If we pause at times in the midst of our anthroposophical
considerations and then ask ourselves: What leads us into a spiritual
movement such as our anthroposophical movement? ... we may of course
answer a similar question from many different stand-points. One of the
standpoints (although it is not the only one, it is nevertheless the
most important one) which is able more than any other to supply a
satisfactory answer is the contemplation of the course of life which
the human soul experiences in feelings between death and a new birth.
Indeed, the events which take place during the long span of life
between death and a new birth are not less important or detailed than
the events which take place between birth and death; yet we are only
able to single out a few of the important things which we must
experience. We may say, however, that whenever and at whatever point
we observe the life between death and a new birth it always convinces
us that humanity must prepare itself for a time when it will know and
feel something concerning the super-sensible worlds.
Let us now penetrate at once into definite and concrete facts. If a
clairvoyant who is able to contemplate life between death and a new
birth perceives what will be described below, this sight may indeed
induce him to consider it as an urgent task to spread the knowledge of
the spiritual world! Let us take the case of a man who has died. The
clairvoyant seeks him, he tries to see him some time after the person
in question has passed through the portal of death. In the manner in
which it is possible to communicate with the dead, he may hear the
following words spoken by the departed one. (This is a concrete case.)
The departed one will speak to him as follows: I have left my
wife behind; I know that she is still dwelling in the physical
world. (Of course, the dead man does not express himself with
physical words.) While I was living with her in the physical
world, and while I attended to my work at the office from morning to
night, she has always been the sunshine of my life. Every one of her
words filled me with happiness; indeed, my life was so that I could not
imagine it without the sunshine shed over it by the partner of my
life. I then passed through the portal of death and left her behind.
Now I am longing to be back again, I feel how I miss everything and my
longing soul seeks to find a path leading to the companion of my life. But
I cannot find this soul, I cannot penetrate to where she is dwelling,
it is just as if she were no longer there. And if at times I have an
inkling of her presence and feel as if she were there, as if I were in
her neighbourhood, she is dumb, so that I only compare this with the
case of two people, one of whom is filled with the desire that the
other one speak a few words to him, while the other silent and cannot
speak. Thus the soul that has filled me with bliss for such a long
time during my physical life has now grown silent.
You see, if we investigate what may be the cause of all this we obtain
the answer: there is no language in common between the departed and
the living who have remained behind. Nothing fills the soul with a
substance which would continue to render it perceptible. Because a
language in common is lacking, two souls feel separated.
This was not always the case. If we go back further into human
evolution we find that the souls possessed a certain spiritual
inheritance, a spirituality rendered them perceptible to one another
not only upon the physical plane, but also when one of them dwelt in the
physical and the other in the spiritual world. But the old heirloom of
spiritual inwardness has been used up and to-day it exists no longer,
so that the distressing case may really arise that one soul who has
been loved by the other as dearly as I have just described, cannot be
found beyond death by the soul, because nothing of what can be
perceived by the departed soul lives within the soul who has remained
upon the earth. What can be perceived by the departed soul is spiritual
knowledge and spiritual feelings: this is the link which connects the
soul upon the earth with the spiritual world. If here upon the earth a soul
who has remained behind has fostered the knowledge of spiritual world,
and if thoughts connected with the spiritual world have passed through
this soul, these thoughts may be perceived by the departed soul, even
the old religious feelings suffice to give soul something which may be
perceived by the other soul. If it were possible to trace this case
still further, the seer would discover that even when both souls have
passed through death the departed souls are only able to perceive one
another dimly; they are quite unable to establish a reciprocal
connection, or they have the greatest difficulty in doing this,
because they have no language in common. Clairvoyance reveals the
deeper meaning of Anthroposophy: it is the language which will
gradually be spoken both by the living and by the dead, by those who
dwell in the physical world and by those who live between death and a
new birth. The souls who have remained behind and who have taken up
within them thoughts concerning the super-sensible worlds become
visible to the souls of the departed. If they have strewn out love
before death, they will do this also after death. This may
convince us that Anthroposophy is a language which renders perceptible
to the super-sensible world what takes place in the world of physical
events. Indeed, the danger threatening humanity upon the earth is that
the souls will become more and more estranged from one another and
will be unable to build a connecting bridge, if spiritual ideas do not
enable them to find the thread which links up souls. This is the
reality of Anthroposophy, for it is not a mere theory. Theoretical
knowledge is the very least; what we take up within us is a real
soul-elixir, real substance. This substance enables the soul who has
passed through death to see the soul who has remained behind. We may
say that the seer who has an insight into these things, who has once
perceived a soul filled with longing to see what it has left behind
upon the earth, but unable to see it because its family has not
yet found Anthroposophy the seer who has perceived how the
souls suffer under similar privations, knows that he cannot do
otherwise than to speak to his fellow-beings about spiritual wisdom,
and to consider that the time has come when spiritual wisdom must
enter the hearts of men. We may say that those whose mission is based
upon the knowledge of the super-sensible worlds feel that it is an
urgent necessity to speak about the super-sensible worlds, a necessity
which cannot be overlooked, for this would be the greatest sin of all.
Thus they feel the necessity of proclaiming anthroposophical truths,
of making revelations concerning the super-sensible worlds.
What has just been said may show you the tremendous earnestness
connected with the necessity of revealing spiritual truths. But there
is still another aspect of the communication between the living and
the dead. We have not advanced very far in this direction, but we
shall gradually progress. In order to understand how the living will
gradually be able to establish a kind of communication with those who
have departed, we must bear in mind the following things. Very little
indeed is known concerning the physical world. For how is this
knowledge of the physical world acquired? By using the senses and
applying thought, by feeling what comes toward us from the world
outside. But this is only the very least part of what is contained in
the world outside. It contains still other things. I would like you to
have some idea of the fact that there are still other things in the
world which are far more important than what is real in a physical
sense. I do not mean the super-sensible world, but something else.
Imagine, for instance, that you are accustomed to go to your office
every day at 8 a.m. One day you discover that on that particular
morning you are three minutes late, and you happen to cross a certain
square where you would have been obliged to pass through a kind of
garage with a roof supported by columns. On that particular day on
which you cross the square three minutes later than usual you realise
that had you been punctual that is to say, had you not been
three minutes late you would have been killed by the collapsing
roof. Try to imagine this quite vividly You may also take the case of
a man who misses a train which is afterwards wrecked in a collision;
he would have been killed had he left by that train! All these are
things which have not taken place, and this is why people do not
notice them. But if something similar faces you, so that you
must hit upon it, it will undoubtedly make an impression upon
you. The day's course from morning to night always contains things
which have not occurred to you. These are beyond your range of sight,
things which may perhaps seem invented, yet they belong to
the most important ingredients of life. You will have an inkling of
these facts if you consider, for instance, the case of certain man in
Berlin who had booked a berth on the Titanic. He met an
acquaintance who told him: I wish you would not leave on the
Titanic! He actually succeeded in persuading him to
postpone his departure. The Titanic was sunk, and so this man
escaped death. This undoubtedly made an indelible impression upon him.
This is a special case, yet similar cases continually occur unnoticed:
if they are noticed, they make a deep impression upon the human
soul.
Let us now observe things from another aspect: How many impressions
and feelings escape our attention because we are unable to perceive
the dangers from which we have been preserved!
If we could observe everything that is so closely connected with these
things and that escapes notice, we would pass through the world with
entirely different feelings. The seer discovers the following
possibility: Let us suppose, that the above-mentioned example is true.
You actually cross that square three minutes later than usual. The
moment in which you cross the square is the most appropriate one in
which to hear a dead person who wishes to be perceived by you, who
wishes to speak within you. You may then think or feel: Whence do the
feelings come which now arise within my soul? This is not necessarily
restricted to these particular cases, it may occur in many ways. Men will
begin to feel these things if they observe also the world of
possible events, not only the world of physical happenings.
Real are, for instance, a great number of herrings in the sea;
but they are possible only because an infinite quantity of eggs has
been laid. Thus an infinite wealth of possibilities lies concealed
within the depths of life. What is real, is related to the example of the
herrings in the same way as the life destroyed within the eggs. This is
what makes such an infinitely significant impression upon the seer who
reaches the boundary line separating the two worlds. The seer may
there obtain the following impression: How infinitely great and
full of contents are, events which take place in the super-sensible
world, yet only a small part of all this becomes real in our world of
the senses! If this has been experienced, also the following may be
felt: Infinite things lie concealed within the depths of
life. This feeling will develop with the aid of anthroposophical
thoughts. We shall be able to feel that every point containing
something which is real in the physical meaning, conceals something
within it. Behind every flower, every breath of air, little stone and
crystal lie infinite possibilities. Anthroposophists will gradually
develop this feeling, so that reverence and devotion for what lies
concealed within things will gradually unfold. If human beings
gradually develop this feeling they will discover quite independently
that during moments such as those which have just been described they
will enter into a relationship with those who are dead as far as
earthly life is concerned. The dead will begin to speak. In the
future, men will experience as something quite normal that a dead
person is speaking within their soul. They will gradually learn to
know the source of these communications; that is to say, they will
recognise who is speaking to them. Only because to-day men pass by so
carelessly before the infinite world of the dead and the infinite
depth of what is possible, only because of this they do not hear what
the dead wish to speak within the hearts of the living.
The twofold aspect of the things which I have just explained to you,
namely, that through the living souls, through the thoughts of
anthroposophists, something is formed here which can be perceived by
the dead and that the dead will be able to speak to the hearts
that have found their way into anthroposophical feelings may
show you the transformation which can take place for the whole of
humanity through the spreading of Anthroposophy. A bridge will be
built uniting these worlds with the worlds beyond. And it is a fact
that the life between death and a new birth will change. It will not
merely be a theory, it will become a reality, so that communication
will be established between the so-called living and the dead, who
are, however, more alive than we. The souls upon the earth will then
also be able to feel what can be so fruitful for the dead. For if we
do not feel how beneficial it is for the dead, if we reach out
to them, we cannot do this in the right way.
Let us now take an extreme case. You may experience it if you are an
anthroposophist and live with someone else as brother or sister,
father or mother, husband or wife. Whereas one of the two feels
attracted by Anthroposophy, the other one may be filled with hatred
while the former is approaching Anthroposophy! How often we come
across this! It may indeed take on this form in the sphere of
consciousness, but not within the soul. Something else may take place
there. In the astral body there is the sub-consciousness.
Whereas someone may be raging violently against Anthroposophy, his
sub-consciousness may be filled with an intense desire to know
something about Anthroposophy. The more someone inveighs against
Anthroposophy, the more he will have in his sub-consciousness the
longing and the impulse to know something about Anthroposophy. When we
cross the threshold of death, things take on their true aspect and
nothing can be masked. Here upon the earth we may tell lies and
pretend to be different from what we really are; but after death
everything becomes true and shows its real countenance. If during our
life on earth we have inveighed strongly against Anthroposophy, a
longing for Anthroposophy will arise after death, and we shall suffer
torments because this longing cannot be satisfied. A person who is
still alive could, for instance, imagine that he is sitting in front
of a departed one; he should then harbour anthroposophical thoughts,
for the departed soul will understand these thoughts, even if he has
not been an anthroposophist during his lifetime. If the living
person is an anthroposophist, the departed one will in that case be
able to perceive him.
What we may call, a certain inclination toward the language spoken
during life, this is a fact which should be borne in mind, because
soon after death the dead person still has a certain connection with
the language which he has spoken during his life. For this reason, we
should clothe our thoughts in the language which the dead person was
accustomed to speak; after five, six, eight years, however in
some cases even sooner it is evident that the language of the
Spirit is able to overcome the obstacles arising out of the external
form of speech, and the deceased can understand anthroposophical
thoughts even if he has spoken another language during his lifetime.
In any case, it has proved to be something very beautiful if an
anthroposophist has read to a departed friend, particularly to one
who has not been an anthroposophist during his lifetime. This has
proved to be an enormous benefit to the dead, one of the greatest
services of love. We do not merely wish to spread Anthroposophy as a
teaching this should be done, of course, for it is necessary
but Anthroposophy should also be active within the soul in a
far more unobtrusive way. Spiritual tasks, even spiritual offices,
may, as it were, develop and be of great help to the souls in their
development after death. And this is what we should strive after more
and more: to help the souls who live between death and a new birth to
overcome a great difficulty, consisting therein that the old spiritual
inheritance does not exist any longer, for a time has come in which it
is very difficult for the souls to find the right direction after
death, in which it is almost impossible for the souls who dwell
between death and a new birth to find their way about.
The seer may then discover that, between death and a new birth, there
are souls who are forced to undertake certain tasks, which they do
not, however, understand. This, for instance, is a fact: The seer who
directs his clairvoyant gaze toward the life between death and a new
birth may discern souls who are obliged to fulfil definite tasks. For
a certain length of time they must be the servants of powers who are
known to us as the spirits of death and illness. We must here speak of
a death which does not occur as a regular phenomenon, but takes hold
of men before their time, so that they die in the flower of their
life. When illnesses arise, these are physical events, but they are
caused by forces coming from the super-sensible worlds. The deeds of
super-sensible beings lie at the foundation of illnesses which spread
rapidly. It is the task of certain spirits to bring premature death.
That this is nevertheless rooted in wisdom, is a fact which we
cannot consider just now; but it is essential to observe that we come
across souls who are under the yoke of these beings. And although the
seer must have grown accustomed to a certain composure and calmness,
it is nevertheless painful and distressing to watch these souls
labouring under a yoke, who are obliged to bring illness and death to
the human beings upon the earth. And if the seer tries to retrace the
path of these souls until he comes to their preceding life upon the
earth, he will discover why these souls are now condemned to be the
servants of the spirits of illness and death. The cause lies in the
unscrupulousness which these souls have unfolded during their
physical life. To the extent in which they have been unscrupulous
during their life upon the earth, they now condemn themselves to be
the servants of these evil beings. Just as cause and effect are
connected when two balls collide, so must unscrupulous people become
the servants of these evil powers. This is a deeply moving fact! There
is still another thing which the seer perceives: there are souls who
are under the yoke of ahrimanic spirits; they must prepare the
spiritual causes of everything which occurs here in the form of
obstacles and hindrances to our actions. Ahriman also has this task.
All the obstacles which arise here, are the result of influences
emanating from the spiritual world. Servants of Ahriman do this. Why
are these souls compelled to perform these services? Because they were
addicted to a comfortable, indolent way of living during their
existence between birth and death. And if you consider how many people
are indolent and lazy, you will find that Ahriman may expect a very
great number of recruits! It is this lazy indolence which influences
human life to a great extent. Even modern political economists now
take into account not only human egoism and competition, but also this
inclination toward a comfortable life. Comfort has become a life-factor.
It is another matter, however, if we have these experiences so that we
are able to find our way about and know why we must experience them, or
whether we experience them unconsciously, without knowing why we must
serve these spirits. If we know why we are under the yoke of the evil
spirits who bring epidemic diseases, we also know what good qualities
will be required in our next life in order to bring about a cosmic
adjustment annulling the evil influences. If we cannot understand
these experiences, we do indeed form the same karma, but we create
something which will be adjusted only in the second incarnation, so
that we retard our real progress. For this reason, it is important to
learn to know these things here upon the earth, for after death we
shall experience them. We must learn something about them here
upon the earth. Also this shows us how urgently necessary it is to
render this new knowledge accessible to men by spreading spiritual
truths, because the old form of knowledge no longer exists. The
question, Why are we anthroposophists? should be answered
by the spiritual facts themselves, which appeal profoundly not only to
our understanding, but also to our feelings. Thus we gradually learn
to consider Anthroposophy as a universal language enabling us to break
down the barrier between the worlds in which our soul alternately
dwells within a physical body and outside a physical body. The
dividing wall hiding the super-sensible world from our sight will fall
if spiritual science really penetrates into the souls of men. We must
feel this, and then we shall have a true, inward enthusiasm for
Anthroposophy.
Let me speak of still another phenomenon. The seer will experience
that a special moment enters the life of the souls between death and a
new birth, a moment which has an enormous influence upon the seer, and
also upon those who are passing through it. This moment will lie
further back in the case of some souls, and in the case of others it
will appear sooner. If we observe sleep with a clairvoyant eye, when
the human being is outside his physical body with his astral body and
his Ego and looks back upon the physical and etheric bodies, we shall
generally gain the impression that the physical body appears to be
slowly dying. Only during earliest childhood, until the child acquires
an understanding and his memory begins, the sleep in the child's body
appears as something which blossoms and flourishes; but very soon, and
in a way which is clearly evident to the seer, the body begins to
wither away soon after it has entered physical life; death is
merely the last stage of this process of decadence. Sleep exists in
order that the used-up forces may become regenerated. But this
regeneration is incomplete. The unregenerated part which remains
behind is always, to a small extent, a cause of death. If these
unregenerated parts accumulate, so that the forces of regeneration can
no longer assert themselves, the human being falls a prey to physical
death. Thus, if we observe the human body, we see that death is a
gradual process. We really die slowly and gradually from the moment of
birth onward. This makes a very profound impression upon us when we
first become aware of it.
Between death and a new birth the soul is faced by a moment in which
it begins to develop forces enabling it to enter the next existence.
Let me indicate an example showing you what I really mean: To-day
there are already quite a number of books dealing with Goethe's
character and natural dispositions. Scientists endeavour to discover
the ancestors from whom Goethe may have inherited this or that
capacity. The source and cause of spiritual capacities are therefore
sought in the physical line of heredity. I do not wish to contest
this, but if one follows the path of the soul between death and a new
birth, the following fact may be discovered: Let us take Goethe's
soul. Long, long before it is born, it already exercises an influence
upon its' ancestors from the super-sensible worlds, and it is already
connected with the ancestors through forces living within it. Its
influence is even of such a kind that it brings together in an
appropriate way the men and women who are able to supply, after a long
time, the qualities required by the soul. This is not an easy task,
for many souls are involved in it. If you bear in mind the fact that
men of the 18th century descend from souls of the 16th century, and
that all these souls have been working together, you will realise that
such an understanding is most important. Souls who are born in the
18th or 19th century must come to an understanding with other souls
already during the 16th century in order to arrange the whole net of
relationships. A great deal of work must be done between death and a
new birth. We do not only work in an objective way by filling up one
part of our time with services rendered to the spirits of hindrance,
and so forth, as explained above but we must also develop
forces which render it possible for us to reincarnate. It then appears
that we must prepare our form in a primal image. This makes the very
opposite impression of what the seer perceives when he looks
clairvoyantly upon the sleeping physical body and the etheric body.
During sleep, the physical and etheric body appear to be withering
away; but what is formed there as a primal image which gradually
penetrates into physical Nature gives us the impression of something
which blossoms and flourishes.
An important moment, therefore, appears between death and a new birth:
it lies between the recollection of the preceding life and the
transition to the next existence, when the human being begins to build
up his physical organism. If you imagine physical death and compare it
with this moment, you will find that it is the exact opposite of
physical death. Physical death is the transition from physical
existence to a non-existence; the moment described above is the
transition from non-existence to a growing existence. If we are able
to understand this moment, we experience it in an entirely different
way than if we do not understand it.
A thought such as this one, dealing with the opposite aspect of death
and with what occurs between death and a new birth, should really
become a feeling within the soul of an anthroposophist. It
should not merely be grasped with the intellect, but should be felt
and permeated with feeling. Then we shall be able to experience how
much richer our life becomes if the soul takes up similar ideas.
Something else will then arise: namely, that, generally speaking, the
soul will gradually acquire a feeling for the many things which exist
in the world. If we walk through a wood in the spring and have first
meditated upon the idea which I have described above, we shall not be
far if we really notice these things from perceiving the
spirits that weave and work in between the physical things. The
perception of the spiritual world would really not be so difficult if
the human beings themselves would not render it so difficult. If we
try to permeate our feelings with what we have taken up in our
thoughts, if we try to awaken them inwardly to life, this striving
will open our spiritual eyes. Things such as those which have been
explained to-day are intended as a help, so that anthroposophical
striving may acquire life. The description of similar things always
makes us feel that it is like a stammering, because our language is
adapted only for the physical world, and it requires a great effort in
order to produce at least a faint idea of the reality of these things;
in fact, special means of description must come to our aid. But just
this way of speaking about these things may awaken within our hearts
what we may designate anthroposophically as a substance of feeling.
Anthroposophy should become for us a substance of feeling and a
life-substance, so that we may not look upon the acquisition of
anthroposophical ideas as something insignificant, but gladly take
hold of them, and attribute the chief importance not to the thoughts
themselves, but to what Anthroposophy makes of us.
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