Lecture I
The
theme we are to consider today leads at once into a sphere which
belongs to all humanity, apart from distinctions.
We
are to speak, in the first place, of that realm of man's aspiration
which in its true, original form can be described in no human language but
only in the language of thought — I refer to the realm of occult
science.
Through
his human faculties man strives for occult knowledge and may also acquire
it, but occult knowledge has a greater significance for the world than it
has merely within the human soul. In the world around us we can
distinguish different substances and materials through which its
various phenomena and manifestations are given expression. In
the Primal Principle, the essential nature of which can hardly be
expressed in words of human language, all creatures, all things of
the earth and all worlds are rooted. But the individual
differentiations of this Primal Principle come to expression in the
physical world in the substances of earth, of water, of air, of fire,
of ether, and so forth.
One
of the finest, most highly attenuated substances within the reach of human
faculties is called Akasha. The manifestations of beings and of
phenomena in the Akasha are the most delicate and ethereal of any that are
accessible to man. What a man acquires in the way of occult knowledge
lives not only in his soul but is inscribed into the Akasha-substance
of the world. When we make a thought of occult science come alive in
our souls, it is at once inscribed into the Akasha-substance and this
is of significance for the general evolution of the world. For no
being in the whole world other than man is able to make in the
Akasha-substance the inscriptions that can be called by the name of
Occult Science.
It
is important to bear in mind one characteristic feature of the
Akasha-substance, namely that in the spiritual world between death and
a new birth, man lives in this substance, just as here on the earth he
lives in the atmosphere.
If
a seer, using the means at his disposal, were to come into contact with
human souls living between death and rebirth he would be able to observe
the following. —
In
the present cycle of evolution — formerly it was different —
a man who here on the earth is never able to kindle to life within him
thoughts and ideas belonging to Spiritual Science, cannot be seen, even
when he is actually present, by a soul living between death and a new birth.
But when a man living on the earth causes a thought or an idea from the
domain of Spiritual Science to quicken within him so that it can be
inscribed into the Akasha-substance, he becomes visible to the souls
who are living between death and rebirth. Profoundly shattering
impressions may come to a seer who has prepared himself patiently for
clairvoyant vision when he enters into relation with souls who have
passed through the gate of death. I will give you an actual
example.
A
seer found a man who had passed through the gate of death, leaving behind
him his wife and children whom he dearly loved. This man and his family were
kindly, good-hearted people but had no inclination whatever for spiritual
knowledge; they had not outgrown the religious traditions through
which certain souls today still feel connected with the spiritual
world.
Some
little time after he had passed through the gate of death, this man said
to himself: ‘I have left behind on the earth my wife and children;
they were the very sunshine of my life, but my spiritual sight cannot reach
them. I have nothing but the remembrance of the time I spent together with
them on the earth.’
An
entirely different picture can be seen if a soul still on the earth forms
strongly spiritual thoughts and ideas. In this case, when another soul,
living between death and a new birth, looks down upon one he has left
behind, he can follow his soul-life at the present time because it is
inscribing itself into the Akasha-substance.
This
is an indication of how anthroposophical teaching will bridge the gulf
between the so-called living and the so-called dead; and already now we
can see how human beings who have some understanding of the spiritual may
be a blessing to the so-called dead by reading to them in thought the
truths of Spiritual Science. If, either reading aloud or to
ourselves, we follow in thought the ideas and concepts of Spiritual
Science, at the same time feeling that one or more who have passed
through death are there in front of us while we read, then this
reading becomes very real to them, because such thoughts are
inscribed into the Akasha-substance. Such reading may be of the
greatest service, not only to those on the other side of death who
while they were on earth concerned themselves with Spiritual Science,
but also to those who during their earthly life would have nothing to
do with it.
The
question may be asked: As the dead are living in the spiritual world, do
they need such reading of Spiritual Science by those on the earth? There
are many who believe that it is only necessary to have passed through the
gate of death in order to experience everything that can be attained
only by dint of great effort on the earth, through Spiritual Science.
Such people also believe that after death a man will be able to
acquire all occult knowledge, because he will then be in the
spiritual world. This, however, is not the case.
Just
as here on the earth there live beings other than man, who perceive everything
that man is able to perceive by means of his senses, whereas — as in
the case of the animals — they are unable to form ideas or
concepts of it, so it is with souls living in the super-sensible
worlds. Although these souls see the beings and facts of the higher
spiritual worlds, they can form no concepts or ideas of them if men
here on the earth do not inscribe such concepts and ideas into the
Akasha Chronicle.
This
mission of human life upon earth is by no means without purpose; on
the contrary it has very deep meaning and purpose. If human souls had
never lived on the earth, the spiritual worlds would still be in
existence but there would be no occult knowledge of these spiritual
worlds. In the course of world-evolution the earth has reached a
point at which spiritual knowledge can be developed by spiritual
beings organised and constituted as men are on the earth. What has
been inscribed into the Akasha-substance through Spiritual Science
would never have been there if this science had not existed on the
earth.
If
a man tries to put the life of his soul on the earth to the test, he
will discover in the first place that during our present age he has
applied his faculties for the acquisition of knowledge to aims other
than the attainment of spiritual knowledge. These faculties have been
used for the acquisition of data of knowledge produced by means of
the senses and through the intellect that is bound to the brain. Thus
human knowledge is of two kinds: the one pertains only to experience
acquired by means of the senses, which needs the organ of the
intellect in order to transform it into knowledge; the other kind is
Spiritual Science. The knowledge that belongs only to the sense-world
forms the one stream; the other consists of what men inscribe through
Spiritual Science into the Akasha Chronicle. For Spiritual Science
develops ideas and concepts which are then inscribed forever in the
Akasha Chronicle.
All
science, all knowledge pertaining to experiences acquired through the
senses, to technical things, to the commercial and industrial life of
mankind, when inscribed in the Akasha-substance has this effect: the
Akasha-substance discards it, thrusts it away, and the medley of
ideas and concepts is obliterated. If these facts are perceived
with the eyes of a seer, a conflict may be observed in the
Akasha-substance between the impressions made by the occult knowledge
acquired by man — impressions which are eternal — and
those made by thoughts based upon the senses, which are only
transitory. This conflict arises from the fact that when man first
began to inhabit the earth as man (that is to say, in the ancient
epoch of Lemuria), he was already then destined by sublime spiritual
Beings to acquire Spiritual Science.
But
through what we call the Luciferic influence, through the
encroachment of Luciferic beings, man diverted his power of thought
and other powers of soul which he would otherwise have used for the
acquisition of occult knowledge only, to the study of things
belonging exclusively to the physical world.
There
are many who say that whereas ordinary science is accessible to
everybody, spiritual or occult science can be made intelligible only
to those who are able to see into the spiritual worlds.
This
is a fundamental error, for in the depths of his own soul every man
is capable, even before he becomes a seer, of recognising the truths
of Spiritual Science. Admittedly, occult truths can be discovered
only by the seer, but when they have been discovered, and expressed
in the normal language of human reason, they can be intelligible to
every human soul who has the will to remove the obstacles to such
understanding that exist within himself.
As
a result of the Luciferic impulses it became possible at a later
period in the evolution of the earth for another Being whom we call
Ahriman, to acquire influence over the souls of men. And only when
the possibility of understanding Spiritual Science is held back
through Ahrimanic influence in the soul does that understanding
remain unattainable. If the Being we call Ahriman did not work in
every human soul, if our souls were free from his influence, then an
idea or thought belonging to Spiritual Science would need only to be
spoken and the soul, through its subconscious relationship to
this truth, would feel: This idea, this statement of Spiritual
Science, is true. In every human soul there is a life which the
everyday consciousness understands and can account for, and a
subconscious soul-life which lies submerged as if in the depths
of an ocean and only from time to time is brought to light. In the
depths of the soul there lies, for example, the fear that is present
in every human being — the fear of the spiritual. This fear is
the outcome of Ahriman's influence and would not exist if
Ahriman had not gained power over the souls of men. The reason why a
man is usually unconscious of such fear is that it works in the
deepest foundations of his soul and plays no part in what he can
account for with his everyday consciousness.
Sometimes
this fear knocks at the door of a man's ordinary consciousness
without any knowledge on his part of what is inwardly disquieting
him; and then he looks for something that will act as an opiate, that
will deaden this feeling of fear. He finds this opiate in
materialistic thoughts, theories and ideas. Materialistic theories
are not devised on a logical basis, although it may be believed that
this is the case; they are devised as the result of a dread of the
spiritual, which is the consequence of Ahriman's influence upon
the soul. Hence the preparatory condition for actual understanding of
spiritual truths is much less a knowledge of physical science than an
education of the soul in the virtue of moral courage, spiritual
courage. Therefore we may say that occult science must be explored by
the seer, but it can be understood by every human soul if this
soul will only liberate within itself all the moral courage at its
command and so frustrate the obstacles proceeding from Ahriman.
Should
anyone wish to understand occult truths through the original moral
forces of his soul he may make the following attempt: he may allow
Spiritual Science to work upon his soul without saying to himself,
‘I agree with this’, or, ‘I do not agree with it’.
He may assimilate the ideas and concepts given by the seer and allow
them to work upon his soul; and if he has absorbed the occult
knowledge with inner enthusiasm and not as the result of mere
curiosity, he will have an experience that may be compared with a
feeling of soaring without physical ground under his feet, with a
feeling as if he were hovering in the air.
This
attempt will have a completely different effect according to whether it is
carried out by a person with religious, reverential inclinations towards
spiritual life, or by someone accustomed to materialistic thinking.
One who has no actual occult knowledge, but whose inclinations and
feelings with regard to the spiritual world have nevertheless a
religious quality may feel somewhat insecure as the result of this
attempt but very much less so than a materialist who has no feeling
of attraction to the spiritual world. The latter will experience a
strong feeling of fear, of insecurity. The materialist may convince
himself through this experience that the effect of occult ideas and
concepts upon him is that they give rise to dread and terror. And
then he may say to himself: ‘This proves to me, not only that I
am full of fear of this realm, but that fear is one of my intrinsic
tendencies.’
If,
for example, Ernst Haeckel or Herbert Spencer had made this attempt they
would have convinced themselves not only that occult knowledge is not
contradictory or impossible of belief but that in the inmost depths
of their souls they were full of fear; and they would soon have
forgotten all doubt and disbelief in what they had been wont to
consider fantastic spiritual teachings and would have admitted to
themselves that to overcome this fear was of very great significance.
Having made this confession they would soon have abandoned their
opposition to the spiritual teachings. They would have said to
themselves: ‘I must endeavour to strengthen moral courage
within myself.’ Then, perhaps, they would have taken their own
self-training in hand and if they had succeeded in overcoming this
fear would have said: ‘Now that we have become stronger souls
we no longer have any doubts as to the truth of spiritual
science.’ This experience, arising from the strengthening
of moral courage within the soul, is a victory over Ahriman, whose
influence can be perceived in the science of Ernst Haeckel and the
philosophy of Herbert Spencer. It is Ahriman who has inspired souls
to take a materialistic direction. If only a small portion of mankind,
as a result of genuine knowledge, will work in the way above
indicated to strengthen their moral courage, these materialistic
theories will gradually disappear from the world.
Occult
knowledge is necessary for the whole process of evolution, as it is inscribed
in the Akasha-substance. The importance of this can be evident from a
brief outline of the evolution of humanity on the earth.
Man's
evolution on earth advances in stages from one civilisation-epoch to
another; during these successive epochs the souls of men dwell, as
individualities, in bodies belonging to the several civilisations.
All the souls here this evening were incarnated in bodies that
belonged to earlier periods of culture. Each individual soul advances
in accordance with the karma it has built up for itself.
As
well as this evolution of individual souls which depends upon their karma,
we must recognise the evolution of mankind as a whole which advances
from epoch to epoch. A Grecian body, an Egyptian, Chaldean, ancient
Persian or ancient Indian body was, in the finer parts of its
structure, quite different from one of the present age.
Distinction
must be made between the inner progress of the ‘I’ and the astral
body from incarnation to incarnation, and the outer progress and
change in the physical and etheric bodies from one race to another,
from one nation to another, from one epoch to another. This progress
of the physical and the etheric bodies from one epoch to another
would not be perceptible to those who study anatomy and physiology,
but it happens, nevertheless, and can be recognised through occult
science. The human physical body will be quite different when, in the
normal course of evolution, our souls appear again on the earth in
future incarnations.
In
the present epoch of human life a delicate organ is being developed in
man. It is not perceptible to anatomists and physiologists, yet it exists
as an anatomical structure. This rudimentary organ is situated in the
brain, near the organ of speech.
The
development of this organ in the convolutions of the brain is not the result
of the karma of individual souls but of human evolution as a whole on the
earth; and in the future all men will possess it, no matter what the
development of the souls incarnating in the bodies may be, and
irrespective of the karma connected with these souls.
In
a future incarnation this organ will be possessed by human beings who at
the present time may be opposed to Anthroposophy as well as by those who
are now in sympathy with it. This organ will in future time be the physical
means, the physical instrument, for the application of certain powers
of the soul; just as, for example, Broca's organ in the third
convolution of the brain is the organ of the human faculty of
speech.
When
this new organ has developed it may either be used rightly by mankind, or
it may not. Those people will be able to use it rightly who are now preparing
the possibility of having in their next incarnation a true remembrance of
the present one. For this physical organ will be the physical means
for remembering an earlier incarnation — which in the case of
by far the greater majority of people is possible now only through
higher development, through Initiation. But a faculty which in the
present epoch it would be possible to acquire only through Initiation
will later on become the common property of mankind. Our modern
knowledge was formerly the special knowledge possessed by the
Atlantean Initiates only; everyone can now possess it. In the same
way, remembrance of former lives on earth is possible at present only
for Initiates but in times to come it will be possible for every
human soul.
The
Initiate is able to attain certain knowledge without the use of a
physical organ, but this knowledge can become the common property of
mankind only when a physical organ through which it can be acquired
is developed in mankind as a whole in the course of evolution.
The
reincarnated souls must, however, be able to use this organ in the
right way and only those who in the present incarnation have
inscribed occult thoughts and ideas in the Akasha-substance will be
capable of this.
One
often hears it asked: What is the use of believing in former lives
when mankind in general can remember nothing about them? But from
what is known of life, how much more surprising it would be if men in
general were even now able to remember their former lives. If we ask
ourselves what is necessary to enable us to remember anything, we
shall have to reply: We can remember only that about which we have
previously thought.
Everyday
life can teach us that this is so. Suppose someone on getting up in
the morning cannot find his cuff-links, no matter where he looks. Why
is he not able to find them? Because while he was putting them away
he was not thinking of what he was doing. Let him, however, try every
evening while putting his links away to think quite consciously: I am
putting my cuff-links away in this place. Then he will never be
uncertain but will go straight to the place where he has put them;
the thought brings the process back into his memory.
When
we are living in a future incarnation we shall only be able to
remember those that are past if we can grasp the true nature of the
soul which continues from one incarnation to another. A man who does
not study occult science in the present life can acquire no knowledge
of the constitution and nature of the soul, and if he has no such
knowledge, how should he, when he is again incarnated, remember that
to which he never gave a thought in the earlier incarnation?
Through
the study of Spiritual Science, which includes, among other things,
the study of the intrinsic nature of the soul, we prepare in
ourselves that which will enable us in a future incarnation to
remember what happened in the present one. There are, however, many
people nowadays who are not willing to devote themselves to the study
of this knowledge. These human beings will be reborn, perhaps in
their next incarnation, with the above-mentioned organ for the
remembrance of former lives physically developed; but they
have not prepared themselves in such a way as to be able to remember
the past.
What,
then, is the significance of Spiritual Science or Anthroposophy in
the life of the present day, in addition to all that has been said?
Through Anthroposophy we become able to use in the right way the
organ that will be developed in human beings of the future, the organ
for the remembering of former lives on earth. In our present
incarnation we must inscribe in the Akasha-substance the knowledge we
acquire in order that in our next incarnation we may be able to use
this organ — which is developing in man whether he wishes it or
not. In the future there will be men who are able to use this organ
for remembering past lives and others who are not able. Certain
illnesses will appear in the latter, owing to the presence in their
physical bodies of an organ which they are unable to use. To have an
organ and be unable to use it gives rise to nervous diseases in a
very definite form, and those that will be caused in cases of this
kind will be far worse than any yet known to man.
When
we study the connection of facts in this way we begin to get an idea
of the mission and purpose of Anthroposophy and of the importance of
understanding life and mankind through this knowledge. But lest the
impression made upon you by what has been said should lead to any
misunderstanding, I will mention yet another fact which may mitigate
anything that was painful in that impression. Although a genuine
occultist realises that Anthroposophy must enter into the spiritual
life of our present time in order that the man of the future may be
able to use the organ for remembering past lives and remain
physically in good health, nevertheless it cannot be said
categorically that a man who in this epoch is not ready to accept
Anthroposophy will suffer in his following incarnations in the sense
referred to above. For a long time to come it will still be possible
for a human being, even if he has neglected to use this organ in the
present life, to put this right in the next, for there will be
several more opportunities for him to regain health and acquire
anthroposophical knowledge. The time will come, however, when this
possibility will cease.
For
this reason, even if we have not yet reached the crucial moment, we
are nevertheless living in the epoch when Anthroposophy must be
membered into the spiritual life of mankind. Anthroposophy is an
essential development in the general progress of mankind and does not
stem from the personal opinions of individuals.
And
so especially in our own time, the possibility will be given for the
subjective development of the human soul, leading to personal vision
of the spiritual worlds, to genuine occult development. It may be
said that every individual who will apply the original forces within
his soul, undisturbed by Ahrimanic influences, can understand
everything that is revealed from the spiritual worlds; hence in a
certain sense it is possible for every human being to unfold
consciousness of the spiritual worlds by undergoing occult
development. At the present time, three particular powers of the soul
may well be developed in order to establish an occult link with the
super-sensible worlds.
The
first of these powers is that of thinking. We live in relation with
the world around us by forming thoughts about our surroundings. In ordinary,
everyday life a man thinks thoughts which are caused through
impressions made on the senses, or through the intellect that is
bound up with the brain. In my book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and its Attainment
it is said that through meditation,
concentration and contemplation, through strengthening his life of
soul, a man can make this power of thinking independent of external
life. I want to call your attention here to how the power of thinking
within the soul, which otherwise is developed only through thought
about the external world, can be made essentially free and
independent of everything belonging to the body. That is to say,
through such development it becomes possible for the soul to
think, to form thoughts within itself, without using the brain as an
instrument. This is easy to understand if we consider the chief
characteristic of ordinary, everyday thinking which is dependent upon
the impressions conveyed through the senses.
The
chief characteristic of ordinary thinking is that each single act of
thinking injures the nervous system, and above all, the brain; it
destroys something in the brain. Every thought means that a minute
process of destruction takes place in the cells of the brain. For
this reason sleep is necessary for us, in order that this process of
destruction may be made good; during sleep we restore what during the
day was destroyed in our nervous system by thinking. What we are
consciously aware of in an ordinary thought is in reality the process
of destruction that is taking place in our nervous system.
We
now endeavour to practise meditation by devoting ourselves to contemplation,
for instance, of the saying: Wisdom lives in the Light. This idea
cannot originate from sense-impressions because according to the
external senses it is not so.
In
this example, by means of meditation we hold the thought back so far
that it does not connect itself with the brain. If in this way we
unfold an inner activity of thinking that is not connected with the
brain, through the effects of such meditation upon the soul we shall
feel that we are on the right path. As in meditative thinking no
process of destruction is evoked in our nervous system, this kind of
thinking never causes sleepiness, however long it may be continued,
as ordinary thinking may easily do.
It
is true that the opposite often occurs when someone is meditating,
for people often complain that when they devote themselves to
meditation they at once fall asleep. But that is because the
meditation is not yet as it should be. It is quite natural that in
meditation we should, to begin with, use the kind of thinking to
which we have always been accustomed; it is only gradually that we
can accustom ourselves to give up thinking about external things.
When this point is reached meditative thinking will no longer make us
sleepy, and we shall then know that we are on the right path.
When
the inner power of thinking can thus be developed without using the
thinking faculty of the body, then and only then shall we acquire
knowledge of the inner life and recognise our real self, our higher
‘I’.
The
path to true knowledge of the human self is to be found in the kind
of meditation just described, which leads to the liberation of inner
thought-power. Only through such knowledge do we realise that this
human self is not confined within the limits of the physical body; on
the contrary, we come to recognise that this self is connected with
the phenomena of the world around us. Whereas in ordinary life we see
the sun here, the moon there, the mountains, hills, plants and
animals, we now feel ourselves united with everything we see or hear;
we are a part of it all, and for us there is now only one external
world — our own body. In ordinary life we are here and the
external world is around us, but after the development of the
independent power of thinking, we are outside our body, one with all
that we otherwise see; our body in which we live is now outside us;
we look back upon it as the only world upon which we can now gaze.
In
this way, by liberating the power of thinking, we can actually emerge
from the physical body and contemplate it as something external. Even
more can be done: for example, we can give a positive answer to the
question: Why do we wake up every morning? During sleep our physical
body lies in the bed and we are actually outside it, just as is the
case during meditative thinking. On waking we return to our physical
body, being drawn back to it by countless forces, as by a magnet. A
man usually knows nothing of this. But if through meditation he has
made himself free, he is consciously drawn back by the same
force which, on waking from sleep, draws his soul back into his
physical body without consciousness on his part.
We
also learn through meditation how the human being comes down from the
higher worlds in which he lived between death and a new birth, and
how he unites with the forces and substances provided by parents,
grandparents and so forth. In short, we learn to know the forces that
draw human beings back from their life between death and a new birth
to new incarnations.
As
a fruit of such meditation one may look back over a great part of the
life spent in the spiritual world between death and a new birth,
before conception took place. But through this kind of meditation one
can, as a rule, look back only to a certain point that lies before
the present incarnation; it would not be possible to look further
back into earlier incarnations themselves. To do this at the present
time, as the organ referred to above has not yet developed in the
human brain, another kind of meditation is necessary. This other kind
can become effective only if feeling is brought into the
meditation. All meditation as now described may also be permeated
with feeling.
We
will now consider the subject-matter which, in the process of meditation
itself, must be permeated by feeling. If, for instance, we take:
‘Wisdom radiates in the Light’, and we feel inspired through
the radiation of wisdom, if we feel uplifted, if we feel inwardly aglow,
if we can live in and meditate upon the content of these words with
inner zeal, then we have in our souls something more than meditation
in thoughts. The power of feeling we then activate in the soul is the
power we otherwise use in speech. Speech comes into being when
thoughts are permeated with inner feeling. This is the origin of
speech, and Broca's organ in the brain comes into existence in
this way: the thoughts of the inner life that are permeated with
feeling become active in the brain, and build the organ that is the
physical instrument of speech.
When
our meditation is really permeated by such feelings we hold back in our
souls the force that in everyday life we employ in speaking. Speech may be
said to be the embodiment of the inner soul-force which gives expression
to these thoughts If now, instead of allowing the soul-force to be
applied in speaking, we develop meditation from these thoughts that
are permeated with feeling, if we continue this meditation to further
and further stages, we gradually gain the power — now actually
without the physical organ but through Initiation — to look
back into earlier lives on earth and also to investigate the period
between earthly lives, the period which always lies between death and
a new birth.
Through
cultivating the withholding of speech within the soul or, as the occultist
says, withholding the ‘word’ within the soul, we can
eventually look back to the primeval beginning of our earth, back to
what the Bible calls the creative act of the Elohim. We can look back
to the time when repeated earth-lives actually began for human
beings. For the occult development we attain through withholding the
word, or withholding speech, enables us to look into the successive
epochs, in so far as these are connected with our earth, with the
spiritual life of our planet. We become able to behold the Beings of
the higher Hierarchies, in so far as they are connected with the
spiritual life of the earth.
But
these two clairvoyant faculties which are developed in meditation
through thoughts and through thoughts permeated with feeling, cannot
lead us to experiences lying before the epoch of the present earth,
experiences connected with earlier planetary incarnations of our
earth. This requires the development of the third meditative power,
of which we will now speak briefly.
We
can further permeate the content of our meditation with impulses of
will in such a way that if we meditate, for instance, on ‘The
Wisdom of the World radiates in the Light’, we may now really feel
the impulse of our will united with that activity; we can feel our own
being united with the radiating power of the light, and let this
light shine and vibrate through the world. We must feel the impulse
of our will to be united with this meditation.
When
our meditation is filled with impulses of the will, we are holding back a
force which otherwise would pass into the pulsation of the blood. It is easy
to realise that the inner life of the ‘I’ can pass over into
the pulsation of the blood when we remember that we grow pale when we
are afraid and blush when we are ashamed; these are the signs that
the soul-force is passing over into the pulsing of the blood. If the
same force which influences the blood is activated in such a way that
it does not descend into the physical but remains in the soul only,
this is the beginning of the third form of meditation which we can
influence through impulses of will.
He
who achieves these three forms of occult development feels, when he
liberates the power of thought, as though he had an organ at the root
of the nose — these organs are described as
‘lotus-flowers’
[See
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and its Attainment
(1965 edition), pp. 84–112; also
Occult Science — an Outline
(1962–5 edition) pp.
256–61.] by means of which he can become aware of his
‘I’ or Self that extends far into space.
A
man who by meditation has cultivated thoughts permeated with
feeling becomes gradually conscious, through this developed force
which would otherwise have become speech, of the so-called
sixteen-petalled lotus-flower in the region of the larynx. By means
of this lotus-flower he can comprehend what is connected with
temporal things, from the beginning of the earth's existence
until its end. By means of this organ he also learns to recognise the
occult significance of the Mystery of Golgotha, of which we shall
speak in the next lecture.
Through
the soul-force which in normal everyday life would extend to the
blood and its pulsation but is held back, an organ develops in the
region of the heart. By means of this organ the nature of the earlier
incarnations of the earth — known in occultism as the Saturn-,
Sun- and Moon-evolutions — may be understood. Reference is made
to this organ in my book
Occult Science — an Outline
(pp. 276–7).
As
you will now realise, occult development is achieved by means of
faculties and possibilities that are actually present in the life of
the human soul.
The
first occult power that has been mentioned stems from a higher
development of the power of thinking, the power that is otherwise
applied only for thoughts connected with the external world.
The
second power is only a higher development of the force which in
everyday life is applied by every human being through the body, in
speech, in the development of the organ for the word.
The
third power is a higher cultivation of the force that exists in the human
soul to cause the blood to pulsate faster or slower, to direct a greater
or smaller amount of blood to one or another organ of the body; to
direct it more to the centre when we grow pale, more to the surface
when we blush, to direct it more or less strongly to the brain, and
so on.
When
a man cultivates these forces that are present within him, but in ordinary
life are used for his outer, bodily existence only, occult development
begins. The findings of occult investigation can be understood today by
every human being who is willing to clear away obstacles to comprehension.
What can be learnt as the result of occult development is occult
science, and in the present cycle of man's existence occult
science must flow into the human soul in order that it may learn to
know its own being — which is independent of the body. The
forms of all the substances in the external world, such as earth,
water, air, etc., pass away; the forms of the Akasha-substance
endure. Through its inner life, our soul must feel itself connected
with the Akasha-substance, and in future time it will have the wish
to remember what it is experiencing in the present epoch. The
possibility of acquiring ideas and concepts that can lead to this
remembrance results from the study of occult science, which means
that the knowledge gained through occult development must be spread
abroad and accepted.
I
have therefore tried in this first lecture to bring home to you that in
addition to the impulses underlying the development of humanity, the
spreading of anthroposophical occult knowledge and the pointing of the
way to occult development are vitally necessary. It is not by means of
words based upon ordinary human considerations that I have tried to
elucidate the mission of Spiritual Science, but through the study of
facts which are the findings of occult research. Whoever will allow
these facts to work upon his soul will realise that anyone who
understands their full significance cannot possibly deny the need to
spread the knowledge of Spiritual Science at the present time. There
is certainly no need to become fanatical in order to recognise the
necessity of anthroposophical development; what is needed is to
understand the facts that lie at the foundation of man's occult
life. Truth to tell, it can only be ignorance of these facts that
still keeps mankind away from anthroposophical life.
Among
the spiritual movements of our time, Anthroposophy as it is here understood
will be the least fanatical, and the one that proceeds most decisively from
objective considerations. It is necessary to affirm repeatedly
that all kindred theories and teachings must finally unite in
anthroposophical circles in deeply-rooted, living feeling.
There
is an objective spiritual life, the reflection of which in the world of maya
is the life by which we are surrounded. Occult development is a step from
semblance towards reality. And because genuine understanding of these
facts can lead to nothing else than the impulse to take the necessary
steps, the future destiny of Anthroposophy or Spiritual Science will
be secure, because more and more souls will have the wish to
recognise the objective truth regarding the World-Spirit.
The
anthroposophical fire that can be kindled in us is only an outcome of the
Cosmic Fire which streams forth spiritually from the beginning to the end
of existence.
It
is this that I wanted to say to you in this first lecture concerning the
mission of the Anthroposophical Movement in the spiritual life of the
present day.
The decipherment of the Akasha
Chronicle and the difficulties and the dangers attendant upon it are
described by Dr. Steiner in Chapter IV of
Theosophy of the Rosicrucian
(Rudolf Steiner Press, New Edition 1966).
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