IV
E
HAVE seen that if man would enter into the realm to which,
among other things, the woven fabric of our dreams belongs, he must
take with him from the ordinary world something we designated as an
intensified self-consciousness. There must be a stronger and fuller
life in his ego than he needs for his purposes on the physical plane.
In our age this excess of self-consciousness is drawn forth from our
soul by the experiences we gain through occult exercises such as I
have given. Thus the first step consists in strengthening and
intensifying one's inner self.
Man instinctively feels
that he needs this strengthening, and for this very reason a kind of
fear and shyness comes over him if he has not yet attained it. He tends
to shrink from the prospect of developing into higher worlds. We must
continually bear in mind that in the course of evolution the soul of
man has passed through many different stages. Thus, in the period of the
Bhagavad Gita
it was not yet possible for a
human soul to intensify its self-consciousness by such occult
exercises as may be practiced today. In that ancient time, however,
something else was still present in the self; I mean, primeval
clairvoyance. This is also a faculty man does not really need for his
ordinary life on the physical plane, if he can be content with what
his epoch offers him. But the men of that ancient time still had the
remnants of primeval clairvoyance.
So, we can look far
back and put ourselves in the place of a person living at the time when the
Bhagavad Gita
originated. If such a man were to
express his experience he would say, “When I look out into the
world around me I receive impressions through my senses. These
impressions can be combined by the intellect, whose organ the brain
is. Apart from that I still have another faculty, a clairvoyant power
that enables me to acquire knowledge of other worlds. This power
tells me that man belongs to other realms, that my human nature
extends far beyond the ordinary physical world.” This very
power, by means of which there arises in the soul the instinctive
knowledge that it belongs not only to the physical world — this
power is actually a stronger kind of self-consciousness. It is as
though these last remnants of ancient clairvoyance still had the
power to surcharge the soul with selfhood. Today man can again
develop in himself such surplus forces if he will go through the
right occult exercises.
Now, a certain
objection might be made. You know that in anthroposophical lectures
we must always forestall objections that the true occultist is well
aware of. It might be asked, “Why should it occur to
present-day man to want to undertake occult exercises at all? Why
isn't he content with what his ordinary intellect offers him?”
That, my friends, is a big question because we touch something here
that is not only a question but an actual fact for every thoughtful
soul in the present cycle of evolution. If man did not reach out to
anything more than what his senses and his brain-bound intellect can
show him, he would certainly be content with his existence. He would
observe the things and events around him, their relationships, and
how they come into being and pass away again, but he would ask no
questions about this ebb and flow of activity. He would be content
with it as an animal may be content with its existence. In fact, if
man were really the being that materialistic thinking considers him,
he could quite well accept his life as such and ask no questions.
This is the life of the animal, being content with all that arises
and passes before its senses. Why isn't this the case with man?
Remember that we are
speaking of present-day man, for even in ancient Greece the human
soul was different in this respect from what it is today. When we
today give ourselves with our whole soul to the study of natural
science, or when we consider all the events of historical evolution
and gain knowledge of the external science of history — with
all this something else finds its way almost imperceptibly into our
soul, something that has no purpose or sense for physical life. Many
comparisons have been made to illustrate this fact. I would like to
mention one of them because people often make use of it without
considering its deeper significance. A famous medical authority in
the last third of the 19th century, wishing to enhance the honor of
pure science, once drew attention to a Greek philosopher Pythagoras
who was asked, “What do you think of the philosophers who spend
their time speculating on the meaning and purpose of life? How does
their occupation compare with the activities of ordinary men who
pursue some useful calling and play a useful part in community life?”
The philosopher replied, “Look at a fair or market; men come to
buy and sell and everyone is busy, but there are a few among them who
do not want to buy or sell but simply want to stroll about and watch
what is going on.” The philosopher implied that the market
represented life, people busy in all sorts of ways; but the
philosophers are not busy with such affairs, instead they look at
what is happening and try to learn all about it.
Somehow a great respect
for the philosophers who do not seem to take part in any productive
activity has penetrated deeply into the minds of the so-called
intellectuals among mankind. The philosophers are honored just
because their science is independent, detached,
self-sufficient. Yet this comparison ought to give us food for
thought, for it is by no means so banal as it might appear at first
sight. After all, it is curious that philosophers should be compared
to idlers in the market-place of life, useless folk while their
fellows labor. One might indeed think of it in this way, but we must
realize that judgments are passed that originally are quite correct
but become altogether wrong if they linger on for centuries, or as in
this case for thousands of years. Therefore we ask again if these
people who stroll about in life are really to be judged as idlers.
That depends upon the standards by which we value human life.
Certainly there are those who regard the philosophers as useless
loiterers and think they would do better to carry through some
productive work. From their point of view they may be quite right,
but when man today observes life through the senses and considers it
by means of the brain-bound intellect, something steals into his soul
that obviously has no connection with the outer world of the senses.
That is the point.
This can be seen
clearly in books that try to construct a satisfactory picture of the
world and life on a purely materialistic basis. It usually turns out
that the big questions do not arise until the end. These books
claiming to solve the riddle of the universe actually begin to set
forth those riddles only in their concluding pages. In effect, when
one begins today to study the external world that is the subject
treated in such books, the thought slips in that either man exists
for other worlds besides, or else the physical world deceives us and
makes fools of us because it is continually putting questions we
cannot answer.
An enormous part of our
soul life is meaningless if life really ends with death; if man has
no part in, no connection with a higher world. Indeed, it is not the
longing for something he does not have, but the lack of sense for
what he has, that impels man to follow up these questions and ask
what it is that comes into the soul that does not belong to this
world of the senses. Thus he is driven to cultivate something
evidently without foundation in the external world. He is impelled to
take up occult exercises. We would not say man has an inward longing
for immortality and therefore invents the idea of it, but rather that
the external world has implanted something in his soul that would be
meaningless, unreal, if the whole of existence were included between
birth and death. Man is impelled to ask the very nature, not of
something he does not have, but of something he has.
In fact, present-day
man is no longer quite in the position of a mere loiterer or
on-looker, so he cannot appeal now to the Greek philosopher. In those
times the comparison held good, but today it does not. Today we might
say that buyers and sellers come and go. When at length they close
the market and make up accounts they find something that certainly
could neither have been bought nor sold, nor can they find out whence
it came. That never happens in an ordinary market, but so it is in
the market of life. (Every comparison has its flaw and this one is
all the better for it.) As we go on living we are continually finding
things that life opens to view, yet no explanation for them is to be
found in the world of sense. That is the deeper reason why there are
people in the world today who despair of life yet at the same time
have vague, unrecognized longings. Something is active in them that
does not belong to the physical world but keeps on putting forth
questions about other worlds. For this reason we now have to acquire
a spiritual culture. Otherwise we shall be overcome by
hopelessness and despair.
What today we have to
acquire, a man like Arjuna had, simply because he lived in the
ancient age of primeval clairvoyance. Yet it also was a period of
transition, because he belonged to that time in evolution when only
the last remnants and echoes of that clairvoyance remained. If we are
to understand the
Bhagavad Gita
it is important to realize
that at the time of its origin men were entering an age in which this
old clairvoyance gradually became lost. In this lies the deep
undercurrent of that sublime poem; or we may say, the source of the
breath poured out through it. For this song resounds with tones of a
great turning-point in time, when, from the twilight of the old
clairvoyance, a night was to begin in which a new force could be born
to mankind. Only in that night could a force be born that the soul of
today possesses, but that souls of that time did not yet possess.
About Arjuna then we can say that ancient clairvoyance is still
present in his soul but it is flickering out. It is no longer a
strong, spontaneous force but requires such a harrowing experience as
I have described to re-awaken it. What then can Arjuna perceive
through this awakening of the ancient power of vision, which at other
times was dying away within him? He sees the Spiritual Being who is
called Krishna.
Here it is necessary to
point out that though man may lift his soul today into that realm
where his dreams are woven, this is no longer enough to give him a
full understanding of Krishna's being. Even if we develop the forces
enabling us to consciously pass into the region of
dream-consciousness, we still are not able today to fully discover
what Krishna is. Referring again to what was said yesterday, let us
call our everyday consciousness the lowest realm. About it lies a
realm we are unconscious of in daily life, or rather that reaches us
in a kind of phantom picture veiled in our dreams. When we push these
aside impressions from another world enter. Into all the experiences
man has of his physical environment something now enters that is like
a kind of overflow in his soul and belongs really to other
worlds, to inner super-sensible worlds. Now he has an experience that
cannot be described as a reminiscence of ordinary life, because the
world now has a different aspect from anything known on the physical
plane. We discover that we are seeing something we do not see
in the ordinary world. Though we often imagine that we see light, in
reality it is not so. On the physical plane we never see light, only
color and different shades of color, darker and lighter colors. We
see the effects of light but light itself speeds invisibly through
space. We can easily convince ourselves of this fact. When a ray of
light strikes through the window we see a kind of streak of
light-rays in the room, caused by dust in the air. We see reflections
of light from the glittering particles of dust, the light itself
remaining invisible.
After lifting his
experience to the higher realm we have spoken of, man really does
begin to see the light itself. There he is surrounded by flowing
light, just as in the physical world he lives in flowing air. Only he
does not enter this world with his physical body. He has no need to
breathe there. Man enters that world with the part of his being that
needs the light as in the physical world his body needs the air. In
this region light is the element of life — light-air we might
call it — and it is a necessity for existence.
Further, that light is
permeated and transfused with something not unlike the cloud-forms
shaping and re-shaping in our atmosphere. The clouds are water, but
up there what meets us like floating forms is nothing else than the
weaving life of sound, the music of the spheres. Still further
we shall perceive the flowing of life itself. Thus we may
begin to describe the world into which our soul enters, but the terms
of our description must remain meaningless for the physical world.
Perhaps he who uses words most lacking in meaning for the physical
world will best describe that other world that has a far higher
reality.
Of course our
materialistically-minded friends will find it easy to refute us.
Their arguments against what the occultist has to say are plausible
enough. The occultist himself knows how easily such objections are
made, for the very reason that the higher worlds are best described
by words not suitable for things of the physical plane. For example
he would speak of light-air, or air-light. On the physical plane
there is no such thing, but over there, there is. Indeed, when we
penetrate into that realm we also discover what it is to be deprived
of this life element, to have insufficient light-air. We feel a pain
of suffocation in our soul, comparable to losing our breath for lack
of air on the physical plane. There we also find the opposite
condition, a fullness of pure, holy light-air when we live in it and
when we perceive spiritual beings who manifest themselves in full
clearness in this element of airy light and have their life in it.
Those are the beings who stand under the guidance of Lucifer. The
moment we enter that realm without sufficient preparation, without
proper training, Lucifer gains the power to deprive us of the
light-air we need. We can say he suffocates our souls.
It is not quite the
same effect as suffocation on the physical plane. But like a polar
bear transported to the South, we thirst and long for something that
can reach us from the spiritual treasure, the spiritual light of the
physical plane. That is just what Lucifer desires, for then we do not
pay attention to all that comes from the higher hierarchies but
thirstily cleave to all that Lucifer has brought onto the physical
plane. This is what happens if we have not sufficiently trained
ourselves in preparation. Then when we stand before Lucifer he takes
away the light-air from us. We crave breath, and long for the
spiritual that comes from the physical plane.
Let us suppose that
someone goes through a training that brings him far enough to enter
the higher worlds, to reach this upper region. But suppose he has not
done all that belongs to the training; suppose he has forgotten that
with all his exercises he must at the same time be ennobling his
moral sense, his moral feelings, that he must tear all earthly
ambitions and lust for power from his soul. Indeed a man can reach
the higher worlds even though he is vain and ambitious, but then he
takes these qualities with him. When a person has not purified his
moral feelings Lucifer takes the light-air away from him, so that he
perceives nothing of what is really there, and instead he longs for
the things on the physical plane. He breathes in, so to say, what he
has been able to perceive on the physical plane. So he may imagine
that he perceives something only to be seen spiritually in the
light-air. He imagines that he sees the different incarnations of
various human beings. But it is not so. He does not see them
because he lacks the air-light. Instead, like a thirsty being, he
sucks up into that realm things of the physical plane below, and
describes all manner of things acquired there as though they were
processes in the higher region. Actually there is no more harmful way
of raising one's soul into the higher worlds than by means of vain
and earthly love of power! If one does this, one will never be able
to bring down true results of knowledge. What one brings will be a
mere reflection, a phantom picture of the speculations and
conjectures one may have made in the physical world.
Here we have been
describing what may be called the general scenery of that realm.
There are also Beings we meet there, whom we may call Elemental
Beings. In the physical world we often speak of the forces of nature.
In that higher realm these same forces manifest themselves as real
beings. There we make a definite discovery. Through the actual facts
that meet us we discover that whereas on the physical plane good and
evil exist together, in that higher realm there are separate,
specific forces of good and evil. Here in the physical world good and
evil are combined and interwoven in each human soul. One has more of
a tendency to good, another less. In that realm there are evil beings
who exist to battle against the work of good beings. On entering that
realm, therefore, we already have occasion to make use of the
strengthened self-consciousness we mentioned yesterday. We have need
of the more acute power of judgment that must come with our enhanced
self. Then we may really be in a position to say that here in the
higher realm there must needs be beings who have the mission of evil.
Such beings have to exist alongside those who have the mission of
good.
We often hear it asked,
“Why didn't the all-wise God of the universe simply create the
good alone? Why isn't it everywhere, always?” Now we gain this
conviction, however, that if only the good were present the world
would become one-sided, it would not bring forth all the fullness of
life that it does yield. The good must have something to oppose it.
This, in fact, can already be realized on the physical plane, but in
that higher realm we perceive it with far greater force. There we see
that only people who are content with a merely sentimental and dreamy
outlook can imagine that good beings alone could bring about the
purposes of the universe. In the realm of everyday life we might do
with sentimentality, but we cannot tolerate it when we enter the
stern realities of the super-sensible world. There we know that the
good beings alone could not have made the world. They would be too
weak to mold this universe. In the totality of evolution those forces
must be included which come from the evil beings. There is great
wisdom in this fact that evil is mingled in cosmic evolution. Thus,
one of the things we have to get rid of when we enter spiritual life
is sentimentality. Bravely and unflinchingly we must approach the
dangerous truths that dawn upon us when we perceive the battle that
is fought in just this realm — the battle between the good and
evil beings that can there be revealed to us. All these are
experiences we have when we have trained and adapted our souls to
entering consciously into this realm.
So far we have only
entered the realm of dreams. We human beings live in still another
realm, one for which we are so little adapted in ordinary life that
we generally have no perceptions whatever in it. It is the realm
through which we live in dreamless sleep. Here already an absolute
paradox appears, for sleep after all is characterized by the complete
cessation of consciousness. In normal human life today man ceases to
be conscious when he falls to sleep, and he does not regain
consciousness till he wakes up again. In the age of primeval
clairvoyance this realm too was something the soul could experience.
If we go back into those ancient periods of evolution there was
actually a condition of life corresponding to our sleep in which,
however, man could perceive in a still higher, still more spiritual
world than the world of dreams. This was true even in early
post-Atlantean times. There we find conditions that, in regard to the
usual human processes, are exactly like the condition of sleep, but
are not, because they are permeated by consciousness. When we have
reached this height we do not see the physical world, even though we
still see the world of light-air, of sound, of cosmic harmony, and of
the battle between the good and evil beings. The world we see may be
said to be still more fundamentally different from all that exists in
the physical world. So it is yet more difficult to describe than the
world we find on entering the region of dream consciousness. I would
like now to give you an idea of how one's consciousness in this realm
works, and of its actual effects.
Anyone who describes
that sublime world into which our dreams find their way, and about
which I have given the merest hint, will be labeled a fantastic
visionary by the bigoted intellectualism of today. If anyone begins
to speak of that still higher realm through which man ordinarily
sleeps, then people, if they take any notice at all, do not stop at
abusing him as a visionary. They altogether lose their heads. We have
already had an example of this. When my books were first published in
Germany, the critics, who are supposed to represent the intellectual
culture of today, attacked them with all sorts of insinuations. In
one point, however, their criticism ran absolutely wild; in fact,
they became foolish in their fury. I mean the point where I had to
call attention to something that could only originate in the
spiritual realm we are now considering. This was the question of the
two Jesus children mentioned in my book,
The Spiritual Guidance of Mankind.
For those of our
friends who have not heard of this I may say once more that it
appeared as a result of occult research, namely, that at the
beginning of our era not only one but two Jesus children were born.
One was descended from the so-called Nathan line of the House of
David, the other from the Solomon line. These two children grew up
side by side. In the body of the Solomon child lived the soul of
Zarathustra. In the twelfth year of the child's life this soul passed
over into the other Jesus child and lived in that body until its
thirtieth year. Here we have a matter of the deepest significance.
Zarathustra's soul went on living in the body that until its twelfth
year had been occupied by a mysterious soul. And then, only from the
thirtieth year onward, there lived in this body the Being Whom we
call the Christ, Who remained on earth altogether for three years.
We really cannot take
amiss the reaction of the critics to this statement, as it is natural
that they should want to have something to say about the matter from
their scholarly viewpoint. But what they set out to criticize comes
from a realm in which they are always fast asleep! So we cannot
expect them to know anything about it. Yet a healthy human
understanding is able to grasp this fact. People only will not give
themselves a chance to understand. In their haste they change their
power of understanding into bitterness and fury.
Such truths as that
about the two Jesus children, which are to be found in this higher
realm, never have anything to do with sympathy and antipathy. We find
such truths; we never experience them in the way we gain experience
in the usual manner of knowledge in the physical world, or even in
the realm of dream life. In both these areas we are there, so
to say. We are present at the origin of our knowing or perception.
This is true also of those occultists who are conscious only as far
as the realm of dreams. We can say that a person witnesses the birth
of his knowledge, of his perceptions, in that realm, but truths like
this concerning the two Jesus children can never be found in this
way. When truths come to us in that higher realm and enter our
consciousness, the moment in which we actually acquired them has long
since passed. We experienced them long before we met them with our
full consciousness, as we have to do in our time. We have them
already in us. So that when we reach these truths — the most
important, the most living and essential of all truths — we
distinctly have the feeling that when we gained them we were in an
earlier time than the present; that we are now drawing out of the
depths of our soul what we acquired in an earlier time and are
bringing it into our consciousness. Such truths we discover in
ourselves, just as in the outer world we come across a flower or
any other object. Even as in the outer world we can think about an
object that is simply there before us, so can we think about these
truths when we have discovered them in ourselves, in our own self.
In the outer world we
can only judge an object after we have perceived it. In the same way
we find those sublime truths objectively in ourselves, and
only then do we study them, in ourselves. We inwardly investigate
them as we investigate the external facts of nature. Just as it would
have no meaning to ask of a flower whether it is true or false, there
would be no sense in asking about these truths that we simply come
upon in ourselves, whether they are true or false. Truth and
falsehood only come into the picture when it is a question of our
power to describe what we find or what arises in our consciousness.
Descriptions can be true or false. Truth and falsehood do not
concern the facts, they concern the manner in which any thinking
being approaches or deals with those facts. Thus, when we do research
and get results in this realm we are really looking into a region of
the soul we have lived in before but did not look into with our
consciousness.
In carrying on our
occult exercises we are best able to enter this realm if we pay
positive attention to those moments when from the depths of our soul
not mere judgments arise, but facts; facts that we know we did not
consciously take part in originating. The more we are able to wonder
at the things there unveiled, like the objective things of the outer
world, the more astonishing it all is for us, the better are we
prepared to enter into this realm. So, as a general rule, we do not
make a good entrance if we have all sorts of conjectures and
constructions in our minds. For example, there is no better way of
finding nothing at all about the previous incarnations of some person
than to speculate as to who they may have been earlier. Let us say
you wanted to investigate the earlier incarnations of Robespierre.
The best way of finding out nothing at all about him would be to
search about for historical personalities you think might possibly
have been his previous incarnations. In that way you never can
discover the truth. You must get out of the habit of making
conjectures and theories and forming opinions.
He would become a true
occultist who would set himself to making as few judgments as
possible about the world because then he will most quickly attain the
condition in which the facts can meet him. The more a man cultivates
silence in his conjectures and opinions, the more will his soul be
filled with the actual truths of the spiritual world. Someone, for
example, who had grown up with a particular religious bias, with
definite feelings and ideas or perhaps views about the Christ —
such a person in general would not be the most adapted to discover a
truth like the history of the two Jesus children. Just when one feels
a little neutral about the Christ event one is well prepared for such
a discovery, provided of course he has made all the other necessary
preparations. People with a Buddhistic bias will least easily be able
to talk sense about Buddha, just as those with a Christian bias will
least easily be able to talk sense about Christ. This is always true.
If we would enter into
the third realm just described, it is necessary that we go through
all the bitterness — for in ordinary life we cannot help
feeling it in this way — of becoming, so to say, a twofold
person. We are, in fact, twofold beings in ordinary life, even if we
make no conscious use of the one-half of our existence, for we are
both waking and sleeping beings. Different as these two conditions
are, so is that third realm in the higher worlds different from this
physical world. That realm has a peculiar existence of its own. There
also we are surrounded by a world, but one so altogether new and
different that we get to know it best if we extinguish not only the
sense impressions of this world of ours but even our feelings and
sentiments and all the things that have the power to arouse our
passions and enthusiasms. In ordinary life man is so little fitted
for conscious experience of that higher world that his consciousness
is extinguished every night. He can only attain experience there if
he is able to become a twofold man. Those who have the power at will
to forget and to blot out all their interests in this physical world,
are then able to enter that higher realm. The world between —
that is to say, where our dreams are woven — is made of the
materials of both worlds, it is penetrated by reflections of the
higher worlds of which man is generally not aware, and by
reminiscences of ordinary consciousness. That is why no one can
perceive the true causes of events in the physical world who is not
able to penetrate with understanding into that third realm.
Now if a man of today
wishes to discover through his own experience who Krishna is, he can
only make that discovery in the third realm. Arjuna's impressions,
which in the sublime Gita are described to us through the words of
Krishna, have their origin in that world. For this reason I have had
to prepare the way today by speaking of man's ascent into the third
realm. Only so will you be able to understand the origin of the
strange and wondrous truths that Krishna speaks to Arjuna —
truths that sound so altogether different from anything that is
spoken in ordinary life.
These lectures are to
help us gain knowledge of Krishna; that is to say, of the very
essence of the
Bhagavad Gita.
Also, the occult principles of
this wonderful Song are to give you something which, if you really
make use of it, can enable you to find the way into the higher worlds
because the way is open to every man. We have only to realize that
the grain of gold with which we must begin is ours once we are aware
of how many things there are in which the highest spiritual beings
live and work and are interwoven in our everyday life.
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