II
Yesterday I tried to give you
a picture of the states undergone by the human being
after he passes through the portal of death and arrives in the
spiritual world. Let us briefly summon before our soul
the picture of the most essential stages. Immediately after
passing through the portal of death, the human being first
experiences the withdrawing of his ideational world. The
ideas, the powers of thought, become objects, become something
like active forces spreading out into the universe. Thus man
feels at first the withdrawal from him of all the experiences
he has consciously undergone during his earth-life
between birth and death. But whereas earth-life, as experienced
through thinking, withdraws from the human being and goes out
into the vast cosmos (a process that occurs a few days after
death [See: Rudolf Steiner, Theosophy, Anthroposophic
Press, New York.]), man's inner depths send forth a
consciousness of all that he has undergone
unconsciously during earth-life while asleep. This stage
takes shape in such a way that he goes backward and
recapitulates his earth-life in a period of one third of
its actual duration.
During this time, the human being is intensely wrapt up in his
own self. It might be said that he is still intensely connected
with his own earthly affairs. He is thoroughly interwoven with
what he passed through, while asleep, during the successive
nights of his earthly life.
You
will realize that the human being, while continuously occupied
with his nightly experiences, must necessarily be led back to
his self. Just consider the dreams, the only element in man's
earth-life that surges up from the sleeping state. These dreams
are the least part of his experiences while asleep.
Everything else, however, remains unconscious. Only the
dreams surge up into consciousness. Yet it could be said that
the dreams, be they ever so interesting, ever so manifold, ever
so rich in many-hued colors, represent something that restricts
the human being completely to his own self. If a number of
persons sleep in the same room, each of them has, nevertheless,
his own dream world. And, when they tell their dreams to one
another, these persons will speak of things that seem to have
happened in entirely different worlds. For in sleep, each
person is alone within himself. And only by inserting our
will into our organism do we occupy the same world situated in
the same space as is occupied by others. If we were always
asleep, each of us would live in a world of his own.
But
this world of our own which we pass through every night between
falling asleep and awaking is the world we pass through in
reverse, after death, during a period encompassing one
third of our life-span.
If
people possessed nothing but this world, they would be occupied
for two or three decades after death (if they die at an old
age) exclusively with themselves. This, however, is not the
case. What we experience as our own affairs nevertheless
connects us with the whole world. For the world through which
each of us passes by himself is interwoven with relations to
all those human beings with whom we were associated in
life.
This interweaving of relations is caused by the fact that, when
looking down from the soul world on the earthly
experiences of those persons with whom we were associated
in some way, we experience together with them what occurs on
earth. Hence anyone willing to try may perceive, if he
acquaints himself with spiritual-scientific methods, [See:
Rudolf Steiner, Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its
Attainment, Anthroposophic Press, New York.] how the dead,
immediately after their transition, are helped to
participate intensively in earthly events by those of
their former companions who are still alive. And so we find
that the dead, in the measure in which they shared this or that
interest with others, underwent common destinies with
others, remain connected with all these earthly interests; are
still interested in earthly events. And, being no longer
hindered by the physical body, they judge earthly events much
more lucidly and sagaciously than men who are still alive. By
attaining a conscious relation to the dead, we are enabled to
gain, by means of their judgment, an extraordinary
lucidity concerning earthly events.
Furthermore, something else must be considered. We can see that
certain things existing within earthly relations will be
preserved in the spiritual world. Thus an eternal element is
intermingled, as it were, with our terrestrial experiences.
Descriptions of the spiritual world often sound almost
absurd. Nonetheless, since I am addressing myself
presumably to anthroposophists of long standing, I may venture
to speak frankly of these matters. In looking for a way to
communicate with the dead, it is even possible to use earthly
words: ask questions, and receive answers. And now a
peculiar fact is to be noticed: The ability lost first by
the dead is that of using nouns; whereas verbs are retained by
them for a long time. Their favorite forms of expression,
however, are exclamatory words; all that is connected with
emotion and heart. An Oh!, an Ah!, as expressions of amazement,
of surprise, and so forth, are often used by the dead in
their language. We must, as it were, first learn the
language of the dead.
These things are not at all as the spiritists imagine. These
people believe that they can communicate with the dead, by
means of a medium, in ordinary earthly language. The
character of these communications immediately indicates
that we are concerned here with subconscious states of living
persons, and not with actual, direct utterances of the dead
transmitted through a medium. For the dead outgrow ordinary
human language by degrees. After the passing of several years,
we can communicate with the dead only by acquiring their
language — which can best be done by suggesting, through
simple symbolic drawings, what we want to express. Then
the answers will be given by means of similar symbolic forms
necessarily received by us in shadowy outlines.
All
this is described by me for the purpose of indicating that the
dead, although dwelling in an element akin to sleep, yet have a
vast range of interests and sweep the whole world with their
glance. And we ourselves can greatly assist them. This may be
done by thinking of the dead as vividly as possible;
especially by sending thoughts to them which bring to life, in
the most striking way, what we experienced in their company.
Abstract concepts are not understood by the dead. Hence I must
send out such thoughts as the following: Here is the road
between Kristiania and a near-by place. Here we two walked
together. The other person, who is now dead, walked at my side.
I can still hear him speaking. I hear the sound of his voice. I
try to recall how he moved his arms, how he moved his head.
— By visualizing, as vividly as possible, what we
experienced together with the dead; by sending out our thoughts
to the dead whom we conjure up before our soul in a familiar
image, we can make these thoughts, as it were, soar or stream
towards the dead. Thus we provide the dead with something like
a window, through which they can look at the world. Not only
the thought sent by us to the dead comes forth within them, but
a whole world. They can gaze at our world as if through a
window.
Conversely, the dead can experience their present spiritual
environment only to the degree in which they formerly
reflected, as much as earthly men are capable of doing,
on the spiritual world.
You
know how many people are saying now-a-days: Why should I worry
about life after death? We might as well wait. Once we are
dead, we shall see what is going to happen. — This
thought, however, is completely misleading. People who have not
reflected, while still alive, on the spiritual world, who have
lived in a purely materialistic way, will see absolutely
nothing after death.
Here I have outlined to you how the dead are living during the
period in which — commensurate with their experiences in
the sleeping state — they pass through their life in
reverse. The human being who has now discarded his physical and
etheric body, feels himself to be at this time in the realm of
spiritual moon forces. We must realize that all the world
organisms — moon, sun and stars — inasmuch as they
are visible to physical eyes, actually represent only physical
formations of a spiritual element.
Just as the single man, who is sitting here on a chair,
consists not only of flesh and blood (which can be regarded as
matter), but also of soul and spirit, so the whole universe,
the whole cosmos, is indwelled by soul and spirit. And not only
one unified spiritual entity dwells therein, but many,
innumerably many spiritual entities dwell therein. Thus
numerous spiritual entities are connected with the moon, which
is seen only externally as a silver disk by our physical
eye. We are in the realm of these entities while retracing our
earth-life, as has been described, until we arrive again
at the starting point. Thus it might be said: Until then we
dwell in the realm of the moon.
While we are in the midst of this going backward, our whole
life becomes intermingled with certain things, which are
brought to an approximate conclusion after we have left the
moon realm.
Immediately after the etheric body has been discarded by us in
the wake of death, a moral judgment on our worth as human
beings emerges from the nightly experiences. Then we cannot do
otherwise than judge, in a moral sense, the events through
which we pass in reverse. And it is very strange how things
develop from this point.
Here on earth we carry a body made of bones, muscles,
arteries, and so forth. Then, after death, we acquire a
spiritual body, formed out of our moral qualities. A good man
acquires a moral body radiating with beauty; a depraved man a
moral body radiating with evil. This is formed while we are
living backward. Our spirit-body, however, is only partly
formed out of that which is now joined to us. Whereas one part
of the spirit-body received by us in the spiritual world is
formed out of our moral qualities, the other part is simply put
on us as a garment woven from the substances of the spiritual
world.
Now, after finishing our reverse course and arriving again at
the starting-point, we must find the transition to which I
alluded in my Theosophy as the transition from the
soul world into the spirit realm. This is connected with the
necessity of leaving the moon sphere and entering the sun
sphere of the cosmos. We become gradually acquainted with the
all-encompassing entities dwelling, in the form of spirit
and soul, within the sun sphere. This we must enter. In the
next few days, I shall discuss to what degree the Christ plays
a leading role in helping the human being to make this
transition from the moon sphere to the sun sphere. (This role
is different after the Mystery of Golgotha from the role
He played before the Mystery of Golgotha.) Today we shall
describe the passage through this world in a more objective
way. — What ensues at this point is the necessity of
depositing in the moon sphere all that was woven for us, as it
were, out of our moral qualities. This represents
something like a small package, which we must deposit in the
moon sphere in order that we may enter, as purely
spiritual beings, into the pure sun sphere. Then we
see the sun in its real aspect: not from the side turned
towards earth but from the reverse side, where it is
completely filled with spiritual entities; where we can
fully see that it is a spiritual realm.
It
is here that we give as nourishment to the universe
everything that does not belong to our moral qualities,
but which has been granted to us by the gods in the form of
earthly experiences. We give to the universe whatever it
can use for maintaining the world's course. These things
are actually true. If I compared the universe to a machine
— you know that I do this merely in a pictorial sense,
for I am certainly not inclined to designate the universe a
machine — then everything brought by us into the sun
sphere after depositing our small package in the moon sphere
would be something like fuel, apportioned by us to the cosmos
as fuel is apportioned to a machine.
Thus we enter the realm of the spiritual world. For it does not
matter whether we call our new abode the sun sphere, in its
spiritual aspect, or the spiritual world.
Here we dwell as a spirit among spirits, just as we dwelled on
earth as a physical man among the entities of the various
natural kingdoms. Now we dwell among those entities which I
described and named in my Occult Science; and we also
dwell among those souls which have died before us, or
are still awaiting their coming earth-life. For we
are dwelling as a spirit among spirits.
These spiritual entities may belong to the higher Hierarchies
or be incorporeal men dwelling in the spiritual world. And now
the question arises: What is our next stage?
Here on earth we stand at a certain point of the physical
universe. Looking around in every direction, we see what lies
outside the human being. That which lies inside
him we are utterly unable to see.
Now
you will say: What you tell us is foolish. It may be granted
that ordinary people cannot see man's inside; but the learned
anatomists, who cut up dead people in hospitals, are certainly
familiar with it. — They are not familiar with it in the
least! For what can be learned about a man in this way is only
something external. After all, if we regard a human being
merely from the outside, it does not matter whether we
investigate his outer skin or his insides. What lies
inside the human skin is not that which anatomists discover in
an external way, but what lies inside the human skin are whole
worlds. In the human lung, for instance, in every human organ,
whole universes are compressed to miniature forms.
We
see marvelous sights when admiring a beautiful landscape;
marvelous sights when admiring at night the starry sky in all
its splendor. Yet if viewing a human lung, a human liver, not
with the anatomist's physical eye, but with the eye of the
spirit, we see whole worlds compressed into a small
space. Apart from the splendor and glory of all the rivers and
mountains on the surface of the earth, a still more
exalted splendor adorns what lies inside of man's skin, even in
its merely physical aspect. It is irrelevant that all this is
of smaller scale than the seemingly vast world of space. If you
survey what lies in a single pulmonary vesicle, it will appear
as more grandiose than the whole range of the mighty Alps. For
what lies inside of man is the whole spiritual cosmos in
condensed form. In man's inner organism we have an image of the
entire cosmos.
We
can visualize these things also in a somewhat different way.
Imagine that you are thirty years old and, looking into
yourself with a glance of the soul, remember something which
you experienced between your tenth and twentieth year. Here the
outer event has been transformed into an inner
soul-image. In a single moment, you may survey widely
spread experiences undergone by you in the course of
years. A world has been woven into an ideational image. Only
think of what you experience when brief memory-images of
widely spread events passed through by you come forth in your
soul-life. Here you have the soul-essence of what you
experienced on earth. Now, if viewing your brain, the inside of
your eye — the inside of the eye alone represents a whole
world — your lung, your other organs in the same
way as your memory-images; then these organs are not images of
events passed through by you but images — even if
appearing in material form — of the whole spiritual
cosmos.
Let
us suppose that man could solve the riddle of what is contained
in his brain, in the inside of his eye, in the inside of his
lung; just as he can solve the riddle of the memories contained
in his soul-life. Then the whole spiritual cosmos would be
opened up to him; just as a series of events undergone in life
are opened up to man by a single memory-image. As human beings,
we incorporate the whole memory of the world. If you consider
these things in the right way, you will understand the
following: The human being, who has undergone after death all
the states described by me previously, now becomes
manifest to the vision of man himself. The human being is a
spirit among spirits. Yet, what he sees now as his world
is the marvel of the human organism itself in the form of the
universe, the whole cosmos. Just as mountains, rivers, stars,
and clouds form our surroundings here on earth; so, when
dwelling as spirit among spirits, we find our surroundings, our
world, in man's wonderful organism. We look around in the
spiritual world; we look — if I may express myself
pictorially — to the right and to the left: as here we
found rocks, river, mountains on all sides, so there above we
find the human being, Man, on all sides. Man is the
world. And we are working for this world which is fundamentally
man. Just as, on earth, we build machines, keep books, sew
clothes, make shoes, or write books, thus weaving together what
is called the content of civilization, of culture, so above,
together with the spirits of the higher Hierarchies and
incorporeal human beings, we weave the woof and weft of
mankind. We weave mankind out of the cosmos. Here on earth we
appear as finished products. There we lay down the spiritual
germ of earthly man.
This is the great mystery: that man's heavenly occupation
consists in weaving, in cooperation with the spirits of the
higher Hierarchies, the great spiritual germ of the future
terrestrial human being. Inside the spiritual cosmos, all of us
are weaving, in magnificent spiritual grandeur, the woof and
weft of our own earthly existence, which will be attained by us
after descending again into earthly life. Our work,
performed in cooperation with the gods, is the fashioning
of the earthly human being.
When we speak of germs here on earth, we think of
something small which becomes big. If we speak, however,
of the germ of the physical human being as it exists in the
spiritual world — for the physical germ maturing in the
mother's body is only an image of the spiritual germ — we
must think of it as immense, enormous. It is a universe; and
all other human beings are interlinked with this universe. It
might be said: all human beings are in the same
“place,” yet numerically differentiated. And
then the spiritual germ diminishes more and more. What we
undergo in the time between death and a new birth is the
experience of fashioning a spiritual germ, as large as the
universe, of our coming earthly existence. Then this spiritual
germ begins to shrink. More and more its essence becomes
convoluted. Finally it produces its own image in the mother's
body.
Materialistic physiology has entirely wrong conceptions of
these things. It assumes that man, whose marvelous form I have
tried to sketch for you, came forth from a merely physical
human germ. This science considers the ovum to be a
highly complicated matter; and physiological chemists
investigate the fact that molecules or atoms, becoming more and
more complicated, produce the germ, the most complicated
phenomenon of all.
All
this, however, is not true. In reality, the ovum consists of
chaotic matter. Matter, when transformed into a germ, is
dissolved; it becomes completely pulverized. The nature
of the physical germ, and the human germ particularly, is
characterized by being composed of completely pulverized
matter, which wants nothing for itself.
Because this matter is completely pulverized and wants
nothing for itself, it enables the spiritual germ,
which has been prepared for a long time, to enter into
it. And this pulverization of the physical germ is brought
about by conception. Physical matter is completely destroyed in
order that the spiritual germ may be sunk into it and make the
physical matter into an image of the spiritual germ woven
out of the cosmos.
It
is doubtless justified to sing the praises of all that human
beings are doing for civilization, for culture, on earth. Far
from condemning this singing of praises, I declare myself, once
and for all, in favor of it when it is done in a reasonable
way. But a much more encompassing, a much more exalted, a much
more magnificent work than all earthly cultural activity is
performed by heavenly civilization, as it might be called,
between death and a new birth: the spiritual preparation,
the spiritual weaving of the human body. For nothing more
exalted exists in the world order than the weaving of the human
being out of the world's ingredients. With the help of the
gods, the human being is woven during the important period
between death and a new birth.
If
yesterday I had to say that, in a certain sense, all the
experience and knowledge acquired by us on earth provide
nourishment for the cosmos, it must be said again today:
After offering to the cosmos, as nourishment or fuel, all the
earthly experiences that could be of use to it, we receive,
from the fullness of the cosmos, all the substances out of
which we are able to weave again the new human being into whom
we shall enter at a later time.
The
human being, now devoting himself wholly to a spiritual world,
lives as a spirit. His entire weaving and being is spiritual
work, spiritual essence. This stage lasts for a long time. For
it must be repeated again and again: to weave something like
the human being is a mighty and grandiose task. Not without
justification did the ancient Mysteries call the human physical
body a temple. The greater the insight we gain into the science
of initiation, into what takes place between death and a new
birth, the deeper do we feel the significance of this word. Our
life between death and a new birth is of such a nature that we,
as spiritual beings, become directly aware of other spiritual
beings. This condition lasts for some time. Then a new stage
sets in.
What took place previously was of such a nature that the single
spiritual beings could really be viewed as individualities. The
spiritual beings with whom one worked were met face to face, as
it were. At a later stage, however, these spiritual
entities — to express it pictorially, because such
things can be suggested only in images — become
less and less distinct, finally being merged into an
aggregation of spirits. This can be expressed in the
following way: A certain period between death and a new birth
is spent in immediate proximity to spiritual beings. Then comes
a time when one experiences only the revelation of these
spiritual beings; when they become manifest to us as a whole. I
want to use a very trivial metaphor. On seeing what seems to be
a tiny gray cloud in the distance, you would be sure that this
was just a tiny gray cloud. But, by coming closer, you would
recognize it to be a swarm of flies. Now you can see each
single fly. In the case of the spiritual beings, the opposite
took place. First you behold the divine-spiritual beings, with
whom you are working, as single individualities. Then, after
living with them more intensively, you behold their
general spiritual atmosphere, just as you beheld the
swarm of flies in the shape of a cloud. Here, where the single
individualities disappear more and more, you live — I
might say — in pantheistic fashion in the midst of a
general spiritual world.
Although we live now in a general spiritual world, we feel
arising out of our inner depth a stronger sense of
self-consciousness than we experienced before. Formerly
your self was constituted in such a way that you seemed
to be at one with the spiritual world, which you experienced by
means of its individualities. Now you perceive the
spiritual world only as a general spiritual atmosphere. Your
own self-consciousness, however, is perceived in greater
degree. It awakens with heightened intensity. And thus, slowly
and gradually, the desire of returning to earth again
arises in the human being. This desire must be described in the
following way:
During the entire period which I have described and which lasts
for centuries, the human being — except in the first
stage when he was still connected with the earth and returned
to his starting point — is fundamentally interested in
nothing but the spiritual world. He weaves, in the large scale
that I have described, the fabric of mankind.
At
the moment when the individualities of the spiritual world are
merged together, as it were, and man perceives the spiritual
world in a general way, there arises in him a renewed interest
in earth-life. This interest for earth-life appears in a
certain specialized manner, in a certain concrete manner. The
human beings begin to be interested in definite persons living
below on earth, and again in their children, and again in their
children's children. Whereas the human beings were formerly
interested only in heavenly events, they now become, after
beholding the spiritual world as a revelation, strangely
interested in certain successive generations. These are the
generations leading to our own parents, who will bear us on our
return to earth. Yet we are interested, a long time before, in
our parents' ancestors. We follow the line of generations until
reaching our parents. Not only do we follow each generation as
it passes through time; but — once the spiritual world
has been manifested to us as a revelation — we also
foresee, as if prophetically, the whole span of generations.
Across the succession of great-great-great-grandfathers,
great-great-grandfathers, great-grandfathers,
grandfathers, and so forth, we can foresee the path on which we
shall descend again to earth. Having first grown into the
cosmos, we grow later into real, concrete human history. And
thus comes the moment when we gradually (in regard to our
consciousness) leave the sun sphere.
Of
course, we still remain within the sun sphere; but the
distinct, clear, conscious relation to it becomes dim and we
are drawn back into the moon sphere. And here, in the moon
sphere, we find the “small package” deposited by us
(I can describe it only by means of this image); we find again
what represents the worth of our moral qualities. And this
package must be retrieved.
It
will be seen in the course of the next days what a
significant part is played in this connection by the
Christ-impulse. We must embody within us this package of
destiny. But while embodying within us the package of destiny
and entering the moon sphere, while gaining a stronger and
stronger feeling of self-consciousness and transforming
ourselves inwardly more and more into soul-beings, we gradually
lose the tissue woven by us out of our physical body. The
spiritual germ woven by ourselves is lost at the moment when
the physical germ, which we shall have to assume on earth, is
engendered through the act of conception.
The
spiritual germ of the physical body has already descended
to earth; whereas we still dwell in the spiritual world. And
now a vehement feeling of bereavement sets in. We have lost the
spiritual germ of the physical body. This has already arrived
below and united itself with the last of those successive
generations which we have watched. We ourselves, however, are
still above. The feeling of bereavement becomes violent. And
now this feeling of bereavement draws out of the universe the
needful ingredients of the world-ether. Having sent the
spiritual germ of the physical body down to earth and remained
behind as a soul (ego and astral body), we draw etheric
substance out of the world-ether and form our own etheric
body. And to this etheric body, formed by ourselves, is joined
— approximately three weeks after the fecundation
has taken place on earth — the physical germ which formed
itself out of the spiritual germ, as I have previously
described.
It
was said that we form our etheric body before uniting
ourselves with our own physical germ. And into this
etheric body is woven the small package containing our moral
worth. We weave this package into our ego, our astral body, and
also into our etheric body. Thus it is joined to the physical
body. In this way, we bring our karma down to earth. First, it
was left behind in the moon sphere; for, had we taken it
with us into the sun sphere, we would have formed a diseased, a
disfigured physical body.
The
human physical body acquires individuality only through the
circumstance of its being permeated by the etheric body.
Otherwise, all physical bodies would be exactly alike; for
human beings, while dwelling in the spiritual world, weave
identical spiritual germs for their physical body. We become
individualities only by means of our karma, by means of the
small package interwoven by us with our etheric body which
shapes, constitutes and pervades our physical body
already during the embryonic stage.
Of
course, I shall have to enlarge during the next days on this
sketch concerning the human being's transition between death
and a new birth. Yet you will have realized what a wealth of
experiences is undergone by us: the great experience of how we
are first merged into the cosmos and then, out of the cosmos,
again are shaped in order to attain a new human earth-life.
Fundamentally, we pass through three stages. First, we dwell as
spirit-soul among spirit-souls. This is a genuine
experiencing of the spiritual world. Secondly, we are given
a revelation of the spiritual world. The individualities
of the single spiritual entities become blurred as it
were. The spiritual world is revealed to us as a whole. Now we
approach again the moon sphere. Within ourselves the feeling of
self-consciousness awakens; this is a preparation for earthly
self-consciousness. Whereas we did not desire earth-life while
being conscious of our spiritual self within the spiritual
world, we now begin, during the period of revelation, to desire
earth-life and develop a vigorous self-consciousness directed
towards the earth.
In
the third stage, we enter the moon sphere; and, having yielded
our spiritual germ to the physical world, draw together out of
all the heaven worlds the etheric substance needed for our own
etheric body. Three successive stages: A genuine life within
the spiritual world; a life amidst the revelations of the
spiritual world, in which we feel ourselves already as an
egoistic self; a life devoted to the drawing together of
the world ether.
The
counterparts of these stages are produced after the human
being has moved again into his physical body. These
counterparts are of a most surprising nature. We see the child.
We see it before us in its physical body. The child develops.
This development of the child is the most wonderful thing to
behold in the physical world. We see how it first crawls, and
then assumes a state of balance with regard to the world. We
observe how the child learns to walk. Immeasurably great things
are connected with this learning to walk. It represents an
entrance of the child's whole being into the state of
equilibrium of the world. It represents a genuine
orientation of the whole cosmos towards the world's three
spatial dimensions. And the child's wonderful achievement
consists in the fact that it finds the correct human state of
equilibrium within the world.
These things are a modest, terrestrial counterpart of all that
the human being, while dwelling as a spirit among spirits,
underwent in the course of long centuries. We feel great
reverence for the world if we look at it in such wise
that we observe a child: how it first kicks its limbs awkwardly
in every direction, then gradually learns to control
itself. This is the aftereffect of the movements which we
executed, during centuries, as a spiritual being among
spiritual beings. It is really wonderful to discover in the
child's single movements, in its search for a state of
equilibrium, the terrestrial after-effects of those
heavenly movements executed, in a purely spiritual sense,
as spirit among spirits.
Every child — unless some abnormal condition changes the
sequence — should first learn to walk (attain a state of
equilibrium) and then learn to speak.
Now
again the child, by an imitative process, adjusts itself
through the use of language to its environment. But in every
sound, every word formation shaping itself in the child, we
find a modest, terrestrial echo of the experience undergone by
us when our knowledge of the spiritual world becomes
revelation; when this knowledge is compressed, as it
were, into a uniform haze. Then the World Logos is formed out
of the world's single being, which we experienced previously in
an individualized way. And when the child utters one word after
the other, this is the audible terrestrial counterpart of a
marvelous world tableau experienced by us during the time
of revelation, before we return again to the moon
sphere.
And
when the child, having learned to walk and speak, gradually
develops its thoughts — for learning to think should be
the third step in a normal human development — this is a
counterpart of the work performed by man while forming his own
etheric body out of the world ether gathered from every part of
the universe.
Thus, in looking at the child as it enters the world, we see in
the three modest faculties needed to gain a dynamic static
relationship to the world — learning to maintain
equilibrium (what we call learning to walk), learning to speak,
learning to think — the compressed, modest, terrestrial
counterparts of that which, spread out into grandiose cosmic
dimensions, represents the stages passed through by us between
death and a new birth.
Only by gaining a knowledge of the spiritual life between death
and a new birth, do we gain a knowledge of the mystery coming
forth from man's innermost depth when the child, having been
born in a uniform state, becomes increasingly differentiated.
Hence, by pointing to every single being as a revelation of the
divine, we learn to understand the world as a revelation of the
divine.
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