LECTURE ONE
I
am very glad to be able to speak here again after a comparatively
long absence. Those of you who were present at our meeting in Munich
earlier this year [From 25th to 31st August, 1912, eight lectures
were given with the following general title: On
Initiation, Eternity and the Passing Moment.
On Spiritual Light and Darkness of Life.]
or have heard something about my Mystery Play,
The Guardian of the Threshold,
will have realised what
the attitude of the soul must be if an adequate conception is to be
acquired of the content of Spiritual Science or, let us say, of
Occultism.
A
great deal has been said previously about the Luciferic and Ahrimanic
beings. The aim of The Guardian of the Threshold was to
show that the essential nature of these beings can be revealed only
by studying them very gradually and from many different aspects. It
is not enough to form a simple concept or give an ordinary definition
of these beings — popular as such definitions are. My purpose
was to show from as many different sides as possible, the part played
by these beings in the lives of men. The Play will also have helped
you to realise that there must be complete truthfulness and deep
seriousness when speaking of the spiritual worlds. This, after all,
has been the keynote of the lectures I have given here. It must be
emphasised all the more strongly at the present time because there is
so little recognition of the seriousness and value of genuine
anthroposophical endeavours. If there is one thing that I have tried
to emphasise in the lectures given over the years, it is that you
should embark upon all your anthroposophical efforts in this spirit
of truthfulness and earnestness, and become thoroughly conscious of
their significance in world-existence as a whole, in the evolutionary
process of humanity and in the spiritual content of our present age.
It cannot be emphasised too often that the essence of Anthroposophy
cannot be grasped with the help of a few simple concepts or a theory
briefly propounded, let alone a programme. The forces of the whole
soul must be involved. But life itself is a process of Becoming, of
development. Someone might argue that he can hardly be expected to
ally himself with an Anthroposophical Movement if he is immediately
faced with a demand for self-development and told that he can only
hope to penetrate slowly and gradually to the essence of
Anthroposophy; he may ask how he can decide to join something for
which he can prepare only slowly. The rejoinder to this would be that
before a human being can reach the highest stage of development he
already has in his heart and in his soul the sense of truth which has
led mankind as a whole to strive for such development, and he need
only devote himself open-mindedly to this sense of truth, with the
will for truth which lies in the depths of his soul unless prejudices
have led him astray. He must avoid empty theories and high-sounding
programmes. Man is able to sense truth where it genuinely exists.
Honest criticism is therefore always possible, even if someone is
only at the very beginning of the path of attainment. This, however,
does not preclude him from attributing supreme importance to
anthroposophical endeavour.
In our present age there are many influences which
divert men from the natural feeling for truth that is present in
their souls. Over the years it has often been possible to indicate
these misleading influences and I need not do it again today. My
purpose is to emphasise how necessary it is — even if there is
already some knowledge of occult science — to approach and
study things again and again from constantly new sides. One example
of what I mean is our study of the four Gospels. This autumn I
brought these studies to a provisional conclusion with a course of
lectures on the Gospel of St. Mark. These studies of the Gospels may
be taken as a standard example of the way in which the great truths
of existence must be approached from different sides. Each Gospel
affords an opportunity to view the Mystery of Golgotha from a
different angle, and indeed we cannot begin really to know anything
essential about this Mystery until we have studied it from the four
different viewpoints presented in the four Gospels.
In
what way have our studies over the last ten or twelve years demonstrated
this? Those of you who want to be clear about this need only turn to my book
Christianity as Mystical Fact,
the content of which was first given in the form of lectures, before the
foundation of the German Section of the Theosophical Society. Anyone
who seriously studies this book will find that it already contained
the gist of what I have since said in the course of years, about the
Mystery of Golgotha and the four Gospels. Nothing, however, would be
more unjustified than to believe that by knowing the contents of that
book you would ipso facto have an adequate understanding of
the Mystery of Golgotha. All the lectures given since the book
appeared have been the natural outcome of that original spiritual
study; nowhere are they at variance with what was then said. It has
furthermore been possible to open up new ways for contemplating the
Mystery of Golgotha, thus enabling us to penetrate more and more
deeply into its significance. The attempt has been made to substitute
direct experience of the spiritual facts for concepts, theories and
abstract speculations. And if, in spite of it all, a feeling of a
certain lack still exists, this lack is due to something that is
inevitable on the physical plane, namely, the time factor. Hence I
have always assumed that you would have patience and wait for matters
to develop gradually. This is also an indication of how what I have
to say to you during this coming winter should be understood.
In the course of years we have spoken a great deal of
the life between death and a new birth. The same subject will,
however, be dealt with in the forthcoming lectures, the reason being
that during this last summer and autumn it has been my task to
undertake further spiritual research into this realm and to present
an aspect of the subject which could not previously be dealt with. It
is only now possible to consider certain matters which bring home the
profound moral significance of the super-sensible truths pertaining to
this realm. In addition to all other demands to which only very brief
reference has been made, there is one which in this vain and arrogant
age is a cause of offence to numbers of individuals. But we must not
allow it to deter us from the earnestness and respect for truth that
are due to our Movement. The demand will continue to be made that by
dint of earnest, intimate efforts we shall learn to be receptive to
knowledge brought from the spiritual world.
For some years now the relationship of human beings
living on the physical plane to the spiritual worlds has changed from
what it was through almost the whole of the nineteenth century. Until
the last third of that century men had little access to the spiritual
worlds; it was necessary for evolution that only little of the
content of those worlds should flow into the human soul. But now we
are living in an age when the soul need only be receptive and duly
prepared and revelations from the spiritual worlds will be able to
flow into it. Individual souls will become more and more receptive
and, being aware of their task in the present age, they will find
this inflow of spiritual knowledge to be a reality. Hence the further
demand is made that anthroposophists shall not turn deaf ears to what
can make its way into the soul today from the spiritual worlds.
Before entering into the main theme of these lectures I want to speak
of two characteristics of the spiritual life to which special
attention must be paid.
Between death and the new birth a human being
experiences the realities of the spiritual world in a very definite
way. But he also experiences these realities through Initiation; he
experiences them too if his soul is prepared during his life in the
physical body in a way that enables him to participate in the
spiritual worlds. Hence it is true to say that what takes place
between death and the new birth — which is, in fact, existence
in the spiritual world — can be revealed through Initiation.
Attention must be paid to two points which emerge from
what has often been said here; they are essential not only to
experience of the spiritual worlds but also to the right
understanding of communications received from these worlds. The
difference between conditions in the spiritual world and the physical
world has often been emphasised, also the fact that when the soul
enters the spiritual world it finds itself in a sphere in which it is
essential to become accustomed to a great deal that is the exact
opposite of conditions in the physical world. Here is one example:
If, on the physical plane, something is to be brought about by us, we
have to be active, to use our hands, to move our physical body from
one place to another. Activity on our part is necessary if we are to
bring about something in the physical world. In the spiritual worlds
exactly the opposite holds good. I am speaking always of the present
epoch. If something is to happen through us in the spiritual worlds,
it must be achieved through our inner calm, our inner tranquillity;
in the spiritual worlds the capacity to await events with
tranquillity corresponds to busy activity on the physical plane. The
less we bestir ourselves on the physical plane, the less we can bring
about; the more active we are, the more can happen. In the spiritual
world, the calmer our soul can become, the more all inner
restlessness can be avoided, the more we shall be able to achieve. It
is therefore essential to regard whatever comes to pass as something
bestowed upon us by grace, something that comes to us as a blessing
because we have deserved it as the fruit of inner tranquillity.
I
have often said that anyone possessed of spiritual knowledge is aware
that 1899 was a very significant year; it was the end of a period of
5,000 years in human history, the so-called Lesser Kali Yuga. Since
that year it has become necessary to allow the spiritual to come to
men in a way differing from what was previously usual. I will give
you a concrete example. In the early twelfth century, a man named
Norbert [St. Norbert, c. 1085–1134. In 1121 founded the
Order of Norbertines. In 1126 he became Archbishop of Magdeburg.]
founded a religious Order in the West. Before the idea of
founding the Order came to him, Norbert was a loose-living man, full
of sensuality and worldly impulses. One day something very unusual
happened to him; he was struck by lightning. This did not prove
fatal, but his whole being was transformed. There are many such
examples in history. The inner connection between Norbert's physical
body, etheric body, astral body and Ego was changed by the force
contained in the lightning. It was then that he founded his Order,
and although, as in so many other cases, it failed to fulfil the aims
of its founder, in many respects it did good at the time. Such
‘chance’ events, as they are called nowadays, have been
numerous. But this was not a chance happening; it was an event of
world-karma. The man was chosen to perform a task of special
importance and to make this possible, particular bodily conditions
had to be created. An outer event, an external influence, was
necessary.
Since
the year 1899 such influences on the souls of men must be purely
inner influences, not exerted so definitely from outside. Not that
there was an abrupt transition; but since the year 1899, influences
exerted on the souls of men must more and more take effect inwardly.
You may remember what I once said about Christian Rosenkreutz
— that when he wishes to call a human soul to himself, it is
a more inward call. Before 1899 such calls were made by means of
outer events; since that year they have become more inward.
Intercourse between human souls and the higher Hierarchies will
become more and more dependent upon inner exertions, and men will
have to apply the deepest, most intimate forces of their souls in
order to maintain this intercourse with the Beings of the
Hierarchies.
What I have just described to you as an incisive point
in life on the physical plane has its counterpart in the spiritual
world — visibly for one who is a seer — in much that has
taken place between the Beings of the higher Hierarchies. At this
time there were certain tasks which it was incumbent upon the Beings
of the Hierarchies to carry out among themselves, but one particular
condition must be noted. The Beings whose task in the spiritual
worlds was to bring about the ending of Kali Yuga, needed something
from our Earth, something taking place on our Earth. It was necessary
that in certain souls who were sufficiently mature there should be
knowledge of this change, or at least that such souls should be able
to envisage it. For just as man on the physical plane needs a brain
in order to develop consciousness, so do the Beings of the
Hierarchies need human thoughts in which their deeds are reflected.
Thus the world of men is also necessary for the spiritual world; it
co-operates with the spiritual world and is an essential factor —
but it must co-operate in the right way. Those who were ready
previously or are ready now to participate in this activity from the
human side, would not have been right then, nor would they be right
now, to agitate in the way that is customary on the physical plane
for the furtherance of something that is to take place in the
spiritual world. We do not help the Spirits of the higher Hierarchies
by busy activity on the physical plane, but primarily by having some
measure of understanding of what is to happen; then, in restfulness
and concentration of soul, we should await a revelation of the
spiritual world. What we can contribute is the inner quietude we can
achieve, the attitude of soul we can induce in ourselves to await
this bestowal of grace.
Thus, paradoxical as it may seem, our activity in the
higher worlds depends upon our own inner tranquillity; the calmer we
can become, the more will the facts of the spiritual world be able to
come to expression through us. Hence it is also necessary, if we are
to participate effectively in a spiritual Movement, to be able to
develop this mood of tranquillity. And in the Anthroposophical
Movement it would be especially desirable for its adherents to
endeavour to achieve this inner tranquillity, this consciousness of
Grace in their attitude to the spiritual world.
Among the various activities in which man is engaged on
the physical plane it is really only in the domain of artistic
creation, or where there is a genuine striving for knowledge or for
the advancement of a spiritual Movement, that these conditions hold
good. An artist will assuredly not create the best work of which his
gifts are capable if he is perpetually active and is impatient to
make progress. He will produce his best work if he can wait for the
moment when Grace is vouchsafed to him and if he can abstain from
activity when the spirit is not speaking. And quite certainly no
higher knowledge will be attained by one who attempts to formulate it
out of concepts already familiar to him. Higher knowledge can be
attained only by one who is able to wait quietly, with complete
resignation, when confronted by a problem or riddle of existence, and
who says to himself: I must wait until the answer comes to me like a
flash of light from the spiritual worlds. Again, someone who rushes
from one person to another, trying to convince them that some
particular spiritual Movement is the only genuine one, will certainly
not be setting about this in the right way; he should wait until the
souls he approaches have recognised the urge in themselves to seek
the truths of the spiritual world. That is how we should respond to
any illumination shining down into our physical world; but it is
particularly true of everything that man can himself bring about in
the spiritual world. It may truly be said that even the most
practical accomplishments in that realm depend upon the establishment
of a certain state of tranquillity.
I want now to speak of so-called spiritual healing. Here
again it is not the movements or manipulations carried out by the
healer that are of prime importance; they are necessary, but only as
preparation. The aim is to establish a condition of rest, of balance.
Whatever is outwardly visible in a case of spiritual healing is only
the preparation for what the healer is trying to do; it is the final
result that is of importance. In such a case the situation is like
weighing something on a pair of scales: first, we put in the one
scale what we want to weigh; in the other scale we put a weight and
this sets the beam moving to right and left. But it is only when
equilibrium has been established that we can read the weight.
Something similar is true of actions in the spiritual worlds.
In
respect of knowledge, of perception, however, there is a difference.
How does perception come about in everyday life on the physical
plane? Everyone is aware that with the exception of certain spheres
of the physical plane, objects present themselves to us from morning
until evening during the waking life of day; from minute to minute
new impressions are made upon us. It is in exceptional circumstances
only that we, on our side, seek for impressions and do with objects
what otherwise they do to us. This, however, is already near to being
a searcher for knowledge. Spiritual knowledge is a different matter.
We ourselves must set before our soul whatever is to be
presented to it. Whereas we must be absolutely quiescent if
anything is to come about, to happen through us in the spiritual
world, we must be uninterruptedly active if we really desire
to understand something in the spiritual world. Connected with this
is the fact that many people who would like to be anthroposophists
find that the knowledge we are trying to promote here is too baffling
for them. Many of them complain: in Anthroposophy one has to be
always learning, always pondering, always busy! But without such
efforts it is not possible to acquire any understanding of the
spiritual worlds. The soul must make strenuous efforts and
contemplate everything from many sides. Mental pictures and concepts
of the higher worlds must be developed through steady, tranquil work.
In the physical world, if we want to have, say, a table, we must
acquire it by active effort. But in the spiritual world, if we want
to acquire something, we must develop the necessary tranquillity. If
anything is to happen, it emerges from the twilight. But when it is a
matter of knowing something, we must exert every possible effort to
create the necessary Inspirations. If we are to ‘know’
something, effort is essential; the soul must be inwardly active,
move from one Imagination to another, one Inspiration to another, one
Intuition to another. We must create the whole structure; nothing
will come to us that we have not ourselves produced in our search for
knowledge. Thus conditions in the spiritual world are exactly the
opposite of what holds good in the physical world.
I have had to give this introduction in order that we
may agree together, firstly, as to how certain facts are discovered,
but secondly, how they can be understood as more is said of them. In
these lectures I shall deal less with the life immediately following
death — known to us under the name of Kamaloka — the
essential aspects of which are already familiar to you. We shall be
more concerned to study from somewhat new points of view those
periods in the life after death which follow the period of Kamaloka.
First of all it is important to describe the general
character of that life. The first stage of higher knowledge is what
may be called the ‘Imaginative’ life, or life filled with
true, genuine visions. Just as in physical life we are surrounded by
the world of colours, sounds, scents, tastes, mental pictures which
we form for ourselves by means of our intellect, so in the spiritual
world we are surrounded by ‘Imaginations’ — which
can also be called ‘visions’. But we must realise that
these Imaginations or visions, when they are true in the spiritual
sense, are not the imagery of dream but realities. Let us take a
definite case.
When a human being has passed through the Gate of Death
he comes into contact with those who died before him and with whom he
was connected in some way during life. During the period between
death and the new birth we are actually together with those who
belong to us. Just as in the physical world we become aware of
objects by seeing their colours, hearing their sounds and so on, in
the same way we are surrounded after death, figuratively speaking, by
a cloud of visions. Everything around us is vision; we ourselves are
vision in that world just as here on Earth we are flesh and bone. But
this vision is not a dream; we know that it is reality. When we
encounter someone who is dead and with whom we previously had some
connection, he too is ‘vision’; he is enveloped in a
cloud of visions. But just as on the physical plane we know that the
colour ‘red’ comes, let us say, from a red rose, on the
spiritual plane we know that the ‘vision’ comes from the
spiritual being of someone who passed through the gate of death
before us. But here I must draw your attention to a particular
aspect, especially as it is experienced by everyone who is living
through this period after death. Here on the physical plane it may,
for example, be the case that at least as far as we can judge, we
ought to have loved some individual but have loved him too little; we
have, in fact, deprived him of love or have hurt him in some way. In
such circumstances, if we are not stony-hearted, the idea may occur
to us that we must make reparation. When this idea comes to us it is
possible to compensate for what has happened. On the physical plane
we can modify the previously existing relationship but during the
period immediately following Kamaloka, we cannot. From the very
nature of the encounter we may well be aware that we have hurt the
person in some way or deprived him of the love we ought to have shown
him; we may also wish to make reparation, but we cannot. During this
period all we can do is to continue the relationship which existed
between us before death. We perceive what was amiss but for the time
being we can do nothing to make amends. In this world of visions
which envelops us like a cloud, we cannot alter anything. The
relationship we had with an individual who died before us remains.
This is often one of the more painful experiences also associated
with Initiation. A person experiences much more deeply the
significance of his relation to the physical plane than he was able
to do with his eyes or his intellect, but for all that he cannot
directly change anything. This, in fact, constitutes the pain and
martyrdom of spiritual knowledge, in so far as it is self-knowledge
and relates to our own life. After death, relationships between
individuals remain and continue as they were during earthly life.
When
recently this fact presented itself to my spiritual sight with
tremendous force, something further occurred to me. During my life I
have devoted a great deal of study to the works of Homer and
have tried to understand many things contained in these ancient
epics. On this particular occasion I was reminded of a certain
passage. Homer, by the way, was called by the Greeks the ‘blind’
Homer, thus indicating his spiritual seership. In speaking of the
realm through which men journey after death, Homer calls it the
‘realm of the Shades in which no change is possible’.
Here once again I realised that we can rightly understand much that
is contained in the great masterpieces and revelations of mankind
only by drawing upon the very depths of spiritual knowledge. Much of
what will lead to an understanding of humanity as a whole must depend
upon a new recognition by men of those great ancestors whose souls
were radiant with spiritual light. Any sensitive soul will be moved
by the recognition that this ancient seer was able to write as he did
only because the truth of the spiritual world shone into his soul.
Here begins the true reverence for the divine-spiritual forces which
stream through the world and especially through the hearts and souls
of men. This attitude makes it possible to realise how the progress
and development of the world are furthered. A very great deal that is
true in the deepest sense is contained in the works of men whose
gifts were on a level with those of Homer. But this truth which was
once directly revealed to an ancient, dreamlike clairvoyance, has now
been lost and must be regained on the path leading to spiritual
knowledge.
In order to substantiate still further this example of
what has been bestowed upon humanity by creative genius, I will now
speak of something else as well. There was a certain truth which I
strongly resisted when it first dawned upon me, which seemed to me to
be paradoxical, but which through inner necessity I was eventually
bound to recognise.
The spiritual investigation on which I was engaged at
that time was also connected with the study of certain works of art.
Among them was one which I had previously seen and studied although a
particular aspect of it had not struck me before. I am speaking now
of the Medici tombs in the Chapel designed and built in Florence by
Michelangelo. Two members of the Medici family, of whom no more need
be said at present, were to be immortalised in statues. But
Michelangelo added four so-called ‘allegorical’ figures,
named at his suggestion, ‘Morning’ and ‘Evening’,
‘Day’ and ‘Night’. ‘Day’ and
‘Night’ were placed at the foot of one statue; ‘Morning’
and ‘Evening’ at the foot of the other. Even if you have
no particularly good photographs of these allegorical figures, you
will easily be able to verify what I have to say about them.
We will begin with ‘Night’, the most famous
of the four. In guide-books you can read that the postures of the
limbs in the recumbent figure of ‘Night’ are unnatural,
that no human being could sleep in that position and therefore the
figure cannot be a good symbolic presentation of ‘Night’.
But now let me say something else. Suppose we are looking at the
allegorical figure of ‘Night’ with occult vision. We can
then say to ourselves: when a human being is asleep, his Ego and
astral body have left the physical and etheric bodies. It is
conceivable that someone might visualise a particular posture which
most accurately portrays that of the etheric body when the astral
body and Ego have left. As we go about during the day our gestures
and movements are conditioned by the fact that the astral body and
Ego are within the physical and etheric bodies. But at night the
astral body and Ego are outside and the etheric body alone is in the
physical body. The etheric body then unfolds its own activity and
mobility, and thus adopts a certain posture. The impression may well
be that there is no more fitting portrayal of the free activity of
the etheric body than that achieved by Michelangelo in this figure of
‘Night’. In point of fact, the movement is conveyed with
such precision that no more appropriate presentation of the etheric
body under such circumstances can be imagined.
Now let us turn to the figure of ‘Day’.
Suppose we could induce in a human being a condition in which his
astral and etheric bodies were as quiescent as possible and the Ego
especially active. No posture could be more fitting for the activity
of the Ego than that portrayed by Michelangelo in the figure of
‘Day’. The postures are not allegorical but drawn
directly and realistically from life. The artist has succeeded in
capturing as it were for earthly eternity the postures which in the
evolutionary process most aptly express the activity of the Ego and
the activity of the etheric body.
We come now to the other figures. First let us take that
of ‘Evening’. If we think of how, in a healthily
developed human being, the etheric body emerges and the physical body
relaxes — as also happens drastically at death — but if
we think, not of actual death but of the emergence of the etheric
body, the astral body and the Ego from a man's physical body, we
shall find that the posture then assumed by the physical body is
accurately portrayed in the figure of ‘Evening’. Again,
if we think of the activity of the astral body while there is
diminished activity of the etheric body and Ego, we shall find the
most precise representation in Michelangelo's figure of ‘Morning’.
So on the one side we have the portrayals of the activity of the
etheric body and of the Ego (in the figures of ‘Night’
and ‘Day’) and on the other side the portrayals of the
physical and astral bodies (in the figures of ‘Evening’
and ‘Morning’).
As already said, at first I resisted this conclusion,
but the more carefully one investigates the more one is compelled to
accept it. What I have wanted to indicate here is how the artist is
inspired by the spiritual world. Admittedly, in the case of
Michelangelo the process was more or less unconscious but in spite of
that his creations could only have been produced by the radiance of
the spiritual world shining into the physical. Occultism does not
lead to the destruction of works of art but on the contrary to a much
deeper understanding of them; as a result. a great deal of what
passes for art today will in the future no longer do so. A number of
people may be disappointed but truth will be the gainer! I could well
understand the foundation of the legend that has grown up in
connection with the most elaborate of these figures. The legend is to
the effect that when Michelangelo was alone with the figure of
‘Night’ in the Medici Chapel in Florence, he could make
the figure rise up and walk. I will not go further into this, but
when we know that this figure gives expression to the ‘life-body’,
the significance of the legend is obvious.
The same applies in many cases — in that of Homer,
for instance. Homer speaks of the spiritual realm, a realm of the
Shades in which there can be no change or alteration. But when we
study the conditions prevailing in the period of life following
Kamaloka, we begin to have a new understanding of works of a divinely
blessed man such as Homer. And a great deal will be similarly
enriched through Spiritual Science.
Useful as it may be to indicate these things, they are
not of prime importance in actual life. Of prime importance is the
fact that mutual relationships are continually being formed between
one human being and another. A man's attitude towards another
individual will be very different if he detects a spiritual quality
in him or thinks of human beings as pictured by a materialistic view
of life. The sacred riddle that every human being should be to us can
only be this to our feelings and perceptions when we have within our
own soul something that is able to throw spiritual light upon the
other soul. By deepening our contemplation of cosmic secrets —
with which the secrets of human existence are connected — we
shall learn to understand the nature of the man standing before us;
we shall learn to silence our preconceptions and to feel and
recognise the true qualities of the individual in question. The most
important light that Spiritual Science can give will be the light it
throws upon the human soul. Thereby sound social feelings, also those
feelings of love which ought to prevail between human beings, will
make their way into the world as a fruit of true spiritual knowledge.
We shall recognise that our grasp of spiritual knowledge alone can
help this fruit to grow and thrive. When Schopenhauer said: “To
preach morality is easy; to establish morality is difficult”,
he was giving expression to true insight. After all, it is not so
very difficult to discover moral principles, neither is it difficult
to preach morality. But to quicken the human soul at the point where
spiritual knowledge can germinate and develop into true morality
capable of sustaining life — that is what matters. Our attitude
to spiritual knowledge can also establish within us the seeds of a
truly human morality of the future. The morality of the future will
either be built on the foundations of spiritual knowledge — or
it will not be built at all!
Love
of truth requires that we acknowledge these things; it requires us to
deepen our anthroposophical life; and above all to bear in mind what
has been said today as an introductory fact, namely, that whereas
knowledge demands activity, action in the spiritual
world demands of us inner tranquillity, in order that we may
prove worthy of Grace. You will now be able to understand that during
the period between death and the new birth, when we are confronting
another being, we can realise through the activity we then unfold
whether we have deprived him of love or done anything to him that we
ought not to have done. But, as I have said, during this period we
cannot induce the tranquillity of soul that is necessary if the wrong
is to be righted. In the lectures this winter I shall be describing
the period during which it is actually possible in the natural course
of the life between death and the new birth, to establish conditions
in which change can be made possible — in other words, when a
person's karma can be influenced in a certain way. We must, however,
carefully distinguish between the point of time we have just been
considering and the later period between death and the new birth when
the tasks are different.
It remains to be said that there are certain conditions
which will enable a human being to live through his existence after
death in a favourable or an unfavourable way. It will be found that
the mode of existence of two or more human beings after the period
immediately following their life in Kamaloka depends largely upon
their moral disposition on Earth. Human beings who displayed good
moral qualities on Earth will enjoy favourable conditions during the
period immediately following Kamaloka; those who displayed defective
morality will experience bad conditions.
I should like to sum up what I have been saying about
the life after death in a kind of formula, although as our language
is coined for the physical world and not for the spiritual world, it
cannot be strictly exact. One can only try to make it as exact as
possible. If, then, there has been a good moral quality in our soul,
we shall become ‘sociable’ spirits and enjoy
companionship with other spirits, with other human beings or with
Spirits of the higher Hierarchies. The opposite is the case if a
genuine moral quality has been lacking in us; we then become solitary
spirits, spirits who find it extremely difficult to move away from
the clouds of their visions. To feel thus isolated as a spiritual
hermit is an essential cause of suffering after death. On the other
hand it is characteristic of the companionship of which I have
spoken, to be able to establish the connection with what is necessary
for us. It takes a long time after death to live through this sphere
which in occultism is called the Mercury-sphere.
The moral tone of the soul is naturally still decisive
in the next sphere, the Venus-sphere; but new conditions then begin.
In this sphere it is the religious disposition of the soul that is
decisive. Individuals with a religious inner life will become
sociable beings in the Venus-sphere, quite irrespective of the creed
to which they belonged. On the other hand, individuals without any
religious feelings are condemned in this sphere to complete spiritual
self-absorption. Paradoxical though it may seem, I can only say that
individuals with predominantly materialistic views and who scorn
religious life, inevitably become spiritual hermits, each one living
as it were confined in his own cell. Far from being an ironical
comparison, it is true to say: all those who are supporters of
‘monistic religion’ — that is to say, the opposite
of true religion — will find themselves firmly imprisoned and
be quite unable to find one another.
In this way the mistakes and errors committed by the
soul in earthly life are corrected. On the physical plane errors are
automatically corrected but in the life between death and the new
birth, errors and mistakes on Earth. also our thoughts, become facts.
In the process of Initiation too, thinking is a real fact and if we
were able to perceive it, an erroneous thought would stand there
before us, not only in all its ugliness but with all the destructive
elements it contains. If people had no more than an inkling that many
a thought signifies a destructive reality they would soon turn away
from many of the thoughts circulating in Movements intent upon
agitation. It is part of the martyrdom endured in the process of
Initiation that thoughts gather around us and stand there like
solidified, frozen masses, which we cannot in any way dislodge, as
long as we are out of the body. If we have formed an erroneous
thought and then pass out of the body, the thought is there and we
cannot change it. To change it we must go back into the body. True,
memory of it remains, but even an Initiate is only able to rectify it
when he is in the physical body. Outside the body it stands there
like a mountain. Only in this way can he become aware of the
seriousness of the realities of life.
This will help you to understand that for certain karmic
adjustments a return into the physical body is essential. The
mistakes do indeed confront us during the life between death and the
new birth; but the errors have to be corrected while we are in the
physical body. In this way compensation is made in the subsequent
life for what happened in the previous life. But what must be
recognised in all its strength and fallaciousness stands there,
unchangeable to begin with, as in the case of things in the spiritual
world according to Homer. Such knowledge of the spiritual world must
penetrate into our souls and become perception and feelings, and as
feelings they form the basis for a new conception of life. A monistic
Sunday sermon may expound any number of moral principles but as time
will show, they will produce very little change, because in the way
they are presented the concepts can have a real effect only when we
recognise that for a certain period after death whatever is a burden
on our karma will confront us as a direct reality. We recognise the
burden but it remains as it is; we cannot change it now; all we can
do is to recognise and accept the burden fully and deepen our nature
accordingly.
The effect of such concepts upon our souls is that they
enable us to have the true view of life. And then there will follow
all that is necessary to further the progress of life along the paths
laid down by those who are the spiritual leaders of mankind; we shall
thus move forward towards the goals that are set before man and
mankind.
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