VIII
The Path of Knowledge
and Its Stages:
The Rosicrucian Spiritual Path
Today a picture of the path
of knowledge will be given, and the fruits of this path will also be
shown. You already know some of the major points of view which
thereby come into consideration. However, for those of you who have
already heard lectures pertaining to the path of knowledge or who
have read the periodical, Lucifer, particularly the
thirty-second issue, something new will be offered if we
discuss the path of knowledge as can occur only in intimate
circles of students of spiritual science. The main matter at hand is
to discuss this path of knowledge in so far as it is traced through
the Rosicrucian, Western spiritual stream, which has guided European
culture spiritually by invisible threads since the fourteenth
century.
The Rosicrucian movement
worked in complete concealment up until the last third of the
nineteenth century. What was true Rosicrucianism could not be found
in books and was also forbidden to be spoken of publicly. Only in the
last thirty years have a few of the Rosicrucian teachings been made
known to the outer world through the theosophical movement, after
having been taught earlier only in the most strictly closed circles.
The most elementary teachings of the Rosicrucian's are included
in what is called theosophy today — but only the most
elementary. It is only possible bit by bit to allow mankind to look
more deeply into this wisdom which has been fostered in these
Rosicrucian schools in Europe since the end of the fourteenth
century.
To begin with, we would
like to make clear that there is not just one kind of path of
knowledge, but three paths to consider. Yet this should not be
understood as if there were three truths. There is only one truth,
just as the view revealed from the peak of a mountain is the same for
all who stand there. There are, however, various ways by which the
peak of the mountain can be reached. During the ascent, one has at
every point a different view. Only if one is at the top — and
one can ascend to the peak from various sides — can one have a
free and full view from one's own perspective. So it is also with the
three paths of knowledge. One is the Oriental path of Yoga, the
second is the Christian-Gnostic path, and the third is the
Christian-Rosicrucian path. These three paths lead to the single
truth.
There are three different
paths because human nature is different around our earth. One has to
distinguish three types of human nature. Just as it would not be
right for someone trying to reach a mountaintop to select a remote
path rather than the one next to him, so it would also be wrong if a
man wanted to take another spiritual path than the one appropriate to
him. Many muddled ideas about this prevail today in the theosophical
movement, which must still develop upwards from its initial stage. It
is often supposed that there is only a single path to
knowledge, by which is meant the Yoga path. The Oriental Yoga path is
not the only path to knowledge, however, and is in fact not a
propitious path for those who live within European civilization. He
who considers this matter only from outside certainly can have
scarcely any insight into what we are concerned with here,
because one could easily come to the conclusion that human
nature actually appears to differ little in various lands. If one
with occult powers observes the great differences in human types, it
becomes clear that what is good for the Orientals, and perhaps also
for some other men in our culture, is by no means the proper path for
everyone. There are people, but only a few within European
circumstances, who could follow the Oriental path of Yoga. But
for most Europeans, this is impracticable. It brings with it
illusions and also the destruction of soul-forces. The Eastern
and Western natures, although they do not appear so different
to today's scientists, are totally different. An Eastern brain, an
Eastern imagination, and an Eastern heart work completely differently
from the organs of Westerners. What can be expected of someone who
has grown up within Eastern circumstances should never be
expected of a Westerner. Only one who believes that climate,
religion, and social environment have no influence on the human
spirit might also think that the external circumstances under which a
spiritual training is undergone are also a matter of
indifference. But one who knows the deeply spiritual influences
exerted upon human nature by all these outer circumstances
understands that the Yoga path is impossible for those who
remain within European culture, and can only be tread by those
few Europeans who radically and fundamentally detach themselves from
European circumstances.
Those persons who today are
still inwardly upright and honest Christians, those who are permeated
with certain principle themes of Christianity, may choose the
Christian-Gnostic path, which differs little from the Cabbalistic
path. For Europeans in general, however, the Rosicrucian path is the
only right path. This European Rosicrucian path will be spoken of
today, and indeed the different practices this path prescribes for
people and also the fruits it holds for those who follow it will be
described. No one should believe that this path is only for
scientifically trained men or for scholars. The simplest person can
tread it. If one takes this path, however, one will quickly be in the
position to encounter every objection which can be made against
occultism by European science. This was one of the main tasks of the
Rosicrucian Masters: to arm those who take this path so that they
could travel this path and defend occult knowledge in the world. The
simple man who holds only a few popular ideas about modern science,
or even none at all, but who has an honest craving for truth, can
tread the Rosicrucian path alongside trained men and scholars.
Among the three paths of
knowledge exist great distinctions. The first important
distinction is in the relationship of the pupil to the occult
teacher, who gradually becomes the guru or who mediates the
relationship to the guru. A characteristic of the Oriental Yoga
schools is that this relationship is the strictest imaginable.
The guru is an unconditional authority for the pupil. If that
were not the case, this training could not have the right outcome. An
Oriental Yoga training without a strong submission to the authority
of the guru is totally impossible. The Christian-Gnostic or
Cabbalistic path allows a somewhat looser relationship to the guru on
the physical plane. The guru leads his pupil to Christ Jesus; he is
the mediator. With the Rosicrucian path, the guru becomes always more
a friend whose authority rests on inner agreement. Here it is not
possible to have any relationship but one of strong personal trust.
Should but the slightest mistrust arise between teacher and pupil,
then the essential bond which must remain between them would be
ruptured, and any forces which play between teacher and pupil would
no longer work. It is easy for the pupil to form false ideas about
the role of his teacher. It might seem to the pupil that he needs to
speak to his teacher now and then, or that his teacher must often be
physically near him. Certainly it is sometimes an urgent necessity
for the teacher to approach the pupil physically, but this is
not so often the case as the pupil may believe. The effect that the
teacher exercises on his pupil cannot be judged in the right
way at the beginning of their relationship. The teacher has means
which only gradually reveal themselves to the pupil. Many words which
the pupil believes to have been spoken by chance are actually of
great importance. They may work unconsciously in the pupil's
soul, as a force of right, leading and guiding him. If the teacher
exercises these occult influences correctly, then the real bond
is also there between him and his pupil. In addition, there are the
forces of loving participation working at a distance, forces that are
always at the teacher's disposal and which later are ever more
revealed to the pupil if he fords the entrance to the higher worlds.
But absolute trust is an unconditional necessity; otherwise it is
better to dissolve the bond between the teacher and the pupil.
Now the various precepts
which play a certain role in the Rosicrucian training should be
mentioned briefly. These things need not meet him in the exact
sequence in which they are enumerated here. According to the
individuality, the occupation, and the age of the pupil, the teacher
will have to extract this or that from the different spheres, and
rearrange them. Only an overview of the information shall be given
here.
What is highly essential
for the Rosicrucian training is not sufficiently attended to in all
occult trainings. This is the cultivation of clear and logical
thinking, or at least the striving for it! All confused and
prejudiced thinking must first be eliminated. A man must accustom
himself to viewing the relationships in the world broadly and
unselfishly. The best exercise for one wishing to undergo this
Rosicrucian path unpretentiously is the study of the elementary
teachings of spiritual science. It is unjustified to object: What
good does it do me to learn about the higher worlds, the different
races and cultures, or to study reincarnation and karma when I can't
see and verify it all for myself? This is not a valid objection
because occupying one's thoughts with these truths purifies the
thinking and disciplines it so that people become ripe for the other
measures that lead to the occult path. For the most part, people
think in ordinary life without bringing order into their thoughts.
The guiding principles and epochs of human development and planetary
evolution, the great viewpoints which have been opened by the
Initiates, bring thought into ordered forms. All of this is a part of
Rosicrucian training. It is called the Study. The teacher will
therefore suggest that the pupil think deeply into the elementary
teachings about reincarnation and karma, the three worlds, the
Akashic-Chronicle, and the evolution of the earth and the human
races. The range of elementary spiritual science as it is
diffused in modern times is the best preparation for the simple
man.
For those, however, who
wish to cultivate even sharper faculties of thinking and to undertake
a still more rigorous molding of the soul life, the study of books
written expressly for bringing thinking into disciplined paths is
recommended. Two books written for this purpose — in which
there is no mention of the word “theosophy” — are
my two books, Truth and Science, and The Philosophy of
Freedom. One writes such a book in order to fulfill a purpose.
Those who have a foundation in an intensive training in logical
thinking and who wish to arrive at a wider study would do well to
submit their spirits once to the “gymnastics for soul and
spirit” which these books require. That gives them the
foundation upon which Rosicrucian study is erected. When one observes
the physical plane, one perceives certain sense impressions: colors
and light, warmth and cold, smells and tastes, and impressions from
the senses of hearing and touch. One connects all of these with one's
activity of thought and intellect. Intellect and thought belong
still to the physical plane. You can perceive all of that on the
physical plane. Perceptions on the astral plane are completely
different in appearance. Perceptions are again entirely
different on the Devachanic plane, not to mention in even higher
spirit regions. The person who has not yet acquired a glimpse into
the higher worlds can still try to picture them to himself. I am also
seeking to give a view of these worlds through pictures in my current
manner of representation. He who ascends to the higher regions sees
for himself how they work on him. On every plane a man has new
experiences. But there is one which remains the same through
all worlds up to Devachan itself, one which never changes: that is
logical, trained thinking. Once on the Buddhi-plane, this thinking no
longer has the same value as on the physical plane. There, another
form of thinking must enter. But for the three worlds below the
Buddhi-plane, for the physical, astral, and Devachanic planes, the
same form of thinking is valid. One who therefore schools himself in
orderly thinking through this study in the physical plane will find
in this thinking a good guide in the higher worlds. He will not
falter as easily as one who seeks to enter the spirit realms with
confused thinking. Therefore, the Rosicrucian training advises a
person to discipline his thinking in order to move freely in the
higher worlds. He who reaches up into these worlds learns new methods
of perception, which were not there on the physical plane, but he can
master these with his thinking.
The second thing which the
pupil must learn on the Rosicrucian path of knowledge is Imagination.
The pupil prepares for this in that he gradually learns to immerse
himself in pictorial concepts which represent the higher worlds
in the sense of Goethe's words, “All that is transitory is but
a likeness.” As man ordinarily goes through the physical world,
he takes things up as they appear to his senses, but not that which
lies behind. He is pulled down in the physical world as if by a
dead weight. Man only becomes independent of this physical
world when he learns to consider the objects around him as symbols.
He must, for this reason, seek to acquire a moral relationship to
them. The teacher can give him much guidance in learning to regard
outward appearances as symbols of the spirit, but the pupil can also
do a great deal for himself. He can, for example, look closely at a
meadow saffron and a violet. If I see the meadow saffron as a symbol
for a melancholy disposition, then I have regarded it not only as it
outwardly comes to meet me, but also as a symbol of a certain
quality. In the violet, one can behold a symbol for a calm, innocent
disposition. So you can go from object to object, from plant to
plant, from animal to animal and regard them as symbols for the
spiritual. In this way, you make your imaginative capacities fluid
and release them from the sharp contours of sense perception. One
comes then to behold the symbol for a characteristic quality in every
species of animal. One perceives one animal as a symbol for strength,
another as a symbol for slyness. We must try to pursue such things,
not fleetingly, but earnestly and step by step.
Fundamentally, all of human
language is spoken in symbols. Language is nothing but a
speaking in symbols. Every word is a symbol. Even science, which
claims to view every object objectively, must make use of language,
in that its words work symbolically. If you speak of the wings of the
lungs, you know that there are actually no wings, yet you
nevertheless cherish this designation. He who wishes to remain
on the physical plane would do well not to lose himself too strongly
in these symbols, but the advanced occult pupil will not lose himself
in them. If one investigates, one will perceive the primordial depths
in which human language is founded. Such deep natures as Paracelsus
and Jacob Boehme owed much of their development to the
opportunities they had — which they did not shun —
for studying the imaginative significance of language through
conversations with vagrants and farmers. There the words
“nature,” “soul,” and “spirit”
worked completely differently. There they worked more strongly. When
out in the country, the farmer's wife plucks a goose's feathers, she
actually calls the interior of the feather “the soul.”
The pupil must find for himself such symbols in language. In this way
he loosens himself from the physical world and learns to raise
himself to the realm of Imagination. If the world is thus viewed as a
likeness of man, it has a strong effect. If the pupil practices this
for a long time, he will notice corresponding effects. In observing a
flower, for example, something gradually loosens from the
flower. The color, which once clung to the surface of the
blossom, ascends like a small flame, and hovers freely in space.
Imaginative cognition forms itself out of these things. Then it is as
if the surfaces of all objects loosen. The whole space fills with
colors, the flames hovering in space. In this way, the whole
world of light seems to detach itself from physical reality. When
such a color picture detaches itself and hovers freely in
space, it soon begins to adhere to something. It presses towards
something. It does not just stand still arbitrarily; it encloses a
being, which now itself appears in the color as spiritual being. The
color which the pupil has detached from the objects of the
physical world clothes the spiritual beings of astral
space.
Here is the point where the
occult teacher's counsel must intervene, as the pupil could very
easily lose his bearings. This could happen for two reasons.
The first is that each pupil must go through a definite experience.
The images which are peeled off from the physical objects
— they are not only colors, but also aural and olfactory
sensations — may present themselves as strange, hideous, or
perhaps beautiful shapes, as animal heads, plant forms, or even
hideous human faces. This first experience represents a mirror-image
of the pupil's own soul. The particular passions and desires,
the evils that still lie within the soul, appear before the
advancing pupil as in a mirror in astral space. Here he requires
counsel of the occult teacher, who can tell him that it is not an
objective reality that he has seen, but a mirror-image of his own
inner being.
You will understand just
how dependent the pupil is on his teacher's advice when you hear more
about the manner in which these pictures appear. It is often
emphasized that everything is reversed in astral space, that
everything appears as a mirror-image. The pupil can, for this reason,
easily be misled through illusions, especially with respect to a
mirroring of his own being. The mirror-image of a passion does not
only appear as an approaching animal — that would still be
quite manageable — but it is something quite different
with which one must reckon. Let us suppose that a man has a hidden
evil passion. The reflection of such a desire or lust often appears
in an alluring form, whereas a good characteristic may not
appear at all alluring. Here again we are discussing something which
has been wonderfully portrayed in an ancient saga. You find a
picture of this in the legend of Hercules. As Hercules goes on his
way, good and evil characteristics stand before him. Vices are
clothed in the enticing form of beauty, but virtues are in modest
garb.
Still other hindrances can
stand in the pupil's way. Even when he is already in a position to
see things objectively, there is still the other possibility of his
inner will directing and influencing these phenomena as an outer
force. He must bring himself to the point where he can see through
this and understand the strong influence that the wish has on the
astral plane. All things which have a directing force here in the
physical world cease to exist when one arrives in the imaginative
world. If on the physical plane you imagine yourself to have done
something you actually have not done, you will soon be persuaded by
the facts of the physical world that this is not so. This is not the
case in astral space. There, pictures of your own wishes deceive you,
and you must have knowing guidance which will piece together how
these imaginative pictures work in order to perceive their true
significance.
The third task in the
Rosicrucian training is to learn the occult script. What is this
occult script? There are certain pictures, symbols, which are formed
by simple lines or the joining of colors. Such symbols constitute a
definite occult sign-language. Let us take the following as an
example. There is a certain process in the higher worlds which also
operates in the physical world: the whirling of a vortex. You can
observe this whirling of a vortex when you look at a star cluster, as
in the constellation of Orion, for example. There you see a spiral,
only it is on the physical plane. But you can view this also on all
planes. It can present itself in the form of one vortex entwining
itself into another. This is a figure to be found on the astral plane
in all possible forms. When you understand this figure, you can grasp
through it how one race transforms itself into another. At the time
of formation of the first sub-race of our present main race,
the sun stood directly in the sign of Cancer. At that time, one race
entwined itself in the other; for this reason, one has this occult
sign for Cancer. All of the signs of the Zodiac are occult
signs. One must only come to know and understand their meaning.
The pentagram is also such
a sign. The pupil learns to connect certain sensations and feelings
with it. These are the counterpart of astral processes. This
sign-language, which is learned as occult script, is nothing other
than a reproduction of the laws of the higher worlds. The
pentagram is a sign which expresses various meanings. As the
letter B is used in many different words, so can a symbol in
the occult script have diverse meanings. The pentagram,
hexagram, angle, and other figures can be combined into an
occult script which acts as a signpost in the higher worlds.
The pentagram is the sign for the fivefold organization of man, for
secrecy, and also for that which underlies the species-soul of the
rose. When you connect the petals of the rose's image, you get a
pentagram. Just as the letter B signifies something different in the
words build and bond, so do the signs in the occult script also
signify various things. One must learn to order them in the right
way. They are the signposts on the astral plane. One who has learned
to read the occult script bears the same relationship to one who only
sees these symbols as a literate man does to an illiterate one in the
physical world. Our symbols for writing on the physical plane are for
the most part arbitrary. Originally, however, they were likenesses of
the astral sign-language. Take an ancient astral symbol, Mercury's
staff with the snake. That has become the letter E in our system of
writing. Or take the letter W which depicts the wave-movements of
water. It is the soul-sign of man and at the same time a sign for the
Word. The letter M is nothing other than an imitation of the upper
lip. In the course of evolution, it has all become more and more
arbitrary. On the occult plane, by contrast, necessity prevails.
There one can live these things.
The fourth step is the
so-called “Rhythm of Life.” People know such a
life-rhythm only very slightly in everyday life. They live carelessly
and egotistically. At most, for the children in school, the lesson
plan still bears a certain life-rhythm in that the sequence of daily
lessons is repeated from week to week. But who does that in normal
life? Nonetheless, one can ascend to a higher development only
by bringing rhythm and repetition into one's life. Rhythm holds sway
in all nature. In the revolutions of the planets around the sun, in
the yearly appearance and withering of the plants, in the animal
kingdom, and in the sexual life of the animals, everything is ruled
rhythmically. Only man is permitted to live without rhythm in order
that he can become free. However, he must of his own accord bring
rhythm again into the chaos. A good rhythm is established by
undertaking occult exercises every day at a definite time. The pupil
must carry out his meditations and concentration exercises daily, at
the same hour, just as the sun sends its forces down to earth at the
same time each spring. This is a way of bringing rhythm into life.
Another is one in which the occult teacher brings the proper rhythm
into the pupil's breathing. Inhaling, holding the breath, and
exhaling must be brought into the rhythm for a short period daily, as
determined by the experience of the teacher. Thus through man a new
rhythm is put in place of the old one. Making life rhythmic in such a
way is a prerequisite for ascent into the higher worlds. But no one
can do this without the guidance of a teacher. It should be brought
to awareness here only as a principle.
The fifth step is that in
which one learns the correspondence between microcosm and
macrocosm. This consists of the teacher instructing the pupil on how
to concentrate his thoughts on certain parts of the body. Those of
you who heard the lecture about the relationship of the senses to the
higher worlds will recall that the whole cosmos took part in the
formation of the human physical body. The eye was created by light,
by the spirits who work in light. Every point of the physical body
stands in connection with a particular force in the cosmos. Let
us examine the point at the root of the nose. There was a time when
the etheric head protruded way beyond the physical body. Even
in Atlantean times, the forehead was a point where the etheric head
stood far out beyond the physical head, as is still the case today
with the horses and other animals. With horses the etheric head today
still protrudes beyond the physical. In modern man this point in the
etheric head has been brought under protection of the physical head
and this gives him the capacity to develop those parts of the
physical brain which enable him to call himself “I.” This
organ, which enables man to call himself “I,” is
connected with a definite process which took place during the
Atlantean development of the earth. The occult teacher now instructs
his pupil thus: direct your thoughts and concentrate them on this
point! Then he gives him a mantra. In this way, a certain force in
this part of the head is aroused which corresponds to a certain
process in the macrocosm. In such a way a correspondence between
microcosm and macrocosm is evoked. Through a similar concentration on
the eye, the pupil acquires knowledge of the sun. One finds the
entire spiritual organization of the macrocosm spiritually within
one's own organs.
When the pupil has
practiced this long enough, he may go on to immerse himself in the
things he has thus discovered. He may, for instance, seek out
in the AkashicChronicle that point during the Atlantean epoch
in which the root of the nose reached the condition upon which he had
concentrated. Or he finds the sun in concentrating on the eye. This
sixth step, this immersion in the macrocosm, is called Contemplation.
This gives the pupil cosmic knowledge, and through it he
expands his self-knowledge beyond the personality. This is something
different from the beloved chatter about self-knowledge. One finds
the self not when one looks within, but rather when looking without.
This is the same self which produced the eye brought forth by the
sun. When you wish to seek that part of the self which
corresponds to the eye, then you must seek it in the sun. You
must learn to perceive as your self that which lies outside of you.
Looking only within oneself leads to a hardening in oneself, to a
higher egotism. When people say, “I need only let my self
speak,” they have no idea of the danger that lies therein.
Self-knowledge may only be practiced when the pupil of the white path
has bound himself to self-renunciation. When he has learned to say to
each thing, “That am I,” then he is ripe for
self-knowledge, as Goethe expresses in the words of Faust:
Thou
leadest past mine eyes the long array
Of
living things, mak'st known to me my brethren
Within
the silent copse, the air, the water.
All around us are parts of
our self. This is represented, for example, in the myth of Dionysos.
It is for this reason that the Rosicrucian training places such a
great value upon an objective and quiet contemplation of the external
world: If you wish to know yourself, behold yourself in the mirror of
the outer world and its beings! What is in your soul shall speak to
you far more clearly from the eyes of companions than if you harden
yourself and sink into your own soul. That is an important and
essential truth which no one who wishes to walk on the white path may
ignore. There are many people today who have transformed their
ordinary egotism into a more refined egotism. They call it
theosophical development, when they have allowed their ordinary,
everyday selves to rise as high as possible. They wish to bring
out the personal element. The true occult knowledge, by
contrast, shows man how his inner nature is elucidated when he
learns to perceive his higher self in the world.
When a man has developed
himself through the contemplation of these convictions, when
his self flows out over all things, when he feels the blossom that
grows before him as he feels his finger moving, when he knows that
the whole earth and the whole world is his body, then he learns to
know his higher self. Then he speaks to the flower as to a member of
his own body: You belong to me, you are a part of myself. Gradually
he experiences what is called the seventh step of the Rosicrucian
path: Godliness. This represents the element of feeling which
is necessary to lead man up into the higher worlds, where he may not
merely think about the higher worlds, but learn to feel in them. Then
the fruits of his striving to learn, under the constant guidance of
his teacher, will be shown to him, and he need not fear that his
occult path might lead him into an abyss. All things which have been
described as dangers of occult development do not come into
question if one has been guided in the right way. When this has
happened, the occult seeker becomes a true helper of humanity.
During Imagination, the
possibility arises for the individual to go through a certain
portion of the night in a conscious condition. His physical
body sleeps as usual, but a part of his sleep-condition becomes
animated by significant dreams. These are the first heralds of his
entrance into the higher worlds. Gradually, he leads his experiences
over into his ordinary consciousness. He then sees astral beings in
his entire environment, even here in the room between the chairs, or
out in the woods and meadows.
Man reaches three stages
during Imaginative knowledge. On the first stage, he perceives the
beings which stand behind physical sense-impressions. Behind the
color red or blue stands a being, behind each rose; behind each
animal stands a species- or group-soul. He becomes day-clairvoyant.
If he now waits for a while and practices Imagination quietly,
and steeps himself in the occult script, he also becomes
day-clairaudient. On the third level, he becomes acquainted with all
the things one finds in the astral world which draw man down and lead
him into evil, but which actually are intended to lead him
upwards. He learns to know Kamaloca.
Through that which forms
the fourth, fifth, and sixth parts of Rosicrucian training, that is,
the life-rhythm, the relation of microcosm to macrocosm, and
contemplation of the macrocosm, the pupil reaches three further
stages. In the first, he attains knowledge of the conditions of life
between death and a new birth. This confronts him in
Devachan. The next is the ability to see how forms change from
one state to another, transmutation, the metamorphosis of form. Man
did not always have the lungs he has today, for example; he acquired
them first in Lemurian times. During the preceding Hyperborean epoch
they had another form; before that, another form, because he found
himself in an astral condition; and before that, yet another form,
because he was M Devachan. One could also say: at this stage, man
becomes acquainted with the relationships between the different
globes, which is to say that he experiences how one globe or
condition of form passes over into another. As a last step, before he
passes over into still higher worlds, he beholds the metamorphosis of
the conditions of life. He perceives how the different beings
pass through different kingdoms, or rounds, and how one kingdom
passes over into another. Then he must ascend to still higher stages,
which cannot, however, be discussed further today.
What has been pursued here
will give you enough material to ponder over for the present. Those
things must be really pondered over; that is the first step to ascend
to the heights. Therefore, it is a good thing to have the path
sketched once in an orderly way. It may be possible to take a journey
on the physical plane without a map of the country. On the astral
plane, however, to be given such a map is necessary. Regard these
communications as a kind of map, and they will be useful to you not
only in this life, but also when you step through the portal into the
higher worlds. Whoever takes up these things through spiritual
science will be served well by this map after death. The occultist
knows how wretched it often is for those who arrive on the other side
and have no idea where they really are and what they are
experiencing. One who has lived with the teachings of spiritual
science knows his way about and can characterize these things to
himself. If man would not shrink from treading the path of knowledge,
this would bring him great benefit in the other world.
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