|
|
|
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
|
|
Theosophy of the Rosicrucian
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
|
|
Theosophy of the Rosicrucian
The Descent to a New Birth
Schmidt Number: S-1537
On-line since: 4th July, 2002
THE DESCENT TO A NEW BIRTH
IN THE last lecture we described the worlds through which the human
being has to pass after death, when everything that binds him to his
physical instrument has been laid aside in Kamaloca or as we
say in Rosicrucian Theosophy in the Elemental world. We also
spoke of Rupa-Devachan, or the region known as the Heaven
world, the world of Inspiration. We heard that this region-the
Spirit-Land proper-has a fourfold constitution, like the physical
world. There is the Continental region, permeated by a flowing oceanic
region which is more aptly to be compared with the blood circulation
in the human organism. In the surrounding air of Devachan
which is analogous to the atmosphere of our earth, is to be found all
that pervades the souls of beings in the physical world in the way of
joys, sufferings, sorrows, afflictions, only this air must be
conceived in a much wider sense because this world is the
dwelling-place of other, quite different Beings who are not incarnate
in physical bodies. Finally we heard how in the fourth region of
Devachan everything that is truly original, from the most trivial to
the most lofty inspiration of the inventor or artist, exists as an
archetype. In this world Lies the motive force of the progress of our
earth. But in addition to these constituent realms of the spiritual
world proper, we find that which links our earth with still higher
worlds.
Up to now we have been considering things that have reference only to
earth-evolution, not those that transcend this evolution. A man who
attains Initiation acquires knowledge of what our earth was in the
past and will be in the future, of what links the earth with worlds
beyond our system.
Important above all in Devachan, in this world of Reason,
is the Akasha Chronicle as we are accustomed to call it. The Akasha
Chronicle is not actually brought into being in Devachan but in an
even higher region; when, however, the seer has risen to the world of
Devachan, he can begin to perceive what is known as the Akasha
Chronicle.
What is the Akasha Chronicle? We can form the truest conception of it
by realising that what comes to pass on our earth makes a lasting
impression upon certain delicate essences, an impression which can be
discovered by a seer who has attained Initiation. It is not an
ordinary but a living Chronicle. Suppose a human being lived in the
first century after Christ; what he thought, felt and willed in those
days, what passed into deeds this is not obliterated but
preserved in this delicate essence. The seer can behold it-not as if
it were recorded in a history book, but as it actually happened. How a
man moved, what he did, a journey he took — it can all be seen in these
spiritual pictures; the impulses of will, the feelings, the thoughts,
can also be seen. But we must not imagine that these pictures are
images of the physical personalities. That is not the case. To take a
simple example. When a man moves his hand, his will pervades
the moving hand and it is this force of will that can be seen in the
Akasha Chronicle. What is spiritually active in us and has flowed into
the Physical, is there seen in the Spiritual. Suppose, for example, we
look for Caesar. We can follow all his undertakings, but let us be
quite clear that it is rather his thoughts that we see in the Akasha
Chronicle; when he set out to do something we see the whole sequence
of decisions of the will to the point where the deed was actually
performed. To observe a specific event in the Akasha Chronicle is not
easy. We must help ourselves by linking on to external knowledge. If
the seer is trying to observe some action of Caesar and takes an
historical date as a point of focus, the result will come more easily.
Historical dates are, it is true, often unreliable, but they are
sometimes of assistance. When the seer directs his gaze to Caesar, he
actually sees the person of Caesar in action, phantom-like, as though
he were standing before him, speaking with him. But when a man is
looking into the past, various things may happen to him if, in spite
of possessing some degree of seership, he has not entirely found his
bearings in the higher worlds.
The Akasha Chronicle is to be found in Devachan, but it extends
downwards into the astral world, with the result that in this lower
world the pictures of the Akasha Chronicle may often be a mirage; they
are often disconnected and unreliable and it is important to remember
this when we set about investigating the past. Let me indicate the
danger of these possible mistakes by an example. If through the
indications of the Akasha Chronicle we are led back to the epoch in
the earth's evolution when Atlantis was still in existence, before the
great Flood, we can follow the happenings and conditions of life in
old Atlantis. These were repeated later on, but in a different form.
In north Germany, in central Europe, eastwards of Atlantis, long
before the Christian era and long before Christianity made its way
thither from the south, happenings took place which were a repetition
of conditions in Atlantis. Only afterwards, through the influences
coming from the south, did the peoples begin to lead a life that was
really their own. Here is an example of how easy it is to be exposed
to error. If someone is observing the astral pictures of the
Akasha Chronicle, not the devachanic pictures, he may be confused in
regard to these repetitions of Atlantean conditions. This was actually
the case in the indications about Atlantis given by Scott-Elliot; they
tally with the astral pictures but not with the devachanic pictures of
the true Akasha Chronicle. The truth of this matter had sometime to be
made known. The moment we know where the source of the errors lies, it
is easy to assess the indications correctly.
Another source of error may arise when reliance is placed upon
indications given by mediums. When mediums are possessed of the
necessary faculties, they can see the Akasha Chronicle, although in
most cases only its astral reflections. Now there is something
singular about the Akasha Chronicle. If we discover some person there,
he behaves like a living being. If we find Goethe, for example, he may
not only answer in the words which he actually spoke in his life but
he gives answer in the Goethean sense; it may even happen that he
utters in his own style and trend, verses he never actually wrote. The
Akasha picture is so alive that it is like a force working on in the
mind of the human being. Hence the picture may be confused with the
individuality himself. Mediums believe that they are in contact with
the dead man whose life is continuing in the spirit, whereas in
reality it is only his astral Akasha-picture. The spirit of Caesar may
already have reincarnated on earth and it is his Akasha picture that
gives the answers in seances. It is not the individuality of Caesar
but only the enduring impression which the picture of Caesar has left
behind in the Akasha Chronicle. This is the basis of errors in very
many spiritualist seances. We must distinguish between what remains of
the human being in his Akasha-picture and what continues to evolve as
the true individuality. These are matters of extreme importance.
When the human being has passed out of Kamaloca, he has weaned himself
from all the habits for which a physical instrument is necessary. He
enters into the region described above. The period that now begins for
him is exceedingly important and we must understand what it is that
happens.
All the man's earlier experiences in his life of thought and feeling,
all his passions, confront him in Devachan as his environment.
Firstly, he sees his own physical body in its archetypal form. Just as
on the earth we move among rocks, mountains and stones, in yonder
world we move among the archetypes of all the structures that exist in
the physical world. A man, therefore, moves over his own physical
body. The fact that his own physical body is an object outside him is
a pointer to him after death, for he recognises by this that he has
left Kamaloca and has entered into Devachan. On the earth he says to
his body: I am that! In Devachan he sees his body and
says: Thou art that!
The Vedanta Philosophy teaches its pupils to meditate upon the
Thou art That! in order that through such exercises they
may understand what it means to say to the body: Thou art
That!
In Devachan the human being sees around him what he experienced
inwardly here on earth. If he has harboured revenge, antipathy and
other evil feelings towards his fellow men on earth they confront him
externally like a cloud and this teaches him what significance and
effect all these things have in the world.
Let us be clear about what happens to the human being in Devachan. How
have the organs, the eyes, for instance, of physical man on the earth
been formed? There was a time when no eye was yet in existence. The
eye has been formed out of the physical Organisation by light. Light
is the progenitor of the eye. What is around us on the earth creates
organs in physical bodies and substances; in Devachan, what is around
us works upon our being of soul. So that everything a human being has
developed here on earth in the way of good and reprehensible feelings
is to be found, in yonder world, in his environment; it works upon his
soul and so creates organs of the soul. If a man has lived a righteous
life on earth, his good qualities live around him in the
air of Devachan; they work in the Spiritual, creating
organs. These organs serve as architects and moulders for the building
of the physical body in a new incarnation. What was within the human
being on earth is transferred to the outer world in Devachan, and
prepares the forces which build up the human body for the next birth.
But let it not be imagined that the human being has nothing to do
except to care for himself; as well as this he has very important work
to do in Devachan. We can form an idea of this if we consider for a
moment the evolution of the earth. How greatly certain regions have
changed since a couple of thousand years ago! There were then quite
different plants, different animal forms, even the climate was
different. In respect of the products of nature the earth's surface is
continually changing. In Greece, for example, there could never again
arise what sprang forth from the soil in the days of ancient Greece.
Evolution proceeds precisely through the fact that the face of the
earth undergoes constant change.
When a human being dies, a very long period elapses before he is born
again. When he appears again on the earth he does not find the same
conditions as of yore; he has to have new experiences; he is not born
a second time into the same configuration of the earth; he remains in
the spiritual worlds until the earth has entirely new conditions to
offer him. There is good purpose in this for thereby he learns
something entirely new and his development goes forward quite
differently. Think, for example, of a boy in ancient Rome. His life
did not in the least resemble that of a modern schoolboy; and when we
ourselves are born again we, in turn, shall find quite different
conditions. Thus does evolution proceed from incarnation to
incarnation. While the human being sojourns in the spiritual regions
described, the face of the earth is perpetually changing.
What beings are active here? By what beings are the changes in the
earth's physiognomy brought about? This leads at once to the answer to
the question: What is the human being doing in the period between
death and a new birth? He himself is working from out the spiritual
worlds, under the guidance of higher Beings, at the transformation of
the earth. It is human beings themselves, between death and rebirth,
who carry out this work. When they are born again they find the face
of the earth changed, changed into a form which they themselves have
helped to fashion. All of us have been engaged in this work.
To the question: Where is Devachan, where is the spiritual world?
I answer: It is around us all the time. In very truth it is so.
Around us too are all the souls of discarnate human beings; they are
at work around us. While we are building cities and machines, human
beings who are living between death and a new birth are around us,
working out of the spiritual realms.
When, as seers, we seek for the Dead, we can find them within the
light-if we perceive the light not merely in a material way. The light
that surrounds us forms the bodies of the Dead; they have
bodies woven out of light. The light that enfolds the earth is
substance for the beings who are living in Devachan. A
plant nourished by the sunlight receives into itself not the physical
light alone but in very truth the activity of spiritual beings, among
whom there are also these human souls. These souls themselves ray down
upon the plants as light, weaving as spiritual beings around the
plants. Looking at the plants with the eye of spirit, we can say: the
plant rejoices at the influences coming from the Dead who are working
and weaving around it in the light. When we observe how the vegetation
on the face of the earth changes and ask how this comes about, the
answer is: The souls of the Dead are working in the light which
enfolds the earth; here is Devachan, in very truth. After the period
of Kamaloca we pass into this realm of light. Only those who are able
to point to where, in truth, the Dead are to be found have any
knowledge of Devachan in the sense of Rosicrucian Theosophy.
When the faculties of the seer develop, he often makes a striking
discovery. When he stands in the sunlight, his body holds up the light
and casts a shadow; very often he will discover the spirit for the
first time when he looks into this shadow. The body holds up the light
but not the spirit; and in the shadow that is cast by the body the
spirit can be discovered. That is why more primitive peoples who have
always possessed some measure of clairvoyance, have also called the
Soul, the shadow they say shadow-less
soul-less. A novel by Adalbert Chamisso is unconsciously
based on this idea: the man who has lost his shadow has also lost his
soul hence his despair.
Such, then, is the work that is performed by human beings in Devachan
between death and a new birth. They are by no means in a state of
inactive repose; they work creatively from Devachan at the evolution
of the earth. They are not, as is often said, in a state of blissful
rest or dream. Life in Devachan is just as full of activity as life on
the earth.
When the human being has reached the point where he has transformed
into spiritual forces his activities in the last earthly life, when
these experiences have come to him from the outer world of Devachan
and have worked upon him, then he is ready to come down from Devachan
to a new birth. The earth draws him once again to her sphere.
When the human being descends from Devachan, he passes, first, into
the astral region, the Elemental World. Here he receives a
new astral body... If iron filings are scattered on a piece of paper
and a magnet is moved about underneath, the filings arrange themselves
into forms and lines, following the forces of the magnet. In exactly
the same way, the irregularly distributed astral substance is
attracted and arranged according to the forces which are in the soul
and correspond with what this soul has achieved in the previous life.
Thus the human being himself gathers together his astral body. These
human beings in the making, who to begin with have only an astral
body, appear to the eye of the seer like bell forms opening downwards.
They shoot and whirl through the astral world with tremendous
speed-with a speed that can hardly be conceived.
These incipient human beings must now receive an etheric body and a
physical body. What happened hitherto, up to the stage of the
formation of the astral body, depended upon themselves, upon the
forces they themselves had developed. But the forming of the etheric
body does not, in the present phase of evolution, depend upon the
human being alone; in respect of the forming of an etheric body, man
is dependent upon beings external to himself. Consequently the human
being always has a fitting astral body but there is not in every case
perfect accordance between the astral body and the etheric and
physical bodies; this is often the cause of maladjustment and lack of
satisfaction in life. These incipient human beings whirl around space
as they do because they are seeking for suitable parents, parents who
will afford the best possible opportunity of receiving an etheric and
a physical nature befitting the astral being.
The parents who can provide this can only be relatively the best and
the most suitable. Co-operating in this search are Beings who member
the etheric body to the astral body and whose rank is similar to that
of the Folk-Spirits. The Folk-Spirit is not the intangible abstraction
it is usually considered to be. A Folk-Spirit is as real to the eye of
the seer as our soul that is incarnate in our body. A whole people,
although it has not a common physical body, has a common astral body
and the rudiments of a common etheric body. This lives within a kind
of astral cloud and is the body of the Folk-Spirit. Of
this nature are the Beings who guide the ether-formations around the
human being who is thus no longer entirely under his own control.
Now comes a moment of extreme importance, equally as important as the
moment after death when the whole of the past life is seen as a
memory-picture. When the human being passes into his etheric body but
has not yet acquired his physical body it is a brief moment but
of supreme importance he has a pre-vision of his coming life,
not in all its details but only as a survey over what his future life
has in store for him. He can say to himself (but he forgets it when he
actually incarnates) that he has a happy or an unhappy life in front
of him. It may happen, if a human being has had many unfortunate
experiences in a previous life, that he now gets a shock and is
hesitant to enter into the physical body. The result of this may be
that he does not come right down into the physical body and so the
connection between the several bodies is not fully established. This
produces idiocy in the coming life; it is not always the cause of
idiocy, but frequently so. The soul rebels, as it were, against
physical embodiment. Such a human being cannot make right use of his
brain because he is not properly incarnate in it. He can only use his
physical instrument aright when he allows himself to be born into it
in the full and proper sense. Whereas in other circumstances the
etheric body extends only slightly beyond the physical body, in the
case of idiots portions of the etheric body are often to be seen as an
etheric sheen extending far beyond the head. Here is a case where
something that is left unexplained by physical observation of life, is
explained through Spiritual Science.
Last Modified: 02-Nov-2024
|
The Rudolf Steiner e.Lib is maintained by:
The e.Librarian:
elibrarian@elib.com
|
|
|
|
|