LECTURE XXII
Berlin, 24th October 1905
As a continuation of the lecture on Karma and Reincarnation, let us
select for special consideration the problem of death in its
connection with the whole subject.
The question: Why does man die? continually claims the attention of
mankind. But it is not quite easy to answer, for what we today call
dying is directly connected with the fact that we stand at a quite
definite stage of our development. We know that we live in three
worlds, in the physical, astral and mental worlds and that our
existence changes between these three worlds. We have within us an
inner kernel of being which we call the Monad. We retain this kernel
throughout the three worlds. It lives within us in the physical world,
but also in the astral and devachanic worlds. This inner kernel,
however, is always clad in a different garment. In the physical,
astral and devachanic worlds the garment of our kernel-of-being is
different.
Now we will first look away from death and picture the human being in
the physical world clothed with a particular kind of matter. He then
enters the astral and devachanic worlds always with a different
garment. Let us now assume that the human being were conscious in all
three worlds, so that he could perceive the things around him. Without
senses and perception he would be unable to live consciously even in
the physical world. If man today were equally conscious in all three
worlds there would be no death, then there would only be
transformation. Then he would pass over consciously from one world
into the other. This passing over would be no death for him, and for
those left behind at most something like a journey. At present things
are so that man only gradually gains continuity of consciousness in
these three worlds. At first he experiences it to be a darkening of
his consciousness when he enters the other worlds from the physical
world. The beings who retain consciousness do not know death. Let us
now come to an understanding of the way in which man has reached the
stage of having his present day physical consciousness and of how he
will attain another consciousness.
We must learn to know man as a duality: as the Monad and what clothes
the Monad. We ask: How has the one and how has the other arisen? Where
did the astral man live before he became what he is today and where
did the Monad live? Both have gone through different stages of
development, both have gradually reached the point of being able to
unite.
In considering the physical-astral human being we are taken back into
very distant times, when he was only present as an astral archetype,
as an astral form. The astral man who was originally present was a
formation unlike the present astral body, a much more comprehensive
being. We can picture the astral body of those times by thinking of
the earth as a great astral ball made up of astral human beings. All
the Nature forces and beings which surround us today were at that time
still within man, who lived dissolved in astral existence. All plants,
animals and so on, the animal instincts and passions, were still
within him. What the lion, and all the mammals, have within them
today, was at that time completely intermingled with the human astral
body, which then contained within it all the beings at present spread
over the earth. The astral earth consisted of human astral bodies
joined together like a great blackberry and enclosed by a spiritual
atmosphere in which there lived devachanic beings.
This atmosphere astral air one might call it which at
that time surrounded the astral earth was composed of a somewhat
thinner substance than the astral bodies of human beings. In this
astral air lived spiritual beings both lower and higher
among others the human Monads also, completely separated from the
human astral bodies. This was the condition of the earth at that time.
The Monads, which were already present in the astral air, could not
unite with the astral bodies, for these were still too wild. The
instincts and passions had first to be ejected. Thus through the
throwing off of certain substances and forces possessed by the astral
body, the latter gradually developed in a purer form. What had been
thrown off however remained as separated astral forms, beings with a
much denser astral body, with wilder instincts, impulses and passions.
Thus there now existed two astral bodies: a less wild human astral
body and an astral body that was very wild and opaque. Let us keep
these strictly apart, the human astral body and what lived around it.
The human astral body becomes ever finer and nobler, always throwing
off those parts of itself it needed to expel, and these became ever
denser and denser. In this way, when they eventually reached physical
density, the other kingdoms arose: the animal, plant and mineral
kingdoms. Certain instincts and forces expelled in this way appeared
as the different animal species.
So a continual purification of the astral body took place and this
brought about on earth a necessary result. For through the fact that
in consequence of this purification, what man once had within him he
now had outside him, he entered into relationship with these beings,
and what formerly he had had within him, now worked into him from
outside. That is an eternal process which holds good also for the
separation of the sexes, which from that time on affect each other
from outside. To begin with, the whole world was interwoven with us;
only later did it work upon us from outside. The original symbol for
this coming back into oneself from the other side is the snake biting
its tail.
In the purified astral body pictures arise now of the world
surrounding it. Let us assume that a human being had perhaps separated
off ten different forms, which are now around him. Previously they
were within him and later he is surrounded by them. Now mirrored
pictures arise in the purified astral body of the forms existing in
the outer world. These mirrored pictures become a new force within him,
they are active within him, transforming the nobler, purified astral
body. For instance, it has rejected from itself the wilder instincts;
these are now outside it as pictures and work upon it as formative
force. The astral body is built up by means of the pictures of the
world it has thrown off and which were earlier within it. They build
up in it a new body. Formerly man had had the macrocosm within him, he
then separated it off and now this formed within him the microcosm, a
portion torn off from himself.
Thus at a certain stage we find the human being in a form which is
given him by his surroundings. The mirrored pictures work on his
astral body in such a way that they bring about in it differentiation
and division. Through the mirrored pictures his astral body divided
itself and he re-assembled it again out of the parts, so that he is
now a membered organism. The undifferentiated astral mass has become
differentiated into the different organs, the heart and so on. To
begin with everything was astral and this was then enclosed by the
physical human body. Thereby the human forms became more and more
adapted to densification and to becoming a more complicated and
comprehensive organism, which is an image of the entire environment.
What has become densest of all is the physical body; the etheric body
is less dense and the astral body is the finest. They are in reality
mirrored images of the outer-world, microcosm in the macrocosm.
Meanwhile the astral body has become ever finer and finer, so that at
a certain point of earth evolution the human being has a developed
astral body. Through the fact that the astral body has become
increasingly finer, it has attracted to itself the finer astral
substance around it.
Meanwhile in the upper region the opposite evolutionary processes have
taken place. The Monad has descended from the highest regions of
Devachan into the astral region and in the course of this descent has
become denser. Now the two parts approach each other. From the one
side man ascends as far as the astral body, from the other side it is
met by the Monad on its descent into the astral world. This was in the
Lemurian Age. Thus they could mutually fructify each other. The Monad
had clothed itself with devachanic substance, then again with astral
airy substance. From below upwards we have the physical substance,
then the etheric substance, then again astral substance. So both
astral substances fructify one another and, as it were, melt into one
another. What comes from above has the Monad within it. As though into
a bed, it sinks itself into the astral substance.
This is how the descent of the soul takes place. But in order that it
can happen the Monad must develop a thirst to know the lower regions.
This thirst must be taken for granted. As Monad one can only learn to
know the lower regions by incarnating in the human body and by its
means looking out into the surrounding world. Man now consists of four
members. Firstly he has a physical body, secondly an etheric body,
thirdly an astral body and within this as fourth member of the ego,
the Monad. After the four-fold organism has come into being the Monad
can look through it into the environment and a relationship is
established between the Monad and everything that is in the
surroundings. Through this the thirst of the Monad is partially
assuaged.
We have seen that the entire human body is put together, has been put
together, out of parts which arose through the fact that the
originally undifferentiated mass divided itself into organs, after the
original astral body had thrown off various portions of itself which
were then reflected back, causing images to arise within it.
(60)
These reflected images became forces within the astral body and these
built up the etheric body, that is to say, through these manifold
images the etheric body developed separate members. This etheric body
now consisted of different parts and, as a further process, each of
these parts densified within itself and so the differentiated physical
body developed. Every such physical kernel, out of which the organs
later develop, forms at the same time a kind of central point in the
ether.
The intervening spaces between the centres are filled with the main
etheric mass. We must think of the body as put together out of ten
parts. These ten parts (shown in the diagram) hold the body together
through their relationship; they are images of the whole of the rest
of Nature and everything depends on how strongly they are connected.
Different degrees of relationship exist between the separate parts. As
long as these are retained the body is held together; when the various
relationships cease, the parts fall away; the body disintegrates.
Because during Earth evolution we have manifold forms, the parts in
the etheric body only hold together to a certain degree. Human nature
is an image of the beings which have been thrown off. In so far as
these beings lead a separate existence, the parts of the physical body
also lead a separate existence. When the relationship of forces has
become so slight as to be non-existent, our life comes to an end. The
length of our life is conditioned by the way in which the beings
around us get on with each other.
The development of the higher man proceeds in such a way that, to
begin with, man works upon his astral body. He works ideals into it,
enthusiasm and so on. He fights against his instincts. As soon as he
replaces passions with ideals, instincts with duties, and develops
enthusiasm in the place of desires, he creates harmony between the
parts of his astral body. This peace-making work begins with the
entrance of the Monad, and the astral body gradually approaches
immortality. From that time on, the astral body no longer dies but
retains continuity to the degree in which it has induced peace in
itself and established peace in the face of the destructive forces.
From the time when the Monad enters, it brings about peace, to begin
with in the astral body. Now the instincts begin to come into mutual
relationship. Harmony comes about in the former chaos and an astral
form arises which survives, remains living. In the physical and
etheric bodies peace is as yet not established, and only partly so in
the astral body. The latter retains its form for a short time only,
but the more peace is established, so much the longer is the time in
Devachan.
When someone has become a Chela he begins to establish peace in the
etheric body. Then the etheric body too survives. The Masters also
establish peace in the physical body; thus in their case the physical
body also survives. The important thing is to bring into harmony the
different bodies, which consist of separate warring parts, and
transmute them into bodies having immortality.
Man has formed his physical body by putting out from himself the
kingdoms of Nature, which then reflected themselves back into him.
Through this, the single parts came into existence within him. Now he
performs actions; through these he again has intercourse with his
surroundings. What he now puts out are the effects of his deeds. He
projects his actions into the surrounding world and gradually becomes
a reflection of these actions. The Monad has been drawn into the human
body; man begins to perform actions. These actions are incorporated
into the surrounding world and are reflected back. To the same degree
in which the Monad begins to establish peace, it also begins to take
up the reflected images of its own actions.
Here we have come to a point where we continually create a new kingdom
around us the effects of our own actions. This again builds up
something within us. As previously we fashioned the undifferentiated
etheric body into separate members, we build into the monadic
existence the effects of our actions. We call this the creation of our
Karma. Thereby we can give permanence to everything in the Monad.
Earlier the astral body had purified itself by casting off everything
that was in it. Now man created for himself a new kingdom of deeds, as
it were out of nothing, in regard to relationships, a creation out of
nothing. That which previously had no existence, the new
relationship, reflects itself in the Monad as something new, something
having a pictorial character, and a new inner kernel of being is
formed in the Monad, arising out of the reflected image of deeds, the
reflection of Karma. As the work of the Monad progresses, the kernel
of being becomes more and more enlarged. Let us observe the Monad
after a period of time. On the one hand it will have established
harmony out of the warring forces, and on the other hand out of the
effects of deeds. Both unite and a unified formation arises.
Let us suppose that someone's earthly garment has been laid aside and
the Monad remains. It retains the results of its deeds. The question
is, how the results of the deeds are brought about. If these results
have been so brought about that in the worlds in which the Monad now
finds itself they can continue to be fruitful, then the human being
can sojourn there for a long time; if not, for a short time only. In
this case they must fall back again into the thirst of the Monad (for
the physical plane) and once again inhabit a physical body.
Human life is a continual process of being enveloped in what surrounds
us: Involution Evolution.
(60)
We take up image forms and
according to these, shape our own body. What the Monad has brought
about is again taken up by man as his Karma. Man will always be the
result of his Karma. The Vedanta teaches that the different parts of
the human being are dissolved and cast to the winds; what still
remains of him, that is his Karma. This is the eternal which man has
created out of himself, something which he himself had first to take
up as image out of his environment. Man is immortal; he only needs to
exert his will, he only needs to form his actions in such a way that
they have a lasting existence. That part of us is immortal which we
gain for ourselves from the outside world. We have come into being
through the world and are beginning, through fructification with the
Monad, to build up in ourselves the mirror of a new world. The Monad
has quickened the mirrored images in us. Now these images can work
outwards, and the effects of these images reflect themselves anew. A
new inner life arises. With our actions we are continually changing
our environment. Through this, new reflected images come about; these
now become karma. This is a new life which springs up from within. The
result of this is that in order to develop further from a definite
point of time we must go out of ourselves and work selflessly in our
surroundings. We must make possible this going out from ourselves in
order selflessly to bring about harmonious relationships in our
surroundings. This necessitates a harmonising of the reflected images
in ourselves. It is our task to make the world around us a harmonious
one. If we are a destructive element in the world, what is reflected
into us is devastation: if we bring about harmony in the world,
harmonies are reflected into us.
The highest degree of perfection which we have put out from ourselves,
which we have established around us, this we shall take with us.
Therefore the Rosicrucians said: Form the world in such a way that it
contains within itself Wisdom, Beauty and Strength; then Wisdom,
Beauty and Strength will be reflected into us. Wisdom is the
reflection of Manas; Beauty, Piety, Goodness are the reflection of
Buddhi; Strength is the reflection of Atma.
To begin with we develop around us a domain of Wisdom through
ourselves fostering Wisdom. Then we develop a domain of Beauty in all
regions. Then Wisdom becomes visible and reflects itself in us:
Buddhi. Finally we bestow on the whole physical existence, Wisdom
within, Beauty without.
If our will enables us to carry this through, then we have strength:
Atma, the power to transpose all this into reality. Thus we establish
the three kingdoms within us: Manas, Buddhi, Atma.
Not through laborious research does man progress further on the earth,
but by embodying into the earth Wisdom, Beauty and Strength. Through
the work of our higher Ego we transform the transient body given us by
the Gods and create for ourselves immortal bodies. The Chela, who
ennobles his etheric body (so that it remains in existence), gradually
renounces the Maharajas. The Master, whose physical body also remains
in existence, can renounce the Lipikas. He stands above Karma. This we
must describe as the progress of man in his inner life. What is
higher, outside ourselves, we must seek to approach. Therefore our
Higher Self is not to be sought within us, but in the individualities
who have ascended into loftier regions.
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