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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Initiation, Eternity and the Passing Moment
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Initiation, Eternity and the Passing Moment
Schmidt Number: S-2622
On-line since: 6th July, 2002
Yesterday, in such words as are possible for these matters, I tried to
characterise how the withdrawal from the physical body, and feeling
and experiencing oneself in the etheric and astral bodies take place.
I pointed out that this experience takes place in such a way that
living oneself into the etheric body seems like a flowing out, as it
were, into cosmic space, during which one is continually conscious of
streaming out into infinity in all directions from one's own body as a
central point. Experience in the astral body, however, appears as a
springing out of oneself into the astral body. It is at this moment
that one begins to feel outside one's physical body in such a way that
everything in the physical body that was called oneself is now
experienced as something external to one, something existing outside.
One is inside something else. I pointed out to you yesterday that the
world then confronting us must be called, in conformity with my book,
Theosophy,
for instance, the spirit-land. It might also be called the lower
mental plane. It would be wrong if something derogatory is implied by
imagining that when one selflessly and in the right way reaches the
point of living in the astral body, one is then in the astral world.
Now there is a great difference between life, observation and
experience in sensory existence, and experience in the astral body in
face of the spirit-land. In the life of the senses we are confronted
with substances, forces, objects, processes and so on. We are also
confronted with beings, and besides the beings of the other kingdoms
of nature, insofar as we are justified in calling them so, we are
confronted in particular with our own fellow beings. In sensory
existence we confront these other beings in such a way that we know
how they take up into themselves the substances and forces of the
world of the senses, permeate themselves with these, and thereby live
the life that runs its course by means of external natural forces
within the laws of nature. In short, in the life of the senses we must
distinguish between the course of nature, and the beings who live out
their lives within this natural course and permeate themselves with
the substances and forces there. We have, then, the course of nature
and also the beings. But when in the astral body we are seeing into
the spiritual world, we can no longer make this distinction. In the
spiritual world we are confronted with beings alone, but over against
these beings there is no such thing as the so-called course of nature.
Everything to which you are guided in the way indicated in our last
lecture, everything you meet, is being. Wherever there is
anything, it is being, and you cannot say as you do in sensory life
that there is an animal and here the external substances it is going
to cat. There is not this duality there, for whatever is, is being.
I have already told you how you stand with regard to these beings,
that this is mainly the world of the hierarchies, and we have often
described it from other points of view. You learn to know the world of
the hierarchies in their order of succession, from those beings whom
you learn to know first as angels, and archangels, up to those who
seem to be almost vanishing, so indistinct do they become — the
Cherubim and Seraphim. But one thing is possible when you find
yourself in these worlds; you can succeed in entering into relation
with these beings. Whatever you are in sensory existence you must have
left behind you, in the sense of the way we described this before,
but, as I have already said, you still bear it in memory. Into these
worlds you carry the memory of what you have left behind and, as in
physical life we look back into our memories, so you look back from
the higher worlds on to what you have been in sensory existence. You
still possess it in memory pictures.
Now as you ascend the first steps of initiation into higher worlds, it
is good to learn to distinguish between the first step and those that
follow. It is not good to neglect this. It really amounts to this,
that you will best learn to find your way in higher worlds if, among
the first memory pictures you carry across there, which remind you of
your sensory existence, you do not have the image of your own physical
body and of its form. It is indeed a matter of experience that this is
so. Anyone who has to give advice as to the exercises to be undertaken
in order to bring about the first steps of initiation will see to it
that, after crossing the threshold, after passing the Guardian of the
Threshold, the first memory images have nothing to do with the
perception of the physical bodily form. They are essentially such as
can be included under the heading of a morally intellectual perception
of the self. What you should first experience is how to estimate your
own moral qualities. You should perceive what moral or immoral
tendencies you have, what sense of truthfulness, or superficial
feeling, and also realise how to assess your value as a man of soul.
This is what must first be felt. This does not arise in such a way
that it can best be expressed in the words we use in physical life.
When you enter the spiritual world, experience is far more intimately
bound up with you than anything of the kind in sensory existence. When
you have done something that does not satisfy you morally, your entire
inner life feels that there is something bitter, that there is
something as it were poured out into the world to which you have now
accustomed yourself, that fills it with an aroma of bitterness —
but aroma should not here be understood in the physical sense. You
feel yourself soaked through with this aroma of bitterness. What can
be morally justified is filled with a pleasant aroma. One might say
that the sphere you enter when you are not satisfied with what you
have done, is dark and gloomy, but light and clear is the part of the
universe into which you come when you can be at peace with yourself.
Therefore, if you are to find your way about, this should be the kind
of moral or intellectual valuation to which you should submit
yourself, that, like the atmosphere, fills for you the world into
which you are entering. So it is best to feel this world with your
soul, and after having made yourself familiar with this feeling of the
soul for spiritual space, only then should the memory arise that may
have the very form and shape of your physical bodily form in sensory
life, as long as this form comes before you like an interpenetration
into your newly acquired moral atmosphere.
What I have here been describing may not, however, only arise out of
the midst of daily life, coming like an entrance into the spiritual
world when the appropriate steps toward initiation have been taken. It
may also occur in another way. However it arises, it depends
fundamentally on the karma of the individual human being and on the
way he is constituted. It cannot be said that one way of arising is
better or worse than the other; it is simply that either one or the
other may occur. In the midst of his daily life man may feel himself
drawn into the spiritual world, but it may also happen that his
experience during sleep becomes different. In the ordinary experience
as soon as a man falls asleep he becomes unconscious, regaining his
consciousness on re-awaking, and in his life during the day, except
for remembrance of his dreams, he has no memory of his sleeping life.
He lives through sleep in a state of unconsciousness. Now in the first
stage of initiation it may also happen that something else is extended
over man's sleeping life so that he begins to experience another way
of falling asleep. With the approach of sleeping life another kind of
consciousness is then experienced. This lasts, interrupted more or
less by periods of unconsciousness, for various lengths of time
according to the progress the man has made. Then, as morning
approaches it dies away. During this experience, in the first period
after falling asleep, there arises what can be called a memory of
one's moral attitude, of one's qualities of soul. This is particularly
vivid just after going to sleep and it gradually dies away toward the
time of waking.
Therefore, as a result of the exercises for the first stages of
initiation, the usual unconsciousness of sleep can become lit up and
transfused with consciousness. Then one rises into the actual worlds
of the hierarchies and feels oneself to belong there. But this living
within the world in which all is being, must, as compared with
ordinary life in the world of the senses, be described somewhat as
follows. Suppose that someone in the sensory world is standing before
a pot of flowers and looking at it. The plant is outside, external to
him; he observes it as he stands there looking at it. Now the
experience in the higher world of which we have just been speaking,
can in no way be compared with this kind of observation. It would be
quite wrong to imagine that there one went about looking at the beings
thus, from outside, placing oneself before them, as one would observe
a flowerpot in the world of the senses. It is not so. If you would
compare anything in sensory existence with the way in which you stand
as regards the world of the hierarchies, it could only be in the
following manner. This, of course, will be only a comparison, but it
may help you to have a clear idea.
Let us assume that you sit down somewhere and instead of thinking
laboriously of some special thing, you set yourself to think about
nothing in particular. Some uncalled-for thought may then arise within
you, of which, to start with, you were not thinking at all. It may
occupy your soul so completely that it altogether fills it; you feel
you can no longer distinguish the thought from yourself and that you
are entirely one with the thought that thus suddenly arises. If you
have the feeling that this is a living thought, it draws your soul
with it, your soul is bound up with the thought, and it might just as
well be said that the thought is in your soul as that your soul is in
the thought, then you have something in sense life similar to the way
in which you get to know the beings of the higher hierarchies and the
way you behave toward them. The words, “I am beside them, I am
outside them,” lose all meaning. You are with them, just
as your thoughts live with you. Not that you might say, “The
thoughts live in me.” You have rather to say, “A thought
thinks itself in me.” The beings experience themselves, and you
experience the experience of the beings. You are within them; you are
one with them, so that your whole being is poured out into the sphere
in which they live. You share their life, all the time knowing quite
well that they, too, are experiencing themselves in this. No one must
imagine that after the first steps on the path of initiation he will
immediately have the feeling of experiencing all that these beings
experience. Throughout he need know nothing beyond his being in their
presence, as in sensory existence he might be confronted by somebody
he was meeting for the first time. The expression, “The beings
live and experience themselves within you,” is justified, yet you
need know nothing more of them to begin with than you would know of a
man on first acquaintance. In this way, therefore, it is a
co-experience. This gradually grows in intensity, and you penetrate
ever further into the nature of these beings.
Now, something else is bound up with what has just been described as a
spiritual experience. It is a certain fundamental feeling that rests
in the soul like the actual result of all its separate experiences. It
is a feeling that perhaps I can picture to you by means of a contrast.
What you experience in the world of the senses when standing at some
particular spot looking at what is around you is the exact opposite of
this fundamental feeling. Imagine someone standing here in the middle
of the hall, seeing everything that is here. He would say that here is
this man, there that man, and so on. That would be his relation to the
surrounding world. But it is, however, the opposite of the prevailing
mood in the world we have just been describing. There, you cannot say,
“I am here, there is this being, there that one,” but you
must say, “I am this being.” In reality that is the true
feeling. What I have just said as regards all the separate beings is
felt in face of the world as a whole. You are really everything in
yourself. This being within the beings is extended over your whole
mood of soul. It is in this mood of soul that you experience
consciously the time between falling asleep and waking. When you live
through this consciously, you cannot but have a poured out feeling
toward all that you experience. You feel yourself within everything to
the very limit of the world that you are at all able to perceive.
I once made the following experiment, and I should like to cite it
here as an episode — not as anything remarkable, but in order to
make myself clear. Some years ago it suddenly struck me that certain
more or less super-sensible states come before us in the great poetic
works of the world as a reflection, an echo. What I mean is that if a
clairvoyant becomes clear about the fundamental mood of his soul in
certain super-sensible experiences and he then turns to world
literature, he will find that such moods of soul run through certain
chapters, or sections, of the really great poetic works. These moods
are not necessarily the poet's occult experiences, but the clairvoyant
can say to himself that, if he wishes to live over again as an echo in
the sensory world what he experienced in this mood of his soul, he can
turn to some great poem and find there something like its shadow
picture. When in the light of his experience the clairvoyant reads
Dante, for instance, he sometimes has the feeling that there in the
poem is a reflection, or shadow, that in its original state can only
be experienced clairvoyantly.
Now I once made a search for certain states capable of description in
poetic works, in order to set up some sort of concordance between
experiences in higher worlds and what is present as a reflection of
these in the physical world, and I asked myself, “Is it not
possible that this particular mood poured out over the soul during
fully conscious sleep (that I have described as a being in the higher
worlds, but a being to be apprehended in the mood), might not this be
found echoed in some mood of soul in the literature of the
world?” But nothing came from this direct approach.
When the question was put differently, however, something was
forthcoming. Experience shows that it is also permissible to ask,
“How would a being who was not a human being — for instance,
some other being of the higher hierarchies — feel this mood of
soul, this living within the higher worlds?” Or, to put it more
exactly, man feels himself within the higher worlds and sees beings of
the other hierarchies. Now just as in the world of the senses you can
ask, “What does another person feel about something that you
yourself feel?” so this same question can be put to a being of
the higher hierarchies, and it will then be possible to gain an idea
of the experience of some other being. Just as it would be possible
for us in fully conscious sleep, we can form an idea, as in the case
of man himself, of a definite kind of higher experience in face of
life in the higher worlds, but of experience that plays a large part
in the soul of man.
One can imagine, therefore, a being belonging to a higher hierarchical
rank than man on earth, who is able to feel what human beings feel but
in a higher way. If the question is put in this way, if you reflect
not on an ordinary but on a typical man, and then picture the mood of
soul, it becomes possible to find something in world literature from
which one can form this concept, that such a mood is poured out as an
echo of what can really only be represented in its original state
correctly by translating oneself into the world we have just been
describing. But there is certainly nothing to be found in European
literature of which it might be said, “One can here trace the
mood of what pours itself out over a soul when it feels itself within
the spiritual world and all that belongs there.” It is wonderful
how you begin to understand in a new way and to feel fresh delight and
admiration when you let this mood work on you like an echo coming from
the words of Krishna in the Bhagavad Gita. Quite a new light floods
these lines of the Gita when you realise that all I have just been
describing is contained, not in the words, but in the echo of the mood
that fills the soul. I wanted to give this merely as an illustration
of clairvoyance; to picture it in such a way that you can now take up
this poem and try to discover the mood flowing into it. Starting from
that you may get a feeling of the clairvoyant's corresponding
experience, when from his daytime existence he is transposed into
these worlds in full consciousness, or when his consciousness is
extended during sleep.
Something else, however, is mixed with this mood, this basic feeling;
something else accompanies it. It is only by means of a concept that I
can try to picture what is here experienced in words because one must
always have recourse to words in physical life. What is experienced is
something of this nature. So far as you feel anything at all of a
world, you feel yourself poured out into it. At first you do not
really feel anything external anywhere, you only feel the one point in
the world in which you were beforehand. That is the only external
thing you feel. You find whatever harm you have done and whatever good
you have done crowded into that one point. That is external. For the
rest, you feel yourself with all that you have achieved in the world
poured out over the whole world. You have indeed the feeling that it
would be nonsense to apply certain words natural in sensory existence
to this experience of your connection with the world. For instance,
the words before and after cease to have meaning because as you go to
sleep you do not feel that it is before, and that waking comes after.
You only feel certain experiences that begin as you go to sleep, and
continue to happen. After living through a number of experiences, in a
certain respect you are at the same point again, but not in the same
way as before going to sleep.
You have rather the feeling, “I have been to sleep,” and the
feeling that the word “then” can no longer justifiably be
used. There have taken place a number of experiences during which
before and after have ceased to have meaning. If I now use the
expression after a certain time (though it is not correct) —
“after a certain time one again stands where one stood
before” — it must be imagined that you are standing opposite
yourself, as it were, as though you were out of your body, walking
around and looking at yourself. So you stand at about the same point
where you stood on leaving the body, but you are now standing opposite
yourself; you have changed your direction. Then (again using
“then” in a merely comparative sense) events continue to
take place, and it is as if you had returned to your body and were
inside it once more. You do not experience any before or after, but
what you can only describe as a revolving, about which the words
“beginning,” “middle” and “end” can only
be used together.
In this kind of experience, it is just the same as when you say about
any point of the whole circumference of a circle, “Here it
begins,” and, having made the whole round, “Here it
ends.” You have no feeling of having lived through a period of
time, but rather the feeling of making a round, of describing a
circle, and in this experience you completely lose the feeling of time
that you normally have in sensory existence. You only feel that you
are in the world that has the fundamental characteristic of being
round, of being circular. A being who has never walked the earth, who
has never lived in the world of the senses but has always lived in the
world of which we are speaking, would never be struck by the idea that
the world once had a beginning and could be coming to an end. He would
always think of it as a self-enclosed, round world. Such a being would
have no inducement to say that he strove for eternity for the simple
reason that everything around him is eternal, that nowhere is there
anything beyond which he could look from the temporal into the
eternal.
This feeling of timelessness, this feeling of the circle, appears at a
certain stage of clairvoyance, or in the conscious experience of
sleep. With it is intermingled a certain yearning, a yearning that
arises because in this experience in the higher world you are never
really at rest. Everywhere you feel yourself in this revolving
movement, always moving, never staying still. The longing you have is,
“If only a halt could be made, if only somewhere one could enter
time!” This is just the opposite, one might say, of what is
experienced in sensory existence, in which we always feel ourselves in
time while yearning after eternity. In the world of which I have been
speaking, we feel ourselves in eternity with this one desire, “If
only at some point the world would stand still and enter time
existence!” This is what you realise to be the very fundamental
feeling — the everlasting movement of the universe, and the
longing for time; this experience of eternal becoming, this becoming
that is its own surety, and the longing, “Ah, if only one could
but somewhere, somehow, come to an end!”
Yes, when the conceptions of the life of the senses are applied to
these things one is fully justified in thinking them strange. But we
must not let this impede us. That would imply that we do not wish to
accept a real description of the higher worlds. If that is really what
we want on setting foot in them, all ordinary descriptions of the
world of the senses, and everything else besides, must be abandoned. I
beg you to look upon this feeling I have just pictured as an
experience that one has in oneself and for oneself, and it is
important that one should experience this in oneself and for oneself,
because that belongs to the first stages on the path to initiation.
This feeling may arise in two ways. In one way it may be expressed by
saying, “I have a longing for what is transitory, for existence
concentrated in time; I do not wish to be poured out into
eternity.” If you have this feeling in the spiritual world (I ask
you to consider this well) you do not necessarily bring it back with
you into the world of the senses. On the contrary, it need not be
present there at all when you return; it may only be in the spiritual
world. You may say you have this feeling in the spiritual world —
chat you would like to experience yourself right within time, you
would like to be concentrated in independence at some point of world
existence. You would like to do this so completely that you could say,
“Why should I bother about eternity that extends itself out in
the rest of the universe! I want to make this something independent
for myself, and to live in that.”
Just imagine this wish, this feeling, experienced in the spiritual
world. We have not yet expressed this exactly, but have still to
describe it in another way to make it precise, and then to combine it
with something else. If we want to bring this down into human sensory
existence, we have to describe it — if we still wish to do so at
all — by what is reminiscent of the world of the senses. You will
remember that I have just said, “Up above, everything is being
and we cannot speak of it in any other way.” But that is not the
whole truth. When in the world of the senses some desire takes
possession of us we may say, “You feel yourself driven on by some
being who works in you and causes you to express this wish to make
sure of some particular point.” If one has understood the wish to
make sure of one point, the wish to be concentrated in temporal
things, as an impulse given by a being of the spiritual world —
it can only be such a being — then one has to grasp what
influence Luciferic beings have in that world.
Having reached this conception, we may now ask, “How can one
speak about being confronted with a Luciferic being?” When, in
the world of the higher hierarchies, we feel thus influenced to draw
away from eternity to a state of independent concentration in the
world, then it is that we feel the working of Lucifer. When we have
experienced that, then we know how the forces that are Luciferic can
be described. They may be described in the way I have just shown, and
only then does it become possible to speak with reality of a contrast
that even finds an echo in our world of the senses. This contrast
simply arises from the realisation that in sensory existence it is
quite natural for us to be placed into the temporal, whereas in the
spiritual world that lies — to speak from a transitory point of
view — above the astral world, it is natural for us no longer to
perceive what is temporal, but only what is eternal. This devachanic
experience that appears there as a longing for temporal life is echoed
in the longing for eternity. The interplay of actually experienced
time — time experienced in the passing moment — with the
longing for eternity, arises because of the penetration of our world
of the senses by the devachanic world, the world of spirit-land. Just
as for ordinary sense perception, the spirit-land is hidden behind our
physical world, so the eternal is hidden behind the passing moment.
Just as there is no point where we can say, “Here ends the world
of the senses, and here begins the spiritual world,” but
everywhere the spiritual world permeates sensory existence, so each
passing moment, in accordance with its quality, is permeated by
eternity. We do not experience eternity by coming out of time, but by
being able to experience it clairvoyantly in the moment itself. We are
guaranteed eternity in the passing moment; in every moment it is
there.
Wherever you go in the world, when speaking from the standpoint of
clairvoyant consciousness, you can never say of beings that one is
temporal and another eternal. To say that here is a temporal being or
there an eternal being has no meaning for spiritual consciousness.
Real meaning lies in something quite different. What underlies
existence — the passing moment and eternity — is everywhere
and forever, and the only way to put the question is, “How comes
it that eternity sometimes appears as the passing moment, that the
eternal sometimes appears temporal, and that a being in the world
assumes a form that is temporal?” It simply comes from this, that
sensory existence, wherever it occurs, is interspersed with Luciferic
beings, and to the extent that these beings play into sensory
existence, eternity is rendered temporal. It must therefore be said,
“A being appearing anywhere in time is eternal insofar as it has
power to liberate itself from the Luciferic existence, but insofar as
it is subject to it, it remains temporal.”
When we begin to describe things in a spiritual way, we leave off
using expressions of ordinary life. In ordinary life, if we apply the
teaching of religion and of anthroposophy, we should say, “Man
has his body as an outer sheath, and within he has his soul and spirit
being; his body is mortal, but his being of soul and spirit is
immortal and eternal.” This is how it should be expressed,
insofar as we are in the world of the senses and want to describe what
is there. It is no longer correct if we wish to apply the standpoint
of the spiritual world; then it must be put in this way, “Man is
a being in whose nature as a whole, progressive, divine beings must
work together with Luciferic beings; to the extent that progressive,
divine beings are in him, part of his being wrests itself away from
all that is Luciferic, and so comes to participate in the eternal.
Insofar as divine beings work in man, he shares in the eternal;
insofar as the Luciferic world works in him, all that is bound up with
the temporal and transitory becomes part of his very being.”
The temporal and eternal thus appear as the working together of
diverse beings. In the higher worlds there is no longer any sense in
speaking of abstract opposites such as the temporal and the eternal
because there they cease to have any meaning. There we have to speak
of beings. We speak, therefore, of progressive, divine beings and of
Luciferic beings. Because these beings are present in the higher
worlds, their relation to one another is reflected in the antithesis
of time and eternity.
I have said that it is good if a man, on rising to the world to which
we are referring, should at first experience memories of a more moral
kind rather than his external physical form. Persevering with the
exercises for the first steps in initiation, he should gradually
become so clairvoyant that there will then appear the memory picture,
too, of his physical form. There is something else, however, connected
with the arising of this memory picture of one's physical form, and
that is that actually from this time on (and it is right) he feels as
a memory not only his life of soul in general, not only in general his
good and bad deeds and his moral and his foolish ones, but his entire
ego. It is his whole self that he feels as a memory in the moment when
he can look back on his body as form. He then feels his being as if
split in two. He beholds the part he left behind with the Guardian of
the Threshold, and he beholds what, in the sense world, he called his
ego. Now, on looking back on his ego, he feels that there also is a
cleavage, and quite calmly says to himself: “Only now are you
able to remember what you formerly called your ego. You now live in a
more highly organised ego that bears the same relation to the former
ego that you as thinker bear to memories of life in the world of the
senses.” At this stage one sees for the first time what man,
earthly man, actually is; one looks down on one's ego-man.
At the same time, however, one is raised to a still higher world that
may be called the higher spirit-land or, if you will, the higher
mental world; a world that differs somewhat from the others. We are in
this higher spirit-land when experiencing the splitting of the ego,
and the ordinary ego in memory only. It is here that one is first able
to form a true estimate of man on earth. As one looks back one begins
to know what man is in his inmost being. There, too, it is first
possible to come to an experienced judgement concerning the course of
history. Human evolution that has been experienced becomes for us the
progress of the soul as an ego being. Standing out from the general
progress are the beings who are leaders in the advancement of
humanity. Here one actually experiences what I described in the second
lecture, that is, the impulses that are continually flowing into human
evolution through the initiates, those initiates who, wherever they
may be, have to leave the life of the senses and go to spiritual
worlds so that they can give out these impulses. When you reach the
point of experiencing man as an ego being, you also experience for the
first time a true insight into the human being as such. To this there
is only one exception.
Let us recapitulate all that has been said. When a man goes through
the first stages of initiation, he can raise himself clairvoyantly to
the world of the lower spirit-land; he experiences conceptions of what
has to do with the soul, of what is moral and what is intellectual. He
looks down on all that is going on in souls, even if they do not
comprehend themselves as ego beings. This comprehension of one's being
as an ego being, together with all the blossoming of spiritual life in
the initiates, is experienced in the higher spirit-land with one
single exception that is right and good if it can happen as an
exception that breaks through the general rule. From the lower
spirit-land one sees the whole being of Christ Jesus! So that, looking
back in a purely human way, and holding fast to what is present in
remembrance, you have a memory of Christ Jesus and of all the events
that have taken place in connection with Him, that is, if the other
condition of which I spoke in the second lecture has already been
fulfilled. The truth about the other initiates, however, you
experience for the first time in the higher spirit-land.
There we have a vastly important distinction. When a man rises into
the spiritual world, on looking back he perceives what is of the
earth. But he sees it first with its soul quality unless he can
remember in such a way that, looking back on earthly existence, he
remembers physical man and the shape and form in which he goes about.
That is a thing he should only experience at the higher point
described. It is only Christ Jesus that he may and should see at the
first steps on the path of initiation. This he can do when on going
forward he sees himself surrounded by nothing but what is of a soul
nature, that at first has nothing in it of the ego. But then, within,
as a kind of central point, is the Christ Being, fulfilling the
Mystery of Golgotha and permeated by the ego.
What I have just told you cannot, of course, be understood as coming
from any of the world conceptions of existing Christian religions. I
hardly imagine that you would find it described anywhere. You can,
indeed, find what may be called the reverse of what I have said in a
certain special way that one first lights upon when looking occultly
and precisely into the matter, because up to the present, Christianity
has not reached the goal it has finally to attain. Perhaps some of you
will know that there are many among the official representatives of
Christianity who have a mortal dread of what is known as occultism,
and look on it simply as the work of the devil that can only do man
harm. Why is this so? Why do we repeatedly find, when we speak to the
representatives of any particular priesthood and the conversation
turns to occultism or anthroposophy that they shy away from it? If you
point out to them that the Christian saints have always experienced
the higher worlds, and that their biographies tell us so, you get the
reply, “Oh yes, that may be so but these things should not be
striven after. There is no harm in reading the lives of the saints,
but you shouldn't copy them if you want to keep away from the wiles of
the devil.”
Now why does this occur? If you take all that I have told you into
consideration, you will understand that what here finds expression is
a kind of fear, a strong feeling of fear. Ordinary people do not
recognise its origin, but the occultist can do so.
As I have said in the second lecture, in the higher worlds there can
only be this memory of the Christ when a man has rightly understood
Him on earth, in the physical world of the senses. It is important to
have this memory of the Christ in the very next world you enter, where
you still keep a memory image of the rest of humanity. On the one
hand, it is necessary to have the memory image; on the other, you can
only have it down here if it has already permeated you. Hence it
happens that those who know something of occultism, but have not
thoroughly assimilated certain important and outstanding facts, think
it is all one whether man, when today he presses on into spiritual
worlds, has become acquainted or not with this image of the Christ.
They do not consider that what is above depends to any great extent on
what has been experienced below, although in other respects they are
continually emphasising it.
But the kind of position in which you find yourself with regard to the
Christ in the higher worlds does indeed depend on how you relate
yourself to Him in the physical world. If in the physical world you do
not try to call up the right conception of Him, you are not in a
certain respect sufficiently developed for the higher worlds, and in
spite of the fact that you should find Him there, you cannot do so. So
that if you have not concerned yourself about this matter that is full
of splendour and so significant, on rising to higher worlds you may
completely miss this image of the Christ. If, then, anyone when still
in sensory existence, were to reject the idea of forming a
relationship to Christ, he might even become a great occultist and
yet, through his perceptions in the higher worlds, have no knowledge
of the Christ; he would not find Him there, nor be able to learn
anything from Him. There would always be something wanting in his
conception of the Christ. That is the significant thing.
I am not here giving out anything that is merely a subjective opinion,
but what is the common objective result of those who have made the
relevant investigations. Among occultists it can be said objectively
that it is so, but in anyone who does not feel impelled to become an
occultist, and who is simply a faithful follower of his particular
religious creed, the same thing is expressed in that unconsciousness
that I have just described as a state of fear. Then if anyone would
embark upon the path into higher worlds, this is said to be devil's
work; it is thought that perhaps he cannot have found the right
relation to Christ, and therefore ought not to be led beyond the
ordinary world. In a certain sense this fear is well-grounded. These
men do not know the way to Christ, and if they then enter higher
worlds, Christ is lost to them. This feeling among certain priestly
orders can be understood as a kind of fear, but there is no way of
meeting it. I beg you to give this little digression your serious
attention, and to go on thinking about it in life. It is interesting
as a piece of historical culture, and will help you to understand much
that plays itself out in life.
I have shown you different aspects of the Christ from two different
points of view, and have tried to throw light on His being. But all
that I have previously said would be just as valid and comprehensible
without these two points of view. It is necessary, however, to meet
the facts objectively and, without the bias of any religious tendency,
to grasp them objectively as cosmic facts.
Thus we have tried to throw a certain light on the concepts of the
temporal, the transitory, the passing moment and eternity on the one
hand, and on the other of mortality and immortality. We have seen how
the concepts ‘transitory’ and ‘temporal’ are bound
up with the Luciferic principle, and how, bound up with the Christ
principle we shall find such concepts as ‘eternity’ and
‘immortality.’ Anyone might believe — at least to a
small extent — that this constituted a kind of undervaluing of
the Luciferic principle and its rejection in all circumstances because
by it we are directed to the temporal, the more transitory, and to the
concentration upon one point. For today, I should like just to say
this, that in all circumstances it is not right to look upon the
‘Light-bearer’ as one of whom we should be afraid, nor is it
right to think that we must turn our back on Lucifer as from one whom
we must always escape. If one does that it is to forget the teaching
of true occultism, namely, that here in the world of the senses there
is a feeling analogous to that in the super-sensible world. In sensory
life man feels, “I live in the temporal and yearn after the
eternal; I live in the passing moment and crave for eternity.” In
spiritual life there is the feeling: “I live in the eternal and
long for the passing moment.” If you now turn to the book,
Cosmic Memory: Atlantis and Lemuria,
was man's development in old Lemurian times a kind of transition from
such a state as we have in sleep into a waking state? Follow
attentively what happened in Lemurian times, and you can say that
since man passed through a transition out of a state of spiritual
sleep into the waking state that we have on earth, the whole of
evolution passed over at that time from the spiritual into the
physical. There is the transition. Since Lemurian times our sensory
existence has acquired meaning. Do you think it unnatural that when he
gradually slipped away from higher worlds to be seized upon by
Luciferic powers, man should have taken with him something like a
longing for eternity? Again, in respect to what is Luciferic, you have
a kind of memory of a pre-earthly state, a memory of something that
man had before he came into sensory existence that should not have
been preserved, namely, a longing for the passing moment and for all
that has to do with time. How far this takes part in the evolution of
man we shall speak of tomorrow.
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Last Modified: 23-Nov-2024
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