LECTURE TWO
It has
already been announced that our studies in these Group Meetings
during the winter are to be concerned with the life between death and
the new birth. Obviously, what will be said from a comparatively new
point of view will become thoroughly clear only when the whole course
of lectures has been given. It must be taken for granted that a great
deal will consist in the communication of findings of investigation
carried out during recent months. It is only as our studies progress
that understanding can become more complete. Let us, however, begin
with a brief consideration of man's nature and constitution — a
study that everyone can undertake for himself.
The most important and most outstanding fact revealed by
an unprejudiced observation of man's life is surely the existence of
the human Ego, the ‘I’. A distinction must however be
made between the ‘I’ itself and the ‘I’
consciousness. It must be clear to everyone that from the time a
child is born the ‘I’ is already active. This is obvious
long before the child has any ‘I’-consciousness, when in
the language he uses he speaks of himself as if he were another
person. At about the third year of life, although of course there are
children in whom this happens at an earlier age, the child begins to
have some consciousness of himself and to speak of himself in the
first person. We know too that this year, although it varies in many
individuals, marks the limit before which, in later life, a human
being is unable to recall what his soul has experienced. There is
thus a dividing line in the life of a human being: before it there is
no possibility of any clear and distinct experience of himself as
‘I’. After that point he can experience himself as an
Ego, as ‘I’; he finds himself so at home in his ‘I’
that he can again and again summon up from his memory what his ‘I’
has experienced.
Now what does unprejudiced observation of life teach us
about the reason why the child gradually passes from the stage when
he has no experience of his ‘I’ to the stage when this
experience comes to him? A clear observation of life can teach us
that if from the earliest periods after birth a child were never to
come into any sort of collision with the outer world, he could never
become ‘I’-conscious. You can discover for yourselves how
often you become conscious of your ‘I’ in later life. You
have only to knock against the corner of a cupboard and you will
certainly be made aware of your ‘I’. This collision with
the outside world tells you that you are an ‘I’ and you
will hardly fail to be aware of that ‘I’ when you have
given yourself a hard bump! In the case of a child these collisions
with the outside world need not always cause bruises but in essence
their effect is similar — to some extent at least. When a child
stretches out his little hand and touches something in the outside
world, this amounts to a slight collision and the same holds good
when a child opens his eyes and light falls upon them. It is actually
by such contacts with the world outside that the child becomes aware
of his own identity. Indeed his whole life during these early years
consists in learning to distinguish himself from the world outside
and thus becoming aware of the self, the ‘I’, within him.
When there have been enough of these collisions with the outside
world the child acquires self-consciousness and says ‘I’
of himself. Once ‘I’-consciousness has been acquired the
child must therefore keep it alive and alert. The only possibility of
this, however, is that collisions shall continue to take place. These
collisions with the world outside have completed their essential
function once the child has reached the stage where he says ‘I’
of himself, and there is nothing further to be learnt by this means
as far as the development of consciousness is concerned. Unbiased
observation, for instance, of the moment of waking will, however,
help everyone to realise that this ‘I’-consciousness can
be maintained only by means of ‘collisions’.
We know that this ‘I’-consciousness,
together with all the other experiences, including those of the
astral body, vanishes during sleep and wakens again in the morning.
This happens because as a being of soul-and-spirit, man returns into
his physical and etheric bodies. Again collisions take place —
now with the physical and etheric bodies. A person who is able —
even without any occult knowledge — to observe the life of soul
accurately, can have the following experience. When he wakes in the
morning he will find that a great deal of what his memory has
preserved rises again into his consciousness: mental pictures,
feelings and other experiences rise up into consciousness from its
own depths. If we investigate all this with exactitude — and
that is possible without any occult knowledge provided only there is
some capacity for observing what the soul experiences — we
shall find that what rises up into consciousness has a certain
impersonal character. We can observe too that this impersonal
character becomes more marked the longer ago the events in question
took place — which means, of course, the less we are
participating in them with our immediate ‘I’-consciousness.
We may remember events which took place very long ago in our life,
and when memory recalls them we may feel that we have as little
directly to do with them as we have with experiences in the outside
world which do not particularly concern us. What is otherwise
preserved in our memory tends continually to break loose from our
‘I’. The reason why, in spite of this, we find our ‘I’
returning each morning clearly into our consciousness is that we come
back into the same body. Through the resulting collision our
‘I’-consciousness is awakened again each morning. Thus
just as the child develops consciousness of his ‘I’ by
colliding with the external world, we keep that consciousness alert
by colliding each morning with our inner being. This takes place not
only in the morning but throughout the day; our ‘I’-consciousness
is kindled by the counter-pressure of our body. Our ‘I’
is implanted in the physical body, etheric body and astral body and
is continually colliding with them. We can therefore say that we owe
our ‘I’-consciousness to the fact that we press inwardly
into our bodily constitution and experience the counter-pressure from
it. We collide with our body.
You will readily understand that this must have the
consequence which always results from collisions, namely that damage
or injury is caused, even if it is not at once noticed. Collisions of
the ‘I’ with the bodily constitution cause slight
injuries in the latter. This is indeed the case. Our
‘I’-consciousness could never develop if we were not
perpetually colliding with our bodily make-up and thereby destroying
it in some way. It is in fact the sum-total of these results of
destruction that ultimately brings about death in the physical world.
Our conclusion must therefore be that we owe the preservation of our
‘I’-consciousness to our own destructive activity, to the
circumstance that we are able to destroy our organism perpetually.
In this way we are destroyers of our astral, etheric and
physical bodies. But because of this, our relation to those bodies is
rather different from what it is to the ‘I’. Everyday
life itself makes it obvious that we can also work destructively upon
the ‘I’, and we will now try to be clear as to how this
may happen.
Our ‘I’ is something — never mind for
the moment exactly what — that has a certain value in the
world. Man feels the truth of this, but it is in his power to reduce
that value. How do we reduce the value of our ‘I’? If we
do harm to someone to whom we owe a debt of love, we shall actually
at that moment have reduced the value of our ‘I’. This is
a fact that every human being can recognise. At the same time he can
realise that as a human being never fulfils his ideal value, his ‘I’
is really occupied throughout his life in reducing his own value, in
bringing about his own destruction. However, as long as we remain
poised in our own ‘I’, we have constant opportunity in
life to annul the destruction we have caused. We are capable of this
even though we do not always manage to do it. Before we pass through
the gate of death we can make compensation in some form for
undeserved suffering caused to another person. If you think about it
you will realise that between birth and death it is possible for man
to reduce the value of his ‘I’ but also ultimately to
make good the destruction that has been brought about.
But in the case of the astral, etheric and physical
bodies there is no possibility of being able to do this at the
present stage of man's evolution. He is unable to work consciously on
these bodies as he can do in the case of his ‘I’, for the
reason that he is not, in the real sense, conscious in these members
of his being. The destruction for which a man is continually
responsible remains in his astral, etheric and physical bodies but he
is not in a position to repair it. And it is easy to understand that
if we were to come into a new incarnation with the forces of the
astral, etheric and physical bodies as they were at the end of our
previous incarnation, those bodies would be useless. The content of
the life of soul is always the source and the sum and substance of
what comes to expression in the bodily constitution. The fact that at
the end of a life we have a brittle organism is evidence that our
soul then lacks the forces necessary to sustain its vigour. In order
to maintain our consciousness and keep it alert we have been
continually damaging our bodily sheath. With the forces that are
still available at the end of one incarnation we could do nothing in
the next. It is necessary for us to reacquire the forces that are
able to restore freshness and health within certain limits to the
astral, etheric and physical bodies, and to make them of use for a
new incarnation. In earthly existence — as is evident even to
external observation — it is possible for man to damage these
bodies but not to restore them to health. Occult investigation
reveals that in the life between death and the new birth we acquire
from the extra-terrestrial conditions in which we are then living the
forces able to restore our worn-out sheaths. Between death and the
new birth we expand into the Universe, the Cosmos, and we have to
acquire the forces which cannot be drawn from the sphere of the Earth
from the heavenly bodies connected with the Earth. These heavenly
bodies are the reservoirs of forces needed for our bodily sheaths. On
the Earth man can acquire only the forces needed for the constant
restoration of the ‘I’. For the other members of his
being the forces must be drawn from other worlds.
Let us consider the astral body first. After death the
human being expands, quite literally expands, into all the planetary
spheres. During the Kamaloka period, as a being of soul-and-spirit,
man expands to the boundary demarcated by the orbit of the Moon
around the Earth. Beings of various ranks are involved in the
process. After that he expands until the Mercury sphere is reached —
Mercury as understood in occultism. Thence he expands to the spheres
of Venus, Sun, Mars, Jupiter and finally Saturn. The being who has
passed through the gate of death becomes in the real sense a Mercury
dweller, a Venus dweller and so on, and in a certain sense he must
have the faculty to become thoroughly acclimatised in these other
planetary worlds. How does he succeed or fail in this respect?
In the first place, when his Kamaloka period is over, a
man must himself possess some quality that will enable him to
establish a definite relationship with the forces in the Mercury
sphere into which he then passes. If the lives of various human
beings between death and the new birth are investigated, it will be
found that they differ greatly in the Mercury sphere. A clear
difference is evident according to whether an individual passes into
the Mercury sphere with a moral disposition of soul, with the outcome
of a moral or an immoral life. There are of course nuances of every
possible degree. A man with a moral quality of soul, who bears within
him the fruits of a moral life, is what may be called a spiritually
‘social’ being in the Mercury sphere; it is easy for him
to establish relationships with other beings — either with
people who died before him or also with beings who inhabit the
Mercury sphere — and to share experiences with them. An immoral
man becomes a hermit, feels excluded from the community of the other
inhabitants of this sphere. Such is the consequence in the life
between death and the new birth of a moral or immoral disposition of
soul. It is important to understand that morality forges our
connection and relationship with the beings living in this sphere and
an immoral disposition of soul encloses us as it were in a prison. We
know that the other beings are there but we seem to be within a shell
and make no contact with them. This self-isolation is an outcome of
an earthly life that was unsociable and lacking in morality.
In the next sphere, which we will call the Venus sphere
— in occultism it is always so named — a man's contact
with it is mainly dependent upon a religious attitude of soul.
Contact with the beings of this sphere can be established by
individuals who during their life on Earth came to realise that
everything transitory in physical things and in man himself is after
all related in some way to immortality; thus they had a feeling that
the attitude of soul in every individual should incline to
divine-spiritual reality. On the other hand, anyone who is a
materialist and cannot direct his soul to the Eternal, the Divine,
the Immortal, is condemned in the Venus sphere to be imprisoned
within his own being, in isolation. Particularly in connection with
this sphere we can learn from occult investigation how in our astral
body during life on Earth we create the conditions of existence as
they will be in the Venus sphere. On the Earth we must already
develop understanding of and inclination for what we hope to contact
and experience in that sphere. Let us consider for a moment the fact
that human beings living on the Earth during entirely different
epochs — as was both inevitable and right — were
connected with divine-spiritual life through the various religions
and prevailing conceptions of the world. The only way in which human
evolution could progress was that out of the one source — for
example the religious life — at different times and for very
different peoples, according to their natural traits and climatic and
other conditions of existence, the varying religious principles were
imparted by those destined for this mission. These religious
principles stem from one source but are graduated according to the
conditions prevailing among particular peoples. Humanity today is
still divided into groups determined by their religious tenets and
views of the world. But it is through what is thereby formed in our
souls that we prepare our understanding of and possibility of
contacts in the Venus sphere. The religions of the Hindu, of the
Chinese, of the Mohammedan, of the Christian, prepare the soul in
such a way that in the Venus sphere it will understand and be
attracted to those individuals whose souls have been moulded by the
same religious tenets. Occult investigation shows clearly that
whereas nowadays men on Earth are divided by race, descent and so
forth, and can be distinguished by these factors — although
this will change in the future and has already begun to do so —
in the Venus sphere in which we live together with other human beings
there are no such divisions. The only division there depends upon
their religious principles and conceptions of the world while they
were on the Earth. It is true that to some extent a classification
according to race is possible because this classification on Earth —
even according to religion — is still, in a certain respect, a
matter of racial relationships. All the same, it is not the element
of race that is decisive, but what the soul experiences through its
adherence to the principles of a particular religion.
We spend certain periods after each death within these
spheres; then our being expands and we pass on from the Venus sphere
to the Sun sphere. In very truth we become, as souls, Sun dwellers
between death and the new birth. Something more than was necessary in
the Venus sphere is required for the Sun sphere. If we are to fare
well in the Sun sphere between death and the new birth, it is
essential to be able to understand not merely one particular group of
human beings but to understand and find points of contact with all
human souls. In the Sun sphere we feel isolated, like hermits, if the
prejudices of one particular faith render us incapable of
understanding a human being whose soul has been filled with the
principles of a different faith. An individual who on the Earth
regarded one particular religion only as valuable is incapable in the
Sun sphere of understanding adherents of other religions. But the
consequences of this lack of understanding are not the same as they
are on Earth. On the Earth men may live side by side without any
inner understanding of each other and then separate into different
faiths and systems of thought. In the Sun sphere, however, since we
interpenetrate one another, we are together and yet at the same time
separated in our inner being; and in that sphere every separation and
every lack of understanding are at once sources of terrible
suffering. Every contact with an adherent of a different faith
becomes a reproach which weighs upon us unceasingly and which we
cannot escape because on Earth we did not educate ourselves in this
respect.
Taking the life between death and the new birth as a
starting-point, what is now to be said will in a certain sense be
easier to understand if reference is made to Initiation. What the
Initiate experiences in the spiritual worlds is in a certain respect
closely akin to experiences undergone in the life between death and
rebirth. The Initiate has to make his way into the same spheres, and
were he to maintain the prejudices resulting from a biased, one-sided
view of the world, he would undergo similar suffering in the Sun
sphere. It is therefore essential that Initiation should be preceded
by thorough understanding of every religious faith spread over the
Earth, also understanding of what is taking place in every individual
soul regardless of the creed or system of thought to which it
adheres. Otherwise, whatever has not been met with understanding
becomes a source of suffering, as if towering mountains were
threatening to crash down upon one, as if explosions were discharging
their whole force upon one. Whatever lack of understanding due to
one's own narrow prejudices has been shown to human beings on Earth,
has this effect in the spiritual worlds.
It was not always so. In pre-Christian times the process
of evolution did not require men unconditionally to acquire this
understanding of every human soul. Humanity was obliged to pass
through the phase of a one-sided attitude. But those who were trained
for some kind of leadership in the world were obliged to acquire,
either consciously or less consciously, an understanding for every
human being without distinction. Even when some individual was to be
the leader of a particular people he would be required to develop a
measure of understanding for every human soul. This is indicated
magnificently in the Old Testament in the passage describing the
meeting between Abraham and Melchizedek, the priest of the Most High.
Those who understand this passage know that Abraham, who was destined
to become the leader of his people, underwent an Initiation at this
time — even if not in full consciousness as is the case in
later Initiations. Abraham's Initiation was connected with
realisation of the Divine element that can flow into all human souls.
The passage which tells of the meeting of Abraham with Melchizedek
contains a deep secret connected with the evolution of humanity. But
men had gradually to be prepared to become more and more qualified
for a fruitful existence in the Sun sphere.
The first impulse in the evolution of our Earth towards
a fruitful existence in the Sun sphere was given by the Mystery of
Golgotha, after preparation for it had been made by the people of the
Old Testament — about which there will be more to say. It is
not essential at the moment to deal with the question as to whether
Christianity in its development hitherto has achieved all its goals
and possible fruits. Needless to say, in its various sects and
denominations Christianity has produced only one-sided aspects of its
essential principle; in certain of its tenets, and as a whole, it is
not on the level of certain other faiths. What really matters,
however, is its potentiality of development, what enrichment it can
give to one who penetrates more and more deeply into its essential
truth.
We have already tried to indicate these possibilities of
development. There is infinitely much to be said, but one matter only
shall now be mentioned because it can throw light upon the point
under consideration at the moment. If we have a genuine understanding
of the different faiths we find one outstanding characteristic,
namely that in the earlier periods of Earth evolution the individual
religions were adapted to the particular races, tribal stocks or
peoples. There is still evidence of this. Only one who has been born
a Hindu can be an orthodox adherent of the Hindu religion today. In a
certain respect the earlier religions are racial religions,
folk-religions. Do not take this as disparagement but simply as
characterisation. The different religions, although deriving from the
primal source of a universal world-religion, were given to the
peoples by the Initiates and adapted to the specific tribal stocks
and races; hence in that sense there is something egoistic about
them. Peoples have always loved the religion that has been determined
by their own flesh and blood. In ancient times, when a religion
stemming from a Mystery Centre had been established among a
particular people, a bodily stranger who wanted to start another
religion among them did not do so, but instead founded a second
Mystery Centre. People were always given a leader from their own
tribe or clan.
In
this respect true Christianity is very different. Christ Jesus, the
Individuality to whom the Christians turn, was least active among the
people and in the area on the Earth where He was born. In respect of
religion, can conditions in the Western world be equated with those
existing in India or China where folk-religions still survive? No,
they cannot! The regions where we ourselves are living could be
equated with India and China only if here, in Middle Europe, we were,
for example, faithful followers of Wotan. We should then be at the
same stage and the element of religious egoism would be in evidence
here too. But in the West this aspect has disappeared, for the West
accepted a religion that was not confined to any particular
folk-community. This fact must be remembered. The influences which
bound blood to blood and were a determining factor in the founding of
the old religious communities, played no part in the spread of
Christianity. The life of soul was the essential factor and in
the West a religion unconnected with a single people or
folk-community was adopted. Why has it been so? It is because in its
deepest roots and from the very beginning Christianity was meant to
be a religion for all men without distinction of belief, nationality,
descent, race, and whatever separates human beings from one another.
Christianity is rightly understood only when it is realised that it
is concerned solely with the essentially human element in all men.
The fact that in its early phases and also in our own times sects
have arisen from Christianity should be no cause of apprehension; for
Christianity makes possible the evolution of the “human
universal”. It is also true that a great transformation will
have to take place within the Christian world if the roots of
Christianity are to be rightly understood. A distinction will have to
be made between knowledge of Christian tenets and the reality
of Christianity.
St.
Paul did in fact begin to make this distinction and those who
understand his words can realise something of what they mean,
although up to now understanding has been rare. When St. Paul made it
clear that belief in Christ Jesus was not the prerogative of Judaism,
and spoke the words, “Christ died not only for the Jews but
also for the Gentiles”, this was an enormous contribution to
the true conception of Christianity. It would be quite false to
maintain that the Mystery of Golgotha was fulfilled only for those
who call themselves Christians. The Mystery of Golgotha was fulfilled
for all men! This is indeed what St. Paul meant in the words
just quoted. What passed over from the Mystery of Golgotha into
earthly life has meaning and significance for all that life.
Grotesque as it may still seem today to those who do not distinguish
between knowledge and reality, it must nevertheless be said that he
alone understands the roots of Christianity who can view an adherent
of a different religion — no matter whether he calls himself
Indian, or Chinese, or anything else — in such a way that he
asks himself: To what extent is he Christ-like? The fact of knowing
this is not what really matters; what does matter is that such
a person knows the reality of Christianity — in the sense that
it is not essential to know physiology provided that digestion takes
place. A man whose religion has failed to bring about in him a
conscious relationship to the Mystery of Golgotha has no
understanding of it, but that does not entitle others to deny him the
reality of Christianity. Not until Christians become so truly
Christian that they seek for the Christ-like principle in all souls
on Earth — not when they have implanted it in the souls of
others by attempts at conversion — not until then will the root
principles of Christianity have been understood. All this belongs to
Christianity when rightly understood. Distinction must be made
between the reality of Christianity and an understanding
of it. To understand what has been present on the Earth since the
Mystery of Golgotha is a great ideal, the ideal of supremely
important knowledge for the Earth — knowledge that men will
gradually acquire. But the reality itself has come to pass;
the Mystery of Golgotha was fulfilled.
Our life in the Sun sphere after death depends upon what
relationship we have established with the Mystery of Golgotha. The
contact with all human souls that can be experienced in the Sun
sphere is possible only if a relationship with the Mystery of
Golgotha has been established in the way described. It is a
relationship which ensures freedom from any still imperfect form of
Christianity as practised in this or that sect. If we have no such
relationship with the Mystery of Golgotha we condemn ourselves to
becoming solitary individuals in the Sun sphere, unable to make
contact with other human souls. There is a certain utterance which
retains its power even in the Sun sphere. When in the Sun sphere we
encounter another human soul we can become companions and not be
thrust away from that soul, if these words have been preserved in our
inner being: “When two or three are gathered together in my
Name, there am I in the midst of them.” In the Sun sphere all
human souls can be united with one another in a true recognition of
Christ. And this union is of tremendous significance. For in the Sun
sphere a man must make a decision; he must acquire a certain
understanding. And what this means can best be explained by referring
to an extraordinarily important fact which every human soul would be
able to realise but does not always do so. One of the most beautiful
sayings in the New Testament occurs when Christ Jesus is endeavouring
to make men conscious of the divine-spiritual core of being within
them, of the truth that God is present as the divine spark in every
human soul, that every human being has divinity within him. Christ
Jesus emphasises this, declaring with all power and intensity: “Ye
are Gods!” The emphasis laid upon the words shows that He
recognised this as a rightful claim when a man applies its
implications to himself. But this utterance was also made by another
Being. The Old Testament tells us in symbolic words at what point in
evolution it was made. At the very beginning of man's evolution,
Lucifer proclaimed: “Ye shall be as Gods!” This is
something that must be noticed. A saying in identical terms is
uttered by two Beings: by Lucifer and by Christ! “Ye shall be
as Gods.” What does the Bible imply by giving emphasis to these
two utterances? It implies that from Lucifer this utterance leads to
a curse, from Christ to the highest blessing. Is there not a
wonderful mystery here? The words hurled into humanity by Lucifer,
the Tempter — when uttered by Christ to men are supreme wisdom.
That what is really important is not the content of an utterance but
from whom it comes — this fact is inscribed in letters of power
into the biblical record. From an instance such as this let us feel
that it behoves us to understand things in adequate depth and that we
can learn a very great deal from what may lie openly before us.
It is in the Sun sphere between death and the new birth
that again and again we hear the words spoken to our soul with all
their force: Thou art a God, be as a God! We know with all certainty
when we arrive in the Sun sphere that Lucifer meets us again and
impresses the meaning of this utterance forcibly upon us. From then
onwards we can understand Lucifer very well, but Christ only if on
Earth we have prepared ourselves to understand Him. Christ's
utterance will have no meaning for us in the Sun sphere if by our
relationship on Earth to the mystery of Golgotha we have not gained
some understanding of it. Trivial as the following words may be, let
me say this: In the Sun sphere we find two thrones. From the throne
of Lucifer — which is always occupied — there sound the
words of temptation, asserting our divinity. The second throne seems
to us — or rather to many human beings — to be still
empty, for on this other throne in the Sun sphere between death and
the new birth, we have to discover what can be called the Akashic
picture of Christ. If we can find the Akashic picture of Christ it
will be for us a blessing — this will become evident in later
lectures. But it has become possible to find that picture only
because Christ came down from the Sun and has united Himself with the
Earth and because we have been able to open our eyes of spirit here
on Earth through understanding in some measure the Mystery of
Golgotha. This will ensure that the throne of Christ in the Sun
sphere does not appear empty to us but that the deeds He performed
while His dwelling-place was still the Sun sphere become visible. As
I said, I have to use trivial words in speaking of these two thrones;
this sublime fact can only be spoken of figuratively. But anyone who
acquires more and more understanding will realise that words coined
on Earth are inadequate and that one is obliged to resort to imagery
in order to be intelligible.
Now we shall understand and find support for what we
need in the Sun sphere only if on the Earth we have acquired
something that plays not only into the astral forces but into the
etheric forces as well. You will know from what I have previously
said that the religions influence the etheric forces and the etheric
body of man. A considerable spiritual heirloom is available for all
of us inasmuch as forces from the Sun sphere are instilled into us if
we have acquired understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha. For it is
from the Sun sphere that we must draw the forces necessary for the
renewal of our etheric body for the next incarnation; whereas the
forces necessary for our astral body in the next incarnation must be
drawn from the other planetary spheres.
Let nobody believe that what I have been saying is
unconnected with the whole course of evolution. I have told you that
already in pre-Christian times a leader of humanity such as Abraham
was able at his meeting with Melchizedek (or Malkezadek) to acquire
the forces needed for the Sun sphere. I am making no intolerant
statement implying that man can acquire the forces necessary for
establishing a right relationship to the beings of the Sun sphere
through orthodox Christianity alone. I am stating a fact of
evolution; another fact is that the time when it was still possible,
as in ancient days, to behold the Akashic picture of Christ as the
result of different means is drawing nearer and nearer to a close as
evolution proceeds. Abraham's spiritual eyes were fully open to the
Akashic picture of Christ in the Sun sphere. You must not argue that
the Mystery of Golgotha had not then taken place and that Christ was
still in the Sun sphere; for during that period Christ was united
with other planetary spheres. It is indeed a fact that at that time
and even down to our own epoch, human beings were able to perceive
what could be perceived in those spheres. And if we go still further
back to those primeval ages when the Holy Rishis were the first
Teachers of the people of ancient India, those Teachers certainly had
knowledge of Christ who at that time was still in the Sun sphere, and
they imparted this knowledge and understanding to their followers,
although of course not using the later nomenclature. Although in
those ancient times the Mystery of Golgotha was not yet within their
ken, men were able, by drawing intimate truths from the depths of
their being, to acquire from the Sun sphere what was needed for the
renewal of their etheric bodies. But these possibilities ceased as
evolution proceeded and this was necessary because new forces must
perpetually be instilled into humanity.
What has been said is meant to indicate a fact of
evolution. We are moving towards a future when it will be less and
less possible for men during the period between death and the new
birth to live through their existence in the Sun sphere in the right
way if they alienate themselves from the Christ Event. True it is
that we must look for the Christ-like quality in each soul. If we are
to understand the root of Christianity we must ask ourselves in the
case of everyone we meet; how much in his nature is Christ-like? But
it is also true that a man can sever himself from Christianity if he
fails to become conscious of what it is in reality. And when we
remind ourselves again of St. Paul's words, that Christ died not only
for the Jews but also for the Gentiles, we must also add that if in
the course of further progress men were more and more to deny the
reality of the Mystery of Golgotha they would prevent what was done
for their sake from reaching them. The Mystery of Golgotha was a deed
of blessing for all mankind. Every human being is free to allow that
event to influence him or not; but the effect of the influence will
in future depend more and more upon the extent to which he is able to
draw from the Sun sphere the forces required to ensure that his
etheric body shall be rightly formed in his next incarnation. The
immeasurable consequences of this for the whole future of the human
race on Earth will be considered in the forthcoming lectures.
Thus Christianity, admittedly little understood, yet
always connected with the Mystery of Golgotha, is the first
preparation if humanity is to regain the relationship to the Sun
sphere. A second impulse would be the genuine anthroposophical
understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha. After a human being has
adjusted himself to existence in the Sun sphere his life expands
further outwards, into the Mars sphere, for example. What is
essential is that he not only establishes the right relationship to
the forces of the Sun sphere but maintains this relationship when his
life expands into the Mars sphere. In order that his consciousness
shall not become dim, shall not fade away altogether after the Sun
sphere but that he can carry it over into the Mars sphere, it is
necessary in the present cycle of human evolution that spiritual
understanding of the gist of our religions and conceptions of the
world shall take root in the souls of men. Hence the endeavours to
understand the essence of religions and systems of thought.
Spiritual-scientific understanding will eventually be replaced by
another, quite different understanding of which men today cannot even
dream. For certain as it is that a truth is right in an epoch
possessed of a genuine sense of truth, it is also a fact that
continually new impulses will make their way into the evolution of
humanity. True indeed it is that what Anthroposophy has to give is
right for a particular epoch, and humanity, having assimilated
Anthroposophy, may bear it into later times as an inner impulse and
through these forces also acquire the forces of the later epoch.
Thus
it has been possible to show the relationship of man’s life on
Earth to the life between death and the new birth. Nobody can fail to
realise that it is just as necessary for a human being to have
knowledge, feeling and perceptiveness of the life between death and
the new birth as of earthly life itself. For when he enters earthly
life at birth, the confidence, strength and hopefulness connected
with that life depend upon what forces he brings with him from the
life between the last death and the present birth. But again, the
forces we are able to acquire during that life depend upon our
conduct in the earlier incarnation, upon our moral and
religious disposition or the quality of our attitude of soul. We must
realise that whether the future evolution of the human race will be
furthered or impeded depends upon our active and creative
co-operation with the super-sensible world in which we live between
death and the new birth. If men failed to acquire the forces able to
provide them with healthy astral bodies, the forces in their astral
bodies would become ineffective and sterile and humanity would sink
into moral and religious turpitude on the Earth. Similarly, if men
failed to acquire the forces needed for their etheric bodies, as
members of the human race they would wither away on the Earth. Every
individual can ask himself the question: In what measure must I
co-operate with the spiritual world in order that the Earth shall not
be peopled by sickly bodies only? Anthroposophy is not knowledge
alone but a responsibility that brings us into connection with the
whole nature of the Earth, and sustains that connection.
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