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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Initiation, Eternity and the Passing Moment
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Initiation, Eternity and the Passing Moment
Schmidt Number: S-2623
On-line since: 6th July, 2002
From the previous lectures you will perhaps have realised how
necessary it is to make our conceptions capable of change and movement
if we are to arrive at a right description of the various worlds of
which we can speak, one of which is our ordinary sensory existence,
our ordinary world of the senses. From much that has been said it
should be evident to you that we must speak of human concepts in a
different language when representing the transition from one world to
another. That is one side of the matter. But there is another side;
all these worlds work reciprocally and in one world the inter-working
of the remaining worlds can always be perceived as a kind of
reflection. In each world we are met by the phenomena and beings of
that particular world, and, in addition, by all that is working into
it from the other worlds. All this must be carefully considered if we
would understand the secrets of initiation, the relation of the
passing moment to eternity, and the relation of the darkness in life
to the light of the spirit. There are certain rules and instructions,
which you will find described in
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds,
to which the soul can be subjected in order to enter super-sensible
worlds. It goes without saying that such rules are not only useful but
indispensable to anyone really wanting to undertake the first or
further steps toward initiation.
At this particular time there is one thing, however, to which we must
call attention. Our present age has a certain peculiarity connected
with the whole character of the world-cycle in which we live. It has
an academic, theorising tendency, and no matter how much we strive to
get rid of it, it still remains engrained in the souls of present-day
men. For this reason, when it is a question of rising into higher
worlds, they expect before everything to be told how, in such
circumstances, each person should act whose soul is desirous of
reaching super-sensible worlds. But in comparison with the real
experience of super-sensible life, into these descriptions that may be
said to give a normal path, a normal “line of march” for a
quick ascent into higher worlds, there always seems to enter what, in
a certain respect, might be called an element of the doubtful.
Life is a complicated affair, and every soul, in whatever position it
is found — everyone wishing to start on the ascent into higher
worlds must do so from some particular position in life — every
soul is involved in a definite karma and starts from a definite point.
No two souls are in the same situation. The path for each soul into
super-sensible worlds is therefore individual, and is determined by
the condition of the soul at its point of departure. If you want to
keep to the truth, you cannot say that normally such and such a path
must be taken by every soul for the ascent into higher worlds, for
initiation. Hence the need of something more than instructions given
in short pamphlets (a much easier affair) saying the soul should do
this or that and giving rise to the belief that it is possible by
following out such rules to rise to higher worlds in any circumstances
and in the same way as any other soul.
This is why such things are doubtful. It was for this very reason that
I tried in
A Road to Self Knowledge
to indicate something individual that can at the same time be useful
to every soul. For the same reason, the necessity also arose of
showing how the ways of initiation are both manifold and varied.
Without wishing to give any kind of explanation about what has been
done, I should just like to point out the different ways in which the
necessities are shown in the three figures who appear before our souls
as Johannes Thomasius, Capesius and Strader in my mystery plays The
Portal of Initiation, The Soul's Probation and The Guardian of the
Threshold. You are here shown, as it were, three different aspects
of the first stages on the path of initiation. You cannot say of any
one of these that it is better or worse than the others; in each case
you must admit that it is the outcome of individual karma. It can only
be said that a soul such as Johannes or Capesius must necessarily
follow the paths we have tried to indicate, not theoretically or
pedantically, but in the actual, dramatic figures.
It will become increasingly necessary to lead people away from the
belief that a few rules will suffice in these matters —
increasingly necessary in precisely these spiritual spheres to point
the way from the academic to living figures. Because the connections
of the worlds are so manifold, the ways of individuals must be
manifold too. But when one first begins seriously to observe certain
individualities or beings of the higher worlds and to verify what part
they have in man, then especially must we feel the need, instead of
giving mere definitions of them, to show these figures livingly and in
their multiplicity. In our time it is particularly important for those
who strive for spiritual knowledge to observe, in all their manifold
and variable nature, such figures as Lucifer and Ahriman whom we shall
always encounter on the path of initiation. It will then be apparent
how remarkable are the connections and links between one world and
another.
There are many signs today of how, gradually, understanding can be
aroused of this interplay of one world with another. I should like to
start from the obvious even though it is not sufficiently appreciated
that it is. In our time, in the widest circles, there is a strong
impulse to get to know the order of nature, the laws of nature, that
work through everything, including all the living things that meet us
in the world of the senses. There is a tendency to ignore any
knowledge coming from other worlds about man and world existence and
simply to build a whole world conception out of the one world. This it
is that gives the more or less monistic or materialistic stamp to our
present world conception. Now, one may say that against this
endeavour, other strivings have made themselves felt today as a kind
of whole some check. Within the world in which we live, these
endeavours seek such phenomena as are governed by laws different from
those of the natural world and, in all their manifoldness, are felt by
the materialistic mind to be inconsistent with the order of nature. We
should certainly pay heed to all that is done in a serious and
scientific way in this field. In this contemporary confrontation of
purely materialistic research with another research, which, although
little noticed and by using the same methods as ordinary research,
seeks other connections in our sensory existence than this existence
itself offers — in all this we may, indeed, look for quite
different worlds, with different laws of being playing into this other
research. In this respect it is most desirable, particularly for
anthroposophists, to give heed to all that is being done in this
direction by extending the methods of science to the interplay of
super-sensible worlds into our physical existence. I have already
pointed this out to smaller circles; today I shall do so for this
larger one.
In the first part of his book, The Mystery of Man, a book I
should like especially to recommend to you, our friend, Ludwig
Deinhard, has undertaken the commendable task of giving lucid
classification and description of everything that in our age can be
investigated by means of the scientific methods recognised today about
the interplay of a super-sensible world into the world that is
accessible to us all. These scientific methods are indeed still being
applied with prejudice. This lucid classification has been a worthy
task. It can be a lesson to anyone interested in seeing how, simply by
taking the facts and following them up, we can find that the
super-sensible actually springs forth from the life of the senses. So
this book, The Mystery of Man, by Ludwig Deinhard, which has
appeared recently, has an important task, and I take this opportunity
of bringing it to your notice.
This interplay of other worlds into the sensory world, creates
something within it that is really repeated and appears in all worlds.
This makes it, however, particularly necessary that we should not form
pedantic, rigid or one-sided dogmas or opinions that this or that is
so, that Lucifer is like this, Ahriman like that; that one must shun
the Luciferic, the Ahrimanic, and so on. Our considerations yesterday
followed this theme.
Let us assume that someone who has taken the first steps on the path
of initiation, because his soul life has become clairvoyant by his own
efforts to open the eyes of his soul, meets the figure in
super-sensible worlds whom we call Lucifer. How did we describe this
being yesterday? He comes before the soul as a being forever striving
to make the eternal, which otherwise is in constant movement and
change, into the stable, temporal and momentary, so that as something
individual it can rejoice in its power to grow individually great. If
as a soul you meet Lucifer in super-sensible worlds, he then appears
there as the great Light-bearer who leads, really leads, to bringing
down into sensory existence all the treasures that pertain to real
being in the spiritual world, and to the creation of its reflection
and revelation in the world of the senses. If you follow Lucifer in
this striving of his in super-sensible worlds, then you are working
for the fulfilment of the primordial task of the universe; that is, to
reveal the un-revealed, to commit to the moment all that is eternal
and to make it possible that all that flows away into limitless
eternity should be held fast in the inward greatness of the individual
moment.
Now a desire exists in every human soul as an echo from the spiritual
worlds to bring to fulfilment this striving to make manifest the
un-revealed, to fix the eternal in the passing moment. Hence it is
that when man enters super-sensible worlds, either by way of
initiation or by death, it is really Lucifer who acts as his
Light-bearer. The dangers to which man is exposed when face to face
with Lucifer in higher worlds are really only present when man takes
with him into these worlds too great a measure of what in sensory
existence constitutes his right relation to Lucifer. Lucifer is only
dangerous for man's life in higher worlds if he takes with him too
much of the nature and essential being of physical man. How then do
matters stand with Lucifer within the actual life of the senses, where
there is always the interplay of super-sensible worlds? In the
historical course of man during sensory existence and in his evolution
we have to do above all with the interplay of the higher worlds, which
send active impulses into physical life so that one thing may take
place after another, in the way things are played out during the whole
earth existence in the history of mankind.
The self-seeking strivings of every human soul that we regard as human
and egoistic play into the life of the senses, and we know that the
development of every soul must start from egoism. That is natural. We
also know that man can work his way out from egoism. Into all that
souls have been able to do on earth through egoism, there comes what
we may call the manifestation of the eternal in the passing moment.
Luciferic forces are forever playing into what is fixed in the
individual soul and also into all that the individual man can do for
the whole world-order and existence through being an egoist and having
the power to develop within him inward greatness that wells forth from
his inner being. For what is individual greatness in the individual
soul but the seed of all the greatness in the whole world evolution of
man? What gave Homer, Shakespeare, Dante, Goethe, their power to
affect mankind? It was their ego-hood, and because within them there
were whole worlds, worlds that issued forth from their inner being
alone, out of their ego-hood. In this indirect way, through ego-hood,
the impulses of spiritual life are introduced, which are from epoch to
epoch the mediators of the greatest spiritual deeds of mankind. In
this we find Lucifer again. It is he who is Light-bearer, impulse and
power behind all the greatness that radiates into human evolution from
the mighty forces of eternity that, at certain points of time, surge
up from the individual human soul.
Man's soul is placed between two poles that are simply the impression
and reflection of all the worlds in which the soul actually stands. At
the one pole the human soul hardens within itself, winds itself into
the cocoon of its selfhood, and only desires what is of service to
itself, what is for its self-gratification. At the other pole the
human soul draws forces from its own depths that are able to radiate
into the whole life of humanity. When does this ego-hood of man come
to light? This happens the moment we think how necessary it is for
every man to sacrifice for others what is his own, what is his most
individually, what belongs most deeply to his ego-hood. But in all
that man can do for his fellows out of his ego-hood lives Lucifer, the
other pole of Lucifer; in all that man can thus achieve for humanity
under the influence of the Light-bearer, lies a reflection of what
Lucifer really is in higher worlds, a reflection of his creative
activity, which is the revealing of the un-revealed.
Can we then say that Lucifer is evil, or can we say that Lucifer is
good? One can only say that if a man maintains that Lucifer is evil,
and that we must flee from him, then it must also be said that we must
avoid fire, because in certain circumstances it destroys life. On the
path of initiation we find that the words good and evil cannot be used
in this way for the description of any being of the super-sensible
world order. Fire is good when it acts in good conditions, evil when
it works in evil ones; in itself it is neither the one nor the other.
So it is with Lucifer. He exercises a good influence on man's soul
when he becomes the instigator of man's sacrifice on the altar of
human evolution of all that is most individual in his soul. Lucifer
becomes an evil being rather, what he does becomes evil — when he
arouses impulses leading only to self-gratification in the human soul.
Thus, once our attention has been drawn to these beings, we have to
follow up the effect their deeds have in the world. The acts of
super-sensible beings can be described as good or bad; the beings
themselves, never!
Just imagine that somewhere, on some island or other, there were a
human race holding the opinion that, in all circumstances, one must
protect oneself from Lucifer and that he has to be kept at the
greatest possible distance. That would not prove that the men of this
island had better knowledge of Lucifer than anyone else, but simply,
by virtue of their particular qualities that these men were only able
to convert into evil what Lucifer could give them. The views about
Lucifer held by the people of this island would only be characteristic
of the people, not of Lucifer. I will not say whether or not this
island exists. You can look for it yourselves in the evolution of the
world.
We must seek the attributes of Lucifer in the being Lucifer whom we
meet in the super-sensible world. The manner of his working has to be
sought in how his powers take on different qualities when, for
instance, they work on such an island and their effects actively ray
out on such an island.
And the Ahrimanic? What is that? When we meet Ahriman in the
super-sensible world, we find his particular attributes are quite
different from those of Lucifer. To come into relation with Lucifer in
the super-sensible world, we really only need to purify and cleanse
ourselves from all the dross of faulty ego-hood and the egoism of
sensory existence. For that, Lucifer will make us a good guide in the
actual super-sensible world, and we shall not easily become his prey.
But with Ahriman it is different; his is another task in world
evolution. While Lucifer reveals all that is hidden, Ahriman's task
for the world of the senses can be described by saying that where our
world of the senses is, where it becomes visible, there is Ahriman,
but he permeates it invisibly, super-sensibly. How does Ahriman help
us? He helps us considerably in the physical world; he helps every
soul. Indeed, he helps every soul to carry into higher worlds as much
as possible from the world of the senses, of what is played out only
there, because the world of the senses exists for some purpose and is
not merely maya. It exists as the stage for events that beings may
experience, and what is thus enacted and experienced must be borne up
into super-sensible worlds. The power to carry into eternity what is
of value in sensory existence is the power that belongs to Ahriman. To
give the passing moment back to eternity, that is in Ahriman's power.
For the individual soul in relation to Ahriman, however, something
quite different comes into consideration. What men experience
primarily in sensory existence is of infinite value to them, and I
hardly think I shall meet with much opposition if I say that the
enthusiasm and the inclination carefully to preserve what we
experience in sensory existence, and to save it up as far as possible
for eternity, is generally much greater than the other tendency,
namely, to bring down into the world of the senses all that we can
from the hidden spiritual worlds. Man loves the world of the senses
quite naturally and comprehensibly, and would like to take as much as
possible of it with him into spiritual existence. Certain religious
faiths, in order to comfort their adherents, tell them that they can
quite well take with them into spiritual life all that is in sensory
existence. No doubt they say it because they unconsciously realise how
much man loves what is his in physical existence. This is what
Ahriman's power strives to bring about, that all that we have here can
be carried on with us into spiritual worlds. This inclination and
desire to carry up the physical into the super-physical is both strong
and forceful in the soul. It is not at all easy to get rid of it when,
through death or initiation, you rise from the world of the senses
into higher worlds. Therefore, you still have it in you when you
become a being of the higher world. If you meet Ahriman there, this is
just where he becomes dangerous because he willingly helps you to
carry into these super-sensible worlds all you have gained and
experienced in sensory existence.
There could be no more cherished companion than Ahriman for those who
would preserve each passing moment for eternity. Many men, as soon as
they have passed the gateway into the super-sensible world, find in
Ahriman an accommodating companion; he is always seeking to make what
takes place on earth play its part in the higher worlds and to claim
it there for himself and for those who work with him. But even that is
not the worst, because you do not enter the super-sensible world
without having in a certain respect cast off your selfhood. If you
gained entrance there with your ordinary, normal impelling force, you
would soon seize hold of Ahriman and feel him to be a most easy-going
companion. But you cannot enter in that state. On entering higher
worlds, you already have the faculty for recognising him as partaking
in the divine, since with overwhelming tragedy he permeates earth
evolution in sensory existence and is forever at pains so to transform
it that it shall become a spiritual life. That is Ahriman's deep
tragedy! He would like to change all that has ever appeared in the
physical into the spiritual, and he battles in the world order for the
purification and cleansing, in cleansing fires, of everything
physical. In his sense that is good, but it would be evil in the sense
of the divine, spiritual beings if Ahriman, who is their opponent in
the world order, could carry out all his aims.
Much must be done there in a different way from how he would have it
done. I should like here to describe what I mean by a comparison. By
applying this comparison to the whole world order, you will be able to
appreciate how Ahriman strives for himself after what he can call
good, yet how impossible it is to fit this “good” into the
whole world order.
Now let us take any animal that, for its progressive development in
sensory existence, must shed its skin. From time to time, it must lay
aside its skin like a kind of image of itself and progress in life
with a new form. Something has to be cast aside to give the being in
question new possibilities of life. Ahriman would like to save
everything and would like to prevent all snakes from casting their
skin; he would like everything used up that, in the mind of the world
order, must be cast aside. Man, too, would like to do that in sensory
existence. There is a great deal he would prefer not to leave but to
take with him, although in the mind of a higher world order it is
destined for the temporal and the passing moment. Because the urge is
so strong in him, man would, if it were possible for him among all his
questions in the sensory world about unknown paths and so forth, want
first to ask, “Where can Ahriman be found? Where can Ahriman help
one to carry into eternity what is held in the passing moment?”
Here is the one good thing! Man is not able to find Ahriman in the
world of the senses because here he is invisible and spiritual. It
belongs to the obligations of the Guardian of the Threshold that
Ahriman should remain as invisible as possible in the physical world.
Thus, man can unfold what lies in his own forces alone for the
preservation of the passing moment in eternity, and cannot
unconsciously let Ahriman help him. Here again, good and evil play
into man's physical life as two poles. Man as a soul passes through
human evolution in which one task is good, genuine and true; that is,
to carry out of the sensory world all that has eternal value and to
make it part of the eternal kingdom. This is the duty laid upon us
— to take the precious treasures of the moment and offer them up
on the altar of eternity. When we let Ahriman help us with the real
treasures of temporal life, then it is good. But when at the moment of
entering the super-sensible world, we come to know Ahriman —
until then we cannot see him — and show him the tendency that
remains in us to carry out of the sensory world into the
super-sensible world what has no value, then this has a great deal of
value for him. It is worthless, however, for his opponents. Then he
can find us to be useful tools to lead what is loved here in sensory
existence over into eternity. Because it is thus loved, it takes its
place through him in eternity.
So once more we see how what emanates from Ahriman cannot, in itself,
be called either good or bad, but becomes good or bad according to how
men place themselves toward it and enter into relation with it.
Through this we can realise how easy it is for descriptions to be
superficial when answering questions that show so little real thought
as, “What is Ahriman like?” or “What is Lucifer
like?” In the higher worlds where descriptions of these beings
are only possible, there are really no such utterances, no such
questions. Thus is man drawn into the labyrinth of life. Both Lucifer
and Ahriman are working in this labyrinth, and man has to discover how
to take up the right attitude toward them. This necessity for seeking
our right relationship to the beings of super-sensible worlds is just
what gives us the power for self-development. Connections with
super-sensible worlds are riot maintained by striving for a knowledge
based on that of the senses, so much as by creating a relationship
with spiritual beings in the way we have just described. For this
reason men must go into the darkness of life in which beings work who
can just as well be good as evil, and who can become good or evil in
the effects of what they do according to the way in which we relate
ourselves to them. That is what constitutes the darkness of life.
Hence, the light of life, spiritual light, can only shine into the
darkness of life by our acquiring the right relation to, and getting
to know, the several powers of the super-sensible world who play into
our physical world. Also, when wishing to speak of super-sensible
worlds, we change our ideas and concepts. I should like to bring
before your souls by yet another example how differently we must think
if we would find the connection between the sensory world and the
super-sensible world in the right way.
We live here in physical existence in such a way that we feel how
there plays with and around us what we call our destiny. In our
destiny we find many sympathetic and many adverse things. Anyone who
can conjure up a true idea of himself knows that feeling and
experiencing with others, and the sympathy or antipathy with which we
meet the fortunes of life, are among our most powerful sensations and
are most deeply rooted in our soul. Now it happens — I need not
here repeat why as this has been told you frequently in earlier
lectures — that in our higher ego, which, in the sense of our
previous lectures, bears within it merely a memory of the ordinary ego
— in this higher ego, we ourselves prepare the very destiny that
then may torment us and cause us suffering throughout a whole
lifetime. Are there not some who deny the idea of reincarnation
because, having lived through this one, they have no desire to build a
new existence for themselves? The reason for this is that they labour
under the delusion that in the worlds man inhabits after death
everything goes on in the same way as in the world of the senses.
Here, in the sensory world one thing may please, another displease us.
But during the life between death and a new birth, it never occurs to
us that we should feel in this way. There we feel quite differently,
though here we may not know it. When, after death we come into the
spiritual world, we realise, for example, “I have lived on earth
in a life of the senses; I have possessed a certain faculty, but this
faculty found a one-sided expression in me; it is possible I even made
bad use of it. I must now form myself anew in another earth existence
and embodiment so that this one-sidedness may be balanced and the
imperfection rectified. In other words, I must take over in another
imperfection what I have previously had in an imperfect form, so that
by working in the opposite direction I may balance and harmonise the
matter.”
Then a time begins between death and a new birth, which goes on until
the new birth, during which man says for example, “Formerly, I
worked and made myself proficient at painting. I will now be born so
that in my new life I will be quite incapable of painting. By not
being able to paint, I shall never be able to harbour in my soul a
judgement arrived at from the standpoint of a painter, but I shall be
able only to judge as one would who has simply seen something. Thus, I
shall acquire other forces that will be helpful in harmonising and
balancing what was mine before.” So we can look back on a life
between birth and death to something happily passed through and yet
say, “If I were so to direct my whole evolution as only to
experience life thus, I should never get its full flavour.” Out
of forces thus developed, there follows the desire, “What once I
experienced in happiness I must now experience in suffering.” You
then arrange everything in such a way that, impelled by this longing
you have to experience suffering in a certain sphere and by undergoing
this, you make further progress in life. Then the fact becomes clear
that in the super-sensible worlds we have craved for pain and
suffering, though in sensory existence we feel they are something to
be avoided.
Here the difference between life in sensory existence and life between
death and rebirth in super-sensible worlds becomes of real, practical
significance. Quite different forces are active in our life between
death and a new birth from all that we find sympathetic or otherwise
between birth and death. What then does a man do who would judge life
in super-sensible worlds according to his sympathies and antipathies
of sensory existence? Actually, he transplants in perspective into the
super-sensible world what he had in sensory existence. It is just as
though you were to draw or paint a rose, for instance, on a sheet of
glass. Then, if you look at the sheet of glass you will not see it.
You look through the glass but the painting that you take for a
reality is projected onto the space of the wall behind. But it is not
real at all; it is you who have transplanted it there. In the same
way, a man, when he wants to judge of the super-sensible world by the
sympathies and antipathies of the sensory world, can project into that
world something like shadows that may nevertheless have validity
there. This something has a certain effect and is in a way authentic.
Even if it is not seen, something like a fog is projected onto what
stands in that world before the observer.
Thus, again and from another side, we are shown through feeling what
may be called the darkness of life. If we ask why we live in this
darkness between birth and death, it may be said that it is because
judgements and valuations of life that are justified and natural in
life between birth and death must have no value for the existence we
lead in super-sensible worlds between death and a new birth. In
sensory existence we have need of a life of soul that in
super-sensible life no longer has validity. Therefore, if we are to
gain comprehensive knowledge of the universe, we must allow all our
investigations and our knowledge of the super-sensible world to be.
penetrated by the light of its spirit. The greatest mistake that men
can make in their view of the world is that of imagining that they can
extend to super-sensible worlds the concepts and ideas gained from the
world of the senses and without having the patience and endurance to
await from actual investigation into the super-sensible, descriptions
of all that, as spiritual light from higher worlds, radiates into the
darkness of sensory existence. Here the question confronts us,
“Is it indeed only those having power of vision in super-sensible
worlds, those who have had the privilege of initiation, who are able
to let this spiritual light of super-sensible worlds work upon
them?” This belief is widely spread throughout the world. You
often hear it said: “How can one understand anything of the
super-sensible worlds if one has never gone through initiation?”
You then hear it pointed out that the only true way must be to go
through initiation, the one path leading to super-sensible worlds.
What the connections are in this sphere, how understanding is related
to seeing in super-sensible worlds, and how much consolation and
strength we can have in life through the apprehension of spiritual
light in our darkness will be our starting-point tomorrow. That will
lead us a few steps further into the problem we are now considering.
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