Christiania, 6th June, 1912.
My dear Friends,
WE have now to give our consideration to the third experience in the
super-sensible world, the consciousness that holds sway
there. But before we can do so, we must first take cognisance of
something which everyone possesses but which not everyone takes the
trouble to observe, namely, the ordinary consciousness of this world,
the consciousness which is centred in the fact that man becomes aware
of his ego, becomes aware of himself as a self-existent being having
knowledge of the objects and beings around him.
This consciousness is an element in our life which we have to examine
with particular care and accuracy, when we are considering occultism.
For it is true to say that this consciousness, which we may call an
ego-consciousness, is for the occultist that element in his life which
he is in the greatest danger of losing when he passes over into the
super-sensible worlds. A man who wants to penetrate into super-sensible
worlds has to exercise extreme caution on this account, since the loss
of this ego-consciousness, the cessation and suppression of it, is as
dangerous as it is necessary! Here, you see, we have come again to a
contradiction, but I have already told you how inevitable
contradictions are in this realm.
If you will reflect a little upon the ego-consciousness, you will see
that it is really the ground of your existence in yourself through the
fact that you have an ego-consciousness, you are in your soul
self-contained. When you are not using your senses, then, except when
you are asleep, you must always be as it were together with yourself
in your consciousness. The consciousness only sinks down into darkness
when you fall asleep.
Now it does not require much thought to perceive that what we are
accustomed to call the Divine, or the One and undivided Foundation of
the Worlds, cannot be counted as forming part of this consciousness,
for man loses this consciousness every evening when he goes to sleep
and finds content of it again every morning. Everything he has in it
in the evening when he falls asleep remains, and he is able on
awakening to take up again the threads of his inner life where he
dropped them when he fell asleep. It has all stayed as it was; only,
man has had no knowledge of himself while he slept. The one Divine
Ground of the World that maintains everything must, therefore,
maintain also man's consciousness while he sleeps It must keep watch
over man's nature, both when he wakes and when he sleeps.
From this it will be evident that man must necessarily think of the
Divine Ground of the Worlds as outside the Earth consciousness within
which he himself stands. Consequently man cannot by means of his own
consciousness have any knowledge whatsoever of the Ground of the
Worlds, This has naturally always meant that since with ordinary Earth
consciousness man is unable to approach by his own efforts the things
that belong to the Foundation of the Worlds, these things have had to
come to him by means of what is called revelation.
Revelations, and particularly the revelations of religion, have always
been given to man, for the simple reason that he cannot find them
within his own consciousness, in so far as it is the Earth
consciousness. If he wants to establish a relationship with the Ground
of the Worlds, if he wants to inform himself about the nature and
being of the original Ground and Foundation of existence, he must
receive a revelation. And revelation has come, as we know, again and
again, throughout the evolution of mankind. When we look back into
ancient pre-Christian times, we find many great religious teachers,
such, for example, as were called in the language of Buddha,
Bodhisattvas; other peoples knew them by other names. These great
teachers came among men and communicated to them what men were unable
to discover by means of their Earth consciousness.
The question may here be asked: how did these religious teachers
obtain knowledge of the things that lie behind human consciousness?
You know very well that there has always been in the world what we
call initiation, and all great religious teachers have had
either to undergo initiation, that is to say, ultimately to ascend for
themselves an occult path, or to receive teaching from initiates who
have ascended the occult path and have come to a comprehension of the
Divine, not with their Earth consciousness but with a consciousness
that has gone beyond the Earth consciousness.
This was the origin of the religions of olden times. All the
communications and revelations that men received in pre-Christian
times from great teachers of mankind go back ultimately to such
founders of religion, initiates who had themselves experienced
in super-physical conditions what they communicated to mankind. And in
consequence the relationship of a religious man to his God is always
of such a kind that he conceives of his God as a Being outside his
world, a Being who is beyond and of whom he can by special means
receive a revelation.
Unless man lifts himself up to initiation, he must necessarily
maintain this attitude. He must feel himself to be standing here on
Earth, surveying with his consciousness the things of Earth, and
receiving from the founders of religion knowledge of the things that
are outside the world of the senses and outside the world of the
understanding, in a word, outside the world of human consciousness.
This is how it has been with all religions, and in a certain respect
we may say it is so still. We know, for example, that Buddhism is to
be traced back to the great founder Buddha. And whenever the
foundation of Buddhism is spoken of, it is always expressly stated
that the Buddha attained to initiation and higher vision while under
the Bodhi tree, which is only a particular way of expressing the fact
that in the twenty-ninth year of his life he became able to look into
the spiritual world and to reveal what he saw and learned.
What exactly is revealed is not for us of very great importance. It
varied in accordance with man's need and capacity to receive. Take,
for example, ancient Greece. In so far as ancient Greece received its
religious ideas through the teaching of Pythagoras, we find again here
the consciousness that Pythagoras has undergone an initiation and has
consequently been able to bring down from spiritual worlds and
incorporate into human consciousness what he saw to be right and
necessary for the men who were on Earth at that time.
Such then is the relation of the religious man to the spiritual world;
nor can we imagine it otherwise. Man and the divine world stand over
against one another. Whether in that world man beholds a plurality of
Beings or a unity, whether polytheism or monotheism is taught, need
not concern us here. The important point is that man finds himself
standing over against the divine world, which must be revealed to him.
This is also the reason why theology has made such a point of not
allowing place in religious ideas for knowledge man acquires by
himself. Such knowledge could only have been attained by undergoing
inner development and rising into the spiritual worlds. It would thus
imply a penetration into regions which theology not religion as
such, but theology is most anxious to exclude from having any
influence upon the religious conceptions of mankind. Hence the care
that is taken in theology to warn man of two wrong paths that are to
be avoided. One is the path that leads to theosophy, where man
seeks to develop himself upward to his God, when he should only stand
over against his God as a man, and the other, so say the theologians,
is the path of mysticism, although theologians
themselves not infrequently make little detours into the regions both
of theosophy and of mysticism. But religious people, people who are
purely and simply religious, are to be distinguished not only from
theosophists, but also from mystics; for the mystic too is quite
different from the religious man. The religious man is essentially one
who stands here on the Earth and establishes a relationship with a God
who is outside his consciousness.
Now there are, as you know, other things in the soul of man besides
what we have already touched on today. There is in the soul of man the
life of thought, that makes use of the instrument of the brain.
Inasmuch as man has his ordinary consciousness, he has of course also
his brain and his world of thought. Consciousness cannot be there
without them. Playing into what we may call human consciousness, we
have the thoughts, the experiences man has when he makes use of the
instrument of the brain. Religions have consequently always contained
thoughts that employ the instrument of the brain, since one who is a
revealer, a founder of a religion, can clothe the divine revelations
in forms men will understand by making use of the instrument of the
brain. Religion can however also be clothed in ideas which make use
rather of the instrument of the heart. Any particular religion,
therefore, may speak either more to the brain or more to the heart of
man. If we make comparison between the various religions of the world,
we find that some speak more to the understanding, to those
experiences of man which are connected with the brain, while others
speak rather to the ideas and feelings of the heart, appeal to the
life of inner perception and feeling. This difference can readily be
observed in the several religions. All religions have, however, this
characteristic in common, that man maintains intact his
ego-consciousness, he remains conscious as man. Here on Earth works
the ego-consciousness, and upon it from without works what belongs to
the nature of the divine super-sensible world.
All this is changed when a man becomes a mystic. For when a man
becomes a mystic, then everything connected with ordinary Earth
consciousness is thrown to the winds. What is so carefully guarded in
religion, so long as it remains religion pure and simple,
namely, that a man stands on his own feet and confronts the divine
world in full consciousness breaks down in mysticism. Mystics,
pre-Christian as well as Christian, have always done their best to
break down the human consciousness. Their concern has ever been to
take the upward path into the super-sensible worlds, that is to say, to
come right out of ordinary human Earth consciousness, to transcend it.
That is the characteristic of mysticism. It sets out to overcome
ordinary consciousness and live its way into a state where
self-forgetfulness supervenes. And then, if the mystic can come so
far, self-forgetfulness passes on to self-annihilation,
self-extinction. Essentially mystical states, raptures, ecstasies have
all of them this end in view, to do away with the limitations of Earth
consciousness, to grow out beyond them into a higher consciousness.
It is difficult to form a conception of the nature of mysticism
because it shows itself in so many different forms. It will be good if
at this point we consider some individual examples.
We will imagine that a mystic, in accordance with what I have just
explained to you, feels called upon to suppress his ordinary
ego-consciousness, to break it down and get beyond it. He will still
have left of course the other experiences of the soul, the experiences
man has by the use of the brain and the heart. The mystic tries to
extinguish his consciousness, but he does not necessarily at the same
time extinguish as well the experiences of brain and heart. The way
opens here, as you see, for many different shades of mysticism. Let us
consider what varieties are possible.
A mystic can have experiences of brain and of heart, while
consciousness is extinguished. Then we can say of him that he goes out
of himself in ecstasy, but that we recognise from the thoughts and
feelings he still has that he has not obliterated what is thought and
felt by the use of brain and heart. To discover mystics who can
truthfully be reckoned in this category we have to go rather far back
in history. We may find them among those who, after the founding of
Christianity, endeavoured to rise to the divine Self with the help of
the philosophy of Plato, Neo-Platonists, that is, such as
Iamblichus and Plotinus. In this class too, belongs Scotus Erigena,
and if one does not hold too strictly to the definition but admits a
mystic in whom the brain experiences outweigh the experiences of the
heart, then we may include also Master Eckhart, These will then form
class A; mystics who still admit experiences of brain and heart.
A second kind of mystic is one who shuts out not his consciousness
alone, but in addition his brain experiences, retaining only the ideas
and conceptions that are acquired by use of the instrument of the
heart. We generally find that mystics of this order have no love for
anything that is thought out. They want to exclude thought altogether
as well as consciousness. What the heart can achieve, that is
all they will allow themselves to use for their development. Such
mystics, although their endeavour is to overcome human consciousness,
to go out beyond it in ecstasy, retain nevertheless a connection with
their fellows through the fact that they base their relationship with
the surrounding world on the experiences of the heart.
Picture to yourselves a mystic of this type, an ecstatic whose
desire and aim is to come out of himself, who loves to be in a state
where he is entirely free from himself! Such a mystic will at once
reject anything you set out to communicate to him which requires him
to use his brain. He will have nothing to do with it. Whether what you
have to say concerns the higher worlds or the world of external
nature, it makes no difference; he will in either case reply that
there is no need to know all that.
A mystic who is in this way connected with his surroundings through
the heart alone is able to be of good service to mankind. But since
all the experiences of the human soul he lets speak only the
experiences of the heart, he will not find easily accessible the
complicated ideas that are acquired on the path of occultism; to
receive these one does need to do at any rate a little thinking!
It was a mystic of this kind who, when asked whether he would not like
to have a Book of Psalms for he never read the Holy Scriptures
made answer: If a man once uses a Book of Psalms, he will
very soon want a bigger book, and there is no telling what more he
will want when he begins to desire after knowledge in the form of
thoughts. The same mystic had no wish to have thoughts even
about Nature. He used to say: Man can know nothing he does not
know already. With this gesture he put all knowledge from him.
Here then was a mystic with experiences of the heart alone, belonging
to our second category,class B.
Now in the case of such a mystic you will find there is a kind of
economy of his soul forces In so far as he makes no use of his
understanding and his power of thought, to that extent his soul forces
are, as it were, husbanded. Consciousness also he puts out of use. All
this has an interesting result. For when he is in his ecstatic states,
with human Earth consciousness shut off, then because he still
perceives around him whatever he can see with his eyes and hear with
his ears and so on, and yet does not want to comprehend his
surroundings, not thinking there is any necessity so to do, such a
mystic will have great forces to spare which enable him to feel
in the surrounding Nature all the more.
As mystic, one can protect oneself entirely from theology; but Nature
surrounds all mystics. A mystic of this kind however will have nothing
to do with any knowledge even about Nature. In this way he saves up
the forces he would otherwise use in reflecting upon Nature in
thought. He rejects all study of the Science of Nature. But the forces
of the heart, these he uses, and they will be able to
develop all the more strongly. He will feel through the instrument of
the heart all that the Being of Nature can say to him, and he will
feel it more powerfully than a man who uses up his soul forces for his
intellect and self-consciousness. Consequently we shall expect to find
in a mystic of this type a feeling for Nature that is very positive
and very concrete. Such a one did in time past clothe his feeling for
Nature in the following words, which I will here read to you, that you
may see how, for a mystic of this type, life itself becomes a feeling
for Nature.
Oh, Most High, Almighty, Good Lord God, to Thee
belong praise, glory, honour and all blessing.
Praised be my Lord God! and with all His creatures, and
especially our brother the Sun, who brings us the
day and who brings us the light: fair is he, and he
shines with a very great splendour.
O Lord he signifies to us Thee!
Praised be my Lord for our sister the Moon, and for
the Stars, the which He has set clear and lovely in
the heaven.
Praised be my Lord for our brother the wind, and for
air and clouds, calms and all weather, by which
Thou upholdest life and all creatures.
Praised be my Lord for our sister water, who is very
serviceable to us, and humble and precious and clean.
Praised be my Lord for our brother fire, through whom
Thou givest us light in the darkness; and he is
bright and pleasant and very mighty and strong.
Praised be my Lord for our mother the earth, the
which doth sustain us and keep us, and bringeth
forth divers fruits and flowers of many colours, and grass.
We have here, as you see, a complete exodus of the soul from
self-consciousness, a kind of intoxication of the heart. All is
feeling. The poem is saturated with something that the eye cannot
perceive (for the writer is a mystic) but the soul can feel. Observe
however, it is what the soul feels when it does not yet go so far as
to enter into the experience of the Divine in Nature. When this also
becomes a part of the experience of the soul, then there can arise
that feeling for Nature which is so beautifully expressed by Goethe in
his Faust:
Spirit sublime, thou gav'st me, gav'st me all
For which I prayed. Not unto me in vain
Hast thou thy countenance revealed in fire.
Thou gav'st me Nature as a kingdom grand,
With power to feel and to enjoy it.
Thou Not only cold, amazed acquaintance yield'st,
But grantest, that in her profoundest breast
I gaze, as in the bosom of a friend.
The ranks of living creatures thou dost lead
Before me, teaching me to know my brothers
In air and water and the silent wood.*
- From Bayard Taylor's Translation.
Here we have an echo of the same feeling, and its mystery has been
solved. When we look at the figure of Faust, we can see how this
experience becomes a part of his soul life.
To return to the hymn quoted above. It is the hymn of a mystic in whom
this one aspect of human experience overshadows all others. He stands
in such intimate relation to Nature that the Sun is his brother and
the Moon his sister; the water too, he calls sister, the fire,
brother, and the Earth herself his mother. This is how he feels the
spiritual in Nature. You have here a mystic who comes right out beyond
ordinary human consciousness, but at the same time retains all those
experiences of the soul which are acquired through the instrumentality
of the heart. He is a mystic whom you all know well, Francis of
Assisi.
In Saint Francis of Assisi we have a striking example of a mystic of
whom we can actually assert that for this one incarnation he rejected
all theology and all knowledge whatsoever, even of super-sensible
things. On the other hand we find that on this very account he was
able to live in extraordinary intimacy with the spirit of Nature. This
was indeed an outstanding feature of his life.
In Saint Francis we have no mere vague pantheism of the spirit,
which has always a trace of affectation about it. He does not just
sing rapturously of a universal Spirit in Nature; he sings of definite
positive feelings that fill his soul when he encounters the beings of
Nature, filial, sisterly, brotherly feelings.
We must now pass on to a third class of mystics, class C. These are
mystics who set out to experience ecstasy that is to say, the
loss or the darkening of self-consciousness and under certain
conditions to shut out also the experiences of the soul which make use
of the heart, while on the other hand retaining thoughts, or
experiences, of the brain. Such men are often not described in
ordinary language as mystics at all, since it is generally expected of
a mystic that his experiences shall be permeated with feeling. And it
is easy to see why. Think of a man who has driven out of his
soul-experiences all his personal self-consciousness. This will mean
that there is absent in him the very thing that most people find
interesting in their fellowmen, namely, personality. People are
interested in each other on account of their personality. Now
experiences of the heart have still so much of the personal about them
for example, in Saint Francis of Assisi, they exercise
still such a compelling influence upon what is human in us, that we
are kept awake in our consciousness and we go with such a person with
interest, though not, it is true, so readily with our will. And
that is also quite right for ordinary life, especially in the present
day; we cannot all be like Saint Francis of Assisi! The universality
of the heart, when it manifests as it did in Saint Francis, has a
powerful influence upon people, even when the essentially personal
element is dulled and darkened. This suppression and extinction of
consciousness leads on the one hand, in a mystic like Saint Francis,
as you know, to a kind of radicalism in life, and on the other hand it
restrains people from imitating him even when their interest is
aroused. For as a general rule people are not at all anxious to come
out of their consciousness, they are afraid they will lose the ground
from under their feet.
But now consider how it might be with a mystic who shuts out all
personal consciousness and in addition all experiences of the heart.
Such a mystic would give to men nothing but pure thoughts,
thoughts and ideas that make use of the brain alone. No one will
easily be able to carry on his life in such a condition. A man may be
a Saint Francis as much as he likes, for the experiences of the heart
can be helpful to mankind in general. But a mystic who suppresses not
only his personal ego-consciousness but also his heart experiences and
lives in thoughts alone thoughts that are bound to the brain
will find it necessary to limit his devotion to this path to
particular solemn moments of his life. For life always calls one back,
again and again, to the personal element on Earth, and anyone who
lived in thoughts alone and used only his brain would not be able to
perform any ordinary Earth activity. He can, therefore, only occupy
himself in this way for quite short periods; no one can ever use the
brain exclusively for more than moments at a time. And as for his
fellowmen, and his relation to them, they will simply not concern
themselves with him, but will all run away from him! For what
interests people most of all is personal experiences; and these he
suppresses. And the heart experiences, which work so powerfully upon
people, these too he renounces. The consequence is, people will steer
clear of him altogether, they will not have the least desire to
approach him.
The philosopher Hegel is a mystic of this kind in the true sense of
the word. What he gives in his philosophy is expressly intended to
exclude every personal point of view and also in addition all
experiences of the heart. It sets out to be pure contemplation in
thought, and we may accordingly take Hegel as an eminent example of a
mystic with brain experiences alone. Such a man leads us up into the
purest ether heights of thought. Whereas in ordinary life man is
accustomed only to have thoughts that are rooted and grounded in
personal interest and in self-consciousness, these are the very
thoughts that in a philosophical mystic of this kind are forbidden.
And he excludes also what makes the spiritual attractive and
desirable, namely, its interplay with the experiences of the heart. He
devotes himself in majestic resignation to following the course of the
experiences of the brain and these alone. Of all that the human soul
can experience, there remain to him only thoughts.
This is the very thing of which so many people complain in Hegel;
there is nothing to recall the experiences of the heart, everything is
put forward solely and entirely in thought pictures. Most people feel
they are left desolate and chill, when they find what they themselves
love with their heart crystallised out in cold thought. And the
consciousness of self, wherein personality is rooted and whereby man
stands fast in earth life, Hegel has it only as a thought. Of
course he devotes consideration to the ego, because it is for him the
thought of a particularly important experience. This he does. But it
remains no more than a thought picture; for him, human personality is
not fired with that living and direct quality which springs from
self-consciousness.
We have still one more possible kind of mystic. It would be a mystic
who shut out all three,Earth-consciousness, heart experiences,
brain experiences. We would then have as class D, mystics who
obliterate all Earth experiences of the soul. You can well imagine,
such a thing is extraordinarily difficult to accomplish. For an
occultist, it is quite a matter of course; we shall go into that more
deeply in the coming lectures. An occultist rises to states where he
silences all that is connected with the brain as well as with the
heart, in so far as these are composed of Earth forces and in so far
as they make use of consciousness. A practical occultist who ascends
into higher worlds will regard this step as obvious. But at this point
the occultist begins to live and experience in the super-sensible
world, and during the time that he is shut off from everything in
connection with the world that surrounds man on Earth he has around
him the higher world. He steps out of [one] thing into another. A mystic on
the other hand who shuts out all these three experiences that make use
of the instruments of Earth, would enter into nothing that can fill
his consciousness. He does not, of course, step into nothingness, for
outside our consciousness is, as we know, the divine spiritual
super-sensible world. But he does not enter this world as the occultist
does, to whom is then revealed the unspoken word and the super-sensible
light; no, he suppresses his consciousness, he suppresses all the
powers that are in him, and only feels at last, after suppressing all
these human experiences, a sense of being united with something, of
being within something.
There begins for him an experience that has the impression, after the
extinction of consciousness and all Earth experiences, of a marriage
with something that is felt and perceived in a kind of intoxication.
The mystic unites himself with it in rapture and ecstasy, but he
cannot make any communication about it, because it is not experienced
in any definite way, he has no concrete impressions of which he can
tell.
We shall see, when we go on to speak further of occultism, into what
desperate situation a man would come who eradicated all three kinds of
experience experiences of heart and brain and consciousness. He
would become a mystic who underwent the so-called mystic union, but
was, in the ecstasy, just like a man asleep, united with the Divine in
sleep and knowing nothing of it, not even having a feeling that
he has been united with the Divine. If the mystic is to retain any
degree of living feeling for his union with the Divine he must at any
rate wipe out these several personal experiences in succession.
Now, we have an example of such a mystic, a person who actually trod
this path and in her writings even went so far as to recommend it to
others. First, she strove with all her powers to overcome personal
self-consciousness, to suppress it and extinguish it altogether. There
were then left still active within her the powers of the heart and of
the intellect. The next step was the conquest of the power of the
understanding. Last of all, she overcame the powers of the heart. The
fact that the powers of the heart remained with her longest accounts
for the extraordinary force and intensity with which she experienced
the entry into the world that lies beyond consciousness. The three
things were overcome in this order; first the consciousness, then the
brain experiences, and last of all the experiences of the heart.
It is characteristic that the one who accomplished this feat with
remarkable order and regularity was a woman. As you know, these things
must be looked at quite objectively; and when speaking with
theosophists I need have no fear of being misunderstood when I say
that this path comes easier to a woman. For, as we shall come to
understand also from other connections, it is a peculiarity of woman's
nature that it is less difficult for her to conquer herself, that is
to say, to conquer all her soul experiences. The woman whose
experience of mysticism followed the path we have described
extinguishing and eliminating one after the other the experiences
connected with brain and with heart, and then experiencing a union
with the Divine Spirit which was like a marriage, like an embrace
was Saint Theresa.
If you will study the life of Saint Theresa in the light of our
considerations today, you will be prepared to admit that it can only
be in very exceptional cases that a mystic comes through on this path.
It will much more usually happen that the several soul experiences are
not overcome in such utter purity and power as was the case with Saint
Theresa, but are only partially conquered, so that some portion of
them remains.
This gives us, in fact, three more kinds of mystics. We have those who
mean to overcome all soul experiences, but in whom the experiences
bound to the brain remain unextinguished. Such mystics are as a rule
persons who may be described as wise and practical in the best sense
of the word, who know their way about in life, because they make good
use of their brain, and who, having to a large extent suppressed the
personal element, are in their impersonal character sympathetically
received by their fellowmen.
Then there are mystics who also try to overcome all their soul
experiences, but have only partial success with those of the heart.
Mark well the difference between a mystic of this kind and a mystic
like Saint Francis of Assisi. Saint Francis of Assisi made no attempt
to overcome the experiences of the heart; on the contrary he retained
them in full, and the consequence was, he retained them in perfect
health. That is what is so grand and majestic about Francis of Assisi;
he enlarged his heart to cover his whole soul. I am not speaking of
mystics of this kind, who do not endeavour to overcome the experiences
of the heart. I am speaking of mystics who make great endeavours, who
wrestle with all their might in this direction, but do not succeed.
In the case of these mystics we do not find that same wonderful kind
of marriage with the super-sensible and spiritual which we meet with in
Saint Theresa. When a mystic has striven to get free of all that is
personal and human and earthly and has nevertheless still retained in
conspicuous measure the experiences connected with the heart, then
something very much of the nature of human limitations interferes in
his striving. And it can actually come about that this marriage, this
embrace of the Divine and spiritual, becomes very like the feelings
and instincts of human love in ordinary life.
Mystics of this kind abound who, so to speak, love their God and their
divine world in the same way as man loves in human life. Look through
the histories of the saints and the accounts of monks and nuns, and
you will find a great number of this type of mystic. They are in
love with the Madonna with an altogether human passion. She is
for them a substitute for a human wife. Or again, you find nuns who
are in love with the Christ as their Bridegroom, they have for Him all
the feelings of earthly human love. We have here reached a chapter
that is very interesting from a psychological point of view
perhaps more interesting than attractive, religious mystics who
strove after what we have described but were not able to reach it
because human nature held them back.
We find mystics such, for example, as Saint Hildegard
who have good and beautiful impulses but who have also a considerable
measure of ordinary earthly instinct and desire, and this taints their
mystical feelings and perceptions. They come to an experience that is
very like an erotic experience, they come into a kind of mystic
eroticism, as you will find if you study the history of the mystics.
The outpourings of their heart speak of the Bride of their
soul, or of their passionate love for the Bridegroom
Jesus, and so on.
We are the more ready to bear with mystics of this kind, if they have
preserved quite a good bit of ordinary human consciousness, and are
able as it were to stand aside in their human personality and look on
at their own mystical experience. For, as they do this and see that
they have not really won the victory but have still something very
human left in them, a trace of humour and irony will often enter their
consciousness. This gives a personal touch to the whole thing, and we
do not dislike them so much; we even begin to feel a sympathetic
interest in their unattained conquest of the experiences of the heart.
Otherwise it repels one; the whole thing savours of pretence and
hypocrisy. For the mystic sets out to compensate for the failure to
overcome what lives in ordinary human impulses and instincts in a
roundabout way, by asceticism.
If, however, this trait of humour and irony is present, if the person
in question has moments when he uses his ordinary human consciousness,
turns round on himself and tells himself the truth from the ordinary
human standpoint, interspersing in this way his mystical moments with
moments when he tells himself the hard plain truth, then we can feel a
certain sympathy with him as we do, for example, when we study
such a mystic as Mechthild of Magdeburg.
For there is this difference between Mechthild of Magdeburg and
mystics who are like her in other respects, that while she too
manifests erotic passion for the Divine and Spiritual, and speaks of
her Divine Lover in the same terms as men speak of human love, she
expresses herself always with a certain touch of humour. She does not
use high-flown language, but speaks in such a way that we can always
detect a trace of irony in her words. The difference is very marked
between such a mystic as Hildegard who has also not succeeded in
overcoming the human personal consciousness, and Mechthild of
Magdeburg, who feels herself passionately moved as she comes to the
boundary of the Divine, but expresses herself with honest truthfulness
and does not call that which still contains erotic passion of the
heart by the specious name of religious rapture, but calls
it quite plainly religious love, and speaks constantly of
her Lover, her divine Bridegroom.
As you see, there are all manner of shades of mysticism! And even now,
we have not so much as touched upon the ancient Greek mysticism which
you will find described in my book Christianity as Mystical
Fact. We shall have to speak of that later. One thing you will
have been able to learn from the kinds of mysticism we have studied
today; namely, that the endeavour of all mystics is to make their way
out beyond ordinary personal ego-consciousness, to eliminate this
consciousness, but that in reality, if man is not then to lose the
ground from under his feet, another consciousness must emerge. It is
of the nature of mysticism to come to the boundary of the spiritual,
to experience the Divine and Spiritual like a kind of marriage, but
not to enter into the world of the Divine and Spiritual. The mystic
divests himself of the consciousness that requires an external object.
His endeavour is to rid himself entirely of this consciousness. What
the mystic wants is to go out beyond himself. If however a man wants
then to experience consciously the unspoken word and the unmanifest
light he must obviously experience them in a new and different
consciousness. In other words, if the mystic wants to become an
occultist, he must not merely undertake the negative striving, but
must centre his attention also on the development of a new and higher
consciousness, namely, the consciousness without an object of
knowledge. We will speak further tomorrow about this higher
consciousness into which the occultist has to enter.