The Problem of Death III
February 7, 1915
Dornach
In connection with
many painful events that have recently happened we have
been considering the Problem of Death.
I should like to call
your attention today first to something of a more general
character which is connected with the problem and which can
be discovered through the means given us by Initiation
Science. One must picture to oneself that when the human
being passes through the gate of death he comes into a
world which is quite different for him from what is often
imagined. It is a tendency in human nature which may very
well be understood, to picture the realm on the other side
of death, the spiritual kingdom into which we enter through
the Gate of Death, as being similar to the kingdom of the
mind and senses in which we live between birth and death. I
say it is an understandable tendency to picture this
kingdom on the other side of death somewhat as a kind of
continuation of the kingdom here. But one is then in error.
For it is difficult to find words from the treasures of our
speech which make it possible to characterise the
experiences between death and a new birth, words which are
even in a slight degree adequate. I have, as you know,
often mentioned that our speech is calculated for the
physical world and we must, as it were, adjust our relation
inwardly to the words if we wish to make them words capable
of expressing that which lies on the other side of
death.
Moreover the mode in
which these words come forth from the soul when the soul
must characterise something which lies on the other side of
death is quite different from the mode in which words come
forth from us in the world of the mind and senses. This
mode of expressing oneself about the spiritual world, its
beings and its phenomena is much more a self-surrender to
this spiritual world and a letting oneself be bestowed upon
the words.
Such words as I have
communicated to you in respect of persons who have died
were not formed as one forms words when one wants to bring
something to expression in the outer physical world, but
they were so formed as if they poured into one's soul from
the being in question. So that the being gives them, pours
them in, and we now have the feeling that — we are
expressing something or other that we see through these
words, but we have throughout the feeling: through us
something is expressing itself, something that uses us to a
certain extent, as its organ, in order to express itself,
in order to objectify itself in spiritual speech. So it is
quite a different proceeding, it is a self-surrender with
one's soul to the being with whom one is concerned, and
such a self-surrender that the being finds the possibility
of expressing with our instruments its own inner nature and
its own inner experiences. When one frames the word it is
not like the adapting of oneself to something external, but
like a surrender of the word to the being in question, like
a placing of the word at this being's disposal, so that the
being can then itself make use of our words.
Thus it is quite a
different method of placing oneself in objectiveness, from
the method here in the world of the mind and senses. One of
the very first conditions, therefore, of gaining a right
relation to the spiritual world, is a certain mobility of
the inner nature, a certain adaptability to the most varied
individuals, a continuous possibility of going out from
oneself and betaking oneself into other individuals. If one
really wants to express with a certain surety of aim
— if I may put it thus — that which is in the
supersensible world and lives therein, as is the case with
one who has gone through the gate of death, one must first
and foremost be healed of what can be called the earthly
ego-delusion. One must have succeeded in thinking
of oneself as little as possible, in setting oneself as
little as possible in the central point of the universe.
One must, if one has a strong predilection for speaking a
good deal about oneself, for brooding a good deal over
oneself, conquer this tendency; since this much speaking of
oneself, much brooding over oneself, is actually the very
worst path to self-knowledge. If one has the tendency to
speak much of oneself, to judge everything so that first of
all one is mindful of how one is oneself placed in the
world, and what one signifies to the world, if one has this
tendency, then one is badly fitted for finding oneself
rightly in the spiritual world or for bringing anything at
all of the spiritual to expression.
One is most occupied
with oneself in the spiritual sense when in the earthly
sense one is least so occupied, thinks about oneself least,
for what in the earthly sense is the most interesting of
all to us, the connection of the world with our own person,
is for the spiritual world the most devoid of importance.
So we shall always find that the way into the true
spiritual reality becomes very difficult when at every
opportunity we must find occasions, according to our inner
nature, to speak of ourselves, to speak of what we could be
worth to the world, if need be, and so forth — less
or more.
If we employ these
methods in ordinary life, which is also ruled inwardly by
spiritual forces and impulses, we do not get on well. Here
one can find the most remarkable connections. I have met
with people who for instance greatly lamented that they
found it extraordinarily difficult to get up, that the
decision to lift themselves up was very difficult. I have
even made the acquaintance of people who have calmly
acknowledged that if there were no external circumstance
compelling them to rise, on the whole they would prefer not
to get up at all. One can always find an inner connection
between the whole being of man and such a predilection.
These people as a rule would be those who tell one much,
very much about themselves, who have a great deal to say
about what is sympathetic or antipathetic to them, what
they have come across in this or that place, to their
benefit or detriment ... and similar things. One who desires
to prepare himself properly for a really objective grasp of
the spiritual world must pay attention to such connections.
For we must observe life if we wish to enter into reality.
And you may be quite sure of this: as human beings, through
our natural predisposition, there is nothing as a rule to
which we are less disposed, than to take life objectively.
We are to nothing so much inclined as to take ourselves in
too much earnest and to observe outer life with too little
earnestness. One only struggles through quite gradually to
words which can then become really true guiding lines of
life, and with great geniuses one can often see how they go
through a great deal, in order then to impress their whole
life-wisdom into a single word. Then this signifies
something quite different from what it would when spoken by
just anyone in the ordinary daily course.
I once drew attention
— it was in connection with the lectures which I held
in Norrköping — to how easily one can utter the
great, the impressive words of the aged John:
“Children, love one another.” But it means
something quite different if a foolish person, some
youngster says it, or if John says it at the end of a full
life in which much, very much had been undergone here upon
earth.
It is not only a
matter of whether the saying is true, but also from what
background of the soul it is spoken, from what background
it arises. Goethe, too, from a rich, full life, wrestled
through to a beautiful saying, the deep meaning of which
one must fathom, though it cannot be understood as people
imagine, using it in every situation of life. To understand
it thus is — I should like to use the paradoxical
term — far too simple, for to understand it thus is
possible for every child. But as it must be understood, as
Goethe understood it upon the foundation of a rich, and
over rich life-experience — I refer to the words,
“Know thyself and live in peace with the world”
— is not possible to every child. But the linking
together of these two sentences shows us that there is no
self-knowledge which does not really lead to the sentence
“Live in peace with the world.”
I really wanted to
review all these things as much as possible in detail since
they are far more important than you at first believe. But
I must indicate them and leave much to your own meditation.
I should like only to point out that, according to the
statements of many persons there is a lack of material for
meditation. put there is really no lack of it, if one only
has the goodwill to let the meditation material be found in
life, offer itself as such from life.
Now he who passes
through the portal of death is directly, through this fact,
removed from all the illusory relationships in which he
lives, in which he is ensnared here, so long as he dwells
in the physical body. He is removed from them for they were
forced upon him as we know through the fact of his being
incorporated in the physical body. He is above all removed
from many functions which had become sympathetic to him in
the life between birth and death, and which naturally,
since he lacks the physical body, he can no longer carry
out after death. The whole mode of living, of the relation
to the universe, becomes a completely different one, and
you can get an idea when you meditate upon the Vienna cycle
“Life between Death and a New Birth”, of the
quite different manner in which one must place oneself to
the world if one desires to make concepts about this life
between death and a new birth. One must only try,
falteringly to coin the words which were sought for there,
to experience them quite intimately. In such matters this
is imperatively necessary.
I have already pointed
out recently that the moment of death is really not to be
compared with the moment of birth into physical human life
except superficially. In the ordinary course of life, if
one is not supported by clairvoyant knowledge, one does not
remember back to the physical birth in the physical body.
Through the capacities given us by the earth we remember no
further back than the fact of being born — not even
so far. If there are people today who believe that they
know everything through the senses, they do not reflect
that they cannot know the very origin of their earth-life
through sense-impressions. They can only know it by being
informed about their birth or by being told on the
foundation of an often not consciously but in fact
unconsciously accepted inference. There are only these two
methods of knowing that one has been born if one has not
the aid of clairvoyant forces; — to have it related
to one, or to make a deduction, an inference — other
men were born, I am similar to other men, therefore at some
time I too was born. A correct deduction.
And any other method
of arriving at the fact of one's own birth with earthly
forces, except to be told about it, or to make this
inference by analogy, any other method than these two does
not exist for the faculties of earth, so already by the
effort to come to a knowledge of our own birth we discover
that it is not possible to find a foundation for the truth
of it in mere experience of the senses. The moment of death
is utterly dissimilar from the moment of birth, for one can
always behold the moment of death, whereas one cannot with
ordinary earthly faculties in the physical body behold the
moment of birth. In the spiritual world in the time between
death and new birth one can always behold the moment of
death from the instant when one has brought it for the
first time to one's consciousness. There it stands although
not perhaps as we see it with its terror, from this side of
life, but it stands there a wonderfully beautiful event of
life, as a coming forth of the soul and spirit nature of
the human being from the physical-sensible sheath, it
stands there as the liberation of the Willing and Feeling
impulses from the fleeting, the objective fleeting
Thought-being.
That directly after
death a person is not in a position to behold this
moment of death immediately, is connected with the fact
that we have, not too little consciousness, after death,
after the entrance of death, but on the contrary, that we
have too much consciousness. Only remember what is said in
the Vienna lectures, that we find ourselves not in too
little wisdom but in too much wisdom, in an unending,
overflowing wisdom pressing upon us from all sides. To be
without wisdom is impossible to us after death. This comes
over us like a light, flooding us from every direction, and
we must first succeed in circumscribing ourselves, in
orientating ourselves, where to begin with if we are not
orientated. Thus through this circumscribing of the whole
highly-pitched consciousness down to the degree of
self-consciousness which we can bear in accordance with our
earthly preparation for death, we come to that which we
call “the awakening” after death.
We awake directly
after death too vividly, and we must first diminish this
awakening to the degree corresponding to the faculties
which we have prepared for ourselves through our
experiences in our various earth-incarnations. So it is a
struggle to stand our ground in the consciousness breaking
in upon us from all sides.
And now comes
something in which we must all — both after death and
also if we would rightly enter Initiation — first
cure ourselves, as it were, of the habits of the
physical-sensible life. In order to be thoroughly
understood I should like to link this on to something. When
we began in Berlin to carry on our movement of Spiritual
Science in quite a small circle, we were at first joined by
various people. We were at that time a very small circle.
One day not long after we had begun to work, a member of
this circle came and explained that he must withdraw again.
He had seen that we were not on the right path, for it was
not a matter of seeking all the things that we sought, but
of seeking Unity. That was an idee fixe with this
person. In a long conversation he developed the fixed idea
of Unity and then left us in order to seek unity. He
thought to arrive at the supersensible just through this
seeking for Unity, through this idee fixe of
Unity. But the idea of oneness or unity is something only
resulting from the last abstractions of the outer physical
life. This striving after oneness is in fact the most
material towards which one can strive. It is precisely of
this oneness-striving that one must be cured if one wishes
to stand correctly in the spiritual world. Here in the
sense world it is so easy to say: we must seek oneness
everywhere, we must seek unity in the plurality, in the
multiplicity. But that is something which only has
significance for the physical sense world here. For when we
pass through the gate of death then we do not have
multiplicity, but something which comes before our soul as
an overwhelming consciousness. When we have passed through
the portal of death we have nothing but oneness around us,
continuous oneness. it is then a matter of rightly finding
plurality, multiplicity. We must strive there for nothing
else than to come out of oneness into multiplicity.
Now I should like to
give you a correctly formed idea of how a person comes into
multiplicity out of oneness. Let us suppose that one passes
through the portal of death, enters into this world of
surging spiritual life of wisdom. One enters first into
this world, which to begin with stupefies us when we awaken
there. We do not distinguish ourselves within it at all. So
much is it oneness that we do not distinguish ourselves in
it, we do not make a differentiation between ourselves and
the universe, but rather we belong completely to the
universe; all is one.
But now let us answer
the question, and I pray you to ponder not a little but
very much upon the answer that I will give. Now we reply to
a question: What actually is this oneness into which we are
there received? Remember all the beings of the higher
hierarchies of which nine are known to you, or ten if we
count mankind. In each hierarchy is a whole host of beings.
These all think. It is not man alone who thinks. All the
beings of these higher hierarchies think. Consider
therefore this whole host of beings in whom we are received
when we have stepped through the portal of death. They are
around us, for in stepping through the portal of death we
are received by the complete fullness of being. At first we
do not perceive them. We are within them, but we do not
perceive them. That which surges around us at first is just
this oneness. But what is this oneness? It is the thoughts
of all the hierarchies merging into one another. What all
the hierarchies think together; this thought-world of the
hierarchies indistinguished as to what one hierarch, what
the other hierarch thinks; — this is the Light-Being
of Thought that surges round us, this oneness.
Therefore we live in
the thoughts of the hierarchies flowing together to a
oneness. Therein we live.
And now what is the
further course of our life after death? Our concern is to
gain a relation to the separate beings, to lift ourselves
out of the ocean of thought where all the thoughts of the
hierarchies flow together, and to gain a relation to the
single beings, to the multiplicity. After death we must not
only gain a relation to the commingled unity of the surging
Thought-essence of the hierarchies — for that is
given to us, but we must work through so that we gain a
relationship to the single beings of the hierarchies. How
do we gain this?
Now at first we are
flooded with this ocean of the thoughts of the hierarchies
merging and flowing together. Through what we have acquired
for ourselves in our physical body there condenses at the
gate of death to which we look back, our own inner being
lifting itself out of the material coverings. That gives us
strength of will. That gives a will-impulse of a feeling
nature, and a feeling-impulse of a will-nature. These we
inwardly become aware of in beholding the being which
ascends from the body which we are after death. Through
this we are in the position to some extent of attracting
our “will-rays.” And when we place such a
will-ray somewhere, which we create out of the force of
death, which is born with death, then we obliterate at
another place, and at a third place, etc. at various places
through the strength of our will-impulse we obliterate the
thought-world surging around us. And inasmuch as we
obliterate it there comes to meet us in the hollow space of
the surging ocean of thought, if I may say so, the thought
of a hierarch, the being that lives within it in the
spiritual world.
Whereas here in the
physical world we exert ourselves to find a thought for the
thing which we see, in the spiritual world, where, as I
have pointed out, thought stands in profusion at one's beck
and call, we must obliterate the thought, drive it away.
Then the beings approach us. We must be master of the
thoughts, then the beings approach us. And the strength to
become master of the thought, to cast the thought out of
our field of sight, as it were, whereby the being
approaches us in the sea of the surging thought-world, this
strength we receive through the fact that as a beautiful
beginning of our spiritual life after death the vision of
dying, of death itself, comes to meet us, and becomes our
teacher in the obliterating. For death becomes to us after
death the teacher of obliterating, the stimulator of that
will force wherewith we must obliterate the thoughts in the
surging sea of light.
Herewith is indicated
the entirely different manner in which the human being
stands to his surroundings after death and before; how he
must proceed in the world of the senses by establishing
himself there, having the atmosphere around him and then
being obliged to wait until something comes into the
atmosphere. On the other hand, after death he must so
proceed that he has the Light-sphere of Thought around him
and within it he must then himself obliterate the thoughts
that lie before him in his field of vision, in which the
beings concerned then appear to him. For here one has to do
with beings, as I have indicated in my book, “The
Threshold of the Spiritual World.” Thus one comes out
of unity into multiplicity. Monism in the sense understood
by many people is only a world-concept for the Gate of
Death. For there in the most marked degree an urgent
necessity arises for seeking multiplicity. To seek oneness
is a last fetter, a theoretical fetter of life as
understood by the senses.
But what is it then
that we actually accomplish there? Well, it is an activity
by which we make room for the hierarchies to approach us.
Our being, as you know, is then spread over the whole
universe (I have repeatedly spoken of this,) and we make
room by creating these hollow places, as it were, so that
what is objective to us after death, can appear. Never can
what is objective in the spiritual world appear to us if we
take our own being into the spiritual world; we can only
discern the other in the spiritual world if on the spot
where the other is to appear we obliterate our own being;
and that happens in this way.
This is an inner
characterization of the process which is also necessary if
we wish to reach the dead in the manner I described to you
at the beginning of the lecture, where one has to acquire
the power of letting the dead speak, of letting the dead
express themselves. One must then try to drive away one's
thinking and feeling from where the dead is, to drive away
oneself, and where one has driven that away, impulses come
forth from the depth of being which, without our will,
place the words in our mouth which must come to us if we
wish to express the objective being of one who is not
incorporated in the physical body.
You see, that which
here in the physical world is in a way the weakest in man,
willing and feeling, (they are the weakest parts of the
human soul and the most unclear), over which we are least
master, gains a special significance if we are to perceive
in the spiritual world. On the other hand, that which here
in the physical world is the strongest of all,
thought-concepts — we prefer to live, as you know, in
illusion and concepts, since there we can be most dominant
— is the weakest in the spiritual world. One cannot
make much beginning there with illusions, for illusions
still disguise for us this overflowing oneness of
thought-essence. Our concern is not an exercising of the
life of thought, but a development of our life of will and
feeling, and this too is the essential in meditation. In
meditation it does not matter so much what we
picture, but, as I have emphasised repeatedly, to picture
with inner strength. it is a matter of inner energy, of
feeling and sensation while we meditate, that is, of a will
element which we develop in meditation, and which we
develop more strongly if we have so to exert ourselves as
in meditation we ought to exert ourselves,
spiritually exert ourselves. What is most opposed of all to
real progress in the spiritual world is the longing to
dream, the longing to form illusions about outer reality,
because in this way we make our will continually weaker and
weaker. One makes the will weakest of all if one cultivates
the parasites of the life of idea, if one makes illusions
for oneself over all sorts of external things. Above all,
the way into the spiritual world does not draw near to us
by our holding life at a distance, but by understanding
that not an impoverishment of the outer life, but only an
enrichment, can lead into the spiritual world. People would
like so much to grow into the spiritual world through
weakness and not through strength. One grows into the
spiritual world by weakness if the outer world, the world
of life, does not interest one, when one cannot fulfill the
Goethe maxim “Know thyself, and live in peace with
the world.”
I should like to point
out before I go further in these studies of death, that in
all human activity of an artistic nature there must lie as
foundation a “playing in” of that activity of
the human soul which is necessary for this human soul after
death. As regards artistic activity it is precisely the
will-element which must be impregnated into the artist from
the spiritual world, not so much the element of
observation. In our age of the decay of art and especially
of artistic labour, the opposite is taking place. In our
age of degeneration that element is being elaborated even
in the artistic world, which makes the conceptual life more
sophisticated. Therefore in our age, artists are becoming
more and more dependent on models and copies. They can do
extremely little if they have no models or copies. Hence in
our age it will come about more and more that the artist
will isolate himself in his art. But it can never reach
real art if one isolates oneself in art. That is the
opposite of what ought to be.
What happens, then, if
someone is creating a human being through art, in painting
or sculpture, and he does not occupy himself with the inner
forces which build up this human being, with the dynamic
forces, but merely goes out and gets a model and uses the
model as one uses things in looking at them? He is then
departing from the real principle of artistic creation.
Artistic creation begins when one creates an inwardly
willed picture of how the nose stands out here, of how the
forehead is vaulted there; one does not see the things
outwardly, but can penetrate into them inwardly. That is
what matters.
And so in a special
way it is also the case with nature. In nature it is a
matter of really living within the activities of nature.
And here I will call your attention to something which the
human being immediately experiences when he has passed
through the portal of death, which here, in the physical
world, however, remains more or less unknown to him.
When we paint, we
paint preferably that which is spread, one might say, over
the surface of things. We paint light and shade. We paint
colours. Now outer nature is furnished with light and
colour from the fact that she does not accept them, but
throws them back. Over there is the object and it throws us
back light and colour. That is between us and the object.
Mineral things are, for instance, minerals, because they
cannot receive light and colour, within, because
they reflect them externally. There within the colour, man
lives with his soul. After death he withdraws into it at
once; there he knows himself in light and colour, but here
he does not know himself within them. When he comes before
the landscape as landscape painter, he must have something
of what is between him and the landscape, he must be able
to rise into it, he must, as it were, bring something into
the physical world which only actually becomes reality when
the human being has passed through the gate of death. This
gives the similarity between artistic creation and the
standing within the spiritual world, although the artist is
for the most part unaware that the spiritual world pulsates
and flows through him, nor is he conscious of the necessity
of being pulsated through by the spiritual world. Precisely
on this account the design of our building has been made as
it has been made, because we must pay attention as I have
often said, just to what is not there, not to what is
there. Just the hollow forms which have been left free have
to be considered, not what is actually there. In so far,
through carrying our stream of Spiritual Science into the
practical domain, a beginning has been made which had to be
made in our present epoch of culture.
You see, such
inter-penetrations of the spiritual world into human life
as through, let us say, the Death Spectrum, were by no
means so unusual in times lying not so very far behind us.
Today it is something unusual, and as a natural gift it
will become more and more unusual. It will occur less and
less as a natural gift. But the less the human being here
in the physical world can form some kind of connection with
the spiritual manifoldness, the more he will be fettered
when he has passed through the gate of death. The
possibility of creating those hollow forms would entirely
cease if mankind should quite lose connection with the
spiritual world, as must necessarily happen in the mere
external progress of world events. We know that the old
clairvoyance must become entirely lost. but if that inner
relation to the spiritual world were not to be
re-established through Spiritual Science, a man would
gradually lose the possibility, after death, of actually
living in the spiritual world, of having a real, actual
existence. Through the backward-survey of his life, which
always remains for him, where the beholding of death is
something quite actual, he would be spell-bound, almost as
if confined in a prison.
Therefore in the case
of those who, if I may say so, go through the gate of death
strengthened by Spiritual Science, it is to be seen that
comparatively quickly after death they gain freedom, free
activity in the spiritual world. Hence the point is for a
man to replace by the strengthening of Spiritual Science
what was earlier given to him by natural aptitude —
the gaining of a relation to the super-sensible, to
spiritual phenomena.
If from a natural
aptitude one can see something like a Death Spectrum (and
people in earlier times which do not lie so far behind us
used always to see the death-spectrum — only it is a
lost faculty) — one sees this death-spectrum through
the separation from the body. This enables one to see the
single, individual phenomena. These single phenomena are
carved out of the oneness ... and that is the important
thing ... this carving out of the oneness ... to learn how to
do this. But the possibility of learning how to do it is
entirely lost with the loss of the natural, atavistic
clairvoyance, and it must be replaced by growing into
Spiritual science. It will be this strengthening given by
Spiritual Science, through which the necessary faculty for
artistic creation in every sphere will be called forth in
the future. The sculptor, the painter, the poet, will not
be able to create if they do not strengthen themselves
through Spiritual Science. Today people are still afraid of
this. But the fear which comes to expression when a
musician, a painter, a poet, says: ‘Since I have to
engage in and struggle with all manner of things this kills
the original artistic creative power in me’ —
can be heard everywhere. This is only a fear of the
strength that is necessary if the domain of human art is
really to last into the future. Men are still afraid today
of what in their inner being must come forth
precisely as the strongest force. Times will come in human
evolution where artistic faculties must ripen through the
strengthening acquired through Spiritual Science.
Then, at all events,
there will be less of the scandalous thing that is
prevalent today, namely, that in very early youth and out
of nothingness, people vaunt themselves artists and
are, in their own opinions, artists.
When this kind of art
does not succeed, they think it is entirely due to lack of
appreciation on the part of the world. This nonsensical
state of things will gradually cease. The art of the future
will be an art of maturity and it will not be
until a comparatively late age in life that a man will feel
inwardly mature enough to engage in art. it will no longer
be believed that in later life it is impossible for a man
to have the forces requisite for artistic creation —
forces of youth as they are often called; far rather will
it be found that only by the deepening and strengthening
acquired through Spiritual Science can the forces that will
lead to artistic creation in the future be liberated from
the inner being. But people are still afraid of these
forces today. They are afraid of what has to be attained.
Many artists have a holy terror of this emergence of the
inner depths of their being, and when they hear that it is
not the external, earthly man, but the higher man within
them who should be the creative artist, they are thrown
into the most utter confusion. It is difficult to imagine
more complete confusion than that of a certain modern
artist when he realised that it is the Genius in the inner
man, the being who belongs to the spiritual world, who is
really the creator in the artist. An artist of
modern times expressed his holy terror of the spiritual
world in approximately the following words:
“Genius is a
terrible disease. In the heart of every writer there is a
monster who devours his feelings directly they have been
born. Who will be victorious — the disease over the
man or the man over the disease? A man must be great indeed
if he is to hold the balance between his character and his
genius. If a poet is not a giant, if he does not possess
the strength of a Hercules, he must either forfeit his
heart or his talent.”
The very flesh of
one's soul, so to speak, creeps when such words are
uttered. For they are simply an expression of the holy
terror which exists in the human being in regard to things
that are connected with the spiritual world. Moreover the
last sentence is quite consistent, although the author is
unaware of how consistent it is ... The fact that
he speaks of giants, of Hercules, is very characteristic.
It is very significant that precisely these words come into
his mouth — or rather into his pen.
So the view may
actually be held that the human being must be victorious by
virtue of what he is in earthly life ... for this is
contained in the words, whereas true knowledge will reveal
that the healthy genius within a man will penetrate and
take hold of him, will make him into its instrument.
Another modern writer
refers and adds to the sentences I have just read, in
strange, extremely strange words. He says: “Let us
picture the tragic destruction of Laocoön as described
in the Aenead. With natural horror and repugnance the
citizens of Troy witness the gigantic snakes strangling
Laocoön and his sons. The spectators feel fear,
compassion and certainly wish to save the victims; however
different their conditions of soul may be, nevertheless the
moment of will undoubtedly plays a very important part ...
but just imagine a sculptor in the midst of this shocked
and excited crowd, a sculptor who sees the terrible
catastrophe taking place before his eyes as the subject of
a future work of art. Amid the general excitement of these
shouting, frenzied, praying people, he remains the
unruffled observer. All moral instincts in him are at this
moment suppressed by the desire for aesthetic
experience.”
This, forsooth, is
supposed to be necessary for the creation of a work of art:
A crowd of people who are not artists stand there with deep
compassion, unable to help, and together with them, a
simpleton, a dunderhead, who has no inkling of the pain
caused by it all. And this dunderhead is supposed to be the
true artist who is capable of portraying the scene; he
stands there in his stupidity merely as an observer: Things
have come to such a pass at the present time that people
dare to demand of the artist that he shall be a dunderhead
when faced with life's phenomena, in order that he may be
“objective.” He must tear compassion and
sympathy out of his heart; he must become a dull-headed
simpleton and only then, according to what is said here,
will he be able to depict something capable of interesting
other human beings.
When people have it in
them to evolve such a view of art, they cannot help being
seized by the most terrible of all Ahrimanic forces. Such a
view denotes the decadence of art that is produced by the
fear and dread of spiritual reality. People do not know
that if a man wants to be an artist he must feel events
with still deeper sympathy, still deeper compassion and
must be able, at a later moment to look at the same events
objectively out of this deep sympathy, making us love them
as we may love a being who is strange to us. Out of this
still deeper quality of sympathy we must be capable of art
that is creative. The perversion of outlook has reached
such a point today that the opposite of truth is
trumpeted forth to the world as consummate wisdom. And I am
convinced that there are infinite numbers of people who
consider this dullness very clever and who regard this
laudation of insensitive stupidity in the artist as the
final discovery of what art really is. Such is the present
day and it is for us to seek in Spiritual Science that
support and strengthening which enable us to realise that
we ourselves are living in the world into which the human
being also enters, in the natural course of events, when he
passes through the Gate of Death.
For us, art is related
to death; it is related to the higher
life: to be related to death means to be related to
higher life.
In order to enter the
spiritual world we must in many respects be capable of
ideas and mental pictures quite different from those which
must fill us for the purpose of understanding the world we
experience between birth and death. We must pierce through
Maya not only in such a way that we take this Maya to be
the same everywhere, thinking that when we have broken
through it at one point we are already in the spiritual
world. The density of Maya is different at different places
in life. This we shall find when we confront diverse
spheres of life. — Maya is woven out of different
materials. Although it is Maya, it is woven out of
different materials at different places in life.
Suppose we get to know
a child in its physical existence; we form ideas about the
being of the child, ideas built up from our experiences of
meeting the child in the physical body. There could be no
greater error than to carry this picture into the spiritual
world for the purpose of really getting to know this being
when it has passed through the Gate of Death.
In the death of Theo
Faiss, a terribly touching karmic event has happened among
us recently. It would be a false picture of him if we were
merely to enlarge the idea we formed of this child as we
met him in the physical world, if we were simply to project
this picture into the spiritual world. In just such a being
the very greatest maturity can be observed soon after
death. We can find the forces which brought the child into
the physical world through birth — and which have not
been allowed by karma to live themselves out in the
physical world — we can find these forces interwoven
in the cosmic forces and we gradually realise that a mature
soul has struggles through death to cosmic existence, is
growing little by little towards the heavenly spheres. And
when such a soul was a child in the last incarnation we can
perceive that this soul is able, comparatively quickly, to
develop to the point where it directs the forces that are
now merging into the cosmos. Then we learn to know the
human being as he is after death; it is as though with his
own being he were directing the forces which were contained
in his death spectrum and are now weaving themselves into
the cosmos. Thus the human being grows into that creative
activity which we may call the heavenly creative
activity. Then his feeling that is coloured by will,
and the element of will that is coloured by feeling, grow
together with the universe outside him. Just as when we, as
children in the physical body, gradually adapt ourselves
with our sense-organs to the external world, just as we
then grow into the faculty of vision, so do we grow, after
death, into the essential realities we grow into the
unfolding of will.
If we allowed these
things to work upon us in the sense of Spiritual Science,
we should observe, little by little, how the Maya of
external life is woven with different strengths at
different places. Maya is difficult to pierce in cases like
the death of a little child, because most of the external
manifestations disturb what must replace them if we are to
have a true picture of what the human being is after
death.
But there are also
human beings with whom it is comparatively easy to pierce
through the warp and woof of Maya; it is easy because the
truth of their being has been able to connect itself deeply
even with the Maya existing in them in the physical world
between birth and death. There are such men, men who bring
down treasures of inner, spiritual richness at their birth
into the physical world and who are able to weave into
their being and life what they have brought down from the
spiritual world. They are those human beings whom we needs
must love because of what the Creators in their love have
made of them; often we do not ask why we love them; love
for them is a matter of course. Such human beings are like
living witnesses to the spiritual world, because even here
in the physical world they are extraordinarily like their
own spiritual being, and because the web of Maya only
through the existence of love, of course, but through this
very love — can very soon be dispersed, enabling us
to gaze into the depths of the soul.
Our attitude to such
human beings must have a certain delicacy, a certain
intimate delicacy because they have brought down a very,
very great deal from the spiritual world into physical
existence and because then, after death, they stand like
living witnesses to the profound truth that the impulses of
the spiritual world live on in all the manifestations of
this physical world. If we behold such human beings after
their death, it is as though they were wanting to say to
us: Thus were we before and the fact that we lived in such
deep, and inward truth is now confirmed when we have passed
through the Gate of Death. — Thus do they stand as
apostles of faith after death too, as apostles of the faith
which allows us to have belief in the life we spend here in
the physical world.
Since the death of our
friend Sybil Colaxxa, she too stands there like an apostle
of the faith that the world in which we live is permeated
with spirituality. And here it is necessary to explain why
the strange thing happened in her case that the sight of
her spiritual being confirmed what she revealed through the
sheaths of external life in the physical world to everyone
who knew and learned to love her. Hence the different tone
in the words that had to be spoken out of her soul; it was
because her essential quality as an individual was
precisely that quality of which I have just spoken:
... Und es durchaseelte diesse Wesen
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... And permeated are these beings
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Deine Stimme, die beredt
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Through thy voice so eloquent
|
Durch des Wortes Art mehr
|
By the nature of the Word
|
Als in dem Worte selbst
|
Rather than the Word itself
|
Offenbarte, was verborgen
|
Revealing what is latent
|
In deiner schönen Seele weset ...
|
Within thy noble soul.
|
Mark well that the
presentation of the past, the use of the imperfect tense,
passes over into the present, the present tense, because
observation of the life in the body harmonised with the
vision of the life after death. This is expressed in the
words themselves. Words that are coined out of the
spiritual world contain their own necessity. Thus the words
had to be: This Being filled with soul they voice, a voice
which, eloquent more through the quality of the words than
the words themselves, revealed what lay hidden within that
soul, and is working on, existing.
“... Existing” therefore, not
“existed.”
Doch das hingebender Liebe
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But this being, silently unveiling
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Teilnahmsvoller Menschen
|
Itself to sacrificing love
|
Sich wortlos voll enthullte: (one can also say,
Enthüllt)
|
Of sympathetic man;
|
Dies Wesen, das von edler stiller Schonheit
|
This being, proclaiming lofty, calm beauty
|
Der Welten-Seelenschöpfung
|
To the susceptible perception
|
Empfänglichem Empfinden kandete.
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Of World-Soul creation.
|
(verkundet —
the present tense — can also be used. Here the two
periods of time flow together.)
Now let us think of a
soul like Fritz Mitscher, a friend who, to our great pain,
has died so recently. The nature of this soul can best be
described by those who knew him in words which may sound
abstract and dry, but which really do express it: he was an
objective human being. Fritz Mitscher was an absolutely
objective human being. There can hardly have been any
occasion when he spoke about himself. Even if he ever did,
it only seemed that he was speaking of himself in
describing his relations to something or other in the
external world. His “I” was practically never
even on the horizon ... let alone at the centre of what he
said. It is natural for an elder person when he is speaking
with a younger one about all kinds of things in life to
bring the conversation back to himself, but it was
characteristic of Fritz Mitscher that when opportunity was
there for him to speak of himself, he avoided it, and
diverted the conversation from himself to what he had
experienced round about him, describing it with the art he
had acquired from Spiritual Science. In the true sense of
the word he was an objective human being. He did not think
about what he signified to the world, about the
position of his own “I” in the world. His
interests were all purely objective, interests which
express themselves so characteristically when a man is
little concerned about the position he gains in the world.
Fritz Mitscher was one of those men who, from the very
beginning, was passionately eager, even in passing
conversation, to convey to others with absolute objectivity
the truths he held most sacred; this eagerness was always
present because he was one of those who are interested in
the cause itself and not in the person and the position of
the individual personality in the world. And when he spoke
before an audience he entered into the subject with the
greatest purity, never losing his way in the psychical
impurity of speaking about himself. It was this that was so
characteristic of him. And it was this that made him so
eminently capable of grasping the world in such a way that
through the medium of the idea, the thought, the mental
picture, he really entered into the world; he did not
become remote from the world but really entered into it.
And so through thought, through idea, he lived right into
world-connections, lived together with the world, lived in
his “I” — because he spoke so little of
himself — and not only in his skin, but right into
the heart of things. it is really only human beings of this
kind who truly understand ideals in the world, life in
ideas and in morals. To live in ideas and ideals
is not merely to have ideas and ideals; ideas and
ideals are easily come by, they can be picked as easily as
blackberries. What matters is not that a man has
ideas and ideals, but that he has them in the purity of the
life of thought, and human beings without number shirk this
purity. They flee from thought in hosts. My dear friends,
we need only call up the Imagination, the real imagination
of pure thinking, of the life in pure thought, in
sense-free thoughts and ideas; we need only picture this
pure wellspring of soul-existence and then try to place the
specters of human beings around it, and we shall find that
in whole hosts they flee from this pure spring of the
sense-free world of thought. They say: “But this is
barren, dry, it is something that tears love out of one's
heart, it is cold, icy.” And they flee in hosts; only
a few stand steadfast in purity of soul. These few are the
true philosopher-souls, the men who are really gifted for
philosophy. And such men as Fritz Mitscher belong to
them.
That is why it is
almost a matter of course for such souls to grow into their
connections in the most natural possible way — or,
better said, for their karma to bring them into these
connections. In the case of Fritz Mitscher this was so in a
high degree. It could never be noticed in him that he
sought any position out of an intention formed in physical
life. He always allowed himself to be led to his tasks by
the flow of karma. Here again you have those truly
philosophical natures who will always have to be led to
their tasks rather than that they will press forward to
some task out of egotistical will. For these truly
philosophical natures know all too well in their deep
feelings and in their impulses too, that a man is, in
reality, never ripe for a task, that only immeasurable
vanity can give rise to the belief that he is
mature, and he always anticipates in advance something that
can only be achieved later on. when a man has only a little
of this attitude, he feels in his life something of an
inner calling. And the life then will be filled, as it
were, with the: “Know thyself!” Knowledge of
the self is best attained when a man speaks and thinks
little of his “I”. his work and labours in life
will then be permeated by the: “Know thyself, live
with the world in peace!”
Such was Fritz
Mitscher's motto. A life like this continues in the
spiritual world and remains what it was, save that in the
spiritual world the fruit grows from the seed. In such
cases we must abandon the point of view — for it
would be unreal — which would make us ask:
“What would have come out of such a being if he had
been able to stay longer in the physical world?” This
is an unreal point of view. The real point of view leads us
to the greatness, the wonder of such a soul being taken up
into the spiritual worlds. What this soul is now called
upon to achieve in the spiritual worlds is related to the
experiences between birth and death as the fruit of the
plant to the seed, so that the life here is actually
revealed as a seed for the spiritual life after death. And
so when a being who has lived in objectivity is seen after
death, words which characterise this objectivity of outlook
in life inevitably sink into the soul, but they are words
which also characterise the relationship to the surrounding
world, how the whole being stood right within the world. It
was necessary to speak of Fritz Mitscher in this way. The
characteristic element in these words was precisely this
difference between the seed here and the plant which
develops in yonder world. This is how I explain to myself
the words being as they were
... Ein Verlust, der tief uns schmerzt,
|
... A loss that deeply pains us,
|
so entschwindest du dem Feld,
|
So you vanish from the field
|
Wo des Geistes Erdenkeime
|
Where the Spirits earthly germs
|
in dem Schoss des Seelenseins
|
in the lap of Soul-existence
|
Deinem Sphärensinne reiften ...
|
Matured to vision of the spheres ...
|
Eine Hoffnung uns begluckend,
|
As a hope and as a blessing
|
So betratest Du das Feld,
|
You appeared upon the field
|
Wo der Erde Geistesblüten
|
Where the earthly blooms of Spirit
|
Durch die Kraft des Seelenseins
|
Could to seekers be revealed
|
Sich dem Forschen zeigen möchten.
|
Through the powers of the Soul.
|
LautrerWahrheitsliebe wesen
|
To essential love of truth
|
War dein Sehnen urverwandt;
|
Your desire was related;
|
Aus den Geisteslicht zu schaffen
|
Creation from the Spirit light
|
War das ernste Lebensziel,
|
Was your fervent aim in life
|
Dem du rastlos nachgestreby ...
|
To which you restlessly aspired ...
|
Eine Hoffnung uns begluckend,
|
As a hope and as a blessing
|
So betratest du das Feld
|
You appeared upon the field
|
Wo der Erde Gestesblüten
|
Where the earthly blooms of Spirit
|
Durch die Kraft des Seelenseins
|
Could to seekers be revealed
|
Sich dem Forschen zeigen möchten..
|
Through the powers of the Soul.
|
Höre unserer Seelen Bitte
|
List to our Souls' petitions
|
Im Vertraun dir nachgesandt:
|
Sent to you with confidence;
|
Wir bedurfen hier zum Erdenwerk
|
Here we need for earthly labours
|
Starker Kraft aus Geistes-Landen,
|
Vigorous pow'rs from Spiritland
|
Die wir toten Freunden danken.
|
Which we owe to our dead friends.
|
Eine Hoffnung uns begluckend,
|
A firm hope — for us a blessing
|
Ein Verlust, der tief uns schmerzt:
|
A great loss that deeply pains:
|
Lass uns hoffen, dass du ferne-nah,
|
Let us hope that far or near
|
Unverloren unsrem Leben leuchtest
|
You may still ilume our life —
|
Als ein Seelen-Stern im Geistbereich.
|
A soul-star in the Spirit Sphere.
|
Fritz Mitscher was an
individuality who became, in an outstanding degree, what
many of our dead friends have actually become since they
entered into the spiritual world. They become our most
effective co-workers in the field of the spiritual life we
have to cultivate; they become those to whom we look
upwards with special gratitude when we have to think of the
tasks of the present and future spiritual evolution, tasks
that can be fulfilled only slowly and with difficulty
within earth-existence with the forces that are incarnated
in physical bodies. In thinking of friends who have passed
through the Gate of Death, including our friend
Morgenstern, it always seems to me to be right to ask that
they will remain among us in order that through their
forces much will be able to be done in our spiritual
movement that it is impossible to do with earthly forces
alone.
It is this that must
be sent as a last greeting from the Earth to such
individualities, and it must be expressed clearly and
emphatically in connection with Fritz Mitscher, a dear
friend who with his youthful forces will be our strong
helper, a true consolation when consolation is needed. And
it is often needed.
Especially during the
most recent period of our work, creative activities and
striving, so many things have made us realise how great are
the hindrances of the physical plane — truly they are
not imagined hindrances — how stubbornly the
prejudices of human beings oppose what must be achieved
among us, and how violent the opposition often is.
We need only take one
such example. — People outside our stream of
Spiritual Science write pamphlets ... Truly I am not saying
these things for personal reasons, because I feel myself to
be only a feeble instrument of the spiritual movement that
has to bear us ... Pamphlet after pamphlet is written with
the object of declaring that our adherents accept
everything without putting it to the test, accept it in
faith and belief and confidence; it is suggested that
nothing exists among us except blind faith. Our movement is
described by the outside world as if all our adherents were
credulous simpletons, simply running after the confidence
they feel. So it is in the outside world.
But within the
precincts, this confidence — if we mean a confidence
that exists in the deep foundations of souls and does not
merely lie in words — this confidence is often by no
means so conspicuous. There is a great contradiction
between what we are accused of in pamphlets and what ought
to exist in such rich abundance within the precincts of our
society. There is yawning contradiction! I say what I have
to say here without criticism and above all without
bitterness, without in the least wanting to hit at any
single personality — but concerning many things I
said here in the autumn, it has been stated in writings
that Dr. Steiner hawks about his occult researches into
such matters — meaning matters about which I have
spoken ... he hawks about his occult powers in connection
with the things that were spoken about. If it has been
possible for such a thing to have been written, then it is
a clear proof of the fact that the element of which we are
accused in the world is by no means so firmly rooted in the
deeper forces of the souls among us, although in many ways
it may exist in the upper maya of consciousness. Let it be
said once and for always that the teaching presented here
is based upon no principle of authority whatever, and
belief in it as dogma is never demanded. It is given in
order that it may be tested in all details. But for anyone
to set himself up as a kind of judge as to what I myself
should include in my occult investigations and exclude from
them — this is a spiritual tyranny which most
certainly is not born of the element that must be present
in the Society, although up to a certain point it need not
be present for the purpose of taking in spiritual Science;
this is a spiritual tyranny emanating from unconscious lack
of confidence. Confidence is not needed for the purpose of
receiving teachings; but confidence is needed for
the realization that it is not for the spiritual
investigator to be told what he has to bring from the
spiritual world but that it must be Presumed that the
representative of Spiritual Science knows himself what he
has to do; he has himself to decide what falls within the
field of his investigations. Confidence is needed here;
this kind of confidence can never be unprofitable to the
movement, because it does not transcend the limits of the
personal and does not touch the teaching. But a fact like
this denotes — as many similar facts denote —
that great obstacles and hindrances do exist and
that within our spiritual movement we must carry out as a
duty — far removed from anything that looks like
desire in our work — what leads from insight into
inner necessity. This duty will always be done, however
sourly, it is done (‘sourly’ according to the
ordinary meaning of the word.) But precisely when we
realise that we may give to our dear Dead a kind of
personal charge to be together with our forces, then there
arises for our movement a feeling of security which the
physical world could never afford.
And so, in thinking of
our beloved Dead, there flows into our movement and into
its impulses, something that is supersensible, not
springing from what we have here, something that could
never, in the physical world itself, give wings to our
work. It is possible for supersensible impulses to flow
into the Maya of our society-activities, for us to feel
secure — because what we do, contains not merely the
forces of the physical plane but supersensible forces too.
Our beloved Dead have remained with us, although not in
physical existence, and we therefore feel security in work
which feels itself to be within the flow of spiritual
evolution:
“Höre unserer Seelen Bitte,
|
“List to our Souls' petitions
|
Im Vertraun dir Nachgesandt:
|
Sent to you with confidence:
|
Wir Bedurfen hier zum Erdenwerk
|
Here we need for earthly labours
|
Starker Kraft aus Geistes-Landen,
|
Vigorous pow'rs from Spiritland
|
Die wir toten Freunden Danken.”
|
Which we owe to our dead friends.”
|
So do we speak with
reality of our beloved Dead as companions, co-workers, as
those who are invisibly among us. Thus concretely do we
seize the invisible being, giving the hand physically for
the last time to the friend in the visible world and then
receiving this hand spiritually, after death from the
supersensible world. In this exchange of hand-clasps we
have the symbol for work within a Society that is not
intended to be a mouthpiece for the physical world but is
to call the supersensible worlds too, into its activities.
For such work, for such activities, we want to build a
centre on this hill. May there be a home here for this
work!
|