LECTURE EIGHT
Dornach,
17 February 1922
Today we
shall consider the passage of the human spirit and soul through the
sense-perceptible physical organism. We shall look first at how this
element of spirit and soul prepares for physical incarnation by
descending from the spiritual worlds, and then at how it departs from
physical incarnation through the portal of death and returns to the
spiritual world. We shall take particular account of what happens in
the soul during this process, for we must understand that on entering
the physical organism, right at the moment of conception, a
tremendous transformation takes place, and that another tremendous
transformation takes place when the human being departs from physical
incarnation through the portal of death.
We have
described these things from numerous standpoints already. But today
we shall be concerned with the inner experience of the soul itself.
What are the last experiences of the soul before it descends to
physical life on earth?
Between
birth and death our soul is filled with an intricate fabric of
thoughts, feelings and impulses of will. All these work together and
intermingle to form the total structure of the soul. Our language has
words for all the different forms of thought, of feeling, and of will
impulses, so that we can describe all these things that are
experienced during physical earthly life. And by considering our more
subconscious feelings and our soul experiences as a whole, we can
throw at least some light on what lives in the soul before it enters
earthly life.
First of
all we must be clear that the thought element leads a shadowy
existence in the soul during physical earthly life. Thoughts are
quite rightly described as pale and abstract. At best, the thoughts
and mental pictures of the human being during earthly life are no
more than mirror images of the external world. Human beings make
thoughts about what they have perceived with their senses in the
external world. As you know, if you subtract from your thought life
everything you have perceived through your senses and everything you
have experienced with the help of your senses during the course of
earthly life, there is very little left. This is different, of
course, if a study of spiritual science has led to the acquisition of
other kinds of thought content than those drawn from the
sense-perceptible world. Our thought world is shadowy because it has
lost its inner vitality as a result of our descent into the physical
sense-perceptible world. You could say that as a solid earthly object
is to its shadow on the wall, so is the real content of thoughts to
what lives in our thinking during earthly existence. If we seek to
make the transition from the earthly thoughts of our life between
birth and death to the true stature of our thought life, we find that
this really only exists in our purely spiritual life before
conception has taken place. It is like going from a shadow picture to
whatever is casting the shadow. Before birth, or rather before
conception, there is a vivid, fully alive existence which later
becomes shadowy thoughts. The thought world existing as an inner
weaving of soul before conception might well be described as our
actual spiritual existence, our actual spiritual being. This inner
weaving life before conception is, of course, something that fills
the whole of the universe known to us. Before conception we live
throughout the totality of the universe which otherwise surrounds us.
The thoughts that then live in us during our life on earth are the
shadows, confined within our human physical organism, of something
that has life on a cosmic scale prior to conception.
This is a
description of one element of our soul before birth, or before
conception. Before the human being descends to the physical world we
find, as one part of the content of his soul, something that is like
thoughts when he is on earth but which is actually a spiritual
element of his being when he is in the super-sensible world. The other
part of the content of his soul cannot be described as anything other
than fear, to use a concept taken from earthly life. In the period
prior to physical life something lives in the soul which, as fear,
fills it entirely. You must understand, however, that fear as an
experience outside the physical body is something quite different
from fear within the human physical body.
Before
descending to earth man is a being of spirit and soul filled with an
element of feeling which can only be compared with what is
experienced in earthly life as fear. This fear is well justified for
that period of human life about which I am now speaking. In the life
between death and a new birth the human being has undergone manifold
experiences of the kind which are possible while he is united with
the cosmos. By the end of the life between death and a new birth he
has, in a way, grown tired of this cosmic life, just as he grows
tired of earthly life when, towards the end, his bodily organization
shrivels up and becomes infirm. This tiring of life beyond the earth
is expressed not so much in actual tiredness as in fear of the
cosmos. The human being takes flight from the cosmos. He senses that
the fundamental aspect of the cosmos is something that has now become
foreign to him; it no longer has anything to offer him. He feels a
kind of timidity, comparable with fear, towards the element in which
he finds himself. He longs to withdraw from this cosmic feeling and
contract into a human physical body.
From the
earth a certain force of attraction comes to meet this state of fear
in the human being. In a diagram it would look like this. Think of
the cranium, and the brain within. Here is the base of the cranium.
As I have frequently suggested, the human brain with its remarkable
convolutions is a kind of copy of the starry heavens, of the
universe. This brain structure made up of cells is indeed a copy of
the starry heavens (see diagram). While living before birth in the
cosmos the
human being
encompasses with his spirituality the whole of the starry world. But
now he fears it. He withdraws into an earthly image of the starry
heavens, an image in the human brain.
Now we
come to the choice made by man's spirit and soul. For now the soul
chooses whichever brain — in the process of being formed
— most closely resembles the starry constellation in which it
stood before descending into the earthly realm. Naturally, the brain
of one embryo depicts the starry heavens differently from that of
another embryo. And the soul feels attracted towards the brain which
has the most similarity with the starry constellation in which it
existed before descending to earth.
So it is,
in the main, a feeling of timidity which leads the soul down to the
confines of a human being — a feeling of fearfulness with
regard to infinity, you might say. This feeling of fear pertains more
to the soul. And the thought world which unfolds more and more from
childhood into adulthood pertains more to the spirit. Both —
the feeling of fear and also the spiritual element which is
transformed into shadowy thoughts — undergo a substantial
metamorphosis which I should now like to describe to you. I can only
use expressions which will seem unusual as far as ordinary thinking
goes, but ordinary thinking lacks points of reference which might
serve to describe these things. Ordinary thinking lies far from all
aspects of this theme, so we cannot avoid using unusual expressions
if we want to give an adequate description of them.
Let us
start with the spiritual element which lives in the cosmos and then
makes its way to the confined dwelling place of the human body,
unfolding chiefly through the nervous system and the brain and
undergoing metamorphosis as it does so. There are two aspects of
this. First of all it is definitely true to say that the being who is
man in the world of spirit and soul prior to conception dies during
the transition into the physical body. Birth in the physical body is
a dying for the spirit and soul life of man. And when a death takes
place there is always a corpse. Just as a corpse remains when man
dies on earth, so a corpse also remains when the element of spirit
and soul goes down to the earth through conception and dies in the
heavenly region. For the whole of our earthly life we then live, as
far as our thoughts are concerned, on what remains as a corpse. The
corpse is our world of thoughts. Something that is dead is the world
of shadowy thoughts. So we can say that as the spiritual aspect of
man descends to life on earth through conception, it dies for the
world of spirit and soul and leaves this corpse behind.
Just as
the corpse of the physical human being dissolves into the elements of
earth, so the element of spirit and soul dissolves in the spiritual
world and becomes the force which is unfolded in physical thoughts.
Just as the earth goes to work on the corpse when we bury it, or as
fire does when we cremate it, so throughout life we go to work on the
corpse of our spirit and soul element in our world of physical
thoughts. The world of physical thoughts is the continuing in death
of what exists as real spiritual life before man descends into
physical earthly life.
The other
living element which enters into man from his pre-earthly life comes
into play in the physical human being, not through the world of
thoughts, but in the widest possible sense in everything which we can
call feelings — feelings to do with man as well as feelings to
do with nature. Everything by which you spread into your environment
in a feeling way (see chart) is an element which represents a living
echo of pre-earthly life.
You do
not experience your pre-earthly life in a living way in your thoughts
but only in your feelings for other creatures. If we love a flower or
a person, this is a force which has been given to us out of our
pre-earthly life, but in a living way. So if we love a person we can
say that we love him or her not only out of our experiences in this
earthly life, but also out of karma, out of being connected in
earlier earthly lives. Something living is carried over from
pre-earthly life in so far as the sympathetic sphere of the human
being is concerned. On the other hand, what is a living spiritual
element between death and a new birth dies into our thought world
during earthly life.
That is
why our thought world is so pale and shadowy and dead during earthly
life, because it actually represents a part of our pre-earthly
experience which has died.
Now let
us turn to the second element — timidity, fear — which is
also metamorphosed in such a way that it falls into two parts. What
we experience prior to our descent into the earthly world as a fear
which fills our whole soul and makes us want to flee from the
spiritual world, becomes, on entering the body, on the one hand
something that I should like to describe as a feeling of self. This
feeling of self is metamorphosed fear. Transformed fear from
pre-earthly life is what makes you feel that you are a self, that you
are self-contained.
The other
part into which fear is transmuted is our will. All our will
impulses, everything on which our activity in the world is based
— all this exists as fear before we descend into earthly
life.
You see
once again what a good thing it is for earthly life that human beings
do not step consciously past the Guardian of the Threshold. I have
frequently said that human beings sleep through what the will
represents, down there in the human organism. They have an intention,
then they carry it out, and then they perceive the consequence. But
what lies between the intention to do a deed and the accomplished
deed, that in which the will actually consists — this is
something in which human beings are as much asleep as they are
between falling asleep and waking up again. If they were to look down
and see what lay at the foundation of their will they would feel,
strongly welling up out of their organism, the fear coming in from
their pre-earthly life.
This is
also something that has to be overcome in initiation. But if we look
into ourselves, the first thing we see is the feeling of self. This
is something which must not be caused to increase too much as a
result of the training. Otherwise, when the human being finally steps
into the spiritual world he might fall into megalomania. But at the
foundation of all his will impulses he will find fear and he must
therefore be strengthened to withstand this fear.
As you
see, in all the exercises contained in my book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds
the aim is to learn to bear the fear which we come
to perceive in the way I have described. This fear is something that
has to be there amongst the forces of development, otherwise human
beings would never descend from the spiritual world into earthly
existence. They would not flee from the spiritual world. They would
not develop the urge to enter into the limitations of the physical
body. The fact that they do develop this urge stems from this fear of
the spiritual world, which quite naturally becomes a part of their
soul configuration once they have lived for a time between death and
a new birth.
So
thoughts are attached to us like a corpse — or rather the power
of the thoughts, not the thoughts themselves. We can describe this
even more exactly. However, to consider this more exact description
it will benecessary to develop certain very precise ideas. The
spiritual force which dies in our thoughts and becomes a corpse when
we descend into physical earthly existence is the same force which
builds our organs out of the cosmos. Our lung, heart, stomach —
all our specific organs — are formed out of the power of
thought of the universe.
When we
enter into earthly life this power of thought enters the narrow
confines of our organism. What does the earth and its environment
want of us? It wants us to create an image of it within ourselves.
But if we were to create an image in ourselves, then during the
course of our lifetime all our inner organs, such as our lungs
— but, above all, the manifold convolutions of our brain
— would be transformed into crystal-like formations. We should
all become statues resembling not human beings but crystals in
various contrasting groups. We should gradually come to be inorganic,
lifeless shapes — statues after a fashion.
The human
organism resists this. It stands by the shape of its inner organs. It
will not have it that, for instance, its lungs might be formed to
represent, let us say, a range of mountains. It will not allow its
heart to be transformed into a cluster of crystals. It resists this.
And this resistance brings it about that instead of forming images of
our earthly environment in our organs we do so only in the shadow
images of our thoughts. So our power of thought is actually always on
the way to making us into an image of our physical earth, of the
physical form of our earth. We constantly want to become a system of
crystals. But our organism will not permit this. It has so much which
has to be developed in the living realm, in the realm of sympathy, in
the realm of feeling of self and in the realm of will impulses, that
it does not permit it. It will not allow our lungs to be transformed
into something that looks like crystals growing out of the earth. It
resists this formation into earthly shapes, and so the images of
earthly shapes only come about in geometry and in whatever other
thoughts we form about our earthly environment. As I said, you must
think with absolute exactitude if you want to reach the point where
you can imagine all this.
But the
tendency is always there of coming to resemble the system of our
thoughts. We have to fight constantly in order not to take onthis
resemblance. We are constantly striving to become a kind of work of
art — though given the kind of thoughts human beings have on
the whole, it would not be a very beautiful work of art to look at.
But we strive to attain an external appearance that resembles what
exists in our thoughts as no more than images and shadows. We do not
achieve this resemblance, but we mirror back what we are aiming for,
so that it turns into our thoughts instead. It is a process that can
truly be likened to the creation of mirror images.
If you
have a mirror with an object in front of it, then you get a mirror
image of the object. The object is not inside the mirror. Everything
we see before our eyes constantly wants to bring about an actual
structure within us. But we resist this. We keep our brain as it is.
Because of this, the object is mirrored back and becomes the mental
image. A table wants to make your very brain into a table but you do
not allow this to happen. In consequence an image of the table arises
in you. This act of rejection is the mirroring process. That is why,
in our thought life, our thoughts are only shadow images of the
external world. When it comes to our feelings, however, the situation
is different. Try once to imagine absolutely accurately what is
involved in feeling something. A round table feels different from one
with corners. You feel the corners. The thought of this angular table
does not affect you very much, whereas getting the feel of the
corners is more painful than gently following the curve of a round
table. When we feel, therefore, external forms come more to life
within us than when we think.
This is
an indication of the metamorphosis undergone by our element of soul
and spirit when it comes into earthly existence from pre-earthly
existence. But now what occurs when we go through the portal of
death? Our world of thought is, so far as its strength is concerned,
only the corpse of pre-earthly existence. It is of little
significance. It disappears when we go through the portal of death,
just as our mirror image disappears if we suddenly take away the
mirror. So, in speaking of immortality, there is absolutely no point
in reflecting on the earthly power of thought for it certainly does
not accompany us through the portal of death. What does go through
the portal of death with us is everything we have developed in the
way of sympathy, of feeling and sensing towards earthly things. Our
feeling of sympathy goes through the portal of death. Inasmuch as we
have sympathy towards our environment, we develop the strength (see
table) in the spiritual world to stand among the spiritual beings in
the spiritual element of thought. Our sympathy, which our body keeps
separate from our earthly environment, streams out now, after death,
into our spiritual environment and unites with the spiritual thought
element of the world into which we step on going through the portal
of death.
Because
we flow with our sympathy into the spiritual element of thought, we
develop once again a kind of thought body, a living thought body
which is ours for the time between death and our next birth. And the
feeling of self we have on earth becomes a kind of ‘standing
within’ other beings. Whilst we are on earth, our feeling of
self only lets us know that we are within our body, but once we have
passed through the portal of death we learn to know that we are in
other beings, the beings of the higher hierarchies. And because we
stand within spiritual beings we receive from them forces which lead
us onwards on our course through life between death and a new birth.
In this way our own being of forces develops. This is the
metamorphosis of the element of spirit and soul which takes place
when we pass through the portal of death.
Unlike
our world of thought, our will does not disappear at death. It is the
source of the content of our feelings of self. Imagine that you want
something which satisfies you. This wanting in itself gives you
something that satisfies you, it gives your feeling of self a
particular nuance. If you have done something that does not satisfy
you, this too gives your feeling of self a particular nuance. Our
will is not only something that acts outwards. It also rays
forcefully back into our inner being. We know what we are from what
we can do. And this nuance of our feeling of self, this raying back
into us of our will element, is something which we take into the
spiritual world with us, together with our feeling of self. So we
take our will — or rather the raying back of our will into our
feeling of self — with us when we submerge ourselves in the
beings of the higher hierarchies. And because we take with us this
element, which has either strengthened or weakened our feeling of
self, we find the force of our karma, our destiny.
Gaining
an understanding of these things helps us to see what the human being
really is. And we also learn to recognize certain symptoms which
accompany earthly life. In earthly life fear certainly puts in an
appearance here and there. But it must never be allowed to fill our
soul entirely. It would be sad if this were to happen. But before we
come down to earthly life our soul is indeed entirely filled with
fear, and in that situation fear is what we need so that we really do
descend into physical earthly life.
Our
feeling of self, though, is something that must not be allowed to
exceed more than a certain degree; indeed it really ought not to be
felt independently at all in earthly life. Someone who develops his
feeling of self with too much independence turns into a person who
knows only himself. Our feeling of self is actually only with us
during earthly life, so that we keep a hold on our body until we die,
returning to it every morning after sleep. If we lacked this feeling
of self during earthly life we would fail to return. But after death
we need it when we become submerged in the world of spiritual beings,
because without it we would all the time lose ourselves.
We do
indeed submerge ourselves there in real spiritual beings. The earth,
on the other hand, makes no such demands on us. If you go for a walk
in the woods, you stay on the path, and the trees are to the left and
right of you, and in front and behind. You see the trees but the
trees do not expect you to enter into them — they do not expect
you to become tree nymphs and submerge yourselves in them. But the
spiritual beings of the higher hierarchies, whose world we enter
after death — they do expect us to submerge ourselves in them.
We have to become all of them. So if, on passing through the portal
of death, we were to enter this spiritual world without our feeling
of self, we would lose ourselves. We need our feeling of self there
simply in order to maintain ourselves. And moral deeds we have done
during earthly life, deeds which have justifiably enhanced our
feeling of self — these protect us from losing ourselves after
death.
These are
thoughts and ideas which, from now on, ought to enter once again into
human consciousness for the near future of earthly evolution. These
thoughts and ideas simply flowed into mankind in earliest times, when
understanding was still instinctively clairvoyant. Human beings used
to have a strong feeling of what they had been before they descended
into earthly life. This was strongly developed in primeval times. But
hope of a life after death was less strongly developed in primeval
times. This was something that was taken for granted. Today we are
chiefly interested in what we might experience after we die. In
primeval times, thousands of years ago, people were more concerned
about their life prior to descending to the earth.
A time
then came when clairvoyance, which had originally been instinctive,
waned, and the intense connection of the soul with life before birth
also waned. Then two spiritual streams sprang up which prepared what
had now to develop in human civilization. We now have two clearly
distinct streams which we have described from varying standpoints.
Today we shall approach them from a particular standpoint which will
also be a help to us in our considerations tomorrow and the next
day.
Take
earthly evolution prior to the Mystery of Golgotha. You find, spread
over the earth, the heathen culture, and in a certain way separated
from this, a culture which one could say was that of the Old
Testament. What was particularly characteristic of this heathen
culture? It contained a definite awareness of the fact that
everything physical surrounding man contained a spiritual element.
The heathen culture had a strong awareness of the nature of living
thoughts which become transformed into dead thoughts. In the beings
of the different kingdoms of nature, this culture saw everywhere the
living element of which human thoughts were the dead counterpart.
Heathen culture perceived the living thoughts of the cosmos and
regarded man as belonging to these living thoughts of the cosmos.
One part
of this heathen world that was particularly filled with life was that
of the peoples of ancient Greece. You know that the idea of destiny
was particularly strong in the world of these ancient Greek peoples.
And — think of certain Greek dramas — this idea of
destiny permeated human life with laws in the way the natural laws
permeate nature. The ancient Greeks felt that they stood in life
permeated with destiny, just as natural things stand permeated with
the laws of nature. Destiny descended on human beings within this
Greek outlook like a force of nature. This feeling was characteristic
of all heathen cultures, but it was particularly marked among the
Greeks. The heathen world saw spirit in all of nature. There was no
specific knowledge of nature in the sense of the natural science we
have today, but there was an all-embracing knowledge of nature. Where
people saw nature, they spoke of the spirit. This was a science of
nature which was, at the same time, a science of the spirit. The
heathen peoples were less interested in the inner being of man. They
looked on man from the outside as a being of nature. They could do
this because they saw all the other natural things as being filled
with a soul element too. They did not think of trees, plants, or
clouds as soulless objects. So they could look at human beings from
outside in a similar way and yet not think of them as being soulless.
Filling all nature with soul in this way, the ancient heathen was
able to regard human beings as natural creatures. Thus the ancient
heathen world was something which contained from the start a
spiritual element which inclined towards the world of spirit.
The creed
which then ran its course in the Old Testament was the polar opposite
of this. The Old Testament knew nature neither in the way we know it
— I mean in the way we come to know it as we turn towards
spiritual science — nor in the way the ancient heathen knew it.
The Old Testament knew only a moral world order, and Jahve is the
ruler of this moral world order; only what Jahve wills takes place.
So in the world of the Old Testament the view arose as a matter of
course that one must not make images of the soul and spirit element.
The heathen world could never have come to such a view, for it saw
images of the spirit in every tree and every plant. In the world of
the Old Testament no images were seen, for everywhere the invisible,
imageless spirit ruled.
We ought
to see in the New Testament a coming together of these two spiritual
streams. People have always given prominence to either one view or
the other. Thus, for instance, the heathen element was always
predominant where religion was more a matter of seeing the objects of
religion. Pictures were made of spiritual beings, pictures copied
from nature. In contrast, the Old Testament element developed
wherever the newer scientific attitude arose with its tendency
towards a lack of images. In many ways modern materialistic science
contains an echo of the Old Testament, of the imageless Old
Testament. Materialistic science strives for a clear distinction
between the material element in which no trace of spirit is left, and
the spiritual element which is supposed to live in the moral sphere
only, and of which no image may be made, or which we may not be
allowed to see in the earthly realm.
This
particular characteristic which is prevalent in today's materialistic
form of science is, actually, an Old Testament impulse which has come
over to our time. Science has not yet become Christian. The science
of materialism is fundamentally an Old Testament science. One of the
main tasks as civilization progresses will be to overcome both
streams and resolve them in a higher synthesis. We must understand
that both the heathen stream and the Jewish stream are one-sided and
that, in the way they still exercise an influence today, they need to
be overcome.
Science
will have to raise itself up to the spirit. Art, which contains much
that is heathen, has made various attempts to become Christian but
most of these attempts have fallen into luciferic and heathen ways.
Art will have to lead to a Christian element. What we have today is
but an echo of the heathen and the Old Testament elements. Our
consciousness is not yet fully Christian. This is what we must
particularly feel when we consider factually, as described by
spiritual science, the way in which human beings pass through birth
and death.
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