Lecture 5
Sickness and Healing
Berlin,
3rd March 1910
It has probably become clear to those people who attended the
lectures which I was permitted to hold here this winter more or less
regularly that this lecture cycle has dealt with a series of far-reaching
questions concerning the soul. It is the intention of today's lecture,
also, to deal with such a question, namely the nature of
sickness and healing.
What might be said
on the relevant facts in life from the point of view of spiritual science, in
so far as they are only physical expressions of spiritual causes, was
explained in earlier lectures held here — for example
“Understanding Sickness and Death”
[ 30 ]
or “Illusory
Illness” and “The Feverish Pursuit of Health “.
[ 31 ]
Today I want to deal with significantly deeper questions in the understanding
of sickness and healing.
Sickness, healing
and sometimes the fatal course of some illnesses deeply affect the human
life. And since we have inquired repeatedly into the preconditions, the
spiritual foundations which lie at the base of our reflections here, we are
justified in also inquiring into the spiritual causes of these far-reaching
facts and consequences of human existence. In other words, what can spiritual
science say about these experiences?
We will have to
investigate deeply once again the meaning of human life as it develops in
order to clarify how illness, health, death and healing stand in relation to
the normal course of development of the human being. For we see the events
referred to affecting this normal course of development. Do they perhaps
contribute something to our development? Do they advance or retard us in our
development? We can only reach a clear conception of these events if here,
too, we take the whole of the human being into account.
We have often said
here that the latter is constituted of four members: first, the physical body
which the human being has in common with all mineral beings of his
environment which take their form from the physical and chemical forces
within them. The second member of the human being we have always called the
ether or life body. This he has in common with all living things; that is,
with the plant and animal beings of his environment. Then we spoke of the
astral body as the third member of man's being; this is the bearer of
pleasure and pain, joy and sorrow, of all the emotions, images, thoughts and
so on which flood through us throughout the day. This astral body the human
being has in common only with the animal world of his environment. And then
there is the highest member of the human being which makes him the crown of
creation; the bearer of the ego, his self-consciousness. When we consider
these four members, we can say in the first instance that there appear to be
certain differences between them, even to the superficial view. The physical
human body is there when we look at the human being, at ourselves, from
outside. The external physical sense organs can observe the physical body.
With the thinking which is tied to these organs, the thinking which is tied
to the instrument of the brain, we can understand this physical body of the
human being. It is revealed to our external observation.
The relation to the
human astral body is quite different. We have already seen from previous
descriptions that the astral body is only an outward fact, so to speak, for
the truly clairvoyant consciousness; the latter can see the astral body in
the same way as the physical one only by schooling the consciousness as has
been frequently described. In ordinary life the astral body of the human
being is not observable from the outside; the eye can only see the outer
expression of the instincts, desires, passions, thoughts and feelings which
surge through it. But in contrast, the human being observes within himself
these experiences of the astral body. He observes what we call the instincts,
desires, passions, joy and sorrow, pleasure and pain. Thus it can be said
that the relationship between the astral and the physical body is such that
in normal life we observe the former internally, but the physical body
externally.
Now in a certain
sense the other two members of the human being, the ether body and the bearer
of the ego, are situated between these two extremes. The physical body is
observable purely from the outside, the astral body purely from the inside.
But the intermediary member between the physical body and the astral body is
the ether body. It cannot be observed from the outside, but it affects the
outside. The forces, the inner experiences of the astral body initially have
to be transferred to the ether body; only then can they act on the physical
instrument, the physical body. The ether body acts as an intermediary member
between the astral body and the physical body, forming a link between outside
and inside. We can no longer see it with the physical eyes, but that which we
can see with the physical eyes is an instrument of the astral body only
because the ether body is connected towards the outside with the physical
body.
Now in a certain
sense the ego acts from the inside to the outside, whilst the ether body
acts from the outside inwards to the astral body; for by means of the ego and
the way it affects the astral body the human being gains knowledge of the
outside world, the physical environment, from which the physical body itself
originates. Animal existence takes place without individual, personal
knowledge because the animal does not have an individual ego. The animal
inwardly lives through all the experiences of the astral body, but does not
use its pleasure and pain, sympathy or antipathy to gain knowledge of the
outside world. What we call pleasure and pain, joy and sorrow, sympathy or
antipathy are all experiences of the astral body in the animal; but the
animal does not commute its pleasure into a celebration of the beauty of the
world, but it remains within the element which causes the pleasure. The
animal lives immediately within its pain; the human being is guided by his
pain beyond himself into discovery of the world because the ego leads him out
again and unites him with the outside world. Thus we see on the one hand how
the ether body is directed inwards into the human being towards the astral
body, whereas the ego leads into the outside world, into the physical world
which surrounds us.
The human being
leads an alternating life. This alternating life can be observed everyday.
From the moment of waking in the morning we observe in the human soul all the
in and out flooding experiences of the astral body — joy and sorrow,
pleasure and pain, feelings, images, etc. We see how at night these
experiences sink down to a level of undefined darkness as the astral body and
the ego enter an unconscious, or perhaps better said, subconscious state.
When we look at the waking human being between morning and evening, the
physical body, ether body, astral body and ego are interwoven, are
inter-linked in their effects. When the human being goes to sleep at night,
the occult consciousness can see that the physical body and the ether body
remain in bed and that the astral body and the ego return to their proper
home in the spiritual world, that they withdraw from the physical body and
the ether body. It is possible to describe this in still a different way
which will enable us to deal with the present subject in the appropriate
way.
The physical body,
which only presents us with its outward aspect, sleep remains in the physical
world as the outward human being and keeps the ether body, the mediator
between inner and outer, with it. That is why in the sleeping human being
there can be no mediation between outer and inner because the ether body, as
mediator, has entered the outside world. Thus one can say in a certain sense
that in the sleeping human being the physical body and the ether body are
merely the outer human being; one could even describe the physical and ether
bodies as the “outer human being”
per se,
even though the ether body is the mediator
between outer and inner. In contrast, the astral body in the sleeping human
being can be described as the “inner human being”. These terms
are also true of the waking human being, because all the experiences of the
astral body are inner experiences under normal circumstances and what the ego
gains in knowledge of the outside world in waking life is taken up inwardly
by the human being to be assimilated as learning. The external becomes
internalised through the ego. This demonstrates that we can speak of an
“outward” and an “inward” human being, the former
consisting of a physical and ether body, the latter of ego and astral
body.
Now let us observe
the so-called normal human life and its development in essence. Let us ask
the question: Why does the human being return with his astral body and his
ego to the spiritual world every night? Is there any reason for the human
being to go to sleep? This subject has been mentioned before, but it is
necessary for the topic we are dealing with today. Normal developments have
to be understood in order to recognise the apparently abnormal states as they
manifest themselves in sickness and healing. Why does the human being go to
sleep every night?
An understanding of
this can only be reached if one considers fully the relationship between the
astral body and the ego and the “outer human being”. We described
the astral body as the bearer of pleasure and pain, joy and sorrow, of
instincts, desires, passions, of the surging imagination, perceptions, ideas
and feelings. But if the astral body is the bearer of all these things, why
is it that at night the human being does not have these experiences, even
though the actual inner human being is connected with the astral body in such
a manner that the physical and the ether bodies are not present? Why is it
that during this period these experiences sink down into an undefined
darkness? The reason is that the astral body and the ego, although they are
the bearers of joy and sorrow, judgments, the imagination, etc., cannot
experience directly those things of which they are the bearers. In our human
life the astral body and the ego under normal circumstances are dependent on
the physical body and the ether body for awareness of their own experiences.
Our soul-life is not something which is immediately experienced by the astral
body. If this were the case, then we would also experience it during the
night when we remain united with the astral body. Our daytime soul-life is
like an echo or a mirror-image. The physical body and the ether body reflect
the experiences of the astral body. Everything which our soul conjures up for
us between waking up and going to sleep, it can only do because it sees its
own experiences in the mirror of the physical and ether or life bodies. At
the moment when we leave the physical and ether bodies at night we still have
all the experiences of the astral body in us but we are not conscious of them
because in order to be conscious of them the reflecting qualities of the
physical body and the ether body are required.
Thus in the whole of
our life as it takes its course from waking up in the morning to going to
sleep at night we see an interaction between the inner and the outer human
being, between the ego and the astral body on the one hand and the physical
body and the ether body on the other. The forces which are at work here are
the forces of the astral body and the ego. For under no circumstances could
the physical body as the sum of physical attributes bring forth our soul-life
out of itself and neither could the ether body. The reflecting forces come
from the astral body and the ego in the same way as the image which we see in
the mirror does not originate in the mirror but in the object which is
reflected in the mirror. Thus all the forces which cause our soul-life lie in
the astral body and the ego, in the inward nature of the human being. And
they become active in the interaction between inner and outer world, they
reach out, so to speak, for our physical and ether bodies, but at night we
see them enter the state which we call “tiredness”. We see them
exhausted at night. And we would be unable to continue our life if we were
not in a position to enter a different world each night than the one which we
inhabit from morning to evening. In the world which we inhabit when we are
awake we can make our soul-life perceptible, we can create it before our
soul. That we do with the forces of the astral body. But we also exhaust
these forces and cannot replenish them out of our waking life. We can only
replenish them out of the spiritual world which we enter each night and that
is why we sleep. We would be unable to live without entering the world of
night and fetching from the spiritual world the forces which we use during
the day. Thus the question what we bring into the physical world when we
enter our ether and physical bodies is answered.
But do we not also
carry something from the physical world into the spiritual world at night?
That is the second question, and it is just as important as the first
one.
In order to answer
this question, we have to deal with a number of things which are a part of
normal human life. In ordinary life we have so-called experiences. These
experiences are significant in our life between birth and death. An example
which has often been mentioned here will illuminate this, the example of
learning to write. When we put pen to paper in order to express our thoughts,
we practise the art of writing. We can write, but what are the conditions
required that we can do so? It is necessary that in a certain span of
existence between birth and death we have a whole series of experiences.
Think of all the things which you went through as a child, from the first
clumsy attempts to hold the pen, put it to paper, etc., etc. One might well
thank God that one does not have to recall all those things. Because it would
be a dreadful situation if every time that we wanted to write we had to
recall all the unsuccessful attempts at tracing the lines, perhaps also the
punishments connected therewith, and so on in order to develop what we call
the art of writing. What has taken place? Development in an important sense
has taken place in the human life between birth and death. We have had a
whole series of experiences. These experiences took place over a long period
of time. Then they were refined, as it were, into an essence which we call
the “ability” to write. All the other things have sunk into the
indeterminate shadow of forgetfulness. But there is no need to remember them,
because our soul has developed to a higher stage from these experiences: our
memories flow together into essences which appear in life as our capabilities
and abilities. That is our development in the existence between birth and
death. Experiences are transformed initially into abilities of the soul which
can then come to expression by means of the outer tools of the physical body.
All personal experiences between birth and death take place in such a manner
that they are transformed into abilities and also into wisdom.
We can gain an
insight into how this transformation takes place if we take a look at the
period between 1770 and 1815. A significant historical event took place
during this period. A large number of people were contemporaries of this
event. How did they respond to it? Some of them did not notice the events
passing by them. Impassively they neglected to turn the events into
knowledge, wisdom of the world. Others transformed them into a deep wisdom,
they extracted the essence.
How are experiences
transformed in the soul into ability and wisdom? They are transformed by
being taken in their immediate form into our sleep each night, into those
spheres where the soul or the inner human being reside during the night.
There the experiences which occur over a period of time are changed into
essences. Any observer of life knows that if one wants to master and
co-ordinate a series of experiences in a single sphere of activity it is
necessary to transform these experiences in periods of sleep. For example, a
thing is best learnt by heart by learning it, sleeping on it, learning it
again, sleeping on it again. If one is not able to immerse the experiences in
sleep in order for them to emerge as abilities or in the form of wisdom or
art, then they will not be developed.
This is the
expression on a higher level of what we are faced with as necessity on a
lower one. This year's plant cannot become next year's one if it
does not return to the dark lap of the earth in order to grow again the
following year. Here development remains repetition. Where it is illuminated
with the human spirit it is a true “development”. The experiences
descend into the nocturnal lap of the unconscious and they are brought forth
again, initially still as repetition; but eventually they will have been
transformed to such an extent that they can emerge as wisdom, as abilities,
as life experience.
Thus life was
understood in times when it was still possible to observe the spiritual
worlds more deeply than is the case today. That is why, where leading
personalities of ancient cultures wanted to speak of certain things by means
of an image we see indications of these significant foundations of human
life. What would someone have to do if he wanted to prevent a series of
daytime experiences catching fire in his soul and being transformed into
certain abilities? What, for example, happens when someone experiences a
certain relationship with another person over a period of time? These
experiences with the other person descend into the night-time consciousness
and re-emerge from night-time consciousness as love for another person,
which, when it is healthy, is an essence, as it were, of the consecutive
experiences. The feeling of love for the other person has come about in such
a way that the sum of experiences has been drawn together into unity, as if
woven into a fabric. Now what would someone have to do to prevent a series of
experiences turning into love? He would have to take the special measure of
preventing the nightly natural process which turns our experience into
essence, the feeling of love, from taking place. He would have to unravel
again at night the fabric of daytime experience. If he can manage this his
achievement is that his experience of the other person, which turns into love
in his soul, has no effect on him.
Homer was alluding
to these depths of human soul-life in his image of Penelope and her suitors.
[ 32 ]
She promises marriage to each one after she has completed a certain
fabric. She manages to avoid having to keep her promise only by unravelling
each night what she has woven during the day. Great depths are revealed where
the seer is also artist. Today there is little feeling left for these things
and such interpretations of poets who were also seers are declared arbitrary
and phantastical. This can harm neither the ancient poets nor the truth, but
only our time, which is thus prevented from entering into the depths of human
life.
Thus something is
taken into the soul at night which returns again. Something is taken into the
soul which the soul develops and which raises it to ever higher levels of
ability. But now it must be asked: where does this development of the human
being reach its limit? This frontier can be recognised if we observe how the
human being when he wakes up in the morning always returns to the same
physical body and ether body with the same abilities and talents, the same
configuration which they have possessed from birth. This configuration, these
inner structures and forms of the physical and ether bodies cannot be altered
by human being. If we were able to take the physical or, at least, the ether
body into the state of sleep then we would be able to change them. But in the
morning we find them again unchanged from the evening. Here there is a clear
limitation to what can be achieved by development in the life between birth
and death. Development between birth and death is essentially restricted to
experiences of the soul; it cannot extend to physical experience.
Thus for all the
opportunities someone might have to pass through experiences which could
deepen his musical appreciation, to awaken in his soul a profound musical
life, it could not be developed if he did not have a musical ear, if the
physical and etheric formation of his ear did not permit him to establish the
harmony between the outer and the inner human being. In order for the human
being to be whole, all the members of his being have to form a unity, to be
in harmony. That is why all the opportunities which a person with an
unmusical ear might have to go through experiences which would enable him to
rise to a higher level of musical appreciation have to remain in the soul,
have to resign themselves. They cannot come to fruition because the boundary
is drawn each morning by the structure and form of the internal organs. These
things are not dependent merely on the more rough structures of the physical
and ether bodies but on very subtle relationships therein. Every function of
the soul in our current normal life has to find expression in an organ; and
if the organ is not formed in a suitable way then this is prevented. Those
things which cannot be demonstrated by physiology and anatomy, the subtle
sculpting within the organs, are precisely the things which are incapable of
transformation between birth and death.
Is the human being
completely powerless, then, to transfuse into his physical and ether bodies
the events and experiences which he has taken into his astral body and ego?
For when we look at people we can see that the human being can even shape his
physical body within limits. One only needs to observe a person who has spent
ten years of his life in deep inner contemplation: the gestures and
physiognomy will have changed. But this occurs within very narrow confines.
Is it always the case?
That this is not
always confined to the narrowest of limitations can only be understood if we
take recourse to a law which we have often mentioned here, but which needs to
be recalled frequently because it is so alien to our present time, a law
which can be compared with another one which became established for mankind
in the 17th century on a lower level.
Up until the 17th
century it was believed that the lower animals, insects, etc., could
originate from river mud. It was believed that nothing more than pure matter
was required to generate earth-worms and insects. This was thought to be true
not only by amateurs but also by scholars. If we go back to earlier times we
find that everything was systematised in such a way that, for example,
instructions were given on how to create life from the environment. Thus a
book from the 7th century AD
[ 33 ]
describes how the
carcass of a horse has to be beaten tender in order to create bees. Similarly
bullocks created hornets, donkeys, wasps. It was in the 17th century that the
great scientist Francesco Redi
[ 34 ]
first pronounced the axiom: life can only
originate from life! Because of this truth, which is taken as self-evident
today so that no one can understand how anything else could ever have been
believed, Redi was considered a dreadful heretic still in the 17th century
and he barely escaped the fate of Giordano Bruno.
It is always like
that with such truths. At first those who proclaim them are branded as
heretics and fall prey to the inquisition. In the past people were burned or
threatened with burning. Today this type of inquisition has been abandoned.
No one is burnt anymore. But those who today sit on the curule chair of
science regard all those who proclaim a new, higher level of truth to be
fools and dreamers. People who today espouse in a different way the axiom
regarding living things which Francesco Redi put forward in the 17th century
are considered to be fools and dreamers. Redi pointed out that it is inexact
observation to believe that life can originate immediately from dead matter
but that it must be traced back to similar living matter, to the embryo which
draws its matter and strength from the environment. Similarly spiritual
science today must point out that what enters existence as soul and spiritual
nature must originate from soul and spirit and is not an assembly of
inherited characteristics. As the embryonic form of the earth-worm draws on
the matter of its environment to develop, so the soul and spiritual kernel
equally has to draw on the substances of its environment in order to develop.
If we pursue the soul and spiritual nature in the human being backwards, we
come to an earlier soul and spiritual element which exists before birth and
which has nothing to do with heredity. The axiom that soul-spiritual elements
can only arise from soul-spiritual elements entails in the last instance the
axiom of repeated earth lives, of which a closer study of spiritual science
furnishes the proof. Our life between birth and death leads back to other
lives which we went through in earlier times. The soul and spiritual element
originates in the soul and in the spirit, and the causes of our present
experiences between birth and death lie in a previous soul and spiritual
existence. When we pass through the gates of death we take with us what we
assimilated in this life as transformation from causes into abilities. This
we return with when we enter a future existence through birth.
In the time between
death and birth we are in different circumstances than when we enter the
spiritual world each night through sleep from which we wake up again in the
morning. When we wake up in the morning, we find our physical and ether
bodies as we left them the previous evening. We cannot transform them with
our experiences in life between birth and death. We find our limitation in
the finished ether and physical bodies. But when we enter the spiritual world
through the gate of death we leave the physical and ether bodies behind and
retain only the essence of the ether body. In the spiritual world we have no
need to take account of an existing physical and ether body. In the whole
period between death and a new birth the human being can work with purely
spiritual forces, he is dealing with purely spiritual substance. He takes
from the spiritual world what he requires to create the archetype of his new
physical body and ether body and forms these archetypes up to the time of his
new birth, weaving into them all the experiences which the soul was unable to
utilise between birth and death in the previous physical and ether bodies.
Then the moment arrives when this purely spiritual archetypal image has been
finished and when the human being is able to sculpt into the physical and
ether bodies what he has woven into the archetypal image; the archetype is
thus active in this particular state of sleep which the human being is
passing through.
If the human being
were able to bring with him in a similar manner his physical body and ether
body each morning on waking up, then he would be able to form them from out
of the spiritual world; but he would also have to transform them. But birth
means waking up from a state of sleep which encompasses the physical and
ether bodies in the existence before birth. It is at this point that the
astral body and ego descend into the physical world, into the physical body
and the ether body, into which they can now sculpt everything which they
could not form into the complete bodies of the previous life. Now, in a new
life, they can express in an ether body and a physical body everything which
they were able to raise to a higher stage of development but which they were
unable to put into practice in the previous life because the complete ether
body and physical body made it impossible.
Were we not able to
destroy our physical and ether bodies, were the physical body unable to pass
through death, it would be impossible to integrate our experiences into our
development. However much we regard death with fear and shock and feel pain
and sorrow at the death which will affect us, an objective view of the world
teaches us in fact: we have to want death! For death alone gives us the
opportunity to destroy this body in order to enable us to construct a new one
in the next life so that we can bring into life all the fruits of earthly
existence.
Thus two currents
are active together in the normal course of human life: an inner and an
outer. These two currents reveal themselves to us in parallel in the physical
and the ether bodies on the one hand and in the astral body and the ego on
the other. What can the human being do between birth and death in relation to
the physical and ether bodies? Not only the astral body is exhausted by the
life of the soul, but the organs of the physical body and the ether body are
also exhausted. We can now observe the following: whilst the astral body is
in the spiritual world during the night, it also works on the physical body
and the ether body to restore them to their normal state. Only in sleep can
what has been destroyed during the day in the physical and ether bodies be
restored. Thus the spiritual world does indeed work on the physical and ether
bodies, but with limitations. The abilities and structure of the physical
body and ether body are given at birth and cannot alter except within very
narrow margins. Two streams are active in cosmic development, as it were,
which cannot abstractly be made to harmonize. If someone tried to unite these
two streams in abstract reflection, tried to develop lightly a philosophy
which said: “Well, the human being has to be in harmony, therefore the
two streams have to be harmonious in man!” he would be making an
enormous error. Life does not work according to abstractions. Life works in
such a way that these abstract visions can only be achieved after long
periods of development. Life works in such a manner that it creates states of
equilibrium and harmony only by passing through stages of disharmony. This is
the living interaction in the human being and indeed it is not meant to be
made harmonious by reflection. It is always an indication of abstract, dry
thinking if a harmony is imagined into a situation where life has to develop
towards a stage of balance through disharmony. It is the fate of human
development that we must have harmony as an aim which cannot, however, be
reached if it is merely imagined into a given stage of human
development.
It will now be
easier to understand when spiritual science says that life presents different
aspects, depending on whether we regard it from the point of view of the
inner or outer human being. The person who wanted to combine these two
aspects by some abstraction would leave out of account that there is more
than one ideal, one judgment, but that there are as many judgments as there
are points of view and that it is only when these different points of view
act together that the truth can be found. This allows us to assume that
life's view of the inner human being might be different from its view
of the outer human being. An example will make clear that truths are
relative, depending on whether they are regarded from one aspect or
another.
It is certainly
quite appropriate for a giant who has a hand the size of a small child to
talk of his little finger. Whether a dwarf the size of the small child can
also talk of the giant's little finger is another matter. Things by
necessity are complementary truths. There is no absolute truth as regards
outer things. Things have to be looked at from all different points of view
and truth has to be found through the individual truths which illuminate one
another. That is also the reason why in life as we can observe it the outer
human being, physical body and ether body, and the inner human being, astral
body and ego, need not in a given period of life be in complete harmony. If
there were complete harmony then the case would be that when the human being
enters the spiritual world at night he would take the events of the day with
him and would transform them into the essence of ability, of wisdom, and so
on, and the forces which he brought with him from the spiritual world in the
morning into the physical world would be used only in relation to the soul
life. But the frontier which we described and which is drawn for the physical
body would never be crossed. Then, also, there would be no human development.
The human being has to learn to take note of these limitations himself; he
has to make them part of his judgment. The possibility must be given for him
to breach these limits to the greatest possible extent.
And he breaches them
continually! In real life these frontiers are crossed continually so that for
example the astral body and the ego do not keep within the limits when they
affect the physical body. But in doing so they breach the laws of the
physical body. We then observe such breaches as irregularities, as
disorganisation of the physical body, as the appearance of sickness, caused
by action of the spirit — the astral body and the ego. Limits can be
breached also in other ways, namely that the human being as inner being does
not manage to correlate with the outside world, that he fails to relate fully
to the outside world. This can be shown in a very dramatic
example.
When the famous
eruption of Mount Pelee
[ 35 ]
in Central America took place, very noteworthy
and instructive documents were found in the ruins afterwards. In one of them
it said: “You need not fear any more because the danger is past; there
will be no more eruptions. This is shown by the laws which we have recognised
as the laws of nature.” These documents, which stated that further
volcanic eruptions were impossible according to the current state of
knowledge of nature, had been buried — and with them the scholars who
had written these documents on the basis of their normal scholarly knowledge.
A tragic event took place here. But that precisely demonstrated the
disharmony of the human being with the physical world quite clearly. There
can be no doubt that the intelligence of the scholars who investigated these
natural laws would have been adequate to find the truth if they had been
sufficiently trained. For they were not lacking in intelligence. But although
intelligence is necessary, it is insufficient on its own, Animals, for
example, leave an area if such an event is imminent. That is a well-known
fact. Only the domesticated animals perish with the human beings. The
so-called animal instinct is therefore sufficient to develop a far greater
wisdom as far as those future events are concerned than human wisdom today.
“Intelligence” is not the decisive factor; our current intellect
is present also in those who commit the greatest follies. Intelligence is
therefore not lacking. What is lacking is sufficiently matured experience of
events. As soon as the intelligence lays something down which appears
plausible to its narrow limited experience it can come into disharmony with
the real outward events and then the outer events break down around it. For
there is a relationship between the physical body and the world which the
human being will gradually learn to recognise and grasp with the forces which
he possesses today already. But he will only be able to do this once he has
accrued and assimilated the experiences of the outside world. Then the
harmony which will have developed as a result of this experience will have
been created by no other intellect than the one we have today; for it is
precisely in the present that our intellect has developed to a certain stage.
The only thing lacking is the ripening of experience. If the maturing of
experience does not correspond to the outside then the human being becomes
disharmonious with the outside world and can be broken on events in the outer
world.
We have seen in an
extreme example how disharmony between the physical bodies of the scholars
and the stage which they had reached inwardly in the development of their
soul came about. Such disharmony occurs not only when momentous events happen
to us; such disharmony is given in principle and in essence always when any
outer harm befalls our physical and ether bodies, when outer harm affects the
outer human being in such a way that he is not capable of countering this
harm with his inner forces, to ban it from his life. This applies whether it
is externally visible or an internal sickness, which is, however, in reality
only an external one. For if we have an upset stomach, then that is
essentially the same as if a brick drops on our head. This is the situation
which occurs when conflict arises — or is allowed to arise between the
inner human being and the external world, when the inner human being cannot
match the outer human being.
Fundamentally all
illnesses are such disharmony, such breaching of the division between inner
and outer human being. Something is created by the continual breach of these
divisions which will become harmony only in the far distant future, which
remains an abstraction if our thinking tries to impose it on our life. The
human being only develops his inner life by beginning to realise that at his
present stage he is not yet able to match outer life. This is true not only
of the ego, but also of the astral body. The human being experiences
consciously between waking up and going to sleep those things which are
penetrated by the ego. The working of the astral body, the way in which it
breaches its limits and is impotent to create proper harmony between the
inner and the outer human being, lies outside normal human consciousness. But
it is present, nevertheless. All these things reveal the deeper inner nature
of sickness.
What are the two
possible courses which an illness can take? Either healing or death occurs.
In the normal development of life death must be seen as the one side and
healing as the other.
What does healing
signify for the development of the human being? First of all it must be
clarified what sickness means for the overall development of the human
being.
In sickness there is
disharmony between the inner and the outer human being. In a certain way the
inner human being has to withdraw from the outer one. A simple example is
when we cut our finger. We can only cut the physical body, not the astral.
But the astral body always transfuses the physical one and the result is that
the astral body does not find in the cut finger what it should find when it
penetrates into its smallest recesses. It feels disconnected from the
physical part of the finger. That, in essence, is the nature of a whole
number of illnesses that the inner human being feels disconnected from the
outer, that it cannot penetrate the outer human being because an injury
causes a division. Now health can be restored to the human being by outer
means or the inner human being can be strengthened to such an extent that it
is able to heal the outer human being. The link between outer and inner human
being is re-established to a greater or lesser degree after healing, the
inner human being can again live in the healed outer one.
This is a process
which can be compared to waking up: after an artificial withdrawal by the
inner human being we return to the experiences which are only available in
the outside world. Healing makes it possible for the human being to return
with those things which he could not otherwise bring back. The healing
process is assimilated into the inner human being and becomes an integral
part of this inner human being. Return to health, healing, is something which
we can look back on with satisfaction because in a similar manner that sleep
makes the inner human being progress we are given something by healing which
allows the inner human being to progress. Even if it is not immediately
visible, we are elevated in our soul experience, are enhanced in our inner
human being by a return to health. In sleep we take with us into the
spiritual world the things we have won through healing and the latter is
therefore something which strengthens us as far as the forces which we
develop in sleep are concerned. All these thoughts on the mysterious
relationship between healing and sleep could be developed in full if there
were the time, but it can be seen, nevertheless, how healing can be equated
with what we take into the spiritual world at night; with that which brings
progress into our processes of development in so far as they can be made to
progress at all between birth and death. Those things which in normal life we
draw in from outer experience come to expression in our soul-life between
birth and death as higher development. But not everything which assimilated
through healing emerges again. We can also take it through the gate of death
and it can be of benefit to us in the next life. But spiritual science shows
us the following: we should be thankful each time that we are healed, for
each healing signifies an enhancement of our inner human being which can only
be achieved with the forces which we have assimilated inwardly.
The other question
is: what is the significance for the human being of the illness which ends in
death?
In a certain sense
it means the opposite, that we cannot restore the disturbed balance between
the inner and the outer human being, that we cannot in the correct way cross
the frontier between the inner and the outer human being in this life. As we
have to accept our unchanged healthy body when we wake up in the morning we
have to accept our unchanged damaged body when an illness ends with death and
are incapable of making it change. The healthy body remains as it is and
receives us in the morning; the damaged body can no longer receive us and we
end up in death. We have to leave the body because we are no longer able to
re-establish its harmony. But we then take our experiences into the spiritual
world without the benefit of an outer body. The fruits which we gain as a
result of our damaged body no longer receiving us become an enrichment for
the life between death and a new birth. Thus, also, we have to be thankful to
an illness which ends in death because it gives us the opportunity of
enhancing the life between death and a new birth and to gather together the
forces and experiences which can only mature during that time.
Thus we have here
the consequences for the soul of illnesses which end in death and illnesses
which end in healing. That gives us two aspects: we can be thankful to an
illness which ends in healing because we have become strengthened in our
inner self; and we can be thankful to an illness which ends in death because
we know: in the higher stage which we enter in the life between death and a
new birth death is of great significance for us because we will have learnt
from it that our body must be different when we construct it for the future.
And we will avoid the harmful aspects which caused us to fail before. The
healing process makes our inner life progress, death influences the
development in the outer world.
The necessity
therefore arises that we take two different points of view. Nobody should
think that it would be correct to say from the point of view of spiritual
science: if death, which results from illness is something for which we must
be grateful, if the course of an illness is something which elevates us in
our next life, then we should really permit all illness to end in death and
not make any attempt at healing! To speak like that would not be in the
spirit of spiritual science, for the latter is not concerned with
abstractions but with those truths which are arrived at from different points
of view. We have the duty to make every attempt at healing with all the means
at our disposal. The task to heal to the best of our ability lies embedded in
the human consciousness. Thus the view that death, when it occurs, is
something to be grateful for is not one which is normally present in ordinary
human consciousness, but can only be won if we transcend it. From the
“viewpoint of the gods” it is justified to let an illness end in
death; from the human viewpoint it is justified only to do everything to
bring about healing. An illness which ends in death cannot be judged on the
same level. Initially these two views are irreconcilable and they have to
progress in parallel. Any abstract harmonising is of no use here. Spiritual
science has to advance to a recognition of the truths which stem from one
particular side of life and of other truths which are representative of
another side.
The sentence
“healing is good, healing is a duty” is correct. But so is the
other sentence “death is good when it occurs as the result of illness;
death is beneficial for overall human development.” Although these two
sentences contradict one another, both of them contain living truths which
can be recognised by living knowledge. Precisely where two streams, which can
only be made harmonious in the future, enter human life it is possible to see
the error of thinking in stereotypes and the necessity to regard life in
broad outline. It has to be clearly understood that so-called contradictions,
when they refer only to experience and a deeper knowledge of the matter, do
not limit our knowledge but lead us gradually into a living knowledge because
life itself develops towards harmony.
Normal life proceeds
in such a manner that we create abilities from experiences and that the
things which we cannot assimilate between birth and death are woven into the
fabric which we then make use of between death and a new birth. Healing and
fatal illness intertwine with this normal course of human life in such a
manner that every healing is a contribution to the elevation of the human
being to a higher stage, and every fatal illness, too, leads the human being
to higher levels. The former as far as the inner human being is concerned and
the latter as far as the outer human being is concerned. Thus there is
progress in the world in that it moves not in one but in two opposing
currents. It is precisely in sickness and healing that the complexities of
human life become visible. If sickness and health did not exist, normal life
could only proceed in such a manner that the human being would spin the
thread of his life hanging on to the apron strings of existence, never going
beyond his limits. And the forces to construct his body anew would be given
to him from the spiritual world between death and a new birth. In such a
situation the human being would never be able to unfold the fruits of his own
labour in the development of the world. These fruits can be unfolded by the
human being in the close confines of life only in that he can err. For only
by a knowledge of error can truth be arrived at. It is only possible to
assimilate truth such that it becomes part of the soul, such that it
influences development, if it is extracted from the fertile soul of error.
The human being could be perfectly healthy if he did not interfere in life
with his errors and imperfections by breaching his limits. But health which
has the same origins as the inwardly recognised truth, health for which the
human being wrestles from one incarnation to the next with his own life, such
health only comes about through the reality of mistakes, through illness. The
human being learns to overcome his mistakes and errors in healing on the one
hand, and on the other he meets the mistakes which he was not able to
overcome in life in the existence between death and a new life so that he
learns to surmount them in the next life.
We can now return to
our dramatic example and say: the intellect of those scholars who made such a
wrong judgment at the time will not only become more cautious in jumping to
conclusions, but it will let the experience ripen in order gradually to
create harmony with life.
Thus it can be
observed how healing and sickness affect human life so that the human being
could never achieve his aims by his own effort without them. We can see how
their seemingly abnormal intervention in our development belongs to human
existence, as does error, if our aim is to recognise truth. We could say the
same about sickness and healing as a great poet in an important epoch said
about human error: “The striving human being errs.”
[ 36 ]
This might give the impression as if the poet had wanted to say: “The
human being always errs!” But the sentence is reversible and might be
said: “Let the human being strive whilst he still errs!” Error
gives birth to renewed striving. The sentence “The striving human being
errs” need not, therefore, fill us with despair, for every error brings
forth new striving and the human being will continue to strive until he has
overcome the error. That is as much as to say that error in itself points
beyond itself and leads to human truth. And similarly it can be said:
sickness may occur in the human being, but he must develop. Through illness
he develops to health. Thus illness points beyond itself in healing and even
in death, and produces a state of health which is not alien to man but which
grows out of the human being and is in accord with this being.
Everything which
appears in this context is well suited to showing us how the world in the
wisdom of its existence avails the human being at every stage of his
development of the opportunity to grow beyond himself in the sense of the
saying by Angelus Silesius with which we concluded the lecture “What is
Mysticism?” At that time we were referring to more intimate spheres of
development; now we can expand its meaning to the whole field of sickness and
healing and we can truly say:
If
you transcend yourself in God's prevailing,
Then in your spirit will ascension reign!
[ 37 ]