Berlin, 22nd December, 1909.
THE LAW OF KARMA WITH RESPECT TO THE DETAILS OF LIFE
Our lecture to-day shall be devoted to subjects interesting to
Anthroposophists in the widest sense, subjects intended to throw light
on certain points which may have puzzled those who have attended our
Group-Meetings for a considerable time. It is well, now and then, to
recollect that the point of importance in Anthroposophy is not so much
the learning of certain things as theory or doctrine, but that we
should continually enter in greater detail into the questions and
enigmas of life. Some people may perhaps say: All that is
necessary to know of Anthroposophy for use in life could be
comfortably contained in a small pamphlet of sixty pages or so;
everyone could possess a copy and would then be convinced as to the
nature of man, reincarnation and karma, and the evolution of humanity
on the earth, and could go through life needing nothing
further. A person who would like to have that carried out might
perhaps suggest: Why does not the Anthroposophical Movement
distribute as many copies as possible of a booklet containing these
principal points of view, so that everyone might acquire a copy and be
able to convince himself? Why does the Anthroposophical Society adopt
the curious method of holding meetings week after week, assembling all
those interested or likely to become interested for the purpose of
constantly recapitulating what might comfortably be reduced to a
sixty-page pamphlet? What can these Anthroposophists possibly have to
say to their followers, week after week?
There may be certain orders of mind of our day who would like to have
a small outline of Anthroposophy which they could keep in their
waistcoat pockets, and thus study what it is most important to know.
We must, however, over and over again, bring to mind the fact that
nothing can be done in this way with Anthroposophy. There can be no
tabloid-knowledge! Although Anthroposophy does depend both
on knowledge and perception, it does not consist of mere
phrases, but of very definite knowledge. But it is not
enough merely to acquire this knowledge as a general conviction
according to present-day methods, and then rest satisfied. For the
point in question is not merely that one should acquire the conviction
and know that man lives many lives and that there are causal
conditions which pass over from one life into another, that there is
such a thing as reincarnation, as karma. The beneficial effects of
Anthroposophy do not lie in the spreading of this knowledge, but are
felt in the constant and repeated study of all the details connected
with it, and in allowing the teaching to work upon one's soul. It does
one no good simply to believe that man lives more than once and that
there is such a law as that of reincarnation, karma, and so on. The
mere belief in this will not carry one far. As regards the real depths
of life there is not much difference between the soul of a man who
knows of reincarnation and karma and one who knows nothing of it. In
an anthroposophical sense our soul is only changed if we constantly
study, not only the generalities, but the deeper things that Spiritual
Science can teach us. That is why it is a good thing that we should
over and over again consider how the various details of life appear in
the light of the Anthroposophical conception. It is by no means
sufficient merely to know that there is a great law of destiny
establishing a connection between the past deeds, feelings and
thoughts of a man and his present and future experiences.
Anthroposophy will only become a life-factor when we can apply this
general doctrine to the different experiences of life, when we become
able to put our whole soul into such a position, that we obtain an
entirely new outlook on life. That is why we will to-day give a little
time to studying the law of karma, the great law of destiny, with
reference to the details of life. Things will be spoken of to-day
which are familiar to all; but they will be considered from the
standpoint of karma.
Karma says in a general sense that there is a connection in the
spiritual world between what takes place to-day and what has taken
place in the past. It is not really a good thing to call karma the law
of causality, and then to compare it with the law of cause and effect
in the external world. If we wish to find a comparison for this great
law of destiny, we must take care that the comparison is valid, that
it really does represent this law.
Let us take the following as an example. Suppose we have two vessels
containing water and two metal balls of the normal temperature
of the living-room. We throw one ball into one of the vessels; and the
water remains as it was. We now take the other ball and having heated
it, we throw it into the other vessel. The water in that gets
warm. Why has the water in the second vessel grown warm and not
in the first? Because the ball itself underwent a change before it was
thrown into the vessel; and having itself been made hot it brings
about the warming of the water. An event occurred which was the result
of another event, the result of the ball having been heated. The
experiences and activities of a former time are connected with the
experiences and phenomena of the present or future.
When we grasp the law of the spiritual connections between past,
present and future in this way, we shall be able to find it confirmed
in ordinary life, in the everyday life around us, though we
ourselves may be very far from having as yet developed any clairvoyant
faculties. For we must always establish as a golden rule the fact that
while a law of the spiritual world can only be proved by the spiritual
investigator through clairvoyant observation, it can always be
corroborated by the experiences of the external world. People
will, however, have to accustom themselves to observe external life a
little more carefully than usual, if they wish to find confirmation of
the law of karma. As a rule they do not see, figuratively speaking,
beyond the end of their noses. What lies beyond that, they do not
observe. Anyone who observes more profoundly will, however, find
plenty of confirmation between birth and death of the existence of a
law of karma. We will keep as far as possible to the concrete, and
take the following example. A young lad, fifteen years of age, has
been torn away by unforeseen circumstances from the life he had been
accustomed to lead. Till then the position of his parents had
permitted him to study; now at the age of fifteen, in consequence,
perhaps, of his father having lost his fortune, he had to go into
trade, and was thus pitchforked from one calling to another. Of course
the point here is not that the one calling was in any way better than
the other, but that his life was altered by the change. Now people who
contemplate life in the ordinary materialistic sense would probably
not expect anything worthy of note to be brought about by the
influence of such an event in a man's life, and they would find
nothing. But a closer observer would discover that a young man who
goes into trade in that way, will at first feel pleasure in the
change, will like his calling, that his interest in it grows
with his own growth, as one might say. After a while, however,
something remarkable will become evident, The soul-experiences, the
sympathies and antipathies he feels in his work, may, as he reaches
the age of eighteen or nineteen, assume a different form. He may cease
to take pleasure in it; his attitude towards trade may alter. Those
who had never heard of Anthroposophy would feel at a loss to account
for what takes place in the young man's soul.
What then has actually occurred? When the young man was fifteen
and was put into the new trade, he took a great interest in it. At
first the interest he felt drove out the feelings and sentiments that
had formed within him when he was following a different line of
activity. Those feelings were pushed into the background. The time,
however, comes when these break through again with all the more
strength. It is just as though one compressed an elastic object; it
can be compressed for a while but it springs back with all the more
rapidity, and the result in the case of the lad may be that the
interests which have been thrust aside for a time, now burst forth
with greater zest. When he is eighteen or nineteen the feelings and
sentiments that penetrated his soul, three years before the change of
calling, now come forth anew, that is, those he felt at eleven
or twelve. Life can only be explained in such a case by saying:
When this lad was fifteen a turning-point occurred in his life. After
that, things happened whose external effects are felt the same number
of years after the turning-point as the cause of them originated
before that time.
Just think how one would be able to help a person as regards his
soul-moods and the difficulties of life, if we were able to ask
ourselves: When did such a turning-point occur? It may
have been connected with something quite private and intimate; but, if
one can place it, we can then reckon back; and it will be found that
the spiritual effects reveal themselves just as long after the
turning-point, as the cause of them was before that time. This gives
one an insight into karma. Such knowledge is a help in life, and we
may say: Causes and effects of this nature are connected with
definite periods of time and they are determined by a definite period
in life, so that if we count backwards and forwards from that point of
time, we can find the connection between cause and effect.
Now this might, of course, be concealed by the intervention of other
events. Someone might say: The example you have just given us is
no use; I have just met a young man to whom it does not apply:
Well, I have known a case of two men having a game of
billiards, when a passing waiter bumped into the one who was just
about to play, thus driving his ball in quite a different direction
from what was intended! The law of cause and effect was not at fault,
but other circumstances intervened. We must reflect that we shall
never learn to know that law if we do not make an exception of the
things that upset it. After the age of fifteen other circumstances may
arise which interfere with the law. We do not become acquainted with
laws simply by observing life, but by acquiring the right method of
summing up its phenomena. For in life things are being constantly
disturbed and the laws cannot so easily be seen; we can only regulate
our life by knowing how these laws are to be found. When we know the
particulars, we can say in the case of the young man whose life has
been so smashed up, that it is the task of those who have his
education in hand to look out for the result. In this way karma
becomes a law of life; and if we have knowledge of the law, we can
make use of our knowledge when such a case occurs. If we find that we
can no longer give the lad what he had before, we can at any rate
become his adviser. But we can only give the right advice if we know
of the existence of such connections as those I have spoken of,
if we know what is the matter with him and intervene with help just
where and when his particular lack is making itself felt. If we are
ignorant of this law we cannot help him with advice. When we
regard the law of karma as a law of life it may become an influence in
life, we can learn to become counselors.
The above-mentioned case does not of course exhaust all the
combinations that are possible; there is another way in which the law
of karma is experienced between birth and death. There is a remarkable
connection between the experiences a man has in the first half of his
life and the second, but this is not as a rule observed. One
often makes acquaintance with a man in his youth and loses sight of
him before he reaches maturity, or else one only meets a man when he
is already old and one knows nothing of his youth; or even if one did
know him in youth, one may have forgotten what has happened to him
since. Were we to study and compare the beginning and end of people's
lives when it is possible so to do, we should find the finest
confirmation of the law of karma even in the life between birth and
death.
Perhaps you may remember in this connection what I have said in public
lectures about the noble anger which appears in youth. I
have explained that a young person is not able fully to judge of an
injustice that may be going on in his vicinity; he is not yet mature
enough. Yet the wise rulership of the world has so ordained things
that our feelings will help us to judge truly before our reason is
mature enough to do so. A noble nature will, even in childhood, be
moved to a righteous anger by anything like injustice, although it may
be only in his feeling that his soul can sense the injustice. He may
perhaps not yet be ripe to judge of it through his intellect. When
this noble sense of indignation is to be found in the character of a
child we ought to take particular note of it, for the feeling aroused
by the injustice remains in the soul. This noble anger in early youth
permeates the soul and, as life goes on, it becomes transformed. In
the second half of life it reappears in a different form; it appears
as the quality of loving kindness and goodness. We shall not often
find that loving, bounteous goodness in the latter part of a man's
life if other things are equal and nothing has occurred to
distort the sequence without finding that it was expressed in
his early years by a noble anger aroused at the stupidity or the ugly
things of life. In ordinary life we find a karmic connection which we
may clothe in the form of a picture and say: The hand that never
clenched its fist in noble anger in the first half of life, will not
easily be stretched forth in blessing in the latter half. Such
things will of course only be observed by one who can see a little
further than the end of his nose, which is just what most
people do not do. I might give a simple example to show how little
people are inclined to notice such things in life.
I have often mentioned how helpful it is to one who wishes to become
intimately acquainted with life in order to study more deeply the
occult conditions of the soul, to have been a teacher at some time.
One learns more of the soul in that way than can be learnt from the
ordinary text-books on Psychology, which, as a rule, are quite
valueless. A knowledge of the soul is acquired when we do not merely
observe and study but have to take the responsibility of guiding and
directing the life of others. One learns a closer observation. During
the long years of my tutorship I not only observed the children of
whom I had charge, but I had many opportunities when other families
came to visit them, of studying other children of all ages, even from
the time they came into the world.
That is now some twenty-five to thirty years ago. You may have noticed
how every five years or thereabouts the doctors have a different
opinion as to what is good for people. Well, at
that time they were strongly of opinion that it was very strengthening
for delicate children three, four or five years old, to drink a glass
of red wine every day. I knew certain children who had their
glass of wine and others who did not, and was able to make my own
observations. For of course at that time, the doctor's opinion was
considered infallible. It would have been of no use to attempt to go
against it. I was thus able to await results. The children who were
then from two to five years old and who were given the glass of wine
to strengthen them, are now young men and women of twenty-five to
twenty-eight years of age. I particularly noticed that only then the
results of this treatment show themselves. All the children who had
the wine have become Fidgety Phils; their astral bodies
are fidgety, they have not much control of them; they do not know how
to control the involuntary movements of their soul-life. On the other
hand, those children who, unfortunately, as was then said,
could not have their glass of red wine, have now become stable
natures, less wobbly in their astral bodies, or, as
materialists would say, in their nervous systems.
This is an example of the connections that exist in life. It is rather
a trivial one and not particularly illustrative of karma; but it
serves to show that we should not only look as far as the end of our
noses but should survey longer periods of time, and that it is not
sufficient merely to affirm that a remedy will have such and such an
effect, for what is actually brought about can only be observed by the
true observer many years after. Nothing but the great connections and
all that leads us to find them can in reality give us the true
explanations of the relation between cause and effect in the life of
man. Thus we must try to connect the qualities of the soul with those
phenomena of life which lie apparently very far apart; and we shall
then be able to trace the law of karma even between birth and death,
and shall frequently find that the events of later life are connected
with the experiences of the earlier.
You may remember what I said of the mission of Devotion, of the
importance of looking up in feeling to some being or some phenomenon
which we do not yet understand, but which we revere for the very
reason that we have not yet grown up to the level of being able
to understand it. I always like to remind you of how fortunate it is
when a man can say: As a child I heard of a member of our family
who was very greatly respected and honoured. I had not yet seen him
but I had a profound reverence for him. Then one day the opportunity
came, and I was taken to see him. A feeling of profound and holy awe
came over me as I laid my hand on the handle of the door of the room
where this wonderful person was to be seen.
In later life a man will have good reason to be grateful for that
feeling of reverent devotion; we owe much gratitude to anyone who
aroused a feeling of reverence in us in our early life. That feeling
is of great and special value in any life. I have known men who
exclaim, when such a feeling of reverent devotion to the Spiritual and
Divine is alluded to: I am an Atheist! I cannot revere anything
spiritual! We can reply: Look at the starry
heavens! Could you create those? Look at that wisdom-filled structure
and reflect: there it is surely possible to have a feeling of real,
true reverence. There are many things in the world which our
understanding has not yet grown up to, but to which we can look
up in reverence. Especially is this the case in youth, when there is
so much we can look up to and venerate, without being able to
understand it.
A feeling of devotion in early youth is transformed into a very
special quality in the second half of life. We have all heard of
persons who just by being themselves, are, as it were, a blessing to
those around them. There is no need for them to say anything
particular, their presence is enough. It seems as though by the very
nature of their being, something invisible flows forth from them to
the souls around them. Through their very nature they radiate a
healing and beneficent influence on their environment. To what do
these people owe their power of blessing? They owe it to the
circumstance that in their youth they lived a life in which reverence
played a part. Reverence in the early part of their life was
transformed in later years into a force which works invisibly, pouring
forth blessing and help. Here again is a karmic connection which, if
we look for it, is clearly and distinctly to be observed. It was
really a true feeling for karma which led Goethe to choose as the
motto for one of his works, these beautiful words: What we
desire in our youth is fulfilled in old age! If one only
observes the connections to be found within short periods of time, it
may certainly seem as though one could speak of unfulfilled wishes,
but taking longer spans of time, this cannot well be said. All
these things can pass over into and become part of life's daily round;
and as a matter of fact, only one who studies in this anthroposophical
way is qualified to educate children, for he will be able to provide
them in their early years with that which, as he knows, they will be
able to use in the latter part of their life. The responsibility that
a man assumes when he instills one thing or another into a child is
not realised to-day. It has become the custom to look down on these
things to-day to speak of them from the high horse of
materialistic thinking. I should like to illustrate this by an
experience we ourselves once had here in Berlin.
A theosophical visitor once came here, one of those who think
if at some time in their lives they have attended one or two meetings,
they are well able to form an opinion on the whole subject. Such
persons desire to learn about a spiritual Movement like Anthroposophy
so as to be able to write objectively about it. Those who wish to
provide the world with newspaper articles, believe that they can judge
of a movement by going to one or two lectures! This visitor
also went away and wrote. It was curious to read later on in an
American paper what was said of one of our anthroposophical meetings.
Of course the description given was remarkably correct! As I
have said, if anyone really wishes to grasp Anthroposophy it cannot be
done in that way; it is only possible to penetrate into the life of
Anthroposophy if one has the distinct will really to enter into it in
detail and experience. I am only saying all this to characterise the
opinion formed by this visitor, which he did not hide under a bushel!
He said he did not like the way in which Anthroposophy splits up
everything, dividing the world into physical world, astral
world, devachanic world, and so on. Why should everything be so split
up? This was after one or two visits. What a terrible effect it
would have had on him if he had heard of the other divisions! He was
of the opinion that it was unnecessary to consider things in this way,
but that one should speak of the spiritual world in general
terms. Why should it be divided into classes?
That is the way people talk to-day about Education and all other
departments of life; Science itself talks in the same way. The world
talks from an arbitrary observation of life, not from an objective
investigation of the separate phenomena. That is why the impressions
which all such reforms and programmes must make on one who is able
really to observe the world is so dreadful; they arouse a feeling that
may be compared to physical pain. Take any ordinary book on Science
to-day; no matter how conscientiously the conclusions are drawn, it is
terrible to see how they are put forward, for there is no conception
of the way the phenomena ought to be observed. In the same way many a
man is admired to-day, who blazons forth his opinion, based simply on
his own predilections or antipathies.
It is of immense importance that Anthroposophy should become aware of
the fact that life must be observed, down to its very smallest
details, according to the methods which the knowledge of karma and
other laws put into our hands. That is why we can only hope for a
blessing on the future evolution of humanity even as regards
the question of Education if the anthroposophical views
penetrate to the fundamental principles of Education. Karma provides a
firm support for all questions connected with that.
For instance, it is extremely important that we should know the karmic
connections of a certain phenomenon in Education expressed in the
view: If a child is properly brought up, he must be this or that
that is what I admire! It seems as though the child were
supposed to be a sack, into which one can stuff whatever is thought to
be right! People wish to stamp their own nature, with its personal
sympathies or antipathies, upon the child. If they knew the karmic
consequences of this, they would take a different view. They would see
that what is stuffed in that way into a child, as into a sack, will
work out karmically by making the grown man or woman a hard, dry
nature, prematurely old, for the very core of their being is killed.
If we wish to educate a child, and to imbue it with any particular
quality, we must set to work in a roundabout way. We must not try to
force it upon the child, rather ought we to arouse a longing for that
particular quality, so that the child itself will desire to acquire
it. We must even go a step further. If we know that a particular food
is good for a child we must not force him to eat it, but should try so
to cultivate his taste, that he will ask for it of his own accord.
That is a very different method to that of forcing everything into him
as into a sack, saying: in with you! If we
begin to regulate the child's requirements, we reach the very
life-germ of his being and we shall see the effects of this working
out karmically in the second half of his life, in his joy in life, in
his life-force. In his later years, instead of being arid and dry, he
will remain alive in the centre of his being.
If we consider the law of karma in this way we shall say: It
does not suffice merely to write a little book entitled There is
a law of karma, a connection between the earlier and the later,
but we must study life itself in the light of that law.
Anthroposophy is only present in its true form when we enter into all
the details of life; but we must also determine to do this work
without cessation. We must find time to study all the phenomena of
life from the standpoint of Anthroposophy.
The above are a few of the things that indicate the connections to be
found in life between birth and death. Now we can follow out the law
of karma beyond this limit and connect one life with other lives or
with one other. We must connect what we experience to-day, in the
present life between birth and death, with things we experienced
formerly, or that we shall experience later, in subsequent lives. I
will to-day confine myself to throwing light on one important
question, from the standpoint of karma in so far as it extends from
one life into another. That is, the question of health and sickness,
more especially the latter.
Many people when they are stricken with some malady believe that
according to karma they would be right in supposing they have brought
it upon themselves, that it is their fate; but that alone does not
always characterise karma aright. Where there is a malady we must
first of all be quite clear as to the nature of the trouble in a
spiritual sense. It will be well to begin with the nature of pain, and
then pass on to the spiritual understanding of the nature of illness.
What is the nature of pain? We will now consider external pain, such,
for instance, as we feel when we cut our finger. Why does that hurt?
We shall never be able to explain the nature of pain from the
spiritual standpoint if we do not realise that the physical finger is
permeated by an etheric and an astral finger. The outward appearance
of the physical finger, its shape, the way in which the blood
circulates in it and the position of the nerves within it, all
these things are determined by the etheric finger. It is the builder;
and still takes care that the nerves are in their proper place and
that the blood flows in the right way. The way in which the etheric
body carries out these functions is regulated by the astral body,
which permeates the whole. We will now explain by an external example
why it hurts when we cut a finger.
Perhaps it may be a favourite occupation of yours to water the flowers
in your garden once a day; that gives you a feeling of satisfaction.
One morning, however, you find that your watering-pot is spoilt or
perhaps stolen, and you are not able to water your garden. You are
distressed; what you feel is not physical pain, yet the fact that you
are prevented from carrying out your favourite occupation may somewhat
resemble that; you cannot carry out an activity because you lack the
necessary instrument. The external lack felt in this instance, which
can only call forth a moral pain, may become a physical pain in the
way that will now be described.
The etheric and astral bodies are organised for the purpose of
maintaining the finger as it now is. I can never cut the etheric
finger nor the astral finger. If I cut my finger in two, the etheric
finger can no longer carry out its proper duty. It is accustomed to
have the fingers in their right connection. Now this connection is
interrupted: just as your activity was interrupted, when you
wanted to water your garden. Thus the astral and etheric bodies are
not able to intervene, and the prevention from exercising the usual
activity is felt in the astral body as pain. But the moment these
bodies are interrupted, they make an extra effort, just as you,
wishing to water your garden, would make extra efforts to find the
watering-pot or the like. In the same way our astral and etheric
bodies must now call forth greater activity in order to repair the
injury. It is the extra activity thus called forth which is the actual
healing force. Whatever calls forth great activity in the spiritual
bodies of man, produces healing. Now the cause of all illness is, that
through some disorder in the physical or even in the etheric body of
man, the spiritual principles are prevented from intervening in the
proper way, they are hindered, as it were; and the healing consists in
the calling forth of a stronger resistance to the disorder. An
illness may either be healed, or we may die of it. Let us
consider both these possibilities from the karmic standpoint.
If the illness takes such a course that we recover from it, it means
that in those members that we have brought with us from former
incarnation, we had stored up such strong life-force that it is able
to intervene and heal us. When we look back at those incarnations we
can say: Not only were we able at the time to provide for what
we normally have in life, but we brought with us a reserve fund, which
we may call up from the spiritual members of our life.
Now, suppose we die. How does the case stand then? We must then
say: When the effort to heal was made, we called upon the strongest
forces within us but they did not suffice. Yet whenever we call
up these forces, demanding extra strength from them, it is not without
avail, for in so doing we have had to make stronger efforts. Although
we may not be able in this life to restore order to any one part of
our organism, yet it has, none the less, grown stronger. We desired to
resist the malady, but our powers did not suffice. Yet although they
did not succeed, the forces we called up in making the effort, are not
lost. They pass over into the next incarnation and the injured organ
will then be stronger than if we had not had the disturbance. We are
then able to build up the particular organ that brought us a premature
death and to impart to it special strength and regularity. This will
be all the more successfully accomplished if we treat the illness in
the right way and yet are not able to cure it. In such a case
we must look upon the illness, karmically, as something which will in
a future life prove to have been fortunate. We shall then have gained
a special strength through having fought the malady though we were
unable to cure it. One ought not, however, on that account, to
say: Perhaps it might be as well to let an illness take its
course, for then if we do not interfere and try to curb it, the
forces within us will be stronger and our karma will have a better
fulfilment. That would be nonsense. The point is this:
the healing must be carried out in such a way that the equalising
forces are able to intervene in as favourable a manner as possible; in
other words, we must do all in our power to bring about a cure,
regardless of whether it be successful or not. Karma is always a
friend, never an enemy to life!
By this example it is proved that the law of karma, which extends from
one life to another, works for the strengthening of life. We can,
therefore, say that if any one organ is particularly strong, this
points to a preceding life in which that organ was once ailing and we
were not able to heal it. The forces for so doing were called up and
they have caused it to grow particularly strong now. Thus we see the
events and facts stretching across from one life into another. If we
become conscious in the right way of how it can be strengthened, our
life-kernel will become stronger and stronger. In this way we can
attain a more and more living comprehension of our spiritual
life-kernel through the law of karma.
We now come to an answer to the question: Why do we meet
together so often? We do so, because not only do we enrich our
knowledge when we take in anthroposophical teaching, but also because,
if it be given in the right way, it is able to make our life-kernel
more and more strong and forceful. We pour a spiritual life-sap into
all we do, by meeting together and occupying ourselves with
Anthroposophy. Thus Anthroposophy is not a theory, it is a life-giving
draught, an elixir of life which ever anew pours itself into our souls
and of which we know that it will make them grow stronger and
stronger. When Anthroposophy emerges from the position which now,
through lack of comprehension, it occupies in the outer world, when it
really intervenes in our whole spiritual life, people will then see
how the salvation, even of the physical life, of the purely external
life, will depend on the strengthening which can be acquired through
the study of Anthroposophy. The time will come when anthroposophical
gatherings will be the most important sources of strength to man, from
which they will go forth, saying: we are most grateful to these
meetings, for we owe to them our health and strength and the fact that
we are constantly able to strengthen anew our own life-kernel, the
core of our being. People will only realise what the mission of
Anthroposophy is, when they feel that it furnishes us with the means
of working forcefully on the physical body and making it sound and
healthy. Those who are occupying themselves with Anthroposophy to-day,
should regard themselves as pioneers for Anthroposophy as a means of
strengthening life. Then only will it become what it ought to be, the
right point of attack against something which in many cases is
weakening life to-day.
In conclusion I will draw your attention to one thing more. There is
no phrase more frequently mentioned than inherited
tendency. No man is considered an educated man to-day who does
not mention it at least two or three times a week! An educated man
must at least make himself acquainted with what the learned. medical
profession has ascertained as to inherited tendencies.
When a person does not know what to make of himself, most people say
at once: he is suffering from an inherited tendency.
Anyone not saying that is regarded as badly educated, perhaps among
other things an Anthroposophist! Here Science begins not only
to go astray in theory, but also to be injurious to life. This is the
boundary where theory encroaches on morality where it is
immoral to hold a wrong theory. Here life's strength and security
really depend on correct knowledge. What will a man be able to do who,
through the right spiritual conception in his soul, strengthens,
fortifies himself by taking in the elixir of life? No matter what he
may have inherited, these inheritances are only in the physical body
or at most in the etheric body. Through his right conception of the
world he will be able to make his own vital centre stronger and
stronger, and will be able to conquer his inherited tendencies; for
the spiritual, if present in the right way, is able to equalise the
body. If, however, a man does not strengthen the spiritual core of his
being, merely asserting that the spiritual is the fruit of the
physical, he will have a weak inner nature, he will be the victim of
his inherited tendencies; they will work harmfully in him. No wonder
then, that so-called inherited tendencies have such dreadful results;
for people are first of all talked into belief of the powers of such
tendencies and are deprived of what counteracts them. The belief in
inherited tendencies is cultivated, and the spiritual conception of
the world the best weapon with which to fight them, is
taken away. First the power of the inherited tendencies is discovered,
and by this means they become active. Not only is this a wrong
insight, which arouses a life-destroying activity and takes the
weapons of defence out of the hands of the sufferer, but it is the
beginning of a theory based absolutely on a materialistic conception.
Here a materialistic conception of the world begins to play a part
which is in effect not only theoretically incorrect but immoral.
This cannot be got over, simply by saying that those who assert
such things are mistaken. We need not be too severe in judging those
who put forth these theories. We are not attacking individual
scientists here; it is quite comprehensible that they are involved in
a line of thought which must lead to such errors we must admit
this in all fairness. The one, perhaps, may not be able to free
himself from scientific tradition; another perhaps considers it
excusable, for, having a wife and children he would be in an awkward
position if he were to break away from the ruling opinions. But the
whole thing must be considered as a phenomenon of the times, for
Science is beginning not only to spread abroad false theories, but to
take away the life-promoting remedies, the spiritual conception of
life, which is able to fortify and which is alone able to stand up
against the physical, the power which must otherwise overwhelm
man. The physical can only possess overwhelming power as long as a man
does not build up strength in his spiritual nature. If he does this, a
warrior will grow up within him, a warrior who will defend him against
the physical.
We cannot hope that this should come about from one day to the next.
But those who have the right understanding of things will gradually
learn the anthroposophical view of phenomena in face of which man at
first seems powerless. What is not equalised in one life is made good
in the long run. If we contemplate a single life, as well as life from
incarnation to incarnation, we shall see that rightly understood,
karma is a law that no longer depresses us, but rather one which
brings us comfort and force whereby to make ourselves stronger. The
law of karma is a law of life, and we must understand it as such. The
point is, not that we should know a few single abstract thoughts, but
that we should study the life-truths of Anthroposophy in the details
of life, and never weary of anthroposophical work, while we permeate
ourselves with its different truths.
If you hold this as an ideal before you, you will be living an
anthroposophical life in the true sense of the words. You will then
know why it is that we do not satisfy ourselves with merely reading
one or two books, but regard Anthroposophy as something in which our
heart is concerned and which never ceases to occupy us; something to
which we gladly return again and again, and of which we know that the
oftener we return the more it will enrich our lives.
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