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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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The Mission of Christian Rosenkreutz
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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The Mission of Christian Rosenkreutz
Schmidt Number: S-2531
On-line since: 8th December, 2003
II. THE DAWN OF OCCULTISM IN THE MODERN AGE
Today we will lead on from the lecture of the day before yesterday to
certain matters which can promote a deep personal understanding of the
anthroposophical life. If we pass over our life in review and make
real efforts to get to the root of its happenings, very much can be
gained. We shall recognise the justice of many things in our destiny
and realise that we have deserved them. Suppose someone has
been frivolous and superficial in the present incarnation and is
subsequently struck by a blow of fate. It may not be possible,
externally, to connect the blow of fate directly with the
frivolousness, but a feeling arises, nevertheless, that there is
justice in it. Further examination of life will reveal blows of fate
which we can only attribute to chance, for which we find no
explanation whatever. These two categories of experiences are to be
discovered as we look back over our life. Now it is important to make
a clear distinction between apparent chance and obvious
necessity. When a man reviews his life with reference to these
two kinds of happenings, he will fail to reach any higher stage of
development unless he endeavours to have a very clear perception of
everything that seems to him to be chance. We must try, above all, to
have clear perception of those things we have not desired,
which go right against the grain. It is possible to induce a certain
attitude of soul and to say to ourselves: How would it be if I were to
take those things which I have not desired, which are disagreeable to
me and imagine that I myself actually willed them? In other
words, we imagine with all intensity that we ourselves willed our
particular circumstances.
In regard to apparently fortuitous happenings, we must picture the
possibility of having ourselves put forth a deliberate and strong
effort of will in order to bring them about. Meditatively as it were,
we must induce this attitude to happenings which, on the face of them,
seem to be purely fortuitous in our lives. Every human being today is
capable of this mental exercise. If we proceed in this way, a very
definite impression will ultimately be made upon the soul; we shall
feel as though something were striving to be released from us. The
soul says to itself: Here, as a mental image, I have before me a
second being; he is actually there. We cannot get rid of this
image and the being gradually becomes our Double. The soul
begins to feel a real connection with this being who has been imagined
into existence, to realise that this being actually exists within us.
If this conception deepens into a vivid and intense experience, we
become aware that this imagined being is by no means
without significance. The conviction comes to us: this being was
already once in existence and at that time you had within you the
impulses of will which led to the apparently chance happenings of
today. Thereby we reach a deep-rooted conviction that we were already
in existence before coming down into the body. Every human being today
can have this conviction. And now let us consider the question
of the successive incarnations of the human being. What is it that
reincarnates? How can we discover the answer to this question?
There are three fundamental and distinct categories of experiences in
the life of soul. Firstly, our mental pictures, our ideas, our
thoughts. In forming a mental picture, our attitude may well be one of
complete neutrality; we need not love or hate what we picture
inwardly, neither need we feel sympathy or antipathy towards it.
Secondly, there are the moods and shades of feeling which arise by the
side of the ideas or the thoughts; the cause of these moods in the
life of feeling is that we like or love one thing, dislike or abhor
another, and so forth. The third kind of experiences in the life of
soul are the impulses of will. There are, of course, transitional
stages but speaking generally these are the three categories. Moreover
it is fundamentally characteristic of a healthy life of soul to be
able to keep these three kinds of experiences separate and distinct
from each other. Our life of thought and mental presentation arises
because we receive stimuli from outside. Nobody will find it difficult
to realise that the life of thought is the most closely bound up with
the present incarnation. This, after all, is quite obvious when we
bear in mind that speech is the instrument whereby we express our
thoughts; and speech, or language, must, in the nature of things,
differ in every incarnation. We no more bring language with us at the
beginning of a new incarnation than we bring thoughts and ideas. The
language as well as the thoughts must be acquired afresh in each
incarnation. Hebbel once wrote something very remarkable in his diary.
The idea occurred to him that a scene in which the reincarnated
Plato was being soundly chastised by the teacher for his lack of
understanding of Plato would produce a very striking effect in a play!
A man does not carry over his thought and mental life from one
incarnation to another and takes practically nothing of it with him
into his post-mortem existence. After death we evolve no thoughts or
mental pictures but have direct perceptions, just as our
physical eyes have perceptions of colour. After death, the world of
concepts is seen as a kind of net stretching across existence. But our
feelings, our moods of heart and feeling these we retain after
death and also bring their forces with us as qualities and tendencies
of soul into a new earthly life. For example, even if a child's life
of thought is undeveloped, we shall be able to notice quite definite
tendencies in his life of feeling. And because our impulses of will
are linked with feelings, we also take them with us into our life
after death. If, for example, a man lends himself to fallacy and
error, the effect upon his life of feeling is not the same as if he
lends himself to truth. For a long time after death we suffer from the
consequences of false mental presentations and ideas. Our attention
must therefore turn to the qualities and moods of feeling and the
impulses of the will, when we ask: What is it that actually passes on
from one incarnation to another?
Suppose something painful happened to us ten or twenty years ago. In
thought today we may be able to remember it quite distinctly and in
detail. But the actual pain we felt at the time has all but faded
away; we cannot re-experience the stirrings of feeling and impulses of
will by which it was accompanied. Think for a moment of Bismarck and
the overwhelming difficulties of which he was conscious in taking his
decision to go to war in 1866; think of what tumultuous feelings, what
teeming impulses of will were working in Bismarck at that time! But
even when writing his memoirs, would Bismarck have been conscious of
these emotions and resolves with anything like the same intensity? Of
course not! Man's memory between birth and death is composed of
thoughts and mental pictures. It may, of course, be that even after
ten or twenty years, a feeling of pain comes over us at the
recollection of some sorrowful event, but generally speaking the pain
will have greatly diminished after this lapse of time; in thought,
however, we can remember the very details of the event. If we now
picture to ourselves that we actually willed certain painful events,
that in reality we welcomed things which in our youth we may have
hated, the very difficulty of this exercise rouses the soul and thus
has an effect upon the life of feeling. Suppose, for example, a stone
once crashed down upon us. We now try with all intensity to
picture that we ourselves willed it so. Through such mental pictures
that we ourselves have willed the chance events in our life
we arouse, in the life of feeling, memory of our earlier
incarnations. In this way we begin to realise how we are rooted in the
spiritual world, we begin to understand our destiny. We have brought
with us, from our previous incarnation, the will for the chance events
of this life.
To devote ourselves in meditation to such thoughts, and elaborate
them, is of the highest importance. Between death and a new birth too,
much transpires, for this period is infinitely rich in experiences
purely spiritual experiences, of course. We therefore bring
with us qualities of feeling and impulses of will from the period
between death and a new birth, that is to say, from the spiritual
world. Upon this rests a certain occurrence of very great importance
in the modern age, but one of which little notice is taken. The
occurrence is to be found in the lives of many people today but
usually passes by unnoticed. It is, however, the task of Anthroposophy
to point to such an occurrence and its significance. Let me make it
clear by an example. Suppose a man has occasion to go somewhere
or other and his path happens to take him in the wake of another human
being, a child perhaps. Suddenly the man catches sight of a yawning
chasm at the edge of the path along which the child is walking. A few
steps farther and the child will inevitably fall over the edge into
the chasm. He runs to save the child, runs and runs, entirely
forgetting about the chasm. Then he suddenly hears a voice calling out
to him from somewhere: Stand still! He halts as though
nailed to the spot. At that moment the child catches hold of a tree
and also stops, so that no harm befalls. If no voice had called at
that moment the man must inevitably have fallen into the chasm. And
now he wonders from whom the voice came. He finds no single soul who
could have called, but he realises that he would quite certainly have
been killed if he had not heard this voice; yet however closely he
investigates he cannot find that the warning came from any physical
voice.
In deep self-observation, many human beings living at the present time
would be able to recognise a similar experience in their lives. But
far too little attention is paid to such things. An experience of this
kind may pass by without leaving a trace then the impression
fades away and no importance is attached to the experience. But
suppose a man has been attentive and realises that it was not without
significance. The thought may then occur to him: At that point in your
life you were facing a crisis, a karmic crisis; your life should
really have ended at that moment, for you had forfeited it. You were
saved by something akin to chance and since then a second life has as
it were been planted on the first; this second life is to be regarded
as a gift bestowed upon you and you must act accordingly. When such an
experience makes a man feel that his life, from that time onwards, has
been bestowed upon him as a gift, this means that he can be accounted
a follower of Christian Rosenkreutz. For this is how Christian
Rosenkreutz calls the souls whom he has chosen. A man who can recall
such an occurrence and everyone sitting here can discover
something of the kind in their lives if they observe closely enough
has the right to say to himself: Christian Rosenkreutz has
given me a sign from the spiritual world that I belong to his stream.
Christian Rosenkreutz has added such an experience to my karma.
This is the way in which Christian Rosenkreutz chooses his pupils;
this is how he gathers his community. A man who is conscious of
this experience knows with certainty that a path has been pointed out
to him which he must follow, trying to discover how he can dedicate
himself to the service of Rosicrucianism. If there are some who have
not yet recognised the sign, they will do so later on; for he to whom
the sign has once been given will never again be free from it.
That such an experience comes to a man is due to the fact that during
the period between his last death and his present birth, he was in
contact with Christian Rosenkreutz in the spiritual world. It was then
that Christian Rosenkreutz chose us, imparting an impulse of will
which leads us, now, to such experiences. This is the way in which
spiritual connections are established. Materialistic thought will
naturally regard all these things as hallucinations, just as it
regards the experience of Paul at Damascus as having been an
hallucination. The logical conclusion to be drawn from this is that
the whole of Christianity is based upon an hallucination, therefore
upon error. For theologians are perfectly well aware that the Event at
Damascus is the foundation-stone of the whole of subsequent
Christianity. And if this foundation stone itself is nothing but an
illusion, then, if thought is consistent, everything built upon it
must obviously be fallacy.
An attempt has been made today to show that certain happenings,
certain experiences in life may indicate to us how we are interwoven
in the spiritual fabric of world existence. If we develop the memory
belonging to our life of feeling, we grow onwards into the spiritual
life which streams and pulses through the world. Theoretical knowledge
alone does not make men true theosophists; those who understand their
own life and the life of other human beings in the sense indicated
today they and they alone are true theosophists.
Anthroposophy is a basic power which can transform our life of soul.
And the goal of the work in our groups must be that the intimate
experiences of the soul change in character, that through the gradual
development of the memory belonging to the life of feeling we become
aware of Immortality. The true theosophist or anthroposophist must
have this conviction: If you so will, if you really apply the
forces within you in all their strength, then you can utterly
transform your character. We must learn to feel and perceive that the
Immortal holds sway in ourselves and in everyone else. What
makes a man into a true anthroposophist is that his faculties remain
receptive his whole life long, even when his hair is white. The
realisation that progress is possible always and forever will
transform our whole spiritual life.
One of the consequences of materialism is that human beings become old
prematurely. Thirty years ago, for example, children looked quite
different; there are children today of 10 or 11 years old who give the
impression of old and aged people. Human beings especially
adolescents have become so precocious, so old beyond their
years. They maintain that lies such as that of babies being brought by
the stork should not be told to children, that children should be
enlightened on such matters. Those who come after us will
know that the souls of our children hover down as bird-like,
spirit-forms from the higher worlds. To have an imaginative conception
of many things still beyond our comprehension is of very great
importance. As regards the case in question, it is possible to find a
much better imaginative picture than the legend of the stork; the
reality is that spiritual forces are in play between the child and his
parents or teachers; a kind of secret magnetism is in operation. We
must ourselves believe in any imaginative picture we give to
the children. If it is a question of explaining death to them, we must
point to another happening in Nature. We say to the children:
See how the butterfly flies out of the chrysalis. That is what
happens to the human soul at death. But we must ourselves
believe that the Powers behind the Universe have given us, in the
butterfly emerging from the chrysalis, an image of the soul going
forth from the body. The World-Spirit has inscribed such a picture in
Nature to draw our attention to what here transpires. It is infinitely
important to be always capable of learning, of always remaining young,
independently of our physical body. The great task of Theosophy, or
Anthroposophy, is to bring to the world the rejuvenation of which it
stands sorely in need. We must get beyond the banal and the purely
material. To recognise Soul and Spirit as powers operating in life
this must be the aim of the work in our Groups. More and more
we must be permeated with the knowledge that the soul can gain mastery
over the external world.
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Last Modified: 23-Nov-2024
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