The Hell
Berlin, 16 April 1908
We have to go far back in the human
striving for a solution of the world riddles if we want to
envisage the origin of both ideas that soon force themselves on
the human being if he approaches the world riddles in a deeper
sense, above all in a spiritual sense: the ideas of bad and
good.
The human thinking will
always try to rise to the mysterious forces that cause our
development from the spiritual world. All the time we notice
the attempt in the most different forms to relate the
beneficial and progressive forces of life to the destroying
forces, the reluctant ones, the impedient ones. However, the
human being repeatedly faces the intimate relationship between
both forces which exists for the precise observant in spite of
the apparently strong contrast. We need to think only of
Schiller's words about the fire already mentioned at another
opportunity:
Benevolent is the fire's might
If man tames and watches it,
For what he builds, what he creates,
He owes to this heavenly power,
But terrible this heavenly power is,
If she, casting off her shackles,
Strides along on tracks her own
This free daughter of nature.
One could say, in such words lies the
question that has to occupy us today and in the next talk. The
question has dressed itself in the words hell and heaven at
different times. One must not imagine at all that these words
appear where they have that superstitious meaning which many
followers of these ideas add to them, but also not less many of
those who would like to fight against them today without
knowing their deeper meaning.
If we look around only
briefly, we see our question already arising in the ancient
Persian culture where the realms of the good forces, of Ormuzd,
and of the bad forces, of Ahriman, are sharply contrasted to
each other. If we see how in a strange mental image the hating,
the impedient forces mingle into the concealed forces which
penetrate the world in the good sense and finally the light
power is victorious, we have one of the great pictures before
ourselves in which human imagination dresses our problem. From
the Greek Tartaros up to the Nordic mythology a realm of the
hell faces us; we hear names with which the concept
“hell” is connected. It is that region in which all
are condemned who did not die an honourable death in the
physical world.
A peculiarity can strike
us if we remember this legend of the hell. Let us follow it
exactly, because one has to say from the start, in the dress of
mythology a deeper wisdom is sometimes found than that is which
is fathomed with abstractions in our time.
It is strange how the old
Nordic mythology derives the present condition of the world
from a cold nebulous “Niflheim,” the northern land
that was foreign to the sun according to the Germanic idea in
ancient time, and from another realm, “Muspelheim,”
the warm realm. By the cooperation of both realms, the present
condition of the earth originated. From the cold, nebulous
Niflheim and not from the warm Muspelheim the most important
forces serving now humanity were derived. There have first
developed the higher forces underlying the today's culture.
However, at the same time, — and this is the strange that
touches our question in a miraculous way — it is said to us
that Hel who receives the unworthy dead people is exiled by the
gods to this nebulous home where those arrive who died of no
honourable death. It is strange that the realm and the forces
of the rise are brought together with the place and the
personality who represents the force of death, of
decay.
Approaching our times, we
find those taking the mental picture of a world in which the
evil is concentrated who want to explain our existence from the
depths of the world existence. How magnificently and greatly
Dante describes this world immediately at the beginning of his
overpowering poem that shows the purification and development
of the human being to the higher spiritual worlds! Again, a
poet was urged to take these mental pictures to show the forces
living in the human soul when Goethe wrote his
Faust.
Hence, he contrasted that what should lead Faust to the bright
powers with the representative of the infernal powers, with
Mephistopheles.
You can find many important remarks in Goethe's
Faust
that describe
the peculiar relationship of Faust to Mephisto and of both to
the world existence. I would like to mention two of them in
this context in which Goethe puts both concepts strangely side
by side and in a certain way reminiscent to the Nordic legend.
The one quotation is that where Mephistopheles is called
“a part of that force which, always willing evil, always
produces good.” In a very intimate coherence with the
whole world existence, the concepts of good and evil are put
there. And another quotation of Goethe should not go
unmentioned which on the one side leads us deeply into Goethe's
soul, on the other side, however, also rather deeply into our
problem; for it deals with the whole relation of the good
powers in Faust to that what Mephisto, the evil, wants to
attain with him. Very typically, Goethe lets Faust say the
words when he should make the pact with Mephisto that
determines under which conditions he belongs to
Mephisto:
If I should ever say to any moment:
Tarry remain — you are so fair!
Then you may lay your fetters on me,
then I will gladly be destroyed!
Then they can toll the passing bell,
your obligations then be ended —
the clock may stop, its hand may fall,
and time at last for me be over!
(Verses 1699–1706)
“If I should ever say to any moment:
Tarry remain — you are so fair!” is an expression by
which Goethe makes comprehensible to us that Mephistopheles has
not understood it in its entirety. However, Faust knows that he
can only fall for the infernal powers if he is placed in the
position to say to the moment: “Tarry remain — you are
so fair!”
I want to put this at the
beginning of our today's consideration because it can show in
which direction that is turned what occupies us today, on one
side, from the world of legends, on the other side, from a deep
human thinking, dressed in a poetic garment. Indeed, those who
believe today to be able to build up a whole worldview from
some pieced together concepts of the material world, very
easily are ready with the concepts hell and heaven. They do not
care about what we have put at the head of our consideration
now. One simply says, we need only to go back the developmental
way of the different religions and childish worldviews. Then we
realise that either the peoples or some human beings invented
something in their misery that one calls heaven and hell,
partly to comfort the peoples for the grief which they suffer
on earth, partly to encourage them by the fear of the hell to
transform their selfish desires into the good.
Who talks in such a way
knows nothing about the real motives by which one introduced
such ideas like heaven and hell in the souls and hearts of the
human beings.
Today we search an answer
to this question not in any accidental observations, in any
pictures, judgements and conclusions, but we want to gain
mental pictures of what is to be said about this
question.
We remember the talk about the topic
Man, Woman and Child.
We could speak there of
the big development of the human being on earth and impart
knowledge of various forces which are active in the human
evolution. If we survey this human development in the sense of
spiritual science, then we take the way up to attain a
relationship to it as the spiritual-scientific viewer looks at
the growing child approaching us from the first moments of its
life and working out its forces and abilities more and
more.
Someone who looks with
the sight sharpened by spiritual science at this growing human
being sees the abilities of the child developing from the
rudiments in a lovely way. A materialistically minded science
would like to make us believe that that what gradually works
its way out so attractively is to be led back to the merely
inherited attributes of the parents, grandparents or other
ancestors. The word “inheritance” plays a big role
concerning this question in this day and time. Often enough I
drew your attention to the fact that spiritual science has to
play a role which before not too long time — 300 years have not
yet passed — a great scientist played, the Italian naturalist
Francesco Redi (1626–1697). He first pronounced something that
is common property of any unprofessional and academic knowledge
today. At his time, it was not only an unprofessional faith,
but also the faith of all naturalists that from something
unliving, from river mud, not only lower animal beings but also
earthworms, fish can originate. One believes today that these
are only religious prejudices, which prevented the human being
to lead back all things to a wholly mechanical world order.
However, not only the few worldly scholars who lived at that
time supposed that from something unliving life could
originate, but also St. Augustine represented this view. You
learn from this fact that it did not contradict the piety of
St. Augustine at all to represent such a conception.
However, what contradicts
such an assumption? A real, in the depths of the world
existence going outer and inner observing, physical and not
supersensible experience of the things. Physical and not
supersensible experiences forced the quotation upon the human
beings gradually which then Redi did: life can originate only
from life.
In the same position in
which in those days the naturalist Redi was — he escaped the
destiny of Giordano Bruno (1544–1600, Italian monk and
philosopher, burnt at the stake) only by the skin of the teeth
—, is the modern spiritual science today. The sentence, which
one denies today, is applied to the spiritual realm: the
spiritual can originate only from spiritual. — We cannot lead
back to physical processes what we see developing first from
the dispositions of the embryo. We lead it back to the
spiritual as we lead life back to life. Then the spiritual
leads us back to a spiritual-mental. If we see this
spiritual-mental dressed, as it were, in those attributes
connected with the physical or the other covers of the human
being, then we only lead this physical back to the entire line
of inheritance that colours and shades the spiritual-mental
abilities and peculiarities. If one wants to draw our attention
repeatedly to the way in which the qualities sum up in the
inheritance line gradually which appear then last with a
descendant, we are not at all surprised from the viewpoint of
spiritual science. It is a matter of course for us that in the
bodies in which the spiritual germ appears the attributes of
the physical inheritance appear. For, how do we look at this
physical inheritance? We choose the following
example:
We take a sprout of a
plant and plant it in fertile soil with all possible substances
that can well supply the plant. Then we plant the same sprout
in another soil that contains small quantities of the
substances, which the plant needs. The plants carry the
qualities of the ground in themselves from which they have
arisen. Thus, we see the plant unfolding what is its own deeper
origin, we see its sprout, and on the other side that what this
sprout developed and unfolded in which it is wrapped what
appears as attached and filled from the ground from which the
plant has arisen. Thus, the human being has arisen, like the
plant from a former plant, from a spiritual-mental of
prehistoric time. He has grown on a ground that was prepared in
the line of inheritance, and this spiritual-mental germ
contains qualities that it brings from the ground of the
inheritance line. We are not surprised that the complete
process is in such a way and presents itself for the external,
physical world viewer in such a way that one can be addicted to
the indicated mistakes. If it means, one should observe how in
an especially gifted personality the qualities of the ancestors
are added up and that a musician is descended from a family of
musicians and a mathematician from a family of mathematicians,
the spiritual scientist does not at all deny these things or
show them in another light.
For spiritual science,
the matter is in such a way: there are large periods, within
which our spiritual-mental arises repeatedly. We speak in the
spiritual research of repeated earth-lives, while we say that
our spiritual-mental existence points us back to former lives
in which the spiritual germs of the current life were prepared.
Everything that we now contain and that we now gain develops in
future time and has its effect. This spiritual-mental germ has
nothing to do with that what reproduces in the physical line.
If the human being enters the existence, this spiritual-mental
germ enters the physical body, and the forces that are handed
down in the family build up the physical body, which he
inhabits. Thus, a duality is really assembled in the human
being one of which, the spiritual-mental, goes back to an only
spiritual evolution line, while the other, the physical one
goes back to the inherited line of evolution. Inheritance and
reincarnation are both things, which intermingle here, as it
arises from any reasonable consideration.
Nevertheless, one says then, realise that
in one ancestor these qualities exist and in another those
qualities. At last, these qualities accumulate and become
Goethe or Beethoven. The genii normally appear at the end of a
long line. Let us consider this
sentence once: the genius appears at the end of a line of
generations. — It is weird that the genius is led back to
inheritance because it has a body that is organised for the
genius. If the Bernoullis
(famous Swiss family of mathematicians and scientists)
become mathematicians repeatedly, it is
obvious that they need special bodies. It is not miraculous
that if the spiritual-mental germ disappears in an inheritance
line, in that what is the ground for the mathematical head, he
also brings these qualities. On the other hand, does it
surprise one that anybody who dives in the water comes out wet?
Thus, it is also natural that if anybody is born out of a
family he carries the qualities of the family in
himself.
It is something natural
that the cited sentence can really mean something completely
trivial. However, when would it have to appear that the genius
itself is inheritable? If it stood at the beginning and not at
the end of a line of generations! If it stands at the end, it
is a proof of the fact that just the ingenious qualities are
not transmitted! It is already a weird kind of arguing if one
says that one realises that the qualities are transmitted, and
if one asserts that the genius stands at the end of a line. A
healthy logic can only say that the reincarnating genius cannot
transmit the spiritual qualities; since, otherwise, it would
have to stand at the beginning of the generation line. We come
there to two developmental lines, a spiritual one, and a
physical one. If one does not accept this, one also does not
manage with the healthy logic.
We see a child that went
through another life centuries ago developing and using those
qualities which present themselves to it now. We see the child
entering life that way. How do we see the human being leaving
life? We have already pointed to this. Now we want to look at
the events that occur if that what has entered the physical
existence by birth leaves it again, while it walks through the
gate of death. There we must not only consider death, but
something that we already mentioned in the last consideration,
the alternating states of sleeping and waking, and the
alternating states of life and death.
We know from the last
consideration that if the human being sinks in the dreamless
sleep certain members of his being separate from the real human
inside, the innermost being, his essence. We distinguish in
such a sleeping human being in the sense of the spiritual
science what lies, so to speak, in the bed, from this essence.
In the bed lies the physical body that is handed over at death
to the earthly elements. However, if the human being lies in
the bed, the physical body is not in such a way as it is when
it is handed over to the earth. The physical body is there
still infiltrated by the etheric body or life body. The
physical body lives, the vital functions are maintained, so
that in the bed there lie the physical body and the etheric
body or life body. However, the bearer of joy and sorrow is
lifted out, it is the bearer of any sensory sensation surging
up and down during the day like heat and cold, smell and taste,
and it is the bearer of the whole life of thought and imaging,
starting from the instincts and passions up to the moral
ideals. All that sinks in an uncertain darkness with sleep.
However, this also appears again in the morning like light
streaming inside. It is the light of the
consciousness.
We must exactly
distinguish something else within that what is lifted out at
night from the human body, from the physical one and the
etheric one: It is the human self-consciousness and its bearer,
the human ego. We call the bearer of joy and sorrow, of
instincts and passions, of sensuous sensations surging up and
down the astral body, and the bearer of the self-consciousness,
the fourth member of the human being, the ego. These both
members, the ego-bearer and the bearer of desire and pain, are
lifted out during the dreamless sleep from the physical and
etheric bodies.
Why can you not perceive
in that world? We have found the answer of this question in our
talks; because of the present developmental stage of the human
being, the ego and the astral body have no organs. The human
being perceives his physical environment because he has organs,
eyes, and ears. In the morning when the ego and the astral body
disappear in the physical body and use these organs the human
being perceives the surroundings. We have a four-membered
being: a physical body, an etheric body, an astral body, and an
ego-body. — This is the nature of the alternating states of
waking and sleeping.
However, we want to
imagine the moment of death now. We can do this, using what
such a human being perceives who has applied the methods of
initiation and has learnt to use the higher senses slumbering
in the human being. In addition, a usual logic can realise this
because these facts are portrayed in such a way that they can
demonstrate the way of the human being through death. At death,
something happens that only happens during the whole life
between birth and death in special cases. During the whole
life, the etheric body is united with the physical body. Only
at death, it separates from it, and thereby the physical body
becomes a corpse. Now it follows the merely physical-chemical
forces from which it was wrested between birth and death
because the etheric body worked in it.
This etheric body is a
faithful fighter against the decay of the physical body during
the whole life; for the physical body has the chemical and
physical forces in itself. This becomes obvious if it is left
to its own resources after death: it disintegrates, it is an
impossible mixture. The etheric body separates from the
physical body and remains together with the astral body and the
ego for a while.
This coherence is of big
importance. At the moment of death, a comprising painting of
his life between birth and death faces the human being. It is,
as if an immense panorama of this life which we have
experienced stands before our souls. This view, a feeling of
extension, of increasing accompanies this reminiscent picture.
It is, as if the human being extended and on the inner side the
pictures of the past life appeared like in a miraculous
panorama.
Where from does this
come? It originates because the etheric body is the bearer of
memory. As long as it is in the physical body, it is bound to
the physical body, and it can only survey what it has
experienced in the physical body between birth and death. The
physical body is an obstacle. Because the etheric body is an
unclouded, pure bearer of memory, the entire past appears in
one single picture after death. Some people who were almost
drowning or fell off a rock and were close to death remember
that the whole life stood before their souls at this moment. I
could tell a lot to you, however, I only want to mention what
you can read in a book to which I have pointed once.
However, the criminal anthropologist Moritz Benedikt
(1835–1920, Austrian neurologist), a man who would regard
everything that was said here as the biggest nonsense and
fantasy — this does not matter —, tells that when he was close
to drowning his whole life faced him like a big painting. What
happens in such a case? A spontaneous
relaxation of the physical body and the etheric body happens
which is removed immediately again. The result of this fact is
that the commemorative contents of the whole life stand before
the human soul for a quite short interval.
Thus, this reminiscent
picture stands before the human soul first. Then the time comes
in which the etheric body separates from the astral body and
from the ego. However, there remains a rest of the etheric body
that is connected with the human being, the essence of the last
life. Imagine this extract, this life essence in such a way, as
if you could summarise the contents of a thick book skilfully
on one page, but in such a way that a human being could rebuild
the contents of the book. A sort of such a life essence is
attached to the human being for all future, after he has
removed what he cannot use for his further development. We
especially want to notice this. What is attached there to the
human being for his future development is the fruit of the last
life. Each life constitutes something like a page in the big
book of life and all our earth-lives are put down in such a
page. They are attached to our being. We take such a fruit from
a life with us in all the coming ones. This fruit has a great
significance for the further development of the human
being.
However, before we can go
into the significance of this life essence, we must closer
consider the further course of the human being after death.
After this life painting was there for a quite short interval,
the human being experiences another time after death that we
can characterise in the following way. The human being has his
ego, his astral body, and the above-mentioned
extract.
Let us take one of the
usual experiences, the experience of a gourmet who enjoys a
tasty dish. By which does the enjoyment come about? Somebody
may attribute it only to the physical body. However, this would
be absurd. Not the physical body, but the astral body is the
bearer of desires, of joy and sorrow. The astral body has the
enjoyment, and it develops the desire for the tasty dish. The
physical body is an apparatus of physical materials, of
physical and chemical forces. It delivers the tools that the
astral body can satisfy these desires. This is the relation of
the astral body to the physical body in life. The astral body
cries for satisfying its desires, and the physical body
delivers the tools, the palate, the tongue etc. by which it can
satisfy its desires. What does now happen at death? The
physical body is cast off and all instruments of satisfaction
with it. The astral body, however, is there, and it is easy to
realise that this astral body does not break of its hedonism,
its desires automatically only because the physical tools are
taken from it. The astral body keeps the desire, the addiction
after death, although it lacks the physical tools by which it
can satisfy it. The astral body develops the desire for tasty
dishes etc., but there is no palate. On the other hand, it is,
as if a human being suffers from burning thirst in surroundings
where no water is far and wide. For no other reason it cannot
satisfy the desire after death because it has no organs for it.
Thus, it suffers pain because of the desire, until it has
eradicated the desire root and branch by
non-satisfaction.
This time of purification
can appear to any possible degree. We take two human beings,
the one is completely merged in the sensuous enjoyments, his
life is filled with any possible enjoyment from the morning to
the evening which one can have only in the physical world where
the tools exist to its satisfaction. He identifies his whole
inside with his physical body. A human being who identifies
himself in such way with the physical body will have a more
difficult existence after death than someone who already sees
through the sensuous things what is spiritual-mental,
supersensible. On the other side, take someone who beholds a
nice scenery or enjoys a musical work. This human being can
realise a manifestation of the spirit in the smallest, most
unimportant things. One likes to choose the pleasure of a nice
scenery or of a good composition as examples because the matter
can be illustrated easier with it. Somebody who hears the
riddles of the everlasting in the world rushing in the
harmonies and melodies of a composition who can open his soul
in a nice scenery to the spiritual harmonies and relations
breaks away as a mental-spiritual being already in this life
between birth and death from that what is bound to the
physical. What shines through the physical, what is felt
sounding through the physical is a possession that remains to
us and which we have not to purify; for that what drops from us
is only the outer garment. Contemplate once in your deepest
inside how something makes known itself in the musical work
that is purely spiritual. It is concealed in the sensuous
manifestations and penetrates it by the means of the sensuous
manifestation. That belongs to the spirit, to the soul, from
which the human being does not need to break away after
death.
Thus, you realise that
there are degrees of that what one has to endure, and these
degrees are determined by the fact how strongly the human being
has identified himself with that what he only can experience
and enjoy by his organs in the physical world.
There is now, so to
speak, a perspective that needs not to be an immediate reality
for the present human being because there is no one with whom
the conditions come true to this perspective completely.
Nevertheless, it exists. We take a human being who gives his
ego completely up to that what only the physical body and its
organs in connection with the physical outside world can enjoy
and who has no interest in anything that forms the basis as
spiritual-mental contents of this sensuous outside world.
Briefly, we take a human being who looks only at the earth and
identifies himself only with that what forms his body. What
will be the result? We can recognise this if we investigate the
riddles of the human being even more exactly.
We have to adhere if we
want to do this to that what the human being takes as a life
essence of his etheric body. What originates from this life
essence? From this fruit of the preceding life, the human being
builds up his next incarnation, the body of his next life. For
that, what the human being develops gradually is a product of
inheritance. However, this product of inheritance is elastic in
certain way.
The human being cannot be
built up only by the attributes of the inheritance, but — as in
an elastic corporeality — that works and weaves what he has
brought from former lives. Thus, we see the incorporated fruits
of the former life and of all former lives in a human being
except the inherited attributes. If we ask ourselves, what does
this entail if the human being lives from embodiment to
embodiment in such a way? Then we can say, it is the way of
perfection by the earth-lives. The human being entered his
first life with forces that were primitive in relation to the
forces that work with the most human beings today. When he
entered his first incarnation, he had little mental power by
which he could direct the mental to the physical and etheric
bodies. Then he enjoyed the fruits of the first life, took the
fruit of the first life and the result of it was that the next
life could become a more perfect one. Because the human being
can add the experiences of the following lives to those of the
first life, he creates a more and more perfect, self-contained
harmonious earth existence. Any new life appears to us on a
higher level. However, you see two forces working into each
other. You see, after the human being has passed the gate of
death, the life essence, the forces of the former life that are
preserved for the future, the forces which can make the human
being more and more perfect. Thus, the power of the human being
is increased from life to life.
However, when the ego
leaves the physical body, you see the forces that chain him
repeatedly to the past physical existence. Indeed, after death
the human existence consists of advancing and of retarding
forces.
Now look once again
briefly at these retarding forces about which we have spoken,
that from which the human being must break away after death
root and branch. If nothing else were added, the human being
would be only equipped with the fertile forces of his past life
for the future existence. Indeed, the human being breaks away
from all that what chains him, so to speak, to the former
lives, he breaks away from all desires. However, he cannot
break away from one thing. A rest remains. This rest is
prepared between birth and death. It is not there when the
human being enters life. After he has entered life, he grows
into the physical world, and his adhering to the desire of the
physical world is something that the human being causes only in
the course of this life that he only draws in his being. Now we
can form the mental picture that that what the human being
draws gradually in his being is something that does not
contribute to his further development that would make this
further development even impossible if he were exposed solely
to these forces. Because he brings that all in his life and
because it can be taken up by life, it is the life between
birth and death that brings the retarding forces in the human
being.
On one side, there is the
experience of life that we take as a fruit, and on the other
side, it chains us to the physical world that we carry then
continuously in ourselves. On the one side, it is that what
wants to lift out of the embodiment, on the other side, it
brings us repeatedly to this world, until we are so far that we
have completely overcome everything that brings us together
with the physical world at the end of our existence. Thus, the
human being has a power permanently in himself that furthers
him, and another that is a retarding one. We see the human
existence consisting of advancing and of retarding, hampering
forces.
You can see in detail how
these advancing and hampering forces affect each other. Take
the human eye; it is formed, as Goethe says, “in the
light for the light.” If we had no eye, we would not see
the light. However, if the light were not there, the eye would
also not be. The light has developed the eye. Because the light
creates the eye, it inhibits the development and the
developmental stream, which has preceded. Because in the
distant past the light worked on the human body, this eye was
elicited from it. For that purpose, it had to retard the force
only that would have been vitality in another direction. After
long work of the other forces, the eye will be only ripe to
become an organ that furthers the development again. Thus, you
see at this example, that the retardations, the hampering
forces, are substantially necessary.
Now we see how
wonderfully wisely it is established in this human life, while
on one side the forward pressing forces of evolution are there,
and on the other side the repelling forces. These repelling
forces chain the human being to the physical world, which give
him the organs in the physical world between birth and death by
which he acquires the strength for the progress again. If the
hampering forces were not there, the human being would not
enter the life between birth and death and would not grow into
the covers through which the spiritual-mental appears to him.
Now he works by the life that the hampering forces created.
Thus, the human being owes the fruits of progress to the
hampering forces.
There is a big riddle
concealed that in life the progressive forces must co-operate
with the hampering ones. Now it can happen that the human being
balances the progressive forces and the hampering ones, or that
he connects himself completely with the hampering forces that
he grows together completely with the forces which are
generated only in the physical body as means of progress,
however, he regards them not as means, but as an end in itself.
In this case, the spiritual-mental of the human being would
break away from any progress. It would fall out and the time of
kamaloka, the time of purification, which consists of the fact
that the human being casts off what connects him in microcosm
with the physical world, this time would become something
absolute.
This faces us as an
extreme. However, because the human being grows never together
completely with the sensuous world because he is able to avoid
this extreme perspective in his mental, in his inside, he
escapes from the extreme. However, if he were in such a way
that his interest never stuck to that what shines through as a
spiritual-mental — this faces us as a perspective, however, it
is not reached in this life —, then it would squeeze in the
active forces of life. Then it would become obvious there that
the human being would tear out himself from all
spiritual-mental because he has grown together with the
physical-sensuous world. We assume this case. Now the human
being should be placed into the spiritual-mental world after
death. He brings nothing for the spiritual-mental world but the
invincible tendency to the physical-sensuous world. This
reminiscent picture sticks to him and presses like a weight of
lead. The human being gets the hardened material, converted
into the spiritual, into the spiritual world. He is connected
inseparably with the forces that detain and hamper any
development and evolution. This is the idea of the infernal
existence.
Hence, the time of
purification extends in the last perspective to that state
where without understanding of the spiritual-mental world the
ego has stuck to the wholly physical-sensuous and brings
nothing but the understanding of the physical-sensuous. This
understanding of the physical-sensuous is the infernal torture
in the spiritual even if it also is an infinitely satisfying
enjoyment in the sensuous existence. We try to understand the
above-mentioned words of Faust now. If the infernal messenger
wants to have him, what must be achieved? It must be achieved
that Faust does not suck out the germ of further development
from the moments of the bodily existence, but that he has to
get stuck into it at these moments of the physical existence in
such a way that he wants to retain them in his sensuousness.
“If I should ever say to any
moment: tarry remain — you are so fair!”
Then you have me! The human being
can make this pact with the infernal powers that he combines
with these forces hampering the progress. However, we see at
the same time that it was necessary that these hampering forces
came into being in the human evolution.
We examine next time what
the human being was at that time when he appeared in the
physical body for the first time, and where from he brought it.
Now we know that the human being consists of progressive and
backward forces. If the human being had no hampering forces in
those days when he entered the physical body for the first
time, he would have remained in that spiritualised form in
which he was before the incarnation. Because the hampering
organs developed in him, the spirit penetrated the sensuous and
could take the fruits of the sensuous, could get rich more and
more. The progressive forces are those, which had to create the
organs of progress only. They have to hamper a former
development, so that a later development becomes possible.
Nobody has the right to complain obstacles in life.
The conservative element
is a benefit, as long as it is in the service of humanity; it
becomes an impediment if it is made an end in itself. The same
applies after life. The impediment is, considered in the
service of the spirit, the highest bearer of progress. If one
regards it, however, as an end in itself or uses it
egoistically, then it is the germ of the hell. Thus, that from
which all human faculties originate on earth can become an end
in itself, a germ of the hell if the human being unites with it
at an inopportune moment.
We now understand the
Nordic legend. The spiritual germ of the current culture has
arisen from Niflheim. It had to go through the old cultures,
but it also had to go beyond them, while it took the fruits in
the present incarnation. Those human beings who do not use the
present incarnation in the spiritual-mental sense condemn
themselves to be thrown back to a level which was beneficent in
its kind at its time as means of progress but which now
hampers. Thus, that which is a means of progress at its time
becomes the infernal element if it survives in the human
existence. The hell did not always control Niflheim. The good
elements of the human being held on Niflheim up to the time
when they have developed beyond this stage.
Thus, we really see bad
and evil, infernal and heavenly forces working in the human
life and flowing out from him as Schiller says it in the cited
poem. The beneficent element becomes a consuming, hampering
element if it is not used in the right way, — as well as the
fire is beneficent if the human being controls it, while it can
become “terrible,” if “it, casting off its
shackles, strides along on tracks its own.” The infernal
powers also appear, if they enter the human life “on
tracks their own.”
We understand why the
great spirits have thought or felt such deep connections, and
thought and felt the same that spiritual science puts before
our souls. We have recognised the infernal element as something
that is necessary for our life; we will get to know that
element even closer next time, which will give us light about
the whole. We get to know the bright heaven in the light of
true spiritual science. However, already from the today's talk
we can see that it is right what Dante (D. Alighieri,
~1265–1321, Italian poet) pronounces in the last line of his
song about the hell. Dante just also believed at first to have
to look at the strong, hampering forces in life, before he
formed a mental picture of those progressive forces in which
all welfare and all human development is contained. We will
also attain clues for the usual, everyday life if we can
balance regression and progress properly. It will become
obvious where the hampering forces threaten to become the
infernal ones, and where they turn out to be beneficent, while
they rise to the advancing powers. Dante describes it if he
sees himself beguiled by the infernal powers under the guidance
of Virgil (Publius Vergilius Maro,
70–19 B.C., Roman poet),
then he comes out as a victor over all hampering powers, and
the luminous stars appear at the distant firmament to him whose
soul “is swollen with pleasure.”
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