Occultism and Initiation
Public lecture
Helsinki April 12, 1912
Rudolf Steiner
Whoever speaks of
occultism today should realize that much of what they have to say
will be taken, not simply as a compilation of doubtful hypotheses,
but even as dreams and fantasies. Regarding any disagreement aroused
by what I will say tonight among hearers who are involved with
contemporary culture or science, let me assure them that I, for one,
fully understand their objections. First, then, let me indicate what
I really mean by occultism, which is the subject of today's
lecture, and by the methods of investigation leading to the results
of occultism, which may be summed up by the word initiation.
Simply
put, initiation is the sum total of what we must accomplish in order
to arrive at the results of occultism. When I speak of occultism, I
do not mean all those things which are now designated under this name
and are spread about here and there. I mean the precise results of a
kind of spiritual science subjected to scientific thinking and to the
logical requirements of the present. By occultism I mean everything
that under this name, and from the standpoint of science as mentioned
above, seeks to take its place in modern life through the study of
things inaccessible to ordinary science and ordinary knowledge. What
is often published these days as occultism is more than calculated to
arouse the opposition of many of our contemporaries, who say: What is
this occultism, coming forward with insights concerning super-sensible
life and super-sensible facts! What is it compared with the results
achieved by modern science, based upon such strict and conscientious
research!
The
insights which are thus advanced, those which I am talking about, are
primarily those which lead us beyond sense-perception and beyond the
things which can be recognized by ordinary understanding, which is
connected, as it were, with the instrument of the brain. These
insights lead us beyond things which can be experienced between birth
and death into regions we enter when we pass through the portal of
death. The results obtained through spiritual science, or let us say,
through this form of occultism, speak of the development of the true
spiritual core of the human being, and they show us that when one
passes through the portal of death, one's soul-spiritual core
passes over into a super-sensible, spiritual world. From the life led
between birth and death in a physical body, one takes along certain
forces and, by entering into relation with other purely super-sensible
forces and powers during an intermediate period between death and a
new birth, one's soul-spiritual being can connect itself with
the forces given by physical heredity, with what comes from father
and mother and from the ancestors in general in
short, with what unites itself with these purely physical substances
and forces so that the whole human being comes into
existence.
This
will show you that the results of such a spiritual form of research
must speak of the development of a person's soul-spiritual
core, a course of development that goes through repeated earthly
lives. Consequently it speaks of reincarnation, of repeated lives on
earth. It also explains that the inner capacities that we unfold
within our soul during one life, and even the blows of destiny which
we experience, are in a certain way the results of what we have
prepared for ourselves during an earlier life on earth. It explains
moreover that everything we experience during this earthly life, all
the capacities we acquire, pass through the portal of death-we
elaborate them in a super-sensible, purely spiritual world, and when
these qualities have been elaborated to a sufficient degree in the
spiritual world, we once more enter a new life on earth, as already
described.
This
perception in itself may strike some people as a rather daring
assertion. To it must be added the things that explain, upon the
basis of spiritual science, the super-sensible part of human nature
which belongs with the physical being. These things will explain
that, in addition to the physical body that we perceive through our
external senses, there is also a part of the human being which is the
bearer of a super-sensible essence. This part can be perceived with
the aid of spiritual-scientific means, so that it can be recognized
as a human being's soul-spiritual core, passing through
repeated lives on earth and experiencing the destinies mentioned
above.
The
publications of this spiritual science even draw attention to earlier
conditions of human life in remote epochs of earthly existence. From
a spiritual-scientific standpoint, these publications also speak of
cosmic conditions during a time when the earth did not as yet exist
in its present planetary form, that is, they point to conditions
which existed before human life on earth began. They look at the
evolution of cosmic life itself, the transformation of our Earth and
of other heavenly bodies. If we work with the methods of this
spiritual science we must admit on the one hand, that if anything at
all can be known concerning such things, these perceptions affect
human life most deeply, because they are connected with our innermost
nature and being. On the other hand we must point out that,
particularly from the standpoint of so-called modern natural science,
we encounter justified skepticism about the possibility of gaining
any knowledge in these spheres.
The
next question which may be raised in the face of the results of such
investigation is the one which will form the subject of this
evening's lecture. It is none other than the more than
justified question: How do those who advance such statements arrive
at their results? How do they set about coming to such conclusions?
Needless to say, despite the conscientiousness and sureness of
ordinary scientific method (and nobody admires these more sincerely
than a serious spiritual scientific investigator), it does not allow
us to penetrate into super-sensible spheres. But having raised this
question, another immediately arises within the human soul, prompted
by an indisputable fact: Since there is undoubtedly a deep longing to
know such things in every human heart, how does it come about that
precisely the most conscientious method of research seems to separate
human beings from the world in which they long to look?
If
we face this question without prejudice, it soon becomes obvious that
the human being is only able to understand certain kinds of facts,
when facing them in a particular way. In reality, I can only
understand things of which I know the origin and course of
development. I can only understand those things in creation in which
I can, in a certain way, participate actively through my cognitive
capacity. I can only grasp those things at the creation of which I
can, in some way, be present. But if I turn my gaze upon the things
that surround me in nature, upon the essence of all the kingdoms of
nature, I must say to myself: Their form of existence, the way in
which they appear finished to me, allows me to see them clearly
through my senses and I can know them because I investigate their
laws and combine them with my intellect but when I wish to
understand how they have arisen, I cannot penetrate them and my power
of observation fails.
The
beings and facts of the kingdoms of Nature confront humans as
finished acts of creation and at first it appears that we cannot get
a hold of things at the moment they are created. But if human beings
look into their inner self and survey all that lives in their soul in
the form of thoughts, representations, feelings, and impulses of the
will, they face a more or less rich inner world, a world whose
reality they experience far more vividly than the reality of external
objects and the reality of that part of the self which belongs to the
external world. Who can deny that the reality of our pains and
sufferings, of our impulses and passions, of our thoughts and
ideals-in short, of all that surges up and down within our soul from
the moment of waking up to the moment of falling asleep, is greater
than the reality of the physical and physiological processes within
our organism? But even if we do our utmost to gain insight into our
soul life-and we find that it is kindled by the external world, that
this or that experience affects us, and fills us with joy or
sorrow-even if we do our utmost to look into our soul life, we cannot
even there take part in, nor penetrate into, the actual genesis of
any inner soul process, we cannot be witness to the creative process
within us. But bearing in mind that we can only grasp something by
participating in its creative process, we can understand what we lose
through the two modes of observation explained above.
It
is enough to survey what is produced by our fantasy, what we create
by means of something lying, so to speak, within our own power, what
we form in accordance with our thoughts and ideals; it is enough to
remember all that is now accessible to the human being on the
one hand, the sense of satisfaction that arises through an
understanding of creative processes, an understanding gained through
technical knowledge and by the way in which we combine thoughts
dealing with the forces of nature and, on the other hand, the deep
dissatisfaction which makes us feel as if we were standing before a
gate through which we cannot pass, whenever we survey things around
us and within us and realize that we know nothing whatever of their
origin and of their living process. But might it not be possible,
after all, to find some access enabling us to participate in these
creative processes, to penetrate into what we feel to be life's
creative processes, in which we ourselves are placed?
There
is one sphere where we can know in a direct way that we participate
in a certain manner in a creative process, but at the same time we
know that in ordinary consciousness, observation and cognition do not
allow us to look into the process of creation!
What
is meant here can be seen every day, if only we reflect a little over
the strange phenomena which appear in the alternating states of
sleeping and waking. For those who wish to penetrate more deeply into
the essence of life, these phenomena are of the profoundest
significance. They evoke what we may call a mystery of life. Though
it may not strike our ordinary consciousness that something so
infinitely significant is contained in these alternating conditions
of sleeping and waking, this is only due to the fact that every
habitual thing in life has lost the power of making a strong
impression upon us. Just because we are accustomed to these
alternating states of sleeping and waking within twenty-four hours,
we no longer feel the deep significance, the greatness and power
suggested by this everyday phenomenon.
If
we wish to characterize the difference between sleeping and waking,
it will at first seem trivial and obvious; for everyone knows that
sleep occurs in such a way that all the emotions filling our soul
from the moment of waking up to the moment of falling asleep, the
feelings, sensations, impulses, passions, thoughts and ideals,
disappear. This whole day world becomes submerged in darkness, in the
night of unconsciousness. But everyone is also convinced that even
sleep, during the transitory stage between falling asleep and waking
up, the activities within our being continue; something occurs, but
it is inaccessible to human consciousness.
What
can be said, then, concerning the alternating conditions of sleeping
and waking is undoubtedly and obviously true; but if we reflect on
it, we realize that the reason why a barrier is put up before our
knowledge does not lie so far away. If we observe this alternation of
waking and sleeping, we must say that our whole daytime conscious
life, our whole waking life, must be a kind of destructive process,
dissolving deeper processes within our organism. I cannot speak in
detail of the physical, chemical and physiological processes of
fatigue, for this would lead us too far, and this is not the
essential point just now, but what is evident to all is that fatigue
is something like a wear and tear, almost a destructive process of
deeper forces that are active in our organism. This shows us that, in
reality, the peculiarity of our waking daytime life is that it does
not participate in our constructive processes, in the creation of our
own being, but that it shows symptoms of fatigue, and that, after
all, it constantly consumes us, dissolves us. The waking life of day
is in fact a process of dissolution and of destruction, and any
unprejudiced observer will note that sleep is the very opposite: it
is a creative process which restores, reorders and creates anew that
which the waking process destroys and decays.
Yet
it is only natural that we cannot know anything concerning this
creative process within us that takes place during sleep. It concerns
us directly, yet we cannot know anything about it, because
immediately before this creative process arises, we lose our
consciousness, so that we cannot penetrate knowingly into spheres
within our being where creative processes take place. But this leads
to the immediate conclusion that if only we were able to maintain our
consciousness beyond the point where torpor sets in, we could take
hold of the creative phenomena in nature and in the universe. When
creative forces begin to work in human beings, their consciousness
becomes dazed: they fall asleep, become unconscious and this shows us
that human nature, as presently constituted, is such that when we
wish to penetrate into a creative activity-moreover one that takes
place within ourselves-our consciousness vanishes, so that we cannot
witness the creative process. The activities within the human
organism which are of a creative kind constitute a part of our being
into which we cannot penetrate because the activities dull our
consciousness and remain a strange world. There is no other path
leading to a knowledge of things lying behind the sensory world than
that of transcending our ordinary consciousness and penetrating into
a creative process which takes place within us, or into some other
similar process.
Where
do we find something that can teach us how to transcend our ordinary
consciousness and to penetrate into something which is estranged from
us, without getting dazed, without falling into a kind of sleep? In
the large field accessible to our ordinary consciousness there are
two things which evidently lead us out of our ordinary consciousness
without dazing us or putting us to sleep, as is the case every
evening, when we go to bed. These two things in our ordinary
consciousness that may serve as a kind of pattern for the way in
which our consciousness can transcend its ordinary limits and
penetrate into an unknown sphere, these two things must be sought in
the moral field. Two moral experiences, permeating the whole life of
the human being, supply a prototypical idea for the way in which we
can go out of ourselves, without losing our consciousness.
These
two things are first compassion, and second, conscience. If
we study the way in which compassion and conscience are related to
consciousness, we obtain, to begin with, an idea of how consciousness
may go beyond its own limits. When I develop compassion, love or
sympathy for another human soul, I experience within myself,
according to my capacity, not that which touches me for that
would not be an experience of compassion and of love but the
joys, sorrows, pains and pleasures of the other soul. When I am full
of compassion, I can lose myself in the soul of another person, and I
actually live (as any unprejudiced observation will show) outside my
ordinary consciousness, within the other soul.
Here
I am confronted by a deep mystery of life. It is all the deeper
because, if our feelings are of a moral nature, our consciousness
does not vanish and we are not dazed when passing over into the
consciousness of another soul. Indeed, how far I am able to maintain
my own consciousness to a full extent, when experiencing the sorrows
and joys of another soul, and not my own, is a standard of measure
for my morality. It is even a moral defect for my consciousness to be
dazed by the joys and sorrows of another soul; for then we have a
situation similar to that of facing one's own creative activity
taking place during sleep. Consciousness falls asleep, as it were, in
the face of another person's sorrows and joys.
The
second experience which pertains to the moral sphere and leads us out
of our ordinary consciousness, is conscience. If we observe
conscience in an unprejudiced way, we can say the following: In life
we may love or hate, do or leave certain things undone, under the
influence of our instincts and passions, or of sympathy and
antipathy, or perhaps we may follow the dictates of education or of
social relations these appear to us from outside. But there
is something which never speaks to us from outside, and this we call
conscience.
Conscience
comes to us from a world we can feel and experience this
that speaks to us inwardly and can be heard by us inwardly.
Conscience influences our ordinary perceptible world, for everything
which we can perceive is open to correction when the super-sensible
demands of conscience impel us to action. Conscience bears witness to
the fact that, in the moral sphere, our soul can be told something
which transcends our consciousness. And, again, we find that it is a
moral defect if our soul falls into a kind of sleep when conscience
begins to speak and does not listen to its voice but only listens to
what speaks from the physical environment through sympathy or
antipathy, so that these promptings govern the soul's impulses
to action. If we can thus transcend our ordinary consciousness
without feeling dazed, conscience is a phenomenon that speaks to the
human soul in such a way that it need not take its impulses from any
influence coming from the external world.
In
regard to beings outside our own self, in regard to experiences
transcending our knowledge and our consciousness, we have in the
moral sphere the possibility to penetrate into them through
compassion and love. Through conscience we listen, as it were, to
truths which do not come from the world of the senses.
If
it is possible in this way to penetrate into beings outside our own
and to take into our souls truths of the kind uttered by conscience,
then there is a prospect of penetrating into a world which is not the
one given to us during our waking consciousness from the moment of
waking up to the moment of falling asleep. It is possible, and this
prospect opens out to us through methods we call the methods of
initiation. In regard to thinking, feeling, and willing, these
methods of initiation consist in other forms of soul-activity than
those to which we are accustomed in our ordinary life for the
acquisition of an external knowledge concerning the world.
Why
do we acquire concepts and ideas in ordinary life? No one will deny
that the reason modern people form concepts and ideas is to gain
through these thoughts, and even through their feelings and
sensations, certain knowledge concerning what surrounds them in the
external world. Today, we designate as truth those concepts and ideas
that coincide with something outside, with some phenomenon of the
external world, so that these thoughts are, as it were, a reflected
image of the external world. For everything that is connected with
external life, with the external culture, this form of soul-activity
is undoubtedly the right one. But if we wish to penetrate into
super-sensible spheres of existence, this soul-activity must undergo a
complete transformation. In other words (let me use the taboo word!),
if we wish to penetrate into occult mysteries, entirely different
soul-forces must be used. Our concepts, ideas, thought-pictures,
indeed even our feelings and will-impulses, must become quite
different from what they mean to us in the external world.
We
should not begin by asking: What do these soul-activities mean in
regard to this or that in the external world and what is their true
value? We should simply take this content of our soul-life as a
pedagogical means of self-training. We should let our thoughts and
ideas, and even our feelings and sensations work in our soul in such
a way as to shut it out from everything coming to us from the
external world, even from the life experiences and memories we have
collected. By a strong effort of the will, we should eliminate all
impressions coming to us from the physical world, all intellectual
thought patterns, and even all anxieties, worries and joys indeed,
anything which may have accumulated in our memory. We should empty
our soul, so that the same condition sets in which ordinarily arises
through fatigue when we fall asleep in the evening. Doing so,
however, we should reach something entirely opposite to sleep, namely
we should be able to maintain our full consciousness and direct it
towards fruitful thoughts, particularly towards symbolic thoughts, as
rich in meaning as possible. (The essential point is not to ask what
value such thoughts have for the attainment of truth, but to bear in
mind their pedagogical value, when the soul's forces are
directed towards a thought image, or an impulse which is set in the
center of soul-life through a strong effort of the will.)
This
soul activity, purified of everything else, is turned towards this
self-chosen picture and concentrates upon it more and more until the
whole life of the soul, which remains awake through a strong
concentration of the will, is centered upon this self-chosen content.
We then start noticing that something begins to radiate within our
soul life and these rays do not stream from the content we have
chosen, but from the strong concentration of soul forces we have
applied to it. We are now able to experience something which we
generally do not experience, and we obtain the immediate feeling, the
immediate experience: Now I am experiencing something which is
just as real, important and essential for life as the things which I
see with my eyes and hear with my ears; it is just as real, yet I
could never have experienced it! In short, only now do we
begin to know what super-sensible experience really is; only now do we
realize that we live within a soul-spiritual core; only now do we
begin to understand that it is possible to live within an inner soul
being which is quite independent of the bodily being. And this
transforms our whole consciousness.
I
must point out expressly that the process leading to this inner
activity greatly resembles, while also being the very opposite, the
trivial process which takes place when our attention is directed
towards a shining object, producing a kind of hypnosis. This soul
condition, which differs from the normal one, arises through the
sharp concentration upon an object, so that other soul activities are
kept in the background. The concentration upon an inner, freely
chosen content has a certain resemblance with this soul activity, for
it is also a kind of concentration; yet it is at the same time the
very opposite; for the concentration upon a shining object blots out
consciousness, it puts us into a quasi-hypnotic state, whereas when
an inner content, and it is strictly an inner thought-content, is
placed at the center of our soul life by a strong effort of our will,
our consciousness remains intact.
Spiritual
science has a technical name for this method of training the soul:
meditation. This is true meditation. And I wish to emphasize
that this kind of meditation is in practice far more difficult then
one would think, after hearing it described in such a simple way. It
does not suffice to try it a few times. Over and over again we should
endeavour to practice such concentration, such meditation, by forming
thought-images and pictures, ideas taken from the moral and
intellectual sphere and particularly symbolic
representations. This should be done with perseverance, until the
decisive moment arises. This simply consists in the inner conviction:
I have within my being a soul-spiritual core, and this lives
in a super-sensible reality, but in its super-sensible reality it
cannot be perceived through the ordinary sense-organs, nor grasped
through the intellect, bound up with the brain.
From
what I have described above, you will be able to deduce one thing
we always remain within our own being. We turn away from the external
world by concentrating upon our inner self. The first thing we thus
experience is, and only can be, an inner experience, an experience of
our inner being, and this leads us practically to a definite point.
One who concentrates in this way, or meditates, soon perceives
really does perceive that his or her field of vision is
filled with realities; we may call them, if you like, visions. They
appear in the form of pictures, which cannot be compared to anything
else, though there may be some external resemblance with what we see
in the physical world. Particularly in regard to the way in which
they arise and in regard to the effect which they produce, however,
these pictures constitute an altogether new experience, and are in no
way put together from earlier experiences. This completely new
element must be designated as vision, for there is no other apt word
to describe it in our ordinary speech. One might say that this new
experience exactly resembles the pictures of a dream; yet compared
with ordinary dreams, these visions have a far stronger intensity,
and possess, so to speak, an obtrusive, almost importunate reality.
At
this point, those who practice the methods giving insight into the
super-sensible world encounter an obstacle, which might be seen as a
danger. They incur the danger of taking this visionary world from the
outset as something real, as facing them in the same way as the
ordinary physical world outside, so that when they perceive this
visionary world, they say, This world is real, in the
same way as they would in connection with the sensory world. This
danger becomes all the more threatening if all the precautions
connected with an occult training, such as the one described above,
are not observed. These preventive measures are dealt with in detail
in my book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds
and a person who
follows them never for a moment loses the feeling that the world of
visions is the self, and that we ourselves produce this world.
It
is of the utmost importance that we should never allow our
consciousness to be dulled to the extent of having the impression
that an external world lies before us in this visionary world. It
exactly resembles a world lying outside our own being: it stretches
out before us in the manner of a spatial world; it reveals processes
governed by time, just like the processes of the external physical
world; it calls up altogether the delusion that we are facing a
reality, like a dream enhanced to the utmost degree of lifelines.
People who neglect such precautions and who do not recognize that
they themselves have created this visionary world naturally fall prey
to dreams and empty fancies. A truly clairvoyant person allow
me to use this word differs in this point from the fantastic
and visionary dreamer who takes such visions for objective realities.
Those who have advanced to real clairvoyance are aware at every
moment, know and must know, through an intensive self-training, that
although they see before them an extensive spatial world, this is
merely a world of their own creation. Such things exercise a very
suggestive influence, but never for a moment should we lose the
consciousness of the fact that they are nothing but our own creation.
This consciousness in turn should become the object of meditation and
concentration. We should make an effort of the will to concentrate
again and again, intensively and for a long time, upon the fact that
this new world we have, as it were, conquered is our own work, our
own product. And then something strange arises within our
consciousness (this can, of course, only be described as a
practical experience). We recognize that in performing this activity
we have done quite consciously something which we also do in a normal
state of consciousness.
I
have already told you that in our normal state of consciousness we
really produce a destructive process within us. Ordinarily we do not
know this, or at least, we do not pay any attention to it. When we
conjure up before us such a visionary world, while maintaining our
full consciousness, and at the same time concentrate upon the thought
characterized above, we also become fully aware of the fact that the
imaginative knowledge (this is the technical
expression used for it) thus reached also produces a destructive
process. We observe that we always come to the point where the
imaginative world begins to consume us, and if we were to relinquish
the full consciousness that can be maintained only through a strong
effort of will, if we were not to realize fully that in this
visionary world we encounter everywhere our own being, our nervous
system would suffer and would become ill. We should never come to the
point of overstepping the limit where the real destructive processes
would begin. Through the fact that we do not allow things to come as
far as the destructive process, but keep it at bay through the
intense consciousness that we ourselves are the creators of this
imaginative world, through this fact we are able to participate in a
creative process. For when we fulfill within ourselves certain
creative activities which cannot be perceived through our normal
consciousness, we really enter a creative world, and we learn to
follow consciously a process resembling that which takes place during
sleep. This shows us that in this way we can witness a creative
process, understand a process of growth and development within
ourselves.
This
is, however, connected with something else, though I can only give a
brief description of these stages of initiation. Little by little,
the whole process forces us to renounce something the ordinary
clairvoyant does not like to renounce. The ordinary clairvoyant is so
glad to live in this world of visions, he or she takes such indulgent
pleasure in these experiences of a higher world, and they are so
suggestive that he or she easily takes them for reality. This can
lead to a nervous breakdown. But if through, the above effort of will
we remain fully conscious that all this is produced by our own
self, if our consciousness never falls asleep, something
arises that is a source of regret to many namely, the power
lying at the foundation of that effort of our will falls
destructively upon this whole imaginative world, disposes of it and
many things which the ordinary clairvoyant holds very precious are
thus blotted out. In other words, the following happens. Although in
imaginative consciousness we have an element really setting forth the
forces constituting a creative process (for we do not let it go
beyond the limit where the destructive process would set in)
and we really transcend our ordinary consciousness, as we normally do
when we feel compassion or love the decision, or the effort
of will by which we bring destruction (but also structure and order)
into our visionary world leads to the development of an activity that
does not exist anywhere in the external physical world, and that very
soon reveals itself as the creative activity within our own being,
lying beyond the reach of our ordinary consciousness. It is the
activity which may be seen in our soul-spiritual being when it works
upon our organism by drawing regenerating forces out of its spiritual
environment; it is the soul-spiritual core which lives in the
spiritual cosmos.
In
the next stage, which is technically designated as inspiration, we
learn to recognize the soul-spiritual core of our being, and how it
lives within the creative forces of the cosmos. Whereas imagination,
the first stage of initiation, only led us into our inner being by
conjuring up a merely visionary world, the process of inspiration
leads us to a higher stage. A flash of light breaks in upon our whole
visionary world, something that really seems to come out of the
spiritual cosmos, as does conscience, and we observe that it speaks
to us in the same way in which conscience speaks to us in our
ordinary consciousness. Conscience may be compared to the way in
which inspiration speaks to the imaginative consciousness; but then
imagination passes over to the stage of inspiration, and we enter a
real, super-sensible world.
Through
our own development, we have now reached the point where we can
glance behind the veil of physical phenomena, so that now we are able
to understand the wonderful mystery of human development and also of
human death. When we see a human being entering life through birth,
when we perceive how the child's undeveloped physiognomy
gradually acquires characteristic traits, and its helpless movements
gradually acquire strength and sureness, when we observe the
development of what lives in the child's soul, we can no longer
say: Everything that comes out of the child's soul, that forms
its body and its physiognomy, and even the delicate convolutions of
the brain immediately after birth, is the result of heredity! No, we
are now able to look back upon the child's soul-spiritual core
that comes from an entirely different world, and we can see this
soul-spiritual part of the child's being unites itself with
what comes from father and mother. Now we no longer speak merely of
hereditary forces, but of forces from the spiritual world that unite
themselves with what is transmitted by father and mother and by
ancestors in general. We obtain a real conception of something which
was formerly a mere belief, namely, that the human soul-spiritual
being comes from the spiritual world and forms the physical-bodily
part.
We
can then proceed still further. When we study life through the
knowledge given by initiation, we see that the human being's
soul-spiritual core directs the experiences of life more and more
towards its inner center, abstracting them from the external world.
We understand and we can see how the soul-spiritual part gradually
retreats from the external world. We can see the face getting old and
wrinkled, and we obtain the immediate impression: Whereas our
physical body begins to fade, after we have reached the climax of
life, and even our brain decays, so that the soul can no longer
express its own content, and even the soul itself seems to decay, we
see on the other hand that the part that can no longer express itself
outwardly gradually withdraws to the person's inner being, and
concentrates its forces, so that everything which we have
experienced, suffered and achieved is gathered within the soul, and
is at its strongest, its most powerful, when the body releases our
soul-spiritual part. If we follow this process, we find that this
strongest force within us becomes united with forces of the
super-sensible world, forming the prototype of a new incarnation, of a
new body for a new life on earth.
If
we compare what stands at the beginning of life the gradual
plastic development of the body if we compare it with what
stands at the end of life the inner concentration of life's
experiences within the soul, the emancipation of the soul's
forces from the body and the crossing of the threshold of death
if we observe these two things supersensibly, we find that it is like
the beginning and the end, say, of a plant's development, where
the final process already contains the seed, the beginning of the new
plant. But though we see beginning and end thus linked up,
super-sensible knowledge gained through initiation shows us that what
the soul has experienced during life is interwoven with the
soul-spiritual core and that when the human being returns, after an
intermediate period between death and a new birth, a new body is
built. But this soul-spiritual core of the being now forms a new body
and a new earthly existence in such a way as to produce the effect of
causes that had arisen during a preceding life.
The
methods gained through initiation, whose prototypes were compassion
and conscience, i.e., experiences of our ordinary consciousness, thus
give us an immediate knowledge of processes of the super-sensible
world connected with the human being. Initiation therefore becomes
the path leading us up into the super-sensible worlds.
If
you delve deeper into what I have described to you just now, in
outline form, and if you study it in my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds,
you will find, however, that this kind of
initiation has its own characteristics. For its whole development and
the way in which it sets forth the events, it follows the
requirements of modern human education the modern
requirements of logic, sound common sense and science. Consequently
these processes of initiation can be recognized more and more as the
description of a path along which every human being may attain
knowledge of the super-sensible world. In entirely free processes,
produced only by the awakening of the soul and the inner forces of
the soul, the human being can ascend into the super-sensible world and
penetrate into processes which reveal the path taken by the
soul-spiritual being. Such ideas do not only belong to a world that
does not concern us but belong to a world out of which we constantly
draw strength and confidence for our ordinary life. The fact that
initiation reckons with modern logic and modern scientific
requirements is of course a new achievement, one might say, of the
process of initiation. People will gradually come to the point of
acquiring knowledge in this manner, by following the example of
scientific thought, and this will contain truths that penetrate and
satisfy religious feeling through knowledge. But this constitutes a
revolutionary change, and this change will consist in the process of
initiation penetrating visibly and in an evident manner into the
civilization of the present and of the future. It is a turning point
in the development of humanity which may be designated in regard to
super-sensible things as the change from faith to knowledge.
But
faith (and it will be easier to understand this turning point if we
bear this in mind), in the form in which it has arisen and in the
light of initiation, is not something that has been thought out
intellectually, nor is it a newer form of illumination based upon
something unreal; for every kind of faith leads back to results
originally gained by initiated persons, to results of initiation. But
there is a certain difference between what will more and more become
human initiation generally and initiation of past times.
In
past times it was a strict rule and this is still the case
today for many initiations which still exist in the world it
was a strict rule that anyone who went in search of the path leading
to initiation had to have a kind of guide, who was called in certain
circles the spiritual guide, the guru. What is the task of a guru? We
have seen that in the course of development described above, we
encounter certain dangers, dangers against which we must be warned.
In the initiations of the past, which have been handed down
traditionally, the guru's chief task was to warn against
dangers. A guru may do this even today, if he or she is simply a
person whom we consider as a kind of teacher as in ordinary science
a person whom we can trust. But it can easily happen that the new
guru wants to be what the old guru had to be, even though the guru
today cannot be allowed to have that relationship with the pupil, and
this will be increasingly the case the more initiation adapts itself
to the progressive course of human development. Initiation really
began everywhere in the manner described above. Rules were given, and
each person had a personal guide and was told: Now you must
concentrate upon this thing, and now upon that; now you must do this
exercise, and now that. Under strict guidance, a condition was
produced in which the world of imagination appeared. The modern
person on the other hand for that is the very nature of the
modern human being must pass over from imagination to
inspiration through a strong effort of his or her own will, where in
olden times this task was taken over by the guru who led the pupil
from the stage of imagination to that of inspiration by means of
certain influences to which the pupil was more easily amenable after
having been led up to this stage of initiation. What I have described
to you, as something lying concealed in every human being, became an
impulse which the guru transmitted to the pupil. This brought the
pupil's imaginative, visionary life into order. But, in the
process, the guru would gain complete control over the pupil who
would become, as it were, an instrument in the teacher's hands.
Therefore in all initiations of the past, and they are really the
source of every religious faith, there was therefore a strict
requirement that the guru, the initiator, should be above the
possibility of exercising an immoral or unjust influence over the
pupil. In his or her whole inner attitude the guru had to be above
every kind of deceit, and success depended upon the guru's
having attained to this stage of development. The guru had to use
influence only to the extent of transmitting to the pupil the
truth-images of the higher world that he or she had gained, thus
rendering the pupil's path more easy.
I
think that if you wish to understand in an unprejudiced way the
development of human consciousness, you will not need to accumulate
many proofs showing that in regard to super-sensible knowledge as in
other things humanity has become more and more independent of
personal influences. This is simply a fact of the progress of the
human evolution. The gurus who collect their pupils around them, as
the founders of religions and sects were wont to do, will gradually
disappear from the process of human development, and they will be
replaced by men and women of trust, persons in whom the seeker for
initiation can have trust and confidence the same confidence
which one has for other teachers. But such a teacher must, so to
speak, be one of our own choosing and not a guru assigned to us. We
no longer can overcome the perils which beset humanity by founding
sects after the manner of ancient adepts. Indeed, in regard to
super-sensible development, it is good for people not to be too easily
inclined to believe but, on the contrary, be hard to convince. It is
good if they ask themselves, not only once or twice, but many times,
in whom they put their trust, and it is good if they are very
skeptical and full of distrust, when any prophet, founder of a sect,
or adept, is forced upon them as a great teacher. In the field of
which I am speaking, it will always constitute a danger for spiritual
streams seeking to bring occultism into the world to base themselves
chiefly upon great teachers whose authority is enforced from outside,
instead of being founded upon the natural confidence, the inner
trust, that rises up in the pupils when they meet the teacher. In a
certain connection, we have seen a classic example of this, and it is
necessary to mention it. During the last decades, a personality has
arisen who revealed to humankind great and significant truths, truths
that are not yet recognized by ordinary science but are intrinsic
truths, penetrating deeply into super-sensible mysteries. Things of
this kind are contained in the books of H. P. Blavatsky, who has
attained fame in certain circles. Even to those familiar with such
things, her books contain truths of extraordinary significance,
which, more than anything else, can lead us into the secrets of life.
Unfortunately, this occult movement was connected with something
which did it great harm. I do not mean to say that in itself it was
an error, nevertheless it caused great harm that H. P. Blavatsky
referred to her teachers, who were unknown to the world, to her
gurus. Those who understand H. P. Blavatsky's capacities know
that these capacities would never have enabled her to reach such
truths independently. With her own capacities, she could never have
reached them. These truths need no recommendation insofar as they are
true, for they can be tested, so that it did not harm H. P. Blavatsky
if she felt obliged to refer to traditions and exercises derived from
gurus she could never have attained them on her own. But it
harmed the movement she called into life that such things were
accepted upon the foundation of external authority, and not upon the
inner truth of occultism. No matter how much good will might be
involved, the fact is that the time is over the necessities
of the times show us, no matter whether this is justified or
unjustified that the possibility of taking in things simply
upon the authority of gurus is past, more than past! These things
must now be recognized through sound common sense. Truths which can
be gained along the paths described, for instance, in my
Theosophy,
are therefore the result of the kind of spiritual investigation
of which I have spoken today, but at the same time, these results can
be tested and compared with the facts of life itself, and need not be
accepted upon any authority.
Initiation
can only be recognized and justified today if we take into
consideration that it must adapt itself to the modern process of
culture and that it must follow paths and use means which are
accessible to every human being.
Of
course, for some time yet people having this or that degree of
culture, or standing upon this or that stage of scientific training,
may need the advice of an occult teacher, so that initiation becomes
easier for them through the experience of one who has attained it and
who has already taken in the inspirations from a higher world; for
only such a teacher can give the right advice in detail. But the
relation between pupil and teacher can only be of the kind that
otherwise exists in the cultural world between one who wishes to
learn something and one who can teach it. Any mysteriousness
connected with adept teaching, any form of facing people with the
demand believe in this or that new prophet or founder of
religion all this will be rejected by the modern spirit of
civilization, by the modern scientific spirit, and the very fact that
it contradicts the modern spirit is a recommendation against it. No
matter what people say in regard to teachers who may appear, the only
thing which will in future give individuals the right to be teachers
will be others' confidence in their achievements, in the way in
which they appear and in their whole personality. It must be this
confidence that leads a pupil to the teacher from whom advice is
asked.
If
this is not observed in the occult sphere, where initiation is
sought, a danger will arise that is always connected with the
delicate and intricate nature of such things: the danger that in this
field charlatans will be found beside to conscientious initiates who
conscientiously pursue their research into the super-sensible worlds
and transmit the results thus obtained. Charlatanry easily intrudes
itself, and may be found side by side with the conscientious results
of occultism or initiation imparted in the spirit of truth. Credulity
and sensational curiosity in regard to communications coming from the
super-sensible world or initiation are just as great today as doubt,
for there are just as many people ready to accept things upon this or
that authority as there are people who reject everything gained even
by the strictest methods of super-sensible research. For this reason,
a path of investigation, such as the one of initiation described
today, must now be shown in addition to the propagation of occult
facts. This path of initiation is one that can be followed by every
human being; the results obtained along it are accessible to sound
common sense as well as any other scientific result; indeed, in the
case of scientific truths, one is not always in the position to test
them personally, as in the case of clinical facts or other results
gained in laboratories. We know that anyone may investigate them if
he or she understands the required method; yet it is not possible to
test everything, so that we simply accept certain facts that convince
us, those our sound common sense recognizes as true.
The
same thing can be said of the results of initiation. Not every person
will always be in the position to test them, but those who
investigate will communicate their results to the world in an ever
growing measure, and sound common sense will accept them, in the same
way in which it accepts the results of other scientific
investigations. There is, of course, a difference, namely that the
results of initiation contain truths which every human being needs,
in order to gain strength and sureness in the sorrows and joys of
life, strength and sureness in work and in one's sphere of
activity; so that humans may take hold of the central point of their
being that leads them unswervingly along the path of their ideals.
The results of spiritual investigation can also give us strength when
life becomes crushing, and comfort is needed in sickness and in
death, by looking up to the facts of the spiritual super-sensible
world to which we belong, and from which we gain the true forces
which keep us upright. Then into the human soul will penetrate those
results of initiation and occultism that may be recapitulated in
words expressing what has already been said concerning initiation:
Es sprechen zu den Menschensinnen
die Dinge in den Raumesweiten,
Sie wandeln sich im Zeitenlaufe.
Erkennend dringt die Menschenseele,
von Raumesweiten unbegrenzt
und ungestoert durch Zeitenlauf,
ins Reich der Ewigkeiten.
Things in the world's spaces
Speak to human senses,
Changing in the course of time.
By cognizing, the human soul
Unbounded by the distances of space
And undisturbed by the course of time
Penetrates into the kingdom of eternities.
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