The objection is frequently made that theosophy does not really work its
way into the realm of morality. In fact it is said that through certain of
its teachings it in some respects not only does not counter egotism but
furthers it. Those who are of this opinion share the following thoughts.
They say that theosophy demonstrates how the human being develops his
existence from life to life and that the main point is that even if he
suffers defeats he has the possibility of striving ever higher, employing
in a subsequent life the results of what he has learned in a given life as
in a kind of “school.” He who immerses himself completely in this
belief in human perfectibility will strive to render his “I” ever
more pure, to make it as rich as possible, so that he may ascend ever higher
and higher. This, so these people say, is after all really an egotistic
striving. For we theosophists, they say, seek to attract teachings and forces
from the spiritual world in order to elevate our “I” to ever
greater heights. This is therefore an egotistic basis for human action.
These people maintain further that we theosophists are convinced that we
prepare a bad karma for ourselves through imperfect actions. Thus in order
not to do so the theosophist will avoid doing this or that which he would
otherwise have done. He therefore refrains from the action for fear of karma.
For the same reason he would probably also do this or that which he otherwise
would not have done, and this too would be but one more quite egotistic
motivation for an action. There are a number of people who say that the
teachings of karma and reincarnation as well as the rest of the striving for
perfection which originates in theosophy leads people to work spiritually
for a refined form of higher egotism. It would actually be a severe
reproach if one were able to maintain that theosophy prompts people to
develop moral action not out of sympathy and compassion but out of fear
of punishment. Let us now ask ourselves whether such a reproach is
really justified. We must reach very deeply into occult research if we
wish to refute such a reproach to theosophy in a really fundamental way.
Let us assume that someone were to say that if a person does not already
possess this striving for perfection, theosophy will certainly never
prompt him to moral actions. A deeper understanding of what theosophy
has to say can teach us that the individual is related to the whole of
humanity in such a way that by acting immorally he not only does
something that may earn him a punishment. It is rather the case that
through an immoral thought, an immoral action or attitude he brings
about something really absurd, something that cannot be reconciled with
truly healthy thinking.
The statement has many implications. An immoral action not only
implies a subsequent karmic punishment; it is rather in the most
fundamental respect an action that one definitely ought not to do. Let us
assume that a person commits a theft. In so doing the person incurs a
karmic punishment. If one wishes to avoid this punishment one simply
does not steal. But the matter is still more complicated. Let us ask
ourselves what really motivates the person who lies or steals. The liar or
thief seeks personal advantage the liar perhaps wishing to wiggle out
of an unpleasant situation. Such an action is only meaningful if one actually
does gain an advantage through lying or stealing. If the person were now
to realize that he simply cannot have that advantage, that he is wrong,
that on the contrary he will bring about a disadvantage, he would then say
to himself that it is nonsense even to think about such an action. As
theosophy penetrates ever deeper into human civilization, people will
know that it is absurd, indeed that it is ridiculous, to believe that through
lying or stealing one can acquire what one seeks to acquire. For one thing
will become increasingly clear for all people as theosophy enters their
consciousness: that in the sense of higher causes we have to do not at all
with totally separate human individualities, but that along with the
separate individualities the whole of humanity forms a unity. One will
realize more and more that in the sense of a true view of the world the
finger is more intelligent than the whole man, for it does not presume to
be something on its own, independent of the entire human organism to
which it belongs. In its dull consciousness it knows that it cannot exist
without the whole organism.
But people continually embrace illusions. They fancy themselves
separate by virtue of what is enclosed within their skins. This they are,
however, just as little as is the finger without the whole organism. The
source of the illusion is the fact that the human being can wander about
and the finger cannot. We are in the same situation on earth as is the
finger on our organism. The science that believes our earth is a glowing
hot, fluid sphere surrounded by a hard shell upon which we humans walk
about, and that this explains the earth, stands at the same level as a
science that would believe that in all essential respects the human being
consists of nothing more, nothing else than his skeleton, for what one
perceives of the earth is the same as the skeleton in man. The rest of what
belongs to the earth is of a super-sensible nature. The earth is a real
organism, a real living being. When one pictures to oneself the human
being as a living creature, one can think of his blood with its red and
white corpuscles. These can only develop in the entire human organism
and thereby be what they are. What these red and white blood corpuscles
are for the human being we human beings are for the organism of the
earth. We definitely belong to this earth organism. We form a part of the
whole living being that is the earth, and only then do we view ourselves
correctly when we say, “As single individuals we are nothing. We are
only complete when we think our way into the ‘body’ of the earth,
the body of which we perceive only the skeleton, the mineral shell, as long
as we do not acknowledge the spiritual members of this earth organism.”
When a process of infection arises in the human organism, the entire
organism is seized by fever, by illness. If we translate this into terms
applicable to the earth organism we can say that what occultism
maintains is true: When something immoral is done anywhere on earth it
amounts to the same thing for the whole earth organism as a little
festering boil on the human body, which makes the whole organism sick.
So that if a theft is committed on the earth the result is that the entire
earth develops a kind of fever. This is not meant merely in a metaphorical
sense. It is well-founded. The whole organism of the earth suffers from
everything immoral and as individuals we can do nothing immoral
without affecting the whole earth.
It is really a simple thought, yet people have a difficult time grasping it.
But let those people who do not want to believe it just wait. Let one try to
impress such thoughts upon our culture; let one try with these thoughts to
appeal to the human heart, the human conscience. Whenever people
anywhere act immorally their actions are a kind of infected boil for the
whole earth and make the earth organism ill, and experience would show
that tremendous moral impulses inhere in such knowledge.
One can preach morality as much as one likes; it will not help people one
bit. But knowledge such as we have developed here would not seize hold
of people merely as knowledge. If it found its way into the developing
culture, if it streamed into the soul already in childhood, it would provide
a tremendous moral impulse, for in the end no moral preachments have
any real power to overwhelm, to convince the human soul.
Schopenhauer
is quite right when he says that to preach morality is easy but to establish
it is difficult. People have a certain antipathy toward moral preachments.
They say, “What is being preached to me is the will of someone else and
I am supposed simply to acquiesce to it.” This belief will become more
and more dominant to the degree that materialistic consciousness
becomes dominant.
One says today that there is a morality of class, of social standing, and
what such a class morality considers to be right is then applied to the
other class. Such an attitude has found its way into human souls and in
the future it will become worse and worse. People will come increasingly
to feel that they themselves want to find everything that is to be
acknowledged as correct in this sphere. They will feel that it should
originate in their own inclination toward objective knowledge. The
human individuality wants to be taken ever more seriously. But at the
moment in which the heart, for instance, were to realize that it too would
be sick if the whole organism became sick, man would do what is necessary
in order not to fall ill. At the moment in which man realizes that he is
embedded within the total organism of the earth and has no business being
a festering boil on the earth's body at that moment there
exists an objective basis for morality. And man will say, “If I steal
I am seeking my own personal advantage. I refrain from stealing because if I
do steal I shall make sick the entire organism without which I cannot live.
I do the opposite and thereby bring about something advantageous not
only for the organism but also for myself.”
In the future the moral awareness of human beings will form itself in this
general way. He who, through theosophy, finds an impetus to moral
action will say to himself that it is an illusion to seek personal advantage
through an immoral action. If you do that, you are like an octopus that
ejects a dark fluid: you eject a dark aura of immoral impulses. Lying and
stealing are the seeds of an aura into which you place yourself and
through which you make the whole world unhappy.
People say, “All that surrounds us is maya.” But such truths must
become truths for life itself. Let us suppose that one can demonstrate that
through theosophy humanity's moral development in the future will enable man
to see how he wraps himself in an aura of illusions when he seeks his own
advantage. If one can demonstrate this, it will become a practical
truth to say that the world is a maya or illusion. The finger believes this
in its dull, half sleeping, half dreaming consciousness. It is bright enough
to know that without the hand and the rest of the body it is no longer a
finger. The human being today is not yet bright enough to know that without
the body of the earth he is actually nothing. But he must become
bright enough to know this. The finger therefore enjoys a certain advantage
over man. It does not cut itself off. It does not say, “I want to keep
my blood for myself or cut off a portion of myself.” It is in harmony
with the whole organism. Man must, to be sure, develop a higher
consciousness in order to come into harmony with the whole organism of
the earth. In his present moral consciousness man does not yet know this.
He could say to himself, “I inhale the air. It was just outside, and
now it is inside the human body. Something external becomes something
internal. And when I exhale, something internal again becomes something
external. And so it is with the whole man.” The human being is not even
aware of the simple fact that separated from the surrounding air he is
nothing. He must undertake to develop an awareness of how he is locked
into the entire organism of the earth.
How can the human being know: “You are a member of the whole
organism of the earth?” Theosophy enables him to know this. It shows
man that first there existed a Saturn condition, then a Sun condition,
then a Moon condition. Man was present through all these conditions,
although in a quite different way from today. Then the earth proceeded
from the old Moon condition. Gradually the human being arose as earthly
man. He has a long development behind him and in the future he is to
advance to other stages of development. Man in his present form has
arisen with the earth in its present form. When through the study of
theosophy one traces how man and the earth have arisen it becomes clear
in what way man is a part of the whole organism of the earth. Then it
becomes clear how earth and man gradually have emerged from a
spiritual life, how the beings of the hierarchies have fashioned earth and
man, how man belongs to the hierarchies, even though he stands at the
lowest stage. Then theosophy points to the central Being of the entire
earthly evolution, to the Christ as the great archetype of the human being.
And from all these teachings of theosophy the awareness shall spring
forth for man, “Thus ought you to act.”
The science of the spirit shows us how we can feel ourselves to be a part
of the whole life of the earth. The science of the spirit shows us that
Christ is the Spirit of the earth. Our fingers, our toes, our nose, all our
members dream that the heart provides them with blood. They dream that
without a central organ they would be nothing, for without a heart they
are not possible. Theosophy shows man that in the future of earthly
evolution it would be folly not to take up the idea of Christ, for what the
heart is for the organism Christ is for the body of the earth. Just as
through the heart the blood provides the whole organism with life and
strength, so must the Being of Christ have moved through all single souls on
earth, and the words of St. Paul must become truth for them: “Not I, but
the Christ in me.” The Christ must have flowed into all human hearts.
Whoever wanted to say, “One can continue to exist without Christ,”
would be as foolish as eyes and ears if they wanted to say that they could
continue to exist without the heart. In the case of the single human body
the heart must of course be present from the beginning, whereas the heart
entered the organism of the earth only with the Christ. For the following
ages, however, this heart's blood of Christ must have entered all human
hearts. He who does not unite himself with it in his soul, will wither
away. The earth will not wait with its development; it will come to the
point to which it must come. Human beings alone can remain behind, that
is, they would balk at receiving Christ in their souls. A number of human
beings would stand there in their last incarnation on earth and not have
reached the goal: they have not recognized Christ, have not received
Christ-feeling, Christ-knowing into their souls. They are not mature.
They do not take their places in the development to higher stages. They
separate themselves off.
Such people do not immediately have the opportunity to collapse
completely as would the nose and ears if they detached themselves from
the whole human organism. But occult research shows that the following
would happen to those who do not want to permeate themselves with the
Christ element, the life of Christ, as this can be attained only through
theosophy. Instead of living on upwards with the earth to new levels of
existence they would have assimilated substances of decay, of
disintegration, and would first have to enter upon other paths. If in the
sequence of incarnations human souls take up the Christ into their
knowledge, their feelings, their whole soul, the earth will fall away from
these human souls just as a corpse falls away at a person's death. The
corpse of the earth will fall away and that which, permeated with Christ,
is present in a state of spirit and soul will proceed to form itself into
new existence and will reincarnate itself on Jupiter.
What will happen now with those people who have not taken the Christ
into themselves? Through theosophy they will have abundant
opportunities to be able to recognize the Christ, to be able to take the
Christ into themselves. Today people still resist doing so. They will resist
less and less. But let us assume that at the end of the development there
were those who even then continued to resist. There would then exist a
number of people who could not join the rest in advancing to the next
planet. They would not have reached the actual goal of the earth. These
people would constitute a veritable cross on that planet upon which
human beings will then develop further. For while this group will be
incapable of sharing in the experience of the actual and proper Jupiter
condition and what develops there, they will nevertheless be present on
Jupiter. Everything that is subsequently material is first present in a
spiritual state. Thus everything that people now, during the period of the
earth develop spiritually in the way of immorality, of a refusal to take the
Christ into themselves, is first present in a soul-spiritual state. But this
will become material. It will surround and penetrate Jupiter as a
neighboring element. This will be made up of the successors of those
persons who did not take the Christ into themselves during the earth
condition. What the soul develops in the nature of immorality, of
resistance to the Christ will then be present materially, in an actually
physical state. While the physical part of those people who have taken
the Christ into themselves will exist in a finer form on Jupiter, the
physical part of these other people will be fundamentally coarser. Occult
research paints before the eye of the soul an image of what will be the
future of the people who will not have reached earthly maturity.
We now breathe air. On Jupiter there will in essence be no air. Instead,
Jupiter will be surrounded by a substance that, in comparison to our air,
will be something refined, something etheric. In this substance those
human beings will live who have reached the goal of the earth. Those
others who have remained behind, however, will have to breathe
something like a repulsively warm, boiling, fiery air infused with a dank
stuffiness full of fetid odors. Thus the people who did not attain the
maturity appropriate to the earth will be a cross for the other Jupiter
people, for they will have a pestilent effect in the environment, in the
swamps and other land masses of Jupiter. The fluid-physical components
of the bodies of these people will be comparable to a liquid which
constantly seeks to solidify, freezes up, coagulates. Consequently these
beings will not only have this horrendous air to breathe but also a bodily
state in which the blood would seem continually to congeal, to cease to
remain fluid. The actual physical body of these beings will consist of a
kind of slimy substance more revolting than the bodily substance of our
present snails and fully equipped to secrete something like a kind of crust
surrounding them. This crust will be softer than the skin of our present
snakes, like a kind of soft scaly armor. Thus will these beings live in a
rather less than appealing manner in the elements of Jupiter.
Such a picture as that contemplated in advance by the occult researcher is
ghastly to behold. But woe to those who, like the ostrich, do not want to
look at the danger and wish to shut their eyes before the truth. For it is
just this that lulls us into error and illusion, while a bold look at the
truth imparts the greatest moral impulses. If human beings listen to what
truth says to them they will feel, “You are lying.” Then there
will arise in them an image of the effect of this lie upon human nature in
the Jupiter condition, the image that shows that the lie creates a slimy,
pestilent breath for the future. This image, arising again and again, will
be a reason to direct the impulses of the soul to what is healthy, for no
one who really knows the consequences of immorality can in truth be immoral,
for one is called upon to teach the true consequences that result from the
causes. One should in fact direct people's attention to them while they are
still children. Immorality exists only because people have no knowledge.
Only the darkness of untruth makes immoral actions possible.
To be sure, what can thus be said concerning the connection between
immorality and ignorance should not be intellectual knowledge but
wisdom. Knowledge by itself participates in immorality and if it turns
into sophisticated cleverness it can even be roguery, while wisdom will
affect the human soul in such a way that the soul rays forth truth,
innermost morality.
My dear friends, it is true that to establish morality is difficult; to
preach morality is easy. To establish morality means to establish it out of
wisdom, and one must first have this wisdom. Here we see that it was
after all a rather intelligent utterance on the part of Schopenhauer when
he said that to establish morality is difficult.
Thus we see how unfounded it is when people who do not really know
theosophy come and say that it contains no moral incentives. Theosophy
shows us what we accomplish in the world when we do not act morally. It
provides wisdom, and from this very wisdom morality streams forth.
There is no greater arrogance than to say that one need only be a good
person and all will be in order. The trouble is that one must first know
how one goes about really being a good person. Our contemporary
consciousness is very arrogant when it wishes to reject all wisdom. True
knowledge of the good requires that we penetrate deeply into the
mysteries of wisdom, and this is inconvenient, for it requires that we
learn a great deal.
So when people come and tell us that reincarnation and karma lay the
foundation for an egotistical morality we can thus reply, “No! True
theosophy shows man that when he does something immoral it is roughly
the same as if he were to say, ‘I'm taking a sheet of paper to write a
letter,’ and then takes a match and sets fire to the sheet of paper.
That would be grotesque nonsense. A person finds himself in the same
situation with respect to a wrong action or an immoral attitude.”
To steal means the same thing for the real, deeper human essence as when
one lies. If one steals, one plants into the essential human being the seed
that will cause one to develop a slimy, repulsive substance and to
surround oneself with pestilent odors in the future. Only if one lives in
the illusion that the truth is in the present moment can one do such a
deed. In stealing, man places into himself something that amounts to the
same thing as a flaying of the human being. If man knows this he will no
longer be able to do an immoral deed; he will not be able to steal. Just as
the plant seed sends forth blossoms in the future so too will theosophy, if
it is planted in the human soul, send forth human blossoms, human
morality. Theosophy is the seed, the soul is the nourishing ground and
morality is the blossom and fruit on the plant of the developing human
being.
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