LECTURE FOUR
In
earlier lectures we have heard that the imperishable part of the
human being which at death leaves the physical body and, to a
considerable extent, the etheric body too, passes through a life
between death and the new birth, and that during this period its
forces are drawn from the world of the stars. We have also heard how
the human being is able to draw these forces from the world of stars
to the extent to which he developed moral and religious qualities
during his life on Earth. It was said that, for example, from the
region which receives forces radiated from the planet known in occult
science as Mercury, a man will be able to draw the requisite forces
if, during his life on Earth before death, he developed a genuinely
moral disposition; from the Venus region he can draw the forces he
needs for his further life in the spiritual worlds, also for his
subsequent life on Earth, if he developed a truly religious attitude
before his death. To sum up, we may say that as long as a human being
is making use of his senses, as long as he lets himself be guided and
directed by the intellect that is bound to the brain as its
instrument, he is connected with the forces of the Earth; in the life
between death and a new birth he is connected with the forces
radiating from the worlds of the stars. In man of the present age,
however, there is a certain difference between his connection with
the forces of the Earth during his physical life and his connection
with the forces of the stars between death and the new birth. The
forces which man draws into his consciousness during his earthly
life, that is to say, the forces he experiences consciously during
earthly life, contribute nothing essential to what he needs for the
up-building and vitalising of his own being; for they give rise to
catabolic processes, processes of destruction. Evidence for this is
the simple fact that during sleep the human being has no
consciousness. Why not? The reason is that he is not meant to witness
what happens to him during sleep. During sleep the forces used up
during waking life are restored and man is not meant to witness this
process, which is the antithesis of what is in operation during
waking life and is concealed from human consciousness. The Bible uses
profoundly significant words to express this fact. It is one of the
passages in the Bible which, as is the case with all occult
principles in religious records, is very little understood. In the
story of the expulsion from Paradise it is said that the Divine
Spirit resolved that when the human being had acquired certain
characteristics, for instance, the faculty of distinguishing between
good and evil, insight into the forces of life should be
withheld from him. That is the passage in the Bible where it is
announced that the human being was not to witness the revivification
of his members either during sleep or during his entire existence on
Earth. While man is awake the whole life-process is one of
destruction, of wear and tear. During waking life nothing in man's
being is restored. In the very earliest years of childhood, when any
actual inflow of life can still be observed, the child's
consciousness is still dim and the whole restorative process is
concealed from the human being in his later years. Evidence for this
is the fact that he does not remember his earliest childhood. We can
therefore say that the whole life-giving, restorative process is
concealed from man's conscious life on Earth. Processes of
perception, of cognition, lie within the field of his consciousness;
the life-giving process does not.
This
is different during the period of existence between death and the new
birth. The purpose of the whole of that period is to draw into the
being of man the forces which can build up and fashion the next life,
to draw these forces from the world of the stars. But this process is
not as things are on Earth, when man does not really know his own
being. What, after all, does he know about the processes working in
his organism? He knows nothing of them through direct perception and
what is learnt from anatomy or biology conveys no real knowledge of
his being but is something quite different. In the life between death
and rebirth, however, a man beholds how forces from the world of
stars work upon his being, how they gradually rebuild it. From this
you can gather how greatly perception between death and rebirth
differs from perception on Earth. On Earth the human being stands at
a particular point, directs his senses outwards and then his sight
and hearing expand into space; from the centre where he is standing
he faces the expanse of space. Exactly the opposite is the case
during the life after death. There man feels as if his whole being
were outspread and what he perceives is really the centre. He looks
at a point. There comes a period between death and the new birth when
the human being describes a circle which passes through the whole
Zodiac. He looks out as it were from every point of the Zodiac, that
is to say from different viewpoints, upon his own being, and he feels
as if he were gathering from each particular section of the Zodiac
the forces which he pours upon his being for the needs of the next
incarnation. He looks from the circumference towards a centre. It is
as if you could duplicate yourself, move around while leaving
yourself at the centre, and could drink in the forces of the
Universe, the life-giving ‘soma’ which, streaming as it
does from different points of the Zodiac, assumes different
characteristics as it pours into your being which you have left at
the centre. Translated into terms of spiritual reality, this is
actually how things are during the life between death and the new
birth.
If we now think of the difference between a condition
that is really very similar to life between death and rebirth,
namely, the condition of sleep, this difference can be characterised
very simply, although people who are not accustomed to these ideas
will not be able to make much of it. Put simply, the condition of
sleep can be characterised as follows.
When the human being sleeps during his earthly
existence, that is to say when he has left his physical and etheric
bodies and is living in his Ego and astral body which are then in the
world of stars, he too is actually in that world. And it is a fact
that our condition in sleep is objectively far more similar to the
condition between death and rebirth than is usually imagined.
Objectively, the two conditions are very similar. The only difference
is that during sleep in normal life the human being has no
consciousness of the world in which he is living, whereas between
death and the new birth he is conscious of what is happening to him.
That is the essential difference. If the human being were to awake in
his Ego and astral body when these members are outside his physical
body during sleep he would be in the same condition as he is between
death and the new birth. The difference is actually only a state of
consciousness. This is a matter of importance because as long as the
human being lives on Earth, therefore also during sleep, he is bound
to his physical body. Nor does he become free from the physical body
until it passes into the lifeless condition and undergoes a change at
death. As long as the physical body remains alive, the union is
maintained between the spiritual man, that is to say, Ego and astral
body and the physical and etheric bodies.
Our conception of the state of sleep is, as a rule, too
simple; and that is quite comprehensible because usually we describe
things from one point of view only, whereas when a human being passes
into the higher worlds conditions are complicated. A complete picture
becomes possible only as we progress patiently in Spiritual Science
and learn to view things from all sides. We generally characterise
the state of sleep — and rightly so — by saying that the
physical and etheric bodies remain in the bed, while the Ego and
astral body move outwards and unite with the forces of the stars. But
correct as this is from one point of view, it nevertheless presents
only one aspect of the matter, as we can realise if we consider from
the standpoint of Spiritual Science the sleep that occurs at a more
or less normal time. Objectively speaking, an afternoon nap is a
quite different matter from ordinary sleep at night. What I have now
said is concerned not so much with a man's ordinary state of health
but rather with his whole relationship to the world. We will
therefore not consider an afternoon nap but the sleep of a healthy
human being, let us say at midnight, regarded from the standpoint of
clairvoyant consciousness.
During the waking life of day there is a certain
regulated connection between the four members of man's being:
physical body, etheric body, astral body and Ego. This connection can
be indicated if I make sketches to show how the so-called aura of the
human being appears to clairvoyant consciousness — but of
course the sketches are only very rough.
The important point is that what may be called the auric
picture of the Ego when a human being is asleep, actually becomes
twofold. During the waking state the Ego-aura holds together in the
form of an oval (A) but during sleep divides into two parts (B), one
of which turns downwards as the result of a kind of gravity and
spreads out below. This part of the Ego-aura appears to clairvoyance
as a very dark area tinged with dark red shades. The other, upper
part streams upwards from the head and then expands into the
infinitudes of the world of stars. The Ego-aura is thus divided —
in appearance at all events; we cannot, however, speak of an actual
division of the astral aura.
This occult
spectacle is a kind of pictorial expression of the fact that the
human being; with the Ego-forces that permeate him in the waking
condition, goes forth into cosmic space in order to be united with
the world of stars and draw its forces into himself.
| Diagram 1 Click image for large view | |
(Note
by translator. Dr. Steiner's drawings were probably made with
coloured chalks which would have indicated the several members of
man's being with greater clarity than is possible in the printed
reproductions. Comments made in connection with the drawings have
been abbreviated as follows:
Figure A. Waking state. The physical body is indicated
by the innermost darker dotted outline, the etheric body by the
fainter dotted outline, the astral body by the sloping lines; the
Ego-aura seems to envelop the human form.
Figure B. Indicates the difference in the auric picture
while a human being is asleep. The upper part of the Ego-aura
radiates outwards and upwards without defined limit, and the lower
part radiates downwards without defined limit.)
Now that part of the Ego-aura which streams downwards
and becomes dark and more or less opaque while the part streaming up
wards is luminous and radiant — all this lower part is
particularly exposed to the influence of Ahrimanic powers. The
adjacent part of the astral aura is, on the other hand, particularly
exposed to the Luciferic forces. The account that has been given —
quite rightly from a certain standpoint — that the Ego and
astral body leave the human being during sleep is, however, strictly
true only as regards the upper parts of the Ego-aura and astral aura.
It is not correct as regards the parts of the Ego-aura and astral
aura which correspond more to the lower areas of the human figure,
particularly the lower parts of the trunk. Actually, during sleep,
these parts of the astral aura and of the Ego-aura are more closely
bound up with the physical and etheric bodies than is the case during
the waking state, and below they are denser, more compact.
Now
it is extremely important to know that in view of the evolution of
our Earth and all the forces that have played their part in that
evolution — which you will find described in the book
Occult Science — an Outline,
— it was ordained that man should not
participate in this more lively activity of the lower aura during
sleep, that is to say he was not to witness this activity. The reason
for this was that the revitalising forces needed by man for the
restoration of what has been used up during the waking hours, are
kindled by the lower Ego-aura and lower astral aura. The vitalising
forces must be drawn from these parts of the aura. That they work
upwards and revitalise the whole man depends upon the upper aura
developing powers of attraction drawn from the world of stars; it can
therefore attract the forces which rising from below, act
restoratively. That is the objective process.
Understanding
of this fact is the best equipment for understanding certain
information available to one who studies ancient records or records
based on occultism. You have always heard — and from a certain
standpoint the statement is quite correct — that man leaves his
physical and etheric bodies in the bed and goes forth with his astral
body and Ego; this is absolutely correct as regard the upper parts of
the Ego-aura and astral aura, especially of the Ego-aura. But if you
study Eastern writings, you will find a statement that is exactly the
opposite. It is stated there that during sleep what is otherwise
present in man's consciousness penetrates more deeply into the body.
This is the opposite description of sleep. And especially in certain
Vedanta writings you will find it stated that the part of man of
which we say that during sleep it leaves the physical and etheric
bodies, sinks more deeply into those bodies, and that what gives us
the power of sight withdraws into deeper regions of the eye so that
sight is no longer possible. Why is the process described in this way
in Eastern writings? It is because the Oriental still has a different
standpoint. With his kind of clairvoyance he pays more attention to
what goes on within the human being; he pays less attention to
the emergence of the upper aura and more to the permeation by the
lower aura during sleep. Hence from his particular point of view he
is right.
The processes which take place in the human being in the
course of his evolution are very complicated and as evolution
progresses it will become more and more possible for him to picture
the whole range of these processes. But evolution consists in human
beings having gradually acquired knowledge of particular processes,
hence the differing statements in the different epochs. Although the
statements seem to differ they are not for that reason false; they
relate to the particular condition prevailing at the time. But the
process of evolution as a whole becomes clear only when all the
various processes are taken into account.
We ourselves have now reached the point when it is
possible to survey a certain definite portion of the process of
evolution. There is a most significant difference in the whole
attitude and disposition of man's soul when we observe its
development during incarnations, let us say in the Egypto-Chaldean
period, then in the Graeco-Roman period and then again in our own.
Even externally it is not difficult to discover what the soul is
experiencing. I think that even in this enlightened audience there
will be quite a number of individuals who when they look at a
star-strewn sky cannot locate the particular constellations or
perceive how their positions change in the heavens during the night.
Speaking generally it can be said that the number of individuals who
are still well-informed about the starry sky will steadily decrease.
There will even be people, among town-dwellers for example, whom one
might ask in vain: Is there now Full Moon or New Moon? This does not
in any way imply reproach, for it lies in the natural course of
development. What holds good for the soul now would have been utterly
impossible during the Egypto-Chaldean epoch, particularly during its
earlier periods. In those days men's insight into the heavens was
very great. Our present age, however, has a definite advantage over
the Egypto-Chaldean epoch, inasmuch as logical thinking — of
which most people would be capable today if they were to make efforts
— was quite beyond the men of that earlier epoch. They lived
their lives and carried out their daily tasks more instinctively than
we do today. It would be quite erroneous to imagine that when a
building or, say, an aqueduct was to be constructed, engineers would
sit in their offices and work out the project with the help of plans
and the other methods employed nowadays. Engineers in those times no
more worked from plans than the beaver does today when with such
skill and accuracy he sets about building his den.
In those early times there was no logical, scientific
thinking such as is general today; the activities of men during
waking life were instinctive. They had acquired their knowledge —
and stupendous knowledge has been preserved from the Egypto-Chaldean
epoch — in a quite different way. They knew about the secrets
of the stars in the night, about the heavens, although they had no
Astronomy of the kind that is available for men of the present age.
They watched the spectacle presented by the stars in the heavens on
successive nights and the whole power of the astral forces in space
worked upon them, not merely the sensory impressions made by what
they observed. For example, the passage of the Great Bear or of the
Pleiades was an actual experience within them and the experience
continued while they were asleep, for they were sensitive to the
spiritual reality connected with the passage of a constellation such
as the Great Bear across the heavens; together with the spectacle
perceived by the senses they were inwardly aware of the living
spiritual reality in cosmic space. Something came into their
consciousness which ours today is quite unable to experience.
Nowadays man has eyes only for the material picture of the stars in
the sky. And being very clever he looks at a chart of the heavens
into which figures of animals are inscribed, and says: The ancients
inscribed symbols here and there to represent their idea of the
grouping of the stars, but we have now progressed sufficiently to be
cognisant of the reality. A man of the modern age does not know that
the ancients had actually seen what they inscribed into their charts;
they drew something of which they had had direct vision. Some of them
were more skilful draftsmen than others, but they drew what they had
actually perceived. They did not, however, perceive in the way that
is customary in physical life. When they experienced, for example,
the passage of the Great Bear across the heavens at night they saw
the physical stars implanted in a mighty spiritual Being whom they
could actually perceive. But it would be childish to imagine that
they saw an animal moving across the heavens in the way we should see
a physical animal on the Earth. This experience of the passage of the
constellation of the Pleiades, for example, across the heavens
affected them intimately. They felt that the experience had an effect
upon their astral bodies and caused changes there.
You can form an idea of this experience by picturing
that there is a rose in front of you but you are not looking at it;
you are merely holding it and what you experience is your own contact
with it. You then form an idea of the rose. It was in this way that
the ancients ‘contacted’ as it were with their astral
bodies what they experienced about the constellation of the Great
Bear; they ‘felt’ the astral reality and experienced
their own contact with it. This brought about changes in their very
being, changes which are still brought about today but are unnoticed.
Evolution leading into our modern scientific age with
its power of rationalistic judgement consists in the fact that direct
experience of spiritual processes has ceased and that we are left
with the world of the senses and the brain-bound intellect. Thus when
in the Egypto-Chaldean epoch men spoke of the spiritual Beings in
space and drew figures of these Beings, inscribing physical stars as
focal points, this was in keeping with the reality — which was
an actual experience. Hence in the Egypto-Chaldean epoch men had a
faculty of perception far more in line with the life between death
and rebirth than is our present physical consciousness. When it is
realised how the astral body and the Ego experience what is happening
in the heavens it is also obvious that we are then living outside our
physical and etheric bodies and there is not the slightest reason for
believing that a life in which such experiences occur is impossible
when the physical and etheric bodies are actually laid aside (at
death). Thus in the men of old it was a matter of direct knowledge
that between death and the new birth they would experience the
happenings in the world of stars. A man living in the Egypto-Chaldean
epoch would have thought it ridiculous if anyone set out to prove to
him the immortality of the soul. He would have said: ‘But that
needs no proof!’ He would not even have understood what a proof
is in our meaning of the word, for logical thinking did not yet
exist. If he had learnt in an occult school what in the future would
be meant by ‘proof’, he would still have insisted that it
is unnecessary to prove the immortality of the soul, because in
experiencing the nocturnal starry heavens one is already experiencing
something that is independent of the body. Immortality was thus an
actual experience and the men of those times knew a great deal about
what we today describe in connection with perception in the
disembodied state.
And
now, turning from the more remote worlds of stars to the planets,
these men of old experienced the spiritual sphere that is connected,
for instance, with Saturn. They were able to perceive — this is
true especially of the earlier periods of the Egypto-Chaldean epoch —
what remains of a human being during his life in the Saturn sphere
between death and the new birth. People would have thought it very
strange if it had been suggested to them that they should try to
establish connection with Mars as is sometimes hinted at today, for
they were quite conscious of being related to these worlds. If
someone has knowledge of Saturn or Mars or other planetary sphere and
can follow its functions in our planetary system, this leads to
knowledge of the pre-earthly conditions of Old Saturn, Old Sun and
Old Moon described in the book
Occult Science — an Outline.
This was once a matter of actual experience. There would have been no need
to lecture about it. All that was necessary would have been to make
men conscious that it was simply a matter of inducing in those no
longer capable of perceiving such things conditions which made
perception possible. This could not otherwise have been achieved.
By
the time of the Graeco-Latin epoch this state of things had already
changed. Men had lost their sensitivity for everything I have been
describing and remembrance of it alone remained. In the
Graeco-Latin epoch, among the leading peoples, for example of
Southern Europe, there was no longer any equal possibility of direct
vision of the spiritual Beings of the heavens, but remembrance of
that vision remained. Just as a man remembers today what he
experienced yesterday, so did souls in the Graeco-Latin epoch still
remember what they had experienced of the Universe in earlier
incarnations. This radiated into the souls of men and was a living
experience. Plato speaks of it as ‘recollection’,
but men do not always call it so. Progress in evolution consisted in
the suppression of this direct experience and the development during
the Graeco-Latin epoch of the faculty of judgement and the formation
of concepts. Hence the earlier vision was bound to recede and could
survive only as recollection, remembrance. This is exemplified most
clearly of all in Aristotle who lived in the fourth century
BC. and was the founder of logic, of the art of judgement; he himself
was no longer able to perceive anything of the spiritual realities in
the worlds of the stars, but in his writings he brings all the old
theories back again. He does not speak of the physical heavenly
bodies as we know them today but of the ‘Spirits of the
Spheres’, of spiritual Beings. And a great many of his
utterances were an enumeration of the individual planetary Spirits
and of the fixed stars, finally leading to the one universal Godhead.
The Spirits of the Spheres still play an important role in the works
of Aristotle.
But
even the remembrance in Graeco-Latin times of the Spiritual Beings in
the Universe was gradually lost to humanity and it is interesting to
watch how the ancient knowledge disappears gradually as later epochs
approach. The more spiritually minded among men still drew from their
remembrance the consciousness that spiritual Beings are connected
with all physical bodies existing in space — as Anthroposophy
describes today. A great deal in this connection was presented
magnificently by Kepler. But the nearer we come to modern
times, the more does the possibility fade of even a remembrance of
what the soul experienced in the Egypto-Chaldean epoch from
contemplation of the heavens. As the age of Copernicanism approached
even the remembrance that still survived in the Graeco-Latin epoch
faded, and men had eyes only for the physical globes moving through
space. Occasionally something plays into the consciousness of more
modern men that there is still a possibility of gleaning from the
constellations in the heavens genuine knowledge of spiritual events.
Kepler, for example, set out independently to calculate from the
stars the date of the birth of Jesus of Nazareth. Such a calculation
was possible because Kepler's whole being was still permeated through
and through with spirituality. The same applies to his realisation
that a certain constellation of stars in the year 1604 would be
followed by further suppression of the ancient remembrances.
The nearer we come to the modern age the more is
humanity dependent upon the physical senses and the brain-bound
intellect, because what the souls of men experienced in ancient times
has been thrust down into the deeper strata of consciousness. The
souls of all of you once harboured the experiences known to men when
they were still able to be aware of the spiritual life pervading
cosmic spheres. This is everywhere present in the depths of your own
souls. But it is not possible today to lead souls during the hours of
darkness and guide their vision, let us say, to the constellation of
the Great Bear and enable them to experience as realities the
spiritual forces emanating from that group of stars. It is not
possible because the powers of vision and perception lie in such
depths of the soul. During sleep at night man experiences the heavens
with the radiating upper part of the aura but is not conscious of it.
Hence for souls of the present age the right procedure is to raise
into consciousness by valid methods the forgotten impressions
received in olden times. And how is this done? As we do it in
Anthroposophy! Nothing new is imposed upon souls but what they
experienced in earlier epochs is drawn forth. What souls could no
longer actually experience in the Graeco-Latin epoch but had not yet
entirely forgotten — today it is entirely forgotten but can be
drawn forth again. Anthroposophy is the stimulus for drawing forth
the forces of knowledge which lie deep in the souls of men. All human
beings who have partaken in evolution up to the time of Western
culture have in the depths of their souls the conceptions which
should be kindled to life through Anthroposophy; and the methods used
in Anthroposophy are the stimuli for achieving this.
We will now consider the difference between these two
attitudes to the world, between that of a human soul incarnated in
the Graeco-Latin epoch and one incarnated today. We have heard that
during the Graeco-Latin epoch, in earthly life too, the soul had a
certain connection with and capacity for perception of what is lived
through in the period between death and the new birth. These
experiences had not yet withdrawn into such deep strata of the soul.
Hence in those very ancient times there was much less difference
between men's consciousness on Earth and between death and rebirth
than there is today. The ancient Greeks had some remembrance of what
they had once experienced, but even so the difference was already
great. Conditions today have reached the stage when between death and
the new birth, consciousness can still be kindled in a human being in
the Venus sphere if, on Earth, he has cultivated a moral and
religious attitude of soul. But in and especially beyond the Sun
sphere it is impossible for consciousness to be kindled if during his
life on Earth a man has made no attempt to raise to the level of
waking consciousness the concepts lying in the depths of the soul.
Here, in earthly life, Anthroposophy seems to be a kind of
theoretical world-conception which we master because it interests us.
After death, however, it is a torch which from a certain point of
time onwards between death and rebirth illumines the spiritual world
for us. If Anthroposophy is disdained here in the physical world, no
torch is available in that other world and consciousness is dimmed.
To pursue Spiritual Science is not merely a matter of imbibing so
many theories; it is a living force, a torch which can illumine life.
The contents of the spiritual teachings here on Earth are concepts
and ideas; after death they are living forces! But this applies to
consciousness only. It will be clear to you from what I said at the
beginning of the lecture that already in earthly existence the
spiritual ideas we acquire are life-giving forces. But a man cannot
witness the outcome of these life-giving forces because knowledge of
the powers from which they originate is withheld from him. After
death, however, he actually beholds them. Here on Earth,
Anthroposophy seems to be so much theory and the human being in his
waking state has no consciousness of what is spiritually life-giving
but nevertheless objectively present. After death man is a direct
witness of how the forces he took into himself together with the
spiritual teachings received during his life on Earth have an
organising, vitalising, strengthening effect upon what is within his
being when he is preparing for a new incarnation.
In this way spiritual teaching actually becomes part of
the evolution of humanity. But if this spiritual teaching were to be
rejected — at the present time it suffices if only a few accept
it but in the future more and more individuals must do so —
then, as they return to incarnations on Earth, human beings will
gradually find that they lack the life-giving forces they need.
Decadence and atrophy would set in during the subsequent incarnation.
Human beings would quickly wither, be prematurely wrinkled. Decadence
of physical humanity would set in if the spiritual forces were not
received. The forces that were once drawn by men from the worlds of
stars must now be drawn from the depths of their own souls and used
for furthering the evolution of humanity.
If you reflect about these matters you will be filled
through and through with the thought that existence on Earth is of
immense significance. It was necessary that the human being should be
so inwardly deepened by his union with the worlds of stars that the
forces he had otherwise always drawn from those worlds would become
the inmost forces of his soul and be drawn up again from its depths.
But that can be done only on Earth. One could say: in primeval times
the soma-juice rained down from the heavens into individual souls,
was preserved there and must now be drawn forth again from those
souls. In this way we acquire a conception of the mission of the
Earth. And having presented this conception today we will proceed to
study the life between death and the new birth in even greater
detail.
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