spiritual character than is usual.
I
will elaborate what I have been saying by means of an example.
You know from the way in which I have given such examples that
they are the findings of spiritual investigation undertaken
with a deep sense of responsibility.
A
certain individual lived in the European-Asiatic Orient,
somewhat earlier than the founding of Christianity, with a task
that was far from his liking. It was in an epoch when slavery
was still prevalent and his task was to supervise a number of
slaves belonging to a certain owner. Supersensible vision leads
us to a situation where a human soul, incarnated at that time
in the body of a slave-overseer, was obliged to carry out
whatever the cruel owner of these slaves decreed. The slaves
were in the care of the overseer and relationships of an
ethical nature developed between them. But there was deep
conflict in the soul of this overseer. It went against the
grain to carry out the often cruel, disciplinary punishments
ordered by his master. Nevertheless he obeyed, because he was
accustomed to these circumstances and because it was natural at
that time to act in such a way. Now just consider for a moment:
are people to-day always what they would like to be? They do
not often think about this; they deceive themselves about the
disharmony between what they are and what they would like to
be. This individual too was not what he would have liked to be,
but intrinsically he had deep sympathy, deep love, for all the
unhappy slaves upon whom he was obliged to inflict these
cruelties. Social customs, so to say, caused him to hurt the
slaves in many ways. He therefore shared the responsibility,
although the master and owner of the slaves was primarily the
culprit.
Both individualities were born again in the middle of the
Middle Ages, and now as a married couple. The former
slave-owner came again in a male incarnation, the overseer came
as a woman. In the middle of the Middle Ages the reincarnated
slave-owner held a position in a certain village commune, a
position that was by no means pleasant, for he was a kind of
police jailer and was held responsible for whatever
happened in the commune; he felt that life was full of
hardships. If we look for an explanation we find that these
villagers were for the most part reincarnations of the slaves
whom he had formerly owned and whom he had caused to be
ill-treated by his overseer. The karmic result turned out to be
that the former slave-owner, although he had become a fairly
high official, was nevertheless the village jailer, who
together with his wife was held responsible for whatever
happened in the commune. But at the same time, because the wife
shared in all the suffering that the one-time slaves caused her
husband, the karma was fulfilled between her — the former
overseer — and the slave-owner. The bond between these
two was dissolved but not the tie between the one-time
overseer, now incarnated as a woman, and the members of the
commune. They came together again in the nineteenth century.
The earlier overseer, who in a certain way had adjusted his
relation to the former master, came again as the great
educational reformer Pestalozzi, and those who had been
the slaves under him were the children who received such
infinite benefit from his educational principles.
These things must be viewed not merely with the prosaic
intellect, but with soul, with feeling and with love which must
become as clear and brilliant as the intellect and be able to
develop genuine knowledge. The intellect can develop only
pictures of outer Nature, and anyone who thinks that he gets
something more than pictures deceives himself. It is possible
to get more only if soul, feeling and love become forces of
knowledge, and it is only by going back to earlier karma that
we are gradually able to realise how karma works. But the whole
soul must participate, and the content of these explanations of
karma must be grasped by the whole being of man.
It
really amounts to this: the soul must penetrate into the very
essence of the Anthroposophical Movement. A short time ago I
was deeply moved by a certain incident. What I have told you
about Pestalozzi I had also said in a lecture in Dornach, and
later on had occasion to visit an official in Basle,
accompanied by another member of the Dornach Executive. The
well-known picture of Pestalozzi among the children was hanging
on the wall in the waiting-room. It was known to the member of
the Vorstand who was with me. He was deeply moved by it and he
said: When one looks at this faithful portrayal of Pestalozzi,
one realises that such a situation can only have come about in
the way that is revealed through Anthroposophy. This kind of
thing is just what ought to occur more often, this realisation
in direct experience of what has been discovered by
anthroposophical investigations.
These indications of karma which I have now been able, to my
great satisfaction, to give you, cannot make demands merely
upon your intellect. What has been presented during these eight
days calls not merely upon intellect but upon heart, upon the
whole soul. And only when you have gathered together all that I
have said about the reincarnation of historical personalities,
about observation of individual karma, about the influences of
sleeping and waking life in the development of karma and let it
all work in your hearts and souls, will a comprehensive grasp
of the working of karma in individual personalities result from
these studies.
Our
civilisation will be rescued from the grip of its present
decline only if what is so readily taken to-day merely in an
intellectualistic sense penetrates into the whole being of man.
What does an Oriental say nowadays about Western man? The
spirituality of an Oriental at the present time is not of a
kind that we can adopt forthwith, but it is a spirituality
which in the ancient past was able to gaze deeply into the
super-sensible worlds. To-day only traces have remained
but in his soul an Oriental still has the feeling of what was
once experienced in the East, namely, living communion
with the spirit inherent in all things. Such is the experience
of those who are not entirely steeped in materialism. One
Oriental who had a feeling for the spirituality in Eastern
wisdom said the following as he contemplated Western
civilisation: ‘Its essential characteristic is that it is only
façade and has no foundations. The façade stands on
the ground without any solid foundations.’ — And this
Oriental went on to say: ‘Yes, in nearly everything that
belongs to his civilisation, Western man actually starts from
the standpoint of his ego, the ego that is enclosed within a
single life and therefore has no reality. It has reality only
when it emerges from its bounds and leads into the successive
earthly lives.’ Realisation of existence in successive
earthly lives is regarded by the Oriental as the
foundation-structure and remaining with the ego that is
enclosed between birth and death he regards as the façade.
Have we not heard to-day that when a man looks into spiritual
reality he will look back into the past? If he contemplates
karmic development with its magical processes he must have
accepted the principle of successive incarnations. Then the ego
widens out and will no longer be egotistic. The Oriental says
that the European can recognise the ego only within the limits
of birth and death and this he calls the egotism of the
European. So he says that European, indeed Western
civilisation as a whole, is only façade and has no
foundation-structure; moreover that if this state of things
continues and Western civilisation persists in recognising only
the ego living between birth and death, the separate stones of
the façade might one day fall apart as the façade has
no foundation. This picture of the single stones
crumbling away from the façade has actually arisen in many
oriental souls, living as they do, largely in Imaginations. It
is insight into such matters as have been studied here during
these last few days that can add the foundation-structure and
supplement the mere façade. Contemplation of the karma
which reaches from earthly life to earthly life leads man
beyond the restricted activity that is limited to a single life
on Earth.
In
what must be our final lecture, I should now like to place
before your souls a vista into the cultural task of
Anthroposophy. If it works on within you, revealing many
things, you will become co-workers in the task of creating the
foundation-structure for a true and genuine façade of
Western civilisation. I have nothing to add to what has often
been said by men of the East. What they really mean is this:
the West has departed too far from the spirit, it can no longer
find the foundation-structure; the East must contribute what it
still possesses from ancient times in order that civilisation
on Earth may not perish.
Whether this terrible fate that is prophesied for Western
civilisation by all clear-sighted Orientals can be avoided,
depends upon endeavours such as those of Anthroposophy.
Resolute will is needed to penetrate into the spiritual world,
in order that its forces may again be received into the hearts
of men. Hence a community of human beings who have come
together, as you have done, for spiritual activity, has grasped
what this truly means only if the resolution is taken to apply
all the forces of the will to the task of furthering, for the
sake of humanity, experience of the spirit. My purpose in these
lectures was to point the way to experience of spiritual
reality and thus to the moral principle that is
everywhere implicit in it. For this reason I wanted in
these hours when we could be together again, to give you just
what I have given. But in Anthroposophy spiritual things should
be taken in earnest at all times, during every moment, not only
during every lecture-hour. In Anthroposophy, therefore, it is
true to say that when we are beside one another in space, we
are together physically, but because we recognise spiritual
reality we know that we are also together even when physically
apart. And as I know that some of you here must travel back
after the lecture, I will add this. — As we make our
farewells let us say to ourselves that we will be true
anthroposophists by remaining together in our souls through the
spirit which becomes alive in us through our view of life. Let
those of us who are now going away again say to our friends of
the Breslau Group: we too will think about what we have been
able to acquire for our own souls and those of others while
working together with you. We will feel that we are with you
even when we have gone away from this room and we hope that the
Breslau friends too will think of those who were so glad to
have been among them at this time.
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