IX
Man's Experience after Death
It has often been emphasized
that the present can best be understood in the light of the past and its
happenings, and we shall most easily discover and understand the
characteristics of our spiritual ideals for the future by looking back into
times of remote antiquity. Today, therefore, we will consider developments
that took place after the destruction of ancient Atlantis and, in
connection with those developments, man's experience during the life
after death.
The conditions experienced
by the soul between death and a new birth have not always been the same.
They, too, have changed in the course of evolution. During the great
cultural epochs — the ancient Indian, the epoch of the Holy Rishis;
the ancient Persian, epoch of the Zarathustrian culture; the
Egypto-Chaldean,
Greco-Latin and our present epoch — man has connected himself
ever more closely with the physical plane, which he grew to love more
and more intensely. In every such epoch the human soul descended deeper
into the material world. The greater the understanding acquired by man
for this world, the stranger the spiritual world became for him after
death. This was the case most strongly in the Greco-Latin epoch. The
Greeks loved the physical world because in their glorious art, in that
splendid adornment of physical existence, their whole soul could live
joyfully. The physical world was dear to the Roman because in his discovery
of the ego, the “I,” the feeling of his own personality
could develop to the full. The concepts of Roman citizenship and Roman
rights are hallmarks of this cultural epoch. The Roman felt at home
in this physical, material world. The concept of rights has existed
only since that epoch, so it is quite correct to say that jurisprudence
began in the Roman Empire; it is the sign of reverence for the single
personality. Death was the great unknown and evoked fear. The utterance
of Achilles: “Better it is to be a beggar in the upper world than
a king in the realm of Shades,” aptly indicates the conception
prevailing in that epoch of the soul's experience during the life after
death in the spiritual world. The more fully these souls had given
expression in the realm of earth to all their faculties, the more did the
capacity to find their bearings in the spiritual world after death depart
from them. The soul felt isolated in the spheres it had now entered. Even
in spiritland (Devachan) the soul felt that everything around it was
dark, empty and cold. The soul was no longer capable of experiencing
the spirituality of yonder world. Even the great leaders of mankind,
the initiates, could not change this condition, yet they are the teachers
of men not only here on earth but also in yonder worlds. When they told
the dead anything about the world this side of the threshold, these
souls felt still greater pain at having been obliged to leave the physical
world that had become so dear to them. The teachers could bring with
them nothing that would help or be of value to the dead, all of whom
longed for reincarnation. A human being felt as though he were shut
away from his brothers, abandoned even in the realm of the spirit. Had
these conditions remained, love and brotherliness would also have gradually
disappeared from the earth. For this sojourn in the realm of spirit
would have meant that these souls would bring egoism with them into
the physical world and into a life wholly centered in the individual
self.
In the ancient. Indian
epoch man still regarded the earthly world as maya, but things changed
in the course of evolution. Zarathustra already proclaimed that the
spiritual can also be found by man in the physical world. He revealed
the path by which the people were ultimately to realize that the sun
with its light is only the external body of a sublime spiritual being
whom he called Ahura Mazdao, the Great Aura, in contrast to the little
human aura. His aim was to proclaim that this being, as yet far off,
would one day come down to the earth in order to unite with its very
substance and to work further in the evolution of humanity. For the
people of Zarathustra this heralded the same being who in later history
lived on the earth as Christ. To his pupils Zarathustra proclaimed,
“If you learn to understand that the spiritual is present in
everything physical and material, that the physical is permeated by the
great Sun Aura, by Ahura Mazdao, then Ahriman will no longer lead you
astray.”
At other times Zarathustra
said, “So great, so mighty is He who has revealed Himself to me
in the sun that I sacrifice everything to him. Gladly I offer to Him
the life of my body, the etheric existence of my senses, the expression
of my deeds, the astral body.”
This was the pledge once
made by the great Zarathustra. He announced to his pupils that the great
Sun Spirit would reveal Himself directly in the earth itself, in the
realities of earthly existence. Thus did Zarathustra inaugurate the
teaching that the material is only the physiognomy, the expression of
the spiritual.
Then came the time when
the being who had been heralded by Zarathustra revealed himself to Moses
in the burning thornbush and on Sinai. Moses taught that this Sun Being
is also the Ego Being, the highest principle that can be membered into
man. But it is not only into man that a particle of the Sun Spirit has
descended; it has also descended into everything in external nature,
into the elements, everywhere. The same divinity who, in the name of
the “I am the I am,” the principle once revealed to Zarathustra
as Ahura Mazdao, as the innermost core, the primordial ground of all
existence, was proclaimed by Moses to a whole people as the supreme
being whose name was inexpressible and might be uttered only in the
innermost sanctuary by the officiating priest. The Godhead who dwells
in man, who does not reveal Himself only in the elements, in the flaming
fire, is He who is here proclaimed.
Thus we can regard
Zarathustra as the herald of Jehovah, of the same being who at the
beginning of our time-reckoning dwelt for three years in the body of Jesus
of Nazareth. This is the same God who had been proclaimed by Moses and
Zarathustra.
Christ says, “How
shall ye believe me if ye have not believed )Moses and the prophets?”
Herewith Christ confirms that the Old Testament had proclaimed in advance,
only under different names, the same God whom He, Christ also proclaims.
All events in the world need a certain time to take effect. On Sinai,
in the burning thornbush, this Sun Being, descending from the heights
of the spiritual world, had reached the point where He could announce
Himself to man through the elements. He now came nearer and nearer to
the earth, into the sheaths of Jesus of Nazareth at the Baptism in the
Jordan, and when the Mystery of Golgotha took place on the earth and
the blood flowed from the wounds of the Redeemer, this was not only
the expression of a great cosmic event but also of the greatest of all
earthly events: the Christ passed into the earth's aura as the Spirit
of the earth. A new impetus had been given and could be perceived by
clairvoyance, for at that moment the earth's aura changed, revealing
particular colors. New colors were revealed and new powers were
incorporated in the earth's aura. At the moment when the blood that is
the physical expression of the ego flowed from the wounds of the Redeemer
on Golgotha, at that moment the ego of Christ united with the earth. But
the moment had also come when conditions in the spiritual world could
begin to change for souls after death. This was the meaning of Christ's
descent into Hell.
A clairvoyant, living
before the event of Golgotha, would not have seen in the earth's aura
what could be seen there later on, when Christ Jesus had passed through
the death on Golgotha. Let us now think of the event of Damascus. Saul
who, as an initiate of the Jewish Mysteries, knew full well that the
“Great Aura,” Ahura Mazdao, would one day unite with the
earth, rebelled against the belief that this being could have died on the
shameful cross. Although he had participated in the events in Palestine,
he did not believe that this great spirit had dwelt on the earth in
Jesus of Nazareth. It was when he became clairvoyant near the gates
of Damascus that in the earth's aura he beheld the Christ spirit,
the living Christ, who could not previously have been seen there. He
then said to himself, “Yes, it was predicted that the earth's
aura would change, and that has now come to pass.” Then Saul became
Paul. Paul spoke of himself as one who had been born prematurely, one
who had become clairvoyant through grace; his was a premature birth
because maturity had not yet been fully reached; he had not descended
so deeply into matter and was less firmly connected with the physical
body. Those who follow the course of Christianity know that the personality
in it of supreme importance is Paul. He achieved more than anyone else
for its propagation.
It was an occult fact,
an occult event, by which Paul was converted, and it can justly be said
that through that clairvoyant experience humanity was led to Christ.
At that time a change took place in the earth's aura, and since then
it has been changed. The words of St. John's Gospel were thus
fulfilled: “He who eats my bread treads upon me with his feet.”
Since then Christ has been the Spirit of the earth, the planetary Spirit.
The earth is the body of Christ; His habitation is within the earth.
This profound utterance in St. John's Gospel is not to be understood
in an adverse sense or as a pointer to Judas who betrayed Christ. Rather,
the reference is to the Christ-Jehovah Divinity and His relation to
the earth.
When the occult investigator
compares the effect of the art of the Greeks and post-Christian art upon
the world man enters after death, he still finds that when a clairvoyant
contemplates with physical eyes a Greek temple with its Doric pillars
— for example, the ruins at Paestum-he may well be entranced by
the harmonious forms that follow the spiritual lines of direction and
thereby make this temple an actual dwelling place of the god. Just as
a soul feels drawn to the body that is fitting for it, so does the god
descend into these forms that harmonize so perfectly with his nature
and being. But when a seer turns his eyes to the spiritual counterpart
of his temple, he finds nothing in the spiritual world. The temple seems
to have been obliterated from that world and a space left empty there:
nothing of the temple is to be seen. If, on the other hand, a seer is
contemplating works of art of the post-Christian era or, for example,
contemplating the Gospel of St. John or the passages in the Old and
New Testaments that have to do with Christ-Jehovah or Raphael's
Madonnas — if the seer contemplates these creations first with
physical eyes and then with clairvoyant sight, they are by no means
invisible in the spiritual world but radiate there in even greater
splendor. This is especially true of the Gospel of St. John. It is in the
spiritual world that the greatness of that creation is first realized. It
is in the spiritual world that whatever is connected with the Mystery of
Golgotha first becomes radiant and clear in the fullest sense.
Simultaneously with the
historical event on the physical plane, a spiritual happening, which
was also a symbolic happening, took place when the blood flowed from
the Redeemer's wounds. When Christ was no longer living in the physical
body of Jesus of Nazareth, at the moment when He died on Golgotha, He
appeared in the spiritual world to the souls living between death and
rebirth, and the darkness abated. The spiritual world was suddenly filled
with light. Just as the objects in a dark room suddenly become visible
when a ray of light shines into the room and you see the objects that
were always there although you could not previously detect them, thus
did light pour into the world of the dead. The souls there were again
able to perceive what was around them, to feel united in the realm of
spirit with their brothers and could now bring into the physical world
the qualities of love and brotherliness. Thus a new light came into
this world of the dead, for the Mystery of Golgotha has significance
not only for the world in which it took place physically but for all
the worlds with which man is connected in the course of his evolution.
If the spiritual world had remained as the dead experienced it during
the Greco-Latin epoch, if the human soul had remained in the icy coldness
and loneliness then prevailing, brotherliness and love would have gradually
vanished from the world. Man would have brought with him from Devachan
the longing for seclusion. For the light that then streamed into the
earthly world and also into the world of the dead was meant to establish
the kingdom of brotherliness and love on the earth. That is the mission
of the Christ impulse.
We will now consider from
still another side the Mystery of Golgotha and the secret of the blood
flowing from the wounds of the Redeemer.
We know that man on the
earth has received an inheritance from Old Moon. The three lower bodies,
physical body, etheric body and astral body had been prepared for him
and it was on the earth that the ego was first added — the ego
as the expression of human freedom and independence. In ancient times
it was important to establish the homogeneity of mankind. At the beginning,
conditions were such that the relations of one human being to another
were saved only by being given a physical foundation. The blood is the
expression of the ego. Blood kinship and the ties of blood were the
ruling principles. The physical blood was the medium operating from
man to man. This was how things were in times of antiquity. But through
Christ Jesus love became a non-material bond. The activity of the human
group ego declined. In earlier times the human being belonged to a communal
tribal ego and he felt safe and secure within it, within the bosom of
Father Abraham. This kinship was much more important to him than his
personal identity. His higher self continued to exist in the ties of
blood kinship. In the Old Testament we hear of Noah and other tribal
fathers that they lived for hundreds of years. We are there led back
to times when the human being not only had a memory of what he himself
had experienced but also to a time when this memory extended far back
into the generations. He did not say “I” of himself but
he lived in his “I” right back to remote ancestors. His
life did not begin with his birth; it was not then that he began to
say “I” of himself but he said “I” of everything
his ancestors had experienced.
It was against love based
on blood that the luciferic beings at all times directed their sharpest
attacks. Their aim was to make each single human being dependent upon
himself alone, to instill consciousness of self into man even between
death and a new birth. But divine beings, bearers of love, strove to
bring individuals together through bonds other than those based on ties
of blood, which take no account of freedom. The Christ principle unites
with the full expression of the “I” the power flowing from
the spirit of love and lets it hold sway from individual to individual.
Hence there is a saying, Christ is the true Lucifer (Christus verus
Luciferus) or Light-bringer, and finally the opponent of the fallen
Lucifer. The love based on blood was transformed by Christ into spiritual
love, into the brotherly love streaming from soul to soul. Christ's
utterance, “He who forsakes not father and mother cannot be my
disciple,” is to be understood in the sense that love based on
blood must be transformed into the brotherly love that embraces all
human beings with equal strength. Spiritual science takes nothing away
from any of these biblical utterances but when it is rightly understood
can only enrich them with a deeper understanding of Christian grace.
The power of spiritual love was brought to the souls of men for the
first time by Christ when He appeared on the earth; and with the blood
that flowed on Golgotha from the wounds of the Redeemer the superfluous
blood of humanity was as it were sacrificed. Through this act the teaching
was confirmed that individual must confront individual as human brothers.
In the world today there is still little understanding of Christ. Mankind
has first to learn to realize the greatness of this most. mighty cosmic
event. A few individuals have always had a divining of the whole
significance of the Christ Being and His appearance on the earth. How have
they thought of that event? Think of the human beings and peoples who
preserved for some considerable time the connection with the spiritual
world. The ancient Indian set little store by his connection with the
physical world. He was intent upon the acquisition of super-sensible truths
and lofty spiritual life in the spiritual world but had no desire to love
physical existence. Let me tell you about an Eastern saga, which indicates
in a splendid way how the Christ principle was tentatively grasped
there.
In the course of time,
so runs this saga, there appeared the power that guides our earth. An
oriental legend, which reports it, was narrated in the temples of Northern
Tibet to the pupil of the wisdom of the Buddha, and has been preserved
ever since. This Eastern legend narrates that Kashyapa, the worthiest
pupil of the Buddha, lived at a time when, even in the East, little
understanding of wisdom was to be found. When he felt his end approaching
he withdrew into a cave where he lived for long ages; his corpse was
to be preserved there to await the appearance of the Maitreya Buddha
in order then to ascend to heaven.
The gist of this legend
follows. If there had been no special event, that is to say, if Christ
had not appeared on the earth, neither the East nor the West would have
been able to find the path into the spiritual world. The body of Kashyapa
is pre-served until the Maitreya Buddha releases the corpse from the
earth. This means that in the future man will again have powers whereby
what is earthly can be spiritualized. The sublime being who conducts
Kashyapa's body into the spiritual world will have descended more deeply
than any being has ever done. Christ Himself releases the body of Kashyapa.
In the period following this event the body is no longer there. What
does this mean? It means that the body was immediately transported into
the spiritual world. The body of Kashyapa can be liberated in the element
of fire. Where is this fire? When seen by Paul before Damascus it was
spiritualized. Thus the appearance of Christ on the earth is the great
turning point when man can ascend again from the physical into the
spiritual world.
Now think of the Buddha's
teaching. Through observing old age, illness, death, and so forth, the
great truth concerning suffering dawned in him. He now taught of the
cessation of suffering, of release from suffering through the elimination
of the desire for birth, for physical incarnation.
Now think of humanity
six hundred years later. What do you find? Humanity reveres a corpse.
Men gaze at Christ on the cross, Christ who dies and through His death
brought life. Life has vanquished death.
One: To be born is
suffering? No, for Christ entered into our earth and henceforward for me,
a Christian, to be born is no longer suffering.
Two: Illness is suffering?
But the great medicine will exist, that is, the power of the soul that
has been kindled by the Christ impulse. In uniting himself with the
Christ impulse, man spiritualizes his life.
Three: Old age is suffering?
But whereas man's body becomes frail and infirm, in his real self he
grows ever stronger and more powerful.
Four: Death is suffering?
But through Christ the corpse has become the symbol of the fact that
death, physical death, has been vanquished by life, by the spirit; death
has been finally overcome by life.
Five: To be separated
from the being one loves is suffering? But the man who has understood
Christ is never separated from the one he loves, for Christ has brought
light to the world stretching between death and a new birth; so a man
remains united with the object of his love.
Six: Not to receive that
for which one craves is suffering? He who lives with Christ will no
longer crave for what does not come to him, or is not given to him.
Seven: To be united with
what one does not love is suffering? But the man who has recognized
Christ kindles in himself that universal love that envelops every being,
every object according to its value.
Eight: To be separated
from what one loves is no longer suffering, for in Christ there is no
more separation.
Thus for the illness of
suffering, which Buddha proclaimed and recognized, the remedy has been
given through Christ.
This turning of humanity
to Christ and to the dead body on the cross is the greatest transformation
that has ever come to pass in evolution.
|