SPIRITUAL
KNOWLEDGE:
A WAY OF LIFE
RUDOLF STEINER
A Lecture given at The Hague on November 16, 1923
From a shorthand report,
unrevised by the lecturer. Published by kind permission of the Rudolf
Steiner-Nachlassverwaltung, Dornach, Switzerland, and in agreement
with the Rudolf Steiner Publishing Company.
HE
road that leads to a knowledge and understanding of the spiritual
world differs in many respects from the method of knowledge that
meets with general acceptance to-day.
As I have explained on other occasions, not only is it
possible in our time to travel on this road, but there is in the man
of the present day a deep need — yes, a hunger — for
knowledge of the super-sensible. Certain preparatory inner experiences
are, as you know, required in order to awaken in man the hitherto
slumbering: consciousness of the spiritual world and of the eternal
in his own being. Man cannot, therefore, follow this path of
knowledge without its affecting him in his innermost soul. Here we
have at once a radical difference from the way of cognition to which
we are accustomed.
Consider for a moment the scientific knowledge we
acquire to-day by the activity of the intellect — and all
present-day knowledge is so acquired, whether it be based on
observation or on experiment. Where, to begin with, is this
knowledge? For the most part, in books, in writing. The path of
knowledge is in consequence well-defined, and man has continually to
accept — and is often glad to accept — the limits marked
out for recognised knowledge. How readily, when entering into some
question of practical life, a man will defer to books — or
shall we say, for it sounds a little better, will seek the requisite
knowledge along purely scientific lines! This knowledge once
acquired, he is, of course, ready to be himself — to be man —
again. He has no wish to remain, in life, in the mood that
accepts without question, maintaining even with a certain pride: it
has been scientifically proved. ... When anyone brings forward
something he has discovered out of his own experience, it will
frequently happen that one who is au fait in scientific
matters will immediately reply: But that does not tally with what is
already known and proved, with what has been established as
scientific fact. Knowledge has become severed from direct personal
experience, so much so indeed that it is regarded as genuine only if
acquired and experienced quite apart from any relation to what
springs from the heart of man.
The path of knowledge which leads to a recognition of
the spiritual world and of the eternal in the human being has quite
another character. It calls upon the personal in man; he cannot so
much as take one step upon it without heart and soul being directly
concerned. And I want to-day to speak of the results for the life of
man when knowledge is in this way brought into immediate connection
with the personal in the human being.
Knowledge of the spiritual world is not just a
continuation or extension of the knowledge that prevails to-day;
rather does it imply a change in the whole way of experiencing
knowledge.
Let us look a little more closely at a distinctive
feature of the knowledge that has made such advances in our day and
generation. Do not think I want to criticise this method of
knowledge. It has achieved a very great deal on its own ground, and
has brought to humanity quite remarkable blessings of a material
kind, although it must be admitted that these are, in the present age
of civilisation, somewhat heavily cancelled out! Present-day
knowledge has, throughout, this characteristic: it starts from the
assumption that things are either “true” or “untrue”,
and sets out to decide between the alternatives by the exercise of
the intellect. We make a point, do we not, of being logical and of
basing our conclusion on the facts of experience. Once we have come
to see that some scientific statement is true or untrue, then it
stands there before us in its truth or untruth and our personality
has very little concern with it. We can of course — and should
— be filled with enthusiasm for the truth, and turn with
loathing from error and falsehood; but if we compare our personal
relation to the scientific findings of our lime as regards their
truth and falsehood with other relations of life, we find a
considerable difference.
Let me take a simple, practical example. When we satisfy
our hunger, we are doing something in which we are ourselves
personally involved; the satisfied hunger cannot be said to stand
before us as something objective to ourselves. Whereas when we come
to a conclusion between truth and untruth in the realm of science we
seek rather to keep our personality out of the decision. If yesterday
we were in error on a certain matter, and to-day are no longer so,
the implication is, we have arrived at a conclusion, but in doing so
we have not essentially changed in our personal being. If, on the
other hand, we have eaten something we never tasted before, and have
enjoyed it, then we are not quite the same as we were.
Now it will be found that the concepts “true”
and “untrue”, “true” and “false”
become changed when we begin to have immediate experience of the
truths of spiritual science. As we gradually find our way on this new
path of knowledge, we stop saying: This is true, that is false. The
criterion holds good for the material world; there we can rightly let
it be our guide. Few people, however, are aware of its origin. If we
trace back the word “true” in the various languages, we
make an interesting discovery. The abstract concept, it denotes
to-day is comparatively new; it is a product of evolution. In earlier
times, anything to which man felt he owed acknowledgement and assent
was said to be “what the Gods willed.” The world was
divided for man into what the Gods have willed and what the Gods have
not willed. In many languages the word “true” still
retains this older meaning as well. “True” meant “true
to the Divine Order”; the abstract meaning came later. When the
intellect took command in the field of knowledge, men forgot the
origin of the word “true”. And so to-day we have this
completely impersonal relation to knowledge.
The new way of knowledge, however, leads us again to
associate something actual and vital with what we assent to or
reject. In spiritual science we are not content to say of something
that it is true or correct; we ascribe to it a quality, an
effectual quality. We speak of knowledge being sound, wholesome —
or unwholesome, and to be discarded. The concepts “true”
or “correct”, and “untrue” or “incorrect”,
which are really valid only for the physical world, are replaced by
the concepts “sound” and “unsound”. We are
thereby obliged to come into a nearer, more personal relation with
the whole of knowledge. For we must needs regard as desirable what is
sound and wholesome, we incline to it; on the other hand, we turn
away from, we reject, so far as we are able, what is unsound or
unhealthy. And as we begin to discern in the field of knowledge
whether ideas enrich life or impoverish it, strengthen and aid life,
or render it sick and feeble, we begin to realise how intimate is the
connection of ideas with life. The knowledge of the present day we
approach rather as we do a person to whom we are more or less
indifferent, with whom we have merely a conventional relation. Not so
with the Spiritual Science I am representing here. We approach it in
the way we would a friend whom we love.
As we come to apprehend the truths of the pre-earthly
life of man — the life he had as a being of soul and spirit in
a purely spiritual world — or as we take our way into the
realms of the spiritual world through which man lives between death
and new birth, we begin to feel deeply connected with these worlds
and with all that they contain; we feel impelled to unite our very
being with what we recognise as sound and healthy knowledge, giving
us a sound, healthy outlook on life, while on the other hand we
naturally reject and cast behind us views that we cannot help seeing
are unhealthy, unsound.
Let me illustrate my point by comparison once again with
a familiar everyday experience. Normally, man takes nourishment, and
this, when it has undergone change inside him, enables him to replace
what he has used up in his body; and in this metamorphosis of the
means of nourishment man has a feeling of well-being. Conditions,
however, may arise, owing to which he is unable to take food —
perhaps because his organism is not in a state to digest it, or for
some other reason. When this is so, man feeds on what is in his own
body; he begins, so to say, to devour himself. Certain illnesses are
associated with this condition. This is not unlike what happens with
us in the pursuit of knowledge. As we gradually acquire knowledge of
the spiritual world, we come to feel how, through such knowledge, we
are being brought together with the spiritual world, we are becoming
one with it; we are finding our way to the Gods, and to our own
immortal soul, finding our way to what we shall experience in the
spiritual world when we have passed through the gate of death, and to
what we experienced there before we came down to earth. It is almost
as though we had offered up our own existence, surrendered it in
devotion to the world; but that thereby our life had become richer,
inwardly richer. We have become the world, and in so doing we begin
to apprehend ourselves for the first time in our full human
inwardness. We discover that the whole being and existence of man
depends on his coming together with the world in this way. Similarly,
too, we learn to understand how the lack or neglect of such truths is
like having to live in the world without the organs for receiving
nourishment, driven to feed on our own body.
It is different on the intellectual plane. Here we can
dispute and argue about idealism and materialism, and so forth; to
one we may feel kindly disposed — to another perhaps not, but
we do not suffer on that account; none of them affects us deeply. But
when we have learned to apprehend sound spiritual truths, then ideas
that have a materialistic orientation give us pain; for we know, such
truths leave man to feed upon himself.
Now we shall find that the experience I have described
enables us to distinguish spiritual truths in yet another way, for it
brings home to us that truth is related to love, that healthy and
sound knowledge is related to selflessness in man — not
the selflessness that loses the self but that leads rather to the
possession of the self in the true sense. When man has learned to go
out of himself and into the world, becoming in this way not empty but
filled with world content, then it is that he finds his true manhood.
Devotion, loving devotion to the spiritual facts of
life, becomes a characteristic of one who is able to receive
spiritual knowledge. We do not, as a rule, find that the pursuit of
purely intellectual knowledge has any specific effect on character;
but when a man has probed to the heart of spiritual knowledge, he
knows that he cannot apprehend such knowledge without its affecting
his character, without its entering — to speak in a paradox —
into the flesh and blood of his soul, developing in him an
inclination to selflessness, to love. He comes also to understand
that when man receives knowledge that lacks this health-giving
impulse, it drives him — spiritually speaking — to feed
on himself, and from this he can learn the true nature of egoism.
The effect upon character is one of the most important
results that can accrue from spiritual knowledge. Abstract
intellectual knowledge is like an artificial root; it has been
constructed by the intellect — no plant can grow from it. This
is true of all the scientific knowledge that men respect and revere
to-day, useful though it be, and by no means to be disparaged. From a
real root grows a real plant; and from a real knowledge, whereby man
can unite his spirit with the Spirits of the World, grows little by
little the complete man who knows what true selflessness —
selfless love — is, and what egoism is, and from this
understanding derives impulses to act and work in life — the
impulse, where it is right, to be selfless; or again, where he
perhaps has need to draw forth something from his own being in
preparation for life — there, openly, without any disguise, to
develop egoism.
A certain clairvoyance will be found to enter into this
self-observation, and into the way it is led over into deed and
action. From the root of spiritual knowledge springs the plant of the
higher man, the man of soul and spirit. Spiritual knowledge leads
therefore quite naturally and inevitably to morality. As regards
present-day knowledge, we tend to be proud of the fact that it has no
connection with morality or ethics. We assume as a matter of course
that we have to examine the inorganic processes in Nature in
accordance with their laws, looking in them for cause and effect and
not expecting to find in them any ethical working. We boast that we
can even go on to apply these methods to living processes, to
our study of the plant, of the animal and of the human being,
allowing ourselves to concede the presence of a moral element only
when we come to consider the deeper impulses that rise up in human
hearts and souls: impulses of which, however, we cannot say that they
are able to demonstrate their independent existence by accomplishing
the transition to objective reality.
Knowledge of the spirit, on the other hand, leading as
it does to an intensive development of the experience of
selflessness, of that loving devotion to the matter in hand, without
which spiritual knowledge is unattainable, and on the other hand to a
fine perception of the nature of egoism, brings us right into the
moral world-order. The moral world-order begins to be for us an
immediate reality. Let us examine a little how this comes about.
We begin to speak no longer merely in an abstract way of
a pre-earthly life of man, but actually to look into the spiritual
world in which we lived before we descended to Earth, even as we look
out: with our physical eyes on our physical surroundings; and we find
that we are surrounded there by beings who never take on a physical
body, just as here in the physical world we have around us beings who
have, like ourselves, a physical body. The spiritual world and its
beings become actual and objective; we begin to be familiar with
them.
What is the secret of our bodily existence on earth?
Even as through the years of childhood, from birth onward, we are
continually being impelled, unconsciously or half consciously, to
find our way into our body, to grow increasingly one with it, so do
we in like manner, throughout our physical life on earth, gradually
approach the world, feeling our way towards it by means of our
physical organs. When we are active and creative, we — so to
speak — lose ourselves in our body; soul and spirit are
surrendered to the body and we lose consciousness of them. The
content of the world is communicated to us through our bodily nature.
Materialism is quite right as far as earthly consciousness is
concerned, for we are obliged to make use of the body as long as we
remain in the earthly consciousness, and so have to be content with
perceiving only what is bodily. If, however, man wants to comprehend
the spiritual world and his own super-sensible being, he has to
undergo in himself a development wherein the body acts as a
hindrance. For the body would wrench us away from the spiritual
world, would alienate us from it, driving us back again and again
upon ourselves and our own egoity; whereas in spiritual knowledge we
have to come right out of ourselves — rather as we do when we
love another human being. And in so far as we become able to do this,
a deeply significant truth begins to dawn upon us, namely, that man
passes through repeated earthly lives.
As a matter of fact, many of the feelings and impulses
that we carry in our soul are there as a result of earlier lives on
earth; only we do not observe them as such because we remain in our
body. Suppose we meet someone, and the meeting leads to a friendship
that alters the whole course of our life. When we look back over the
earlier years, we discover with the eye of the spirit what we could
never find by the aid of bodily vision alone: namely, that our whole
life up to the moment of meeting him was a search for that person.
One who is already a little older and looks back in this way is able
to see his life as the working out of a plan; he recognises how, when
he was quite a little child, his life took a direction that was to
bring about eventually the meeting with this friend. We can go
further in this kind of observation of life and discover that all we
do, though it may seem to result from the working of earthly physical
forces, is in reality guided from elsewhere. We come in fact
to recognise that the life we are now living is dependent on earlier
lives on earth. And between these have been also lives in a spiritual
world.
Now we can come to a knowledge of the other lives we
have lived on earth only when we learn to imbue with love the faculty
of cognition. It is by no means so easy as some people think, to
discover the man we were! For he is a complete stranger to us now.
Only a selfless, love-imbued faculty of cognition can grasp this
other person, so that he enters into our consciousness.
This is how it is with all stages of higher, spiritual
knowledge. Our knowledge has to become a loving knowledge, intimately
bound up with our personality, a knowledge that simply cannot be
at all without our personality taking part in it. And as we grow into
this larger world, and learn to look beyond birth and beyond death,
to look also beyond and behind the world of the senses — for in
the plant, animal, and mineral kingdoms we begin to behold beings,
spiritually active beings — as we do this, we come into a
kingdom of reality, where the ethical impulses that inhere in our
knowledge have place. I will give you an example.
Destiny, we say, is hard to bear. So little good seems
often to result from actions that spring from the highest motives,
whilst others that flow from evil motives reap marvelous success! How
is this? The reason is that this physical world of the senses,
not-withstanding that we have taken for ourselves a fragment of it to
form, as it were, a garment for our souls, has in it no moral
impulses. The moral and ethical impulses that are behind our actions
have no place there; they are wiped away out of whatever we do or
make in the physical world, the nearest approach to moral working is
a purely formal compensatory effect. But this physical world is
permeated throughout with spirit; we carry our moral or
immoral actions into the world of the spirit. And here, even as we
found that “true” comes to mean for us sound or healthy,
we recognise that when man devotes himself to moral truth, he becomes
in his inner being, strong, well developed; whereas when he gives
himself up to error he becomes a cripple in soul and spirit.
In the present cycle of evolution this does not find
expression in the physical body (there we carry the results of what
we did and achieved in our previous life on earth); but when
we have laid down our physical body and gone through the gate of
death, then there is no longer anything to prevent our soul and
spirit from assuming the physiognomy we have acquired from the
ethical quality of our experience. There in the spiritual world we,
as soul and spirit, are strong and well-developed, or crippled and
weak. Then, later on, comes the time for us to resume a physical
body; and in forming it we build, from within, our own destiny. For
we may, on the one hand, be able, having brought from an earlier life
a harmonious soul-and-spirit nature, to form the new body in perfect
order and proportion, so that we can employ it in good and useful
activity; or, coming into incarnation, as it were, as a moral
cripple, we may find ourselves able only to form and guide the new
body in a clumsy and awkward fashion, from embryo up to adult age.
And now this inner destiny becomes our outer destiny. For it is clear
to an unprejudiced observation that whatever befalls us from
without is closely connected with what we ourselves have prepared as
our inner destiny. In all our intercourse with the world outside, we
make use of the body as an instrument, and according as we use it
skillfully and well, or badly and clumsily, we occasion, at any rate
in part, the events that befall us. And then, in the further lives
that follow, come new compensation and balancing-out. Thus in the
spiritual world we find the formative forces that belong to our moral
life. The moral world becomes for us a reality.
We see how an ethical impulse cannot in one earth-life
effect a change in the physical body, but when it passes over into
the next life on earth, can work there quite definitely as a
health-giving influence, no less truly than heat works in the
physical world, or light, or electricity. That we imagine the moral
world-order to be no more than a man-made abstraction is due to the
fact that we take cognisance only of the physical world, tracing
everything back there from effect to cause; we can, however, equally
well recognise this law at work in the spiritual world; only there we
have to trace the effects, as they show themselves in one life, back
to causes in an earlier life on earth. In other words, we need to
know the level on which the law of cause and effect has to be
applied to human destiny.
Now all that sounds very well, someone might say, but as
things are, men have not this spiritual knowledge of which you speak;
only a researcher in the spirit can see into the spiritual
world-others must be content with the words and ideas in which he
clothes his perceptions. To this I would reply: To paint a picture,
one must be an artist; but to experience the beauty and inner content
of the picture one need not be an artist, one has only to approach
the picture with a sincere and open mind. It is the same with
spiritual knowledge. In order to “paint” in ideas, one
must be a researcher in the spirit; but once the picture is painted,
it stands there for others to behold. And if these, who are not
themselves “artists”, are free from prejudice and are
sincere seekers after truth, they will receive health and healing
from the descriptions of the spiritual world.
We are actually, at the present day, in a peculiar
position in this respect. Spiritual Science, in the sense we
understand it here, is, comparatively speaking, a new thing in our
civilisation. The person who is able to represent it from immediate
experience, stands alone; and all he can do is to clothe it in words
and ideas, and impart these to his fellow men. It might even be
thought that what he has to say concerns himself alone! In any case,
that is how the position is to-day. One earnestly hopes it will soon
alter, for Spiritual Science has power to quicken and awaken man
inwardly. As things still are, however, mankind remains to-day a
recipient only of spiritual knowledge.
For him who acquires spiritual knowledge, the
case is very different. There comes a point where he has to
undergo a pain with which no other pain can be compared. It is at the
moment when he passes beyond his own spiritual experience between
birth and death and launches out into the vast ocean of eternity in
which we shall he when we have gone through the gate of death, and in
which we were before we descended through birth to physical life on
earth. An indescribable pain is involved in leaving, on the path of
knowledge, the world of the physical senses, and entering the world
of the spirit. The whole being is, as it were, steeped in pain. And
now a remarkable thing happens. At first the higher knowledge seizes
hold of the traveler in his entire being; but then, it wrests itself
free of him with unbelievable force and certainty.
Since we have set out in this lecture to show where the
personal has place in the path of knowledge, you will allow me, I
think, to describe at this point what is, on the face of it, an
entirely personal matter. As we shall find, however, what seems most
personal in it has nevertheless an impersonal character. It is an
experience that can befall anyone who comes into a similar situation.
To begin with, as I said, the knowledge of the spiritual
takes hold of the entire human being. Ordinary intellectual knowledge
is a concern of the head, the intellect. It is in the head alone that
we have to exert ourselves. True, the acquisition of this kind of
knowledge often obliges one to sit still for long hours at a stretch,
so that one may be glad to break off for sheer weariness! It is
nevertheless true to say that ordinary knowledge does not call
upon the whole human being. But if we try to acquire, with the aid of
the intellect alone, knowledge of the spiritual and super-sensible, it
evades us like a dream; its great and far-reaching conceptions slip
from our grasp. When we have, so to speak, pressed forward to the
spiritual world, when we have passed what is spoken of as the
Guardian of the Threshold, we have the greatest trouble to bring to
consciousness — not the content; that one can acquire as
a matter of knowledge — but the experience.
It is a fact that very many people become able,
comparatively quickly, to have experiences in the spiritual world.
But presence of mind is needed to grasp these experiences. With the
majority of persons it happens that before they can give their
attention to some experience, it is gone again. Presence of mind is
altogether indispensable for the attainment of spiritual knowledge,
as you will know from my book
How to Attain Knowledge of the Higher Worlds.
When one succeeds in acquiring knowledge of things
that are beyond space and beyond time, they seem like a dream, and
only with the greatest difficulty can one lift them on to a higher
level of consciousness. They vanish-away like a dream if one tries to
grasp them with the head alone.
Now it is important for one who speaks about the
spiritual world in ideas to have always the spiritual world before
him as he speaks; and he can acquire the habit of standing in this
way within the spiritual world only if his whole being participates
in the knowledge. Everyone will find his own way of doing this.
I, for example, find it necessary to fix the results of spiritual
knowledge by jotting down either brief notes or symbolical drawings.
I need hardly say, I mean by this nothing of a mediumistic nature,
but a perfectly conscious and deliberate action. Putting down some
note at once ensures that the activity is not confined to the head
alone but is shared in by the whole human being. It is of no
consequence whether later on one refers to these notes: the point is,
to make them. I can assure you I have used up whole cartloads
of notebooks in this way and never looked at them again. What has
been seen in the spiritual world is more strongly retained when the
experience is allowed to flow into an impulse of will that leads to
the activity of writing; for ultimately, all depends on experiencing
the truths of the spiritual world — let me say —
”organically”, experiencing them with one's whole being.
Initiation-knowledge of the present day has perforce
another characteristic, which need not continue indefinitely and was
not present in earlier and other paths to initiation. I mean the
following. Suppose one has produced some spiritual knowledge, and
later on has occasion to come back to it. If one is, let us say, as
old as I am, and produced some 40 years ago much of what one has to
communicate, then as far as the inner spiritual activity is
concerned, it is almost as though one had to deal with something one
was reading for the first time in an old book. Please understand me
aright. Knowledge one has oneself produced many years ago becomes as
strange to one as a book one has never seen before. It is not remote
in the way that we feel abstract knowledge to be remote, bin
spiritually it severs itself from one. A man who stands outside
initiation-knowledge, may feel how this knowledge, when he receives
it, becomes united with his very being; but for the one who has
produced it, it separates itself from him; he feels as if he had
before him another human being.
Many a book, I assure you, by one or other of our
friends, strikes me as more familiar than the books I wrote myself in
earlier years. In fact, I read these only when I must: for instance,
to revise them for a new edition. The teaching of the spiritual
researcher severs itself from him and becomes objective; he is quite
unable to feel any particular pleasure or satisfaction in it —
as one might naturally expect in other circumstances! This has
nothing to do with the knowledge as such; it arises only from the
fact that one is obliged in the present day to attain the knowledge
in solitude. In earlier limes, when the path of initiation knowledge
was far more instinctive and less conscious, it could not rightly be
pursued in solitude. There were societies for the fostering of
initiation knowledge. Such societies exist even in our time, but they
merely carry on a tradition. If to-day one speaks from direct
personal experience in knowledge, one is compelled to stand alone.
How was it arranged in societies of this kind? And how
will it be in the future, when knowledge of the spiritual will be
received again into civilisation and be called upon to enter once
more into all the practical spheres of life? For spiritual knowledge
will be able to do this, when once man begins to take hold of it. The
societies of which we have spoken were ordered in the following way.
An agreement was come to, freely and willingly on the part of all,
that one of their number should undertake a particular field of
knowledge, another, another field, and so on. One, for example,
would concentrate all his powers on inquiring into the influence
exercised upon the life of man by the world of stars, another on
investigating the path leading from pre-earthly existence into the
sphere of the earth.
This plan made it possible for the several fields of
knowledge to be investigated in detail. For if it takes ten years to
get to know something of the influence of the stars on human life, it
takes, not ten years, but a lifetime to explore in detail even a few
steps of the way from pre-earthly into earthly life. There was
accordingly good reason for distributing among different persons the
several realms of knowledge. Each made a deep study of the field of
knowledge upon which he set himself to concentrate, and for the
rest, allowed himself to take the knowledge from his companions. He
had thus the double experience; he knew what it was to produce
knowledge himself inwardly, and he had also the experience of
receiving knowledge he had not himself produced.
When men learn to be more open-hearted and to approach
knowledge with real warmth of soul, then it will afford them the same
kind of experience one may have from the painting of a great artist.
Man's own natural feeling for reality will enable him to take hold of
what lives in the idea he has not himself produced; he will have a
direct inner experience of the idea. He will undergo also the pain
and suffering of which I told you — all the phases of inner
personal experience that come from meeting spiritual knowledge
face to face. This can be achieved by one who receives spiritual
truths; he can grasp them, take hold of them with the entire forces
of his soul. Such an experience is, however, in large measure denied
to the spiritual researcher of the present day; he has to forgo it in
so far as he produces the knowledge.
The fruits of spiritual knowledge can accrue to those
who receive the truths with warmth of heart. And within the societies
of earlier times provision was always made for the receiving of
knowledge. When a particular field of spiritual research was allotted
to one member — or the member chose it for himself —
then, as far as that field was concerned, he went without the
receiving which gives so much help and enrichment to life; on the
other hand he experienced the blessing of receiving, in that he
received knowledge from his companions who undertook other fields of
research. Something, of the kind must come again in the future.
Do not think I speak out of a desire to attach
importance to my own experiences; I want rather to draw your
attention to the fact that in order to reap the fruits of spiritual
knowledge, one does not need to have produced the knowledge oneself.
Let a man follow the exercises — in meditation, concentration,
etc. — described in my book,
How to Attain Knowledge of the Higher Worlds.
Then, if he succeeds in rousing himself to inner
activity of soul, and takes but a few first steps towards an
understanding of life, his heart will be open to receive what the
spiritual researcher can give, and what he receives will unite itself
with him in quite an intimate manner, for it speaks directly to the
personal in him, and he will find the way, as personal man, to the
deep sources of life whence the eternal in his own being is derived;
he will enter into the experiences man has in the spiritual world
before his life on earth, and into those also that await man when he
has passed through the gate of death and come again into the
spiritual world. And as he makes this knowledge his own, a second
higher man will grow up within him.
On this path of knowledge we learn to feel, as it were,
at home in the spiritual world in the way we feel at home in the
world of nature, with its secure and stable laws. The fact that we
have muscles and bones unites us with nature; our own physical nature
makes us feel at home in the physical nature of the world around. And
when we begin to apprehend the reality of spiritual conceptions and
to see their content as part of the spiritual world, then we begin to
feel at home in a divine spiritual world — even as with our
body we feel at home in the world of the senses. And it is this
feeling at home in the spiritual world that is so important, for
thereby we attain to a knowledge of ourselves as having eternal
spiritual existence in the eternal divine spiritual world.
For not only is it true that mankind in general is
rooted in a spiritual world. Every single human being, just through
that which is most personal in him, just through that which he, as an
individual, can experience by being on earth in a particular place
and at a particular time, is rooted in, and belongs to, a
spiritual world which bears the stamp of eternity. As we come to
realise this, we begin to feel as though a voice were calling to us:
“Make not yourself a cripple in soul and spirit!” For not
merely man in general, but each single human being, is relied upon to
play his part.
It is also through what is most individual and personal
in him that man finds his way to religion, and to all true artistic
experience. Hence it is that Spiritual Science leads directly into a
religious mood of life. You will find abundant evidence in our
literature of how Christianity is deepened, and can stand forth in
its true light and in its true being, when we try to understand the
personal experiences of the Christ Who appeared in a personal form.
Attaining thus by a personal path to our own eternal
being, we know how to give personality its right place and meaning in
the world, conscious that each one of us is needed and reckoned upon
as single personality. Knowledge of the spirit has become for us a
human and personal path in life. We feel inwardly seized and
quickened by the content of spiritual knowledge, in the same way that
our body is seized and quickened by the power of the blood.
The meaning we have been led to discern in our personal,
our individual existence, may perhaps be best conveyed in a picture.
A meeting has been called, and we are summoned to attend the meeting,
because it is important for just that to be said in it which we alone
can contribute. Suppose we take some action which has the result of
preventing our being present. We are not there; we — who are
expected, who are looked for — do not appear.
Whatever we do and accomplish under the impulse of
spiritual knowledge serves, we shall find, to enrich our life; we
begin indeed to recognise how our path in life leads always in a
direction where we are needed and expected. In the world where
spiritual beings are at work, creating and fashioning our individual
existence, we begin to see that we are counted upon to do our part,
and we understand that the only way we can fulfill what is
expected of us and join with our companions in a higher spiritual
world, is by following this personal path of life into the spiritual
world, and finding within us, as we tread the path, the higher
eternal man, the soul and spirit of our being.
Thus does this human knowledge of the spirit bring us
face to face with the challenge: Are we going to arrive in that place
where it is given to human beings to unite in a common experience of
the spiritual — for we are expected there, we are awaited —
or, having passed through many births and deaths, shall we come at
length to a point where the word of reproach rings out: You were
expected, and you did not come!
Translated by Mary Adams.
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