Christiania, 4th June, 1912.
My dear Friends,
IF now we would proceed to consider man from the three points of view
the occult, the theosophical and the philosophical it
will be necessary to speak first of the occult point of view. And we
shall do best if we start by giving a description of how in the
history of the evolution of mankind one or another human being has
succeeded in raising himself to occult vision of the world.
As we said in the introductory lecture, there have naturally never
been more than a few who were found ripe to partake in all that went
on in the Mysteries and places of occult teaching and education. It is
therefore of the development of these few that we shall have to speak.
It will, however, also have been clear to you from many other lectures
I have given that we stand now at a point in time when through the
popularising of theosophical knowledge more and more people will have
to take part in occult life, instead of the very few who have done so
in the past. So that what we have to consider today concerns everyone
who takes an interest in theosophy and realises that occult knowledge
the knowledge, that is, of the hidden aspects of existence
must no longer remain secret, but must spread farther and
farther, in accordance with the demands of a continually developing
humanity.
A man who set out to attain occult knowledge had in the first place to
turn his gaze away from the external world and direct it upon the
forces of his own soul. Since he had, however, at the same time to
remain a man of action in the external world, his occult development
was, so to say, his own affair, was a matter that concerned himself
alone In the world he continued to be a man among men, with all the
duties that life had brought to him. This fact found striking
expression in the very first step he had to take for the development
of his soul forces. For the first thing the pupil had to do may be
described in the following words he had to reconcile himself to his
karma in respect of all that concerned his will. Reconciliation
with karma (or destiny) that was the first thing demanded
of a man who was undergoing occult development.
Please do not imagine that such a reconciliation with one's karma
necessitates the forming of a comprehensive theory about karma what is
meant is much more a particular kind of culture and education of the
life of feeling. Think how it is with a man who is beginning on a path
of occult development Before the moment of time when he makes this
beginning, he has lived in the world as a man among men. He has
acquired a certain standing in life, he has made himself master of
certain thoughts which enable him to carry out satisfactorily the
external actions that his calling demands. He has also come to
recognise certain duties or obligations that custom and society have
laid upon him. It can at the very outset be assumed that any man who
has not responded to what the world demanded of him, any man, that is,
who does not want loyally to fulfil his obligations to the world
around, would never have the urge to undergo occult development In
fact, as a general rule, those who could be called to occult
development were men who showed great ability in the positions in
which life had placed them and who were also desirous of being in
every respect equal to the obligations laid upon them by custom and
society. The capacities and faculties a man shows in his position in
life, the round of duties also that he recognises as incumbent upon
him, these are the very things that constitute karma in the
positive sense. Here a man's karma comes to expression. And the first
demand made upon a man who was preparing to step outside the bounds of
his position in life as such and enter upon an investigation of the
spiritual world, was that he should not in any way deviate from the
karma of his life, but maintain it untouched. This meant that he made
a promise, to himself and to those who were assisting him to penetrate
into the occult world, not to make use in his outer standing in life
of whatever should be acquired in the field of occult research. His
will and action had to be so directed that others who were observing
him would not be aware of any marked difference in the whole behaviour
of his life since he had begun to take steps on the path of occult
research. The power given him in occult research must never be allowed
to interfere in the external life of the physical plane. This is what
is meant by reconciliation with karma. The pupil forgoes
all advantages that might be gained by occult means for his position
in life.
We shall find that a right and regular following of the path does, as
a matter of fact, lead often to a certain improvement in the pupil's
external standing in life. This, however, has nothing to do with the
obligation that has to be deliberately undertaken by one who sets out
on the occult path. You shall not attempt to make any use of
your occult development to acquire an advantage over those who stand
with you in life, but you shall direct your life in accordance with
the very same rules which you have followed hitherto. Such was
the injunction constantly laid upon those who underwent occult
development It was the first renunciation they were called upon to
make, to forgo all application to an egoistic end of the means
acquired in occult life. What has just been said is intended to be
taken quite exactly and literally; please receive the words as they
stand, neither more nor less. You will observe that they are concerned
with what the pupil is in a position to do, or is under obligation to
do, in the external world by reason of the karma that is laid upon
him.
From the very outset the egoistic will of man is thus consciously and
deliberately excluded from all occult striving. This factor alone
brings about a change in the whole mood and character of the pupil. If
you reflect for a moment, you will see that this must be so. Hitherto
the round of duties that devolve on him in his external position in
life have been the one and only world in which he lived and to which
he devoted himself. Now he takes upon himself the obligation to
continue to live in this world in accordance with the same rules as he
has followed hitherto, and yet at the same time to have forces to
spare for something else quite different. This means that a boundary
is set up for him between two regions within both of which he is
active. A world now opens before him to which he previously never gave
a thought. That is a fact of extraordinary importance. For verily man
begins a new chapter in his life, when fresh interests suddenly enter
and assert themselves strongly and persistently.
This then was what happened at the very beginning of occult
development; a man's whole feeling and interest were claimed for a new
world, a world in which he had previously had neither part nor place.
Strict watch had to be kept on the pupil, especially in the more
ancient Mysteries and schools of occult development, lest he be
brought into any disharmony with his circle of external interests. It
was sternly required of him to fulfil his duty in the widest sense in
respect of the demands made by his calling or by his connection with
the State or other form of community. Those who made any show of not
being willing to do this or of rebelling against the duties of
external life were not admitted into places of occult instruction. I
am here simply relating facts. Study the history of occult
development, and you will find that those who in outer life showed
themselves rebellious in one direction or another against the whole
ordering of life within which they lived were not members of any
Mystery school or place of occult instruction.
The second thing required of the pupil was far more difficult of
attainment. Consider the case of a man who has given himself and his
teachers the promise of which we have spoken. He has had to declare:
I will not suffer to enter into my will, as it makes itself felt
on the physical plane, anything that has come to me as a result of
occult research. He takes with him into the realm of occult
research the entire forces of his soul, with the exception of the
will. The will is held back in accordance with his promise; but every
other faculty that he has at his disposal on the physical plane
judgment, fancy and imagination, memory, emotions, all these
forces and faculties of the soul with which he was previously active
on the physical plane, can still be actively applied on that plane.
Take the intellect or understanding, that capacity of the soul
which enables us to discriminate and to form judgments about the facts
of life. We could not get on without it in ordinary life; we have to
apply it at every turn. Now let us suppose we become a member of an
occult society or school. We achieve certain results in occult
research; we acquire, let us say, knowledge about what we do in our
external standing in life. We are not allowed to apply this knowledge
with our will. But to begin with, there is nothing to prevent us from
calling in the help of all the higher means we have from occult
research in order to make intelligent observation of the things and
persons that we meet with on the physical plane. Thus, we may not
allow the results of occult research to flow into our action or into
the resolves of our will, but we may allow occult research to have its
influence upon the way we form our thoughts and conclusions on the
kingdoms of nature as well as on our fellowmen, in effect, upon
the whole way in which we stand in the ordinary world with our
intellect.
You will observe that a rigid self-discipline will here be necessary.
What is easier for a man who meets other men and has to take active
part in their lives than to apply what he knows? Suppose, for example,
he is able by the help of his intellect to perceive that he has to do
with a morally inferior person, nothing is easier than that he should
act accordingly. It would be the natural and obvious thing to do.
The occultist, however, may not take this line. By means of what
occult research gives him he can, it is true, give wings to his
understanding and have clearer insight than he could before into the
character of a fellowman, can recognise perhaps that he is a morally
inferior person; he can also regulate accordingly what he does to this
person, for he has accepted no obligation in regard to his fellowman
but only in regard to his own standing in life. He is under no
necessity to refrain from applying his will in respect of what he does
for the other person. What he does, however, on his own behalf,
for that he is under obligation to be reconciled with his karma and
not to make use of the knowledge that accrues to him when he applies
his intellect, reinforced with the means of occult research.
Let us suppose an actual case of a man who is at the stage of which we
are speaking. Had he not become an occultist, he would perhaps have
met the other person and not recognised him to be morally inferior,
with the result that he would have allowed himself to be taken
in by him. Obviously such things can and do happen in the world, as
you will all be ready to admit. One can be mistaken and take a man for
better than he is, and then find oneself deceived.
The occultist has here an advantage He is able to recognise the moral
inferiority of the person in question. But he has for the time being
please note the words he has for the time being put
himself under obligation not to apply this occult knowledge with his
will, that is to say, not to apply it to his own standing in life. He
has to know that the other is a morally inferior man and at the same
time to conduct himself exactly as before; he has to put up with all
the ways of the other just as though he had never acquired occult
knowledge about him.
Here you have a striking illustration of the rigid self-denial a
beginner in occultism has to practise. He must draw a sharp line of
distinction between what he can know without occult research and what
comes to him through occult research and might give him an unfair
advantage in life. He who is so fortunate being blessed either
with natural talents or with particularly favourable conditions of
life as to recognise, without being an occultist, the moral
inferiority of the other person, is inclined to consider the occultist
a fool, because he waives any advantage that might accrue to himself
from the knowledge. And this frequently happens. Other people through
some good fortune or other are able to perceive what the occultist
also perceives, only does not act upon, being under obligation to
refrain from doing so. You will constantly find this happen, as
you will also find it happen that one or another who has made the
promise fails to keep it. That is, however, his own affair! We may, if
we will, consider the occultist a fool because he lets someone else
get the advantage of him, but we must not let that lead us to conclude
that he has no means for perceiving the character of men.
We have then this second stage: forgoing the use of the will for our
own egoistic ends, we apply our understanding in the external physical
world. The occult teachers of olden times allowed their pupils to
remain rather long at this stage. For a considerable time the pupils
had to go through the world learning to observe more deeply and with
increasing penetration and insight not only their fellowmen but also
the other kingdoms of nature, and yet all the time continuing to walk
the path of ordinary life in exactly the same way as before. This
meant they had to practise a very severe self-discipline, for they
must learn never to place into the service of egoism the advantages
their mind and spirit afforded them. Nor was this all; the whole
experience brought them a step further in another direction as well.
When, after the intellect has spoken, the will comes behind and adds
the action which is the natural sequence of what the intellect
has said, then this intellect does not evolve nearly so much as when
it is used by itself, completely isolated from the sphere of the will.
If a man excludes himself as a being of will and egoism from a realm
into which he enters by applying his intellect and understanding to
the whole surrounding world, then he becomes increasingly able to
detect fine differences. His understanding grows subtle and delicate.
His faculty of judgment and discrimination grows steadily stronger.
The pupil has now absolved the second stage of occult development, the
stage we may call the cultivation of the will-emancipated
understanding, and is ready to go on to the next.
Having for a long time applied his understanding with all keenness and
insight, the pupil must then begin to renounce even the use of this
understanding. This step is a very difficult one. The pupil has to
understand and judge as he did before he became an occultist.
In respect of the objects of the external physical plane he must use
only the power of understanding and judgment which he had previously.
All that he has acquired on the occult path in the way of deeper
understanding and that has brought him untold good and has meant a
definite advance for his spirit, all this he has now to shut
out of his spiritual activity; he may only handle matters of quite
ordinary knowledge. That which he has striven after so keenly and
energetically for a long time, namely, the strengthening of his
understanding, he must lay aside, he must absolutely root it out of
his soul, in so far as conscious application of it is concerned, and
say to himself: As I go about and fulfil my life on the physical
plane, I must think and judge and discriminate as I did before my
occult development, using only the degree of cleverness to which I had
then attained. The pupil has, so to speak, to force himself to be
again as stupid as he was before his understanding was sharpened.
What becomes of the understanding which he has now forgone? He must
not now apply it. He has done so for a long time, but he may do so no
more. What becomes in any case of the results of our power of judgment
and understanding when we refrain from putting them to direct use?
They pass over into memory. This is the next step. All the
knowledge gained by the sharpening of the power of intellect has to
become memory. The pupil must not advance any further in the
cultivation of his intellect, he must also refrain from applying his
strengthened intellect, must not desire to gain with his intellect any
further knowledge about the connections of the world. That which he
has already acquired by means of his strengthened understanding, he
must look for in his memory; ever and again it must rise up in memory.
He shall endeavour to bring it about that the knowledge he has gained
becomes like the thoughts he had, say ten or twenty years ago,
thoughts he no longer thinks, but only remembers.
In occult schools such as the school of Pythagoras in olden time, and
in many a Mystery school of Asia Minor, the selection of pupils was
very strict. Only those were considered ripe who could be trusted to
keep the vow not to let flow into their egoistic will the results of
the cultivation of the intellect. They were then educated for a very
long time in the cultivation of the intellect. In all possible ways
they were shown first how to distinguish things and then how to
combine and connect them again, and they developed a keener sense of
discrimination than it is possible to attain in ordinary life. The
greatest importance was attached in rightly conducted schools of
ancient and medieval times to this cultivation through long periods of
time of the power of judgment.
Then the pupil has to make this further, second renunciation. He has
to vow to himself and to his teacher that he will cease to judge any
more the things he sees on the physical plane, cease to employ in
regard to them the power of judgment he has acquired with his
understanding. Nor may he indulge in a critical attitude to the
teachings imparted to him. All he may do is to compare what he
receives from his teacher with what he has himself previously acquired
through his own power of judgment. He must not make any criticism, he
must be no more than a listener who compares what he now hears with
what he has himself acquired with his sharpened intellect. Such is the
requirement of the next stage of occult development, which may be
called the elimination of the sharpened power of the intellect
and the restriction of the inner soul life to memory. Fancy and
imagination were still allowed play; these might reproduce the
remembered ideas and opinions in symbols and in imaginative pictures.
Memory and fantasy these two powers of the soul came as it
were, into their own, and were able to manifest in their full
effectiveness. For now they stood alone, forming as it were a pure
distillate out of the rest of the soul life, instead of being
perpetually influenced and counselled by the judgment of the
intellect.
Therewith had the pupil taken a further step in occult development.
The time he had to pass in this stage was generally spent in receiving
communications, in the form of ideas, of the recognised truths of
occultism in so far as these had already become a theosophy. The
pupils stood there with such forces as they had already acquired by
the exercise of their power of judgment, remembering what they had
learned and at the same time opening themselves to the influence of
what was imparted by their teachers.
It goes without saying that the length of time passed in this stage of
development varied very much in the several Mystery schools, according
as it was thought necessary for the general requirements of human
evolution to impart more or less of occult secrets to those who were
undergoing occult development in order to fit them to become leaders
of mankind. For the most part, however, this stage of development took
quite a considerable time.
The next task to which the occult pupil had to address himself was to
summon up all his strength in an endeavour to extinguish and wipe out
of consciousness even the memories and the symbolic paintings of the
fancy, as well as also the ideas be it noted! he had
acquired by his own efforts. This was in truth a task of quite
peculiar difficulty, and it is, ordinarily speaking, impossible to
conceive how a pupil could shoulder successfully such a task. You will
be the better able to imagine that a pupil could master such a task
namely, to pour out complete forgetfulness over all that he had
acquired by his own powers when you take into consideration
that such pupils had already learned to curb and restrain their wills,
had already practised the severe self-discipline we have described.
For when, instead of allowing the will free play, they were obliged to
keep it under strict restraint, they acquired thereby great reserve
forces in the will. It was literally so. For a man grows stronger and
stronger in his soul, when he is in this way compelled to restrain his
will outwardly and allow nothing whatever of the results of spiritual
development to flow into it. It makes him so strong that he becomes at
last able to take the great resolve to repress and obliterate from
consciousness all that he has acquired in his occult training and has
up to now been holding in remembrance. As one erases an idea that one
cannot make use of in life, so has all this to be entirely erased.
Such was the unconditional demand.
You are not to imagine that those who were occult pupils in this sense
became blind followers of their teachers, receiving on authority all
that was imparted to them. That was by no means the case. Easy
believers in authority are generally also those who in a light kind of
way apply at once their perfectly ordinary intelligence to pronounce
judgment on what they hear. But those who have first sharpened their
power of judgment and then, holding only in remembrance what they have
acquired by it, have let occult instruction work upon them through the
medium of memory and of fantasy, will most assuredly be no easy
believers in authority, rather will they receive what occult
instruction imparts in the same way as we receive what Nature tells
us. Such will be the attitude of the occult pupil to the instruction
that is now given to him, after he has passed through the previous
stages.
The teachers themselves also took care that their words should work in
the way that Nature works; there was accordingly no need to charge
their pupils to have this or that opinion or thought. It was actually
so that the pupils, after all they had undergone in the development of
their powers of understanding and discrimination, met the words of
their teachers as we meet, shall I say, a sunrise, or a wind-swept sea
or some other natural phenomenon, which we observe with the desire to
learn all we can about it, not approaching it critically, for
then we would never grow really acquainted with it. Those know least
of all the inner power and might of a phenomenon in Nature who
approach it with sympathy or antipathy. In the very same way in which
one observes Nature herself did the occult pupil now observe what was
given to him in occult instruction.
When the pupils have continued in this experience for a while,
allowing only memory and fantasy to be active within them, applying
their understanding to their external calling in life and to that
alone, a time comes when they have to enter on a period of inner quiet
and rest. They must forget their own powers and destroy their own
attainments. For they can only attain complete inner rest of soul when
even the memories and imaginations that they have acquired during
their occult training are blotted out of consciousness.
The soul had to be made empty; and then, when it was empty, when the
egoistic will and the egoistic understanding, and also the egoistic
memory and the egoistic fancy were all driven out, then an
absolutely new world opened before the soul. There had first to be
this emptying in order that the new world might be able to find
entrance into the soul.
You must familiarise yourselves with the fact, that really and truly
it was a new world that penetrated into the empty soul,
an altogether new world! You will, therefore, not be surprised if this
world has strange qualities and characteristics. For what do we mean
by strange? We call a thing strange when we find it contradicts our
previous experience. Look around you in the world today and observe
how often when some statement is made, people reject it right away.
What reason do they give? They say: That statement is
contradictory. What they mean is that according to the power of
judgment they have so far been able to attain, they find the statement
to be in contradiction to everything else they know; they then jump to
the conclusion that they have scored a point over the man who has put
forward the statement, just because they can point to a contradiction
in it.
It is a fact that when one begins to speak quite openly of things, it
always has the result that people point to contradictions and declare
that what has been said must necessarily be false, because it contains
a contradiction. We need to recognise that on this path we shall
indeed meet with contradictions, for we are approaching something that
cannot possibly have any similarity with the world that has been ours
hitherto; we shall have to reconcile ourselves to complete and utter
contradictions when this new world approaches us, for it can only be
described in ideas which must needs appear to us as contradictory. It
is inevitable that this should be so; the new world would not be a new
world if it were in complete harmony with the old and never
contradicted it in any way!
It should therefore not surprise us that when we come to describe the
world man enters when he attains the peace of soul which follows the
stage of forgetfulness, the first characteristic can only be given in
words that, from the point of view of the world to which we are
accustomed, are directly contradictory.
There are three things man finds when he has come to the stage we have
described, three things that can only be characterised by
making use of expressions that are in themselves contradictory when
regarded from the point of view of what man knows of the external
world. These three things man learns to know when he really enters
what we may call the super-sensible world.
The first is the unmanifest light. Look around you in the
world! Can you not see light everywhere? It is of the very nature of
light to reveal itself and be manifest. And yet the first thing man
learns to know in the super-sensible world is the light that is
unmanifest and unrevealed, the light that is dark and does not shine.
The second thing man learns to know in the super-sensible world is the
unspoken word. In the ordinary world a word that is unexpressed
is not a word. We have therefore again a complete contradiction in
terms when we say that the second thing man learns to know in the
super-sensible world is the unspoken word.
The third is the consciousness without any known object.
Reflect how, when you develop a consciousness, when you know, you must
have always an object of knowledge. But the consciousness we find as
the third thing to be met with on entering the super-sensible world is
a consciousness without object.
These then are the three things the pupil encounters when, having
undergone the preparation we have described, he enters right into the
realm of occultism. These are the first three actual occult things he
learns to know:
The unmanifest light,
The unspoken word,
The consciousness without knowledge of an object.
It is a moment of the very greatest significance for the occult pupil
when he can learn to unite a meaning with what appears to be in entire
contradiction to all he has known hitherto. When he is able to unite
something of his own inner experience with the three ideas of the
unmanifest light, the unspoken word and the
consciousness without knowledge of an object, then he has
in that moment become an occultist; the pupil in occultism has really
begun to tread the path of occult knowledge.