Lecture
IV
The
soul, as it becomes clairvoyant, will progress further, beyond the
elemental world we have been describing in these lectures, and it
will penetrate the actual spiritual world. On ascending to this
higher world, the soul must take into account even more forcefully
what already has been indicated. In the elemental world there are
many happenings and phenomena surrounding the clairvoyant soul that
remind it of the characteristics, the forces, and of all sorts
of other things in the sense world, but rising into the spiritual
world, the soul finds the happenings and beings totally different.
The capacities and points of view it could get on with in the sense
world have to be given up to a far greater degree. It is terribly
disturbing to confront a world that the soul is not at all accustomed
to, leaving everything behind it has so far been able to experience
and observe. Nevertheless, when you look into my books
Theosophy
or
Occult Science
or if you recall the recent performance
of Scenes Five and Six of
The Souls' Awakening,
it will occur to you that the descriptions there of the real spiritual world,
the scientific descriptions as well as the more pictorial-scenic ones,
use pictures definitely taken — one can say — from
impressions and observations of the physical sense world.
Recall for a moment how the journey is described through
Devachan or the Spirit-land, as I called it. You will find that the
pictures used have the characteristics of sense perception. This is,
of course, necessary if one proposes to put on the stage the spirit
region, which the human being passes through between death and a new
birth. All the happenings must be represented by images taken from
the physical sense world. You can easily imagine that stage hands
nowadays would not know what to do with the sort of scenery one might
bring immediately out of the spiritual world, having nothing at all
in common with the sense world. One therefore faces the necessity of
describing the region of spirit with pictures taken from sense
observation. But there is more to it than this.
You might well believe that to represent
this world whose characteristics are altogether different from the
sense world, one has to help oneself out of the difficulty with
sense-perceptible images. This is not the case. When the soul that
has become clairvoyant enters the spiritual world, it will really see
the landscape as the exact scenery of those two scenes of the “Spirit
Region” in
The Souls' Awakening.
They are not just thought out in order to characterize something that is
entirely different; the clairvoyant soul really is in such scenery and
surrounded by it. Just as the soul surrounded in the physical sense
world by a landscape of rocks, mountains, woods and fields must take
these for granted as reality if it is healthy, the clairvoyant soul,
too, outside the physical and etheric bodies can observe itself
surrounded in exactly the same way by a landscape constructed of
these pictures. Indeed, the pictures have not been chosen at random;
as a matter of fact they are the actual environment of the soul in
this world. Scenes Five and Six of
The Souls' Awakening
did not come about in just this way because something or other of an
unknown world had to be expressed and therefore the question was
considered, “How can that be done?” No, this world
pictured here is the world surrounding the soul that it to some
degree simply forms as an image.
However, it is necessary for the
clairvoyant soul to enter into the right relationship to the genuine
reality of the spirit world, the spirit-land that has nothing at all
in common with the sense world. You will get some idea of the
relationship to the spiritual world which the soul has to acquire
from a description of how the soul can come to an understanding of
that world. Suppose you open a book. At the top of the page you find
a line slanting from the left above to the right below, then a line
slanting from bottom left to top right, another line parallel to the
first and still another parallel to the second; then come two
vertical lines, the second shorter than the first and connected at
the top to its center. Then comes something like a circle that is not
quite closed with a horizontal line in its center; finally come two
equal vertical lines joined together at the top. You don't go through
all this when you open a book and look at the first thing that stands
there, do you? You read the word “when.” You do not
describe the w as lines and the e as an incomplete
circle, and so on; you read. When you look at the forms of the
letters in front of you, you enter into a relationship with something
that is not printed on the page; it is, however, indicated to you by
what is there on that page.
It is precisely the same with the relationship of the
soul to the whole picture-world of the spirit region. What the soul
has to do is not merely to describe what is there, for it is much
more like reading. The pictures before one are indeed a cosmic
writing, a script, and the soul will gain the right inner mood by
recognizing that this whole world of pictures — woven like a
veil before the spiritual world — is there to mediate, to
manifest the true reality of that world. Hence in the real sense of
the word we can speak of reading the cosmic script in the spirit
region.
One should not imagine that learning to
read this cosmic writing is anything like learning to read in the
physical world. Reading today is based more or less on the relation
of arbitrary signs to their meaning. Learning to read as we have to
do for such arbitrary letters is unnecessary for reading the cosmic
script which makes its appearance as a mighty tableau, expressing the
spiritual world to the clairvoyant soul. One has only to take in with
an open, unbiased inner being what is shown as picture-scenery,
because what one is experiencing there is truly reading. The meaning
itself can be said to flow out of the pictures. It can therefore
happen that any sort of interpreting the images of the spiritual
world as abstract ideas is more a hindrance than a help in leading
the soul directly to what lies behind the occult writing. Above all,
as described in
Theosophy
and in the scenes of
The Souls' Awakening,
it is important to let the things work freely on one.
With one's deep inner powers coming sometimes in a shadowy way to
consciousness, there will already have been surmises of a spiritual
world. To receive such hints, it is not even necessary to strive for
clairvoyance — bear this well in mind. It is necessary only to
keep one's mind and soul receptive to such pictures, without setting
oneself against them in an insensitive, materialistic way, saying,
“This is all nonsense; there are no such things!” A
person with a receptive attitude who follows the movement of these
pictures will learn to read them. Through the devotion of the soul to
the pictures, the necessary understanding for the world of the spirit
will come about.
What I have described is actual fact — therefore
the numerous objections to spiritual science coming from a
present-day materialistic outlook. In general, these objections are
first of all rather obvious; then, too, they can be very intelligent
and apparently quite logical. Someone like Ferdinand Fox,
( 11 )
who is considered so supremely clever not only by the human beings but
also, quite correctly, by Ahriman himself, can say, “Oh yes, you
Steiner, you describe the clairvoyant consciousness and talk about
the spiritual world, but it's merely a collection of bits and pieces
of sense images. How can you claim — in the face of all that
scenery raked together from well-known physical pictures — that
we should experience something new from it, something we cannot
imagine without approaching the spiritual world?”
That objection is one that will confuse many people; it
is made from the standpoint of present-day consciousness apparently
with a certain justification, indeed even with complete
justification. Nevertheless when you go more deeply into such
objections as these of Ferdinand Fox, you will discover the way to
the truth: The objection we have just heard resembles very much what
a person could say to someone opening a letter: “Well, yes,
you've received a letter, but there's nothing in it but letters of
the alphabet and words I already know. You won't hear anything new
from all that!” Nevertheless, through what we have known for a
long time we are perhaps able to learn something that we never could
have dreamed of before. This is the case with the picture-scenery,
which not only has to find its way to the stage for the Mystery Drama
performance but also will reveal itself on every side to the
clairvoyant consciousness. To some extent it is composed of memory
pictures of the sense world, but in its appearance as cosmic script
it represents something that the human being cannot experience either
in the sense world or in the elemental world. It should be emphasized
again and again that our relation to the spiritual world must be
compared to reading and not to direct vision.
If a man on earth, who has become clairvoyant, is to
understand the objects and happenings of the sense world and look at
them with a healthy, sane attitude, he must observe and describe them
in the most accurate way possible, but his relation to the spiritual
world must be different. As soon as he steps across the threshold, he
has to do something very much like reading. If we look at what has to
be recognized in this spirit land for our human life, there is
certainly something else that can demolish Ferdinand Fox's argument.
His objections should not be taken lightly, for if we wish to
understand spiritual science in the right way, we should size up such
objections correctly. We must remember that many people today cannot
help making objections, for their ideas and habits of thought give
them the dreadful fear of standing on the verge of nothingness when
they hear about the spiritual world; therefore they reject it.
This relationship of a modern human being
to the spiritual world can be understood better by discovering what
someone thinks about it who is quite well-intentioned. A book
appeared recently that is worth reading even for those who have
acquired a true understanding of the spiritual world. It was written
by a man who means well and who would like very much to come by
knowledge of the spiritual world, Maurice Maeterlinck;
( 12 )
it has been translated with the title
Concerning Death.
In his first chapters the author shows that he wants to understand these
things. We know that he is to some extent a discerning and sensitive person
who has allowed himself to be influenced by Novalis, among others,
that he has specialized somewhat in Romantic mysticism and that he
has accomplished much that is very interesting — theoretically
and artistically — in regard to the relationship of human
beings to the super-sensible world. Therefore as example he is
particularly interesting.
Well, in the chapters of
Concerning Death
in which Maeterlinck speaks of the actual relationship of
the human being to the spiritual world, his book becomes completely
absurd. It is an interesting phenomenon that a well-meaning man,
using the thinking habits of today, becomes foolish. I do not mean
this as reproof or criticism but only to characterize objectively how
foolish a well-intentioned person can become when he wishes to look
at the connection of the human soul to the spirit world. Maurice
Maeterlinck has not the slightest idea that there is a possibility to
so strengthen and invigorate the human soul that it can shed
everything attained through sense observation and the ordinary
thinking, feeling and willing of the physical plane and indeed, even
that of the elemental world. To such minds as Maeterlinck's, when the
soul leaves behind it everything involved in sense observation and
the thinking, feeling and willing related to it, there is simply
nothing left. Therefore in his book Maeterlinck asks for proofs of
the spiritual world and facts about it. It is of course reasonable to
require proofs of the spiritual world and we have every right to do
so — but not as Maeterlinck demands them. He would like to have
proofs as palpable as those given by science for the physical plane.
And because in the elemental world things are still reminiscent of
the physical world, he would even agree to let himself be convinced
of the existence of the spiritual world by means of experiments
copied from the physical ones. That is what he demands. He shows with
this that he has not the most rudimentary understanding of the true
spiritual world, for he wants to prove, by methods borrowed from the
physical one, things and processes which have nothing to do with the
sense world. The real task is to show that such proofs as Maeterlinck
demands for the spiritual world are impossible.
I have frequently compared this demand of Maurice
Maeterlinck to something that has taken place in the realm of
mathematics. At one time the university Math departments were
continually receiving treatises on the so-called squaring of the
circle. People were constantly trying to prove geometrically how the
area of a circle could be transformed into a square. Until quite
recently an infinite number of papers had been written on the
subject. But today only a rank amateur would still come up with such
a treatise, for it has been proved conclusively that the geometrical
squaring of the circle is not possible.
What Maeterlinck demands as proof for the spiritual
world is nothing but the squaring of the circle transferred to the
spiritual sphere and is just as much out of place as the other is in
the realm of mathematics. What actually is he demanding? If we know
that as soon as we cross the threshold to the spiritual world, we are
in a world that has nothing in common with the physical world or even
with the elemental world, we cannot ask, “If you want to prove
any of this to me, kindly go back into the physical world and with
physical means prove to me the things of the spiritual world.”
We might as well accept the fact that in everything concerned with
spiritual science we will get from the most well-meaning people the
kind of absurdities that — transferred to ordinary life —
would at once show themselves to be absurd. It is just as if someone
wants a man to stand on his head while continuing to walk with his
feet. Let someone demand that and everyone will realize what nonsense
it is. However, when someone demands the same sort of thing in regard
to proofs of the spiritual world, it is clever; it is a scientific
right. Its author will not notice its absurdity and neither will his
followers, especially when the author is a celebrated person. The
great mistake springs from the fact that those who make such claims
have never clearly grasped man's relation to the spiritual world.
If we attain concepts that can be gained only in the
spiritual world through clairvoyant consciousness, they will
naturally meet with a great deal of opposition from people like
Ferdinand Fox. All the concepts that we are to acquire, for instance,
about reincarnation, that is, the truly genuine remembrances of
earlier lives on earth, we have to gain through a certain necessary
attitude of the soul towards the spiritual world, for only out of
that world can we obtain such concepts. When there are impressions,
ideas, mental images in the soul that point back to an earlier life
on earth, they will be especially subject to the antagonism of our
time. Of course, it can't be denied that just in these things the
worst foolishness is engaged in; many people have this or that
experience and at once relate it to this or that former incarnation.
In such cases it is easy for our opponents to say, “Oh yes,
whatever drifts into your psyche are really pictures of experiences
you've had in this life between birth and death — only you
don't recognize them.” That is certainly the case hundreds and
hundreds of times, but it should be clear that a spiritual
investigator has an eye for these things. It can really be so that
something that happens to a person in childhood or youth returns to
consciousness completely transformed in later life; then perhaps
because the person does not recognize it, he takes it for a
reminiscence from an earlier life on earth. That can well be the
case. We know within our own anthroposophical circles how easily it
can occur. You see, memories can be formed not only of what one has
clearly experienced; one can also have an impression that whisks past
so quickly that it does not come fully to consciousness and yet can
return later as a distinct memory. A person — if he is not
sufficiently critical — can then swear that this is something
in his soul that was never experienced in his present life. It is
thus understandable that such impressions cause all the foolishness
in people who have busied themselves, but not seriously enough, with
spiritual science. This happens chiefly in the case of reincarnation,
in which so much vanity and ambition is involved. For many people it
is an alluring idea to have been Julius Caesar or Marie Antoinette in
a former life. I can count as many as twenty-five or twenty-six Mary
Magdalenes I have met in my lifetime! The spiritual investigator
himself has good reason to draw attention to the mischief that can be
stirred up in all this. Something more, however, must be emphasized.
In true clairvoyance, impressions of an earlier life on
earth will appear in a certain characteristic way, so that a truly
healthy clairvoyant soul will recognize them quite definitely as what
they are. It will know unmistakably that these impressions have
nothing to do with what can arise out of the present life between
birth and death. For the true reminiscences, the genuine memories of
earlier lives on earth that come through scrupulous clairvoyance, are
too astonishing for the soul to believe it could bring them out of
its conscious or unconscious depths by any humanly possible method.
Students of spiritual science must get to know what soul experiences
come to it from outside. It is not only the wishes and desires, which
do indeed play a great part when impressions are fished up out of the
unknown waters of the soul in a changed form, so that we do not
recognize them as experiences of the present life; there is an
interplay of many other things. But the mostly overpowering
perceptions of former earth lives are easy to distinguish from
impressions out of the present life. To take one example: a person
receiving a true impression of a former life will inwardly, for
instance, experience the following, rising out of soul depths: “You
were in your former life such and such a person.” And at the
moment when this occurs, he will find that, externally, in the
physical world, he can make no use at all of such knowledge. It can
bring him further in his development but as a rule he has to say to
himself, “Look at that: in your previous incarnation you had
that special talent!” However, by the time he receives such an
impression, he is already too old to do anything with it. The
situation will always be like that, showing how the impressions could
not possibly arise out of one's present life, for if you took
your start from the ordinary dream or fantasy, you would provide
yourself with quite different qualities in a former incarnation. What
one was like in an earlier life is something we ordinarily cannot
imagine, for it is usually just the opposite of what we might expect.
The genuine reality of an impression arising through true
clairvoyance may show in one way or another our relationship to
another person on earth. However, we must remember that through
incorrect clairvoyance many previous incarnations are described,
relating us to our close friends and enemies; this is mostly
nonsense. If the perception you receive is truly genuine, it will
show you a relationship to a person whom it is impossible at the time
to draw near to. These things cannot be applied directly to practical
life.
Confronted with impressions such as these, we have to
develop the frame of mind necessary for clairvoyant consciousness.
Naturally, when one has the impression, “I am connected in a
special way with this person,” the situation must be worked out
in life; through the impression one should come again into some sort
of relationship with him. But that may only come about in a second or
third earthly life. One must have a frame of mind able to wait
patiently, a feeling that can be described as a truly inward calmness
of soul and peacefulness of spirit. This will contribute to our
judging correctly our experience in the spiritual world.
When we want to learn something about another person in
the physical world, we go at it in whatever way seems necessary. But
this we cannot do with the impression that calls for spirit
peacefulness, calmness of soul, and patience. The attitude of soul
towards the genuine impressions of the spiritual world is correctly
described by saying,
To
strive for nothing — wait in peaceful stillness,
one's inner being filled with expectation.
(The Soul's Awakening,
Scene 3)
In a certain respect this frame of mind must stream out
over the entire soul life in order to approach in the right way its
clairvoyant experiences in the spirit.
The Ferdinand Foxes, however, are not always easy to
refute, even when inner perceptions arise of which one can say, “It
is humanly not possible for the soul with its forces and habits
acquired in the present earth life to create in the imagination what
is rising out of its depths; on the contrary, if it were up to the
soul it would have imagined something quite different.” Even
when one is able to point out the sure sign of true, genuine,
spiritual impressions, a super-clever Ferdinand Fox can come and
raise objections. But one does not meet the objections of those who
stand somewhat remote from the science of the spirit or of opponents
who don't want to know anything about it with the words, “One's
inner being filled with expectation.” This is the right mood
for those who are approaching the spiritual world, but in the face of
objections from opponents, one should not — as a spiritual
scientist — merely wait in expectation but should oneself raise
all those objections in order to know just what objections are
possible.
One of these is easy to understand today, and it can be
found in all the psychological, psychopathological and physiological
literature and in the sometimes learned treatises that presume to be
scientific, as follows: “Since the inner life is so
complicated, there is a great deal in the subconscious that does not
rise up into the ordinary consciousness.” One who is
super-clever will not only say, “Our wishes and desires bring
all sorts of things out of soul depths,” but will also say,
“Any experience of the psyche brings about a secret resistance
or opposition against the experience. Though he will always
experience this reaction, a person knows nothing of it as a rule. But
it can push its way up from the subconscious into the upper regions
of soul life.” Psychological, psychopathological and
physiological literature admit to the following, because the facts
cannot be denied: When someone falls deeply in love with another
person, there has to develop in unconscious soul depths, side by side
with the conscious love, a terrible antipathy to the beloved. And the
view of many psychopathologists is that if anyone is truly in love,
there is also hatred in his soul. Hatred is present even if it is
covered over by the passion of love.
When such things emerge from the depths of the soul, say
the Ferdinand Foxes, they are perceptions that very easily provide
the illusion of not coming from the soul of the individual involved
and yet can well do so, because soul life is very complex. To this we
can only reply: certainly it may be so; this is as well-known to the
spiritual investigator as it is to the psychologist, psychiatrist or
physiologist. When we work our way through all the above-mentioned
literature dealing with the healthy and unhealthy conditions of soul
life, we realize that Ferdinand Fox is a real person, an extremely
important figure of the present day, to be found everywhere. He is no
invention. Take all the abundant writing of our time and as you study
it, you get the impression that the remarkable face of Ferdinand Fox
is springing out at you from every page. He seems nowadays to have
his fingers in every scientific pie. To counteract him, it must be
emphasized again and again, and I repeat it in this case gladly: to
prove that something is reality and not fantasy is only possible
through life experience itself. I have continually said: The chapter
of Schopenhauer's philosophy that views the world as a mere mental
image and does not distinguish between idea and actual perception can
be contradicted only by life itself. Kant's argument, too, in regard
to the so-called proof of God' s existence, that a hundred imaginary
dollars contain just as many pennies as a hundred real dollars, will
be demolished by anyone who tries to pay his debts with imaginary and
not real dollars.
Therefore the training and devotion of the soul to
clairvoyance must be taken as reality. It is not a matter of
theorizing; we bring about a life in the realm of spirit by means of
which we can clearly distinguish the genuine impression of a former
life on earth from one that is false, in the same way that we can
distinguish the heat of an iron on our skin from an imaginary iron.
If we reflect on this, we will understand that Ferdinand Fox's
objections about the spiritual world are really of no importance at
all, coming as they do from people who — I will not say, have
not entered the realm of spirit clairvoyantly — but who have
never tried to understand it.
We must always keep in mind that when we cross the
threshold of the spiritual world, we enter a region of the universe
that has nothing in common with what the senses can perceive or with
what we experience in the physical world through willing, thinking,
and feeling. We have to approach the spiritual world by realizing
that all our ability to observe and understand the physical sense
world has to be left behind. Referring to perception in the elemental
world, I used an image that may sound grotesque, that of putting
one's head into an ant hill — but so it is for our
consciousness in the elemental world. There the thoughts that we have
do not put up with everything quite passively; we plunge our
consciousness into a world (into a thought-world, one might call it)
that creeps and crawls with a life of its own. A person has to hold
himself firmly upright in his soul to withstand thoughts that are
full of their own motion. Even so, many things in this elemental
world of creeping and crawling thoughts remind us of the physical
world.
When we enter the actual spiritual world,
nothing at all reminds us of the physical world; there we enter a
world which I will describe with an expression used in my book
The Threshold of the Spiritual World:
“a world of living thought-beings.”
Our thinking in the physical world resembles
shadow-pictures, shadows of thoughts, whose real substance we find in
the spiritual world; this thought-substance forms the beings there
whom we can approach and enter into. Just as human beings in the
physical world consist of flesh and blood, these beings of the
spiritual world consist of thought-substance. They are themselves
thoughts, actual thoughts, nothing but thoughts, yet they are alive
with an inner essential being; they are living thought-beings.
Although we can enter into their inner being, they cannot perform
actions as if with physical hands. When they are active, they create
relationships among themselves, and this can be compared to the
embodiment in the sense world of thoughts in speech, a pale
reflection of the spiritual reality. We can accustom ourselves to
experience the living thought-entities in the spiritual world. What
they do, what they are, and the way they affect one another, forms a
spirit language. One spirit being speaks to another; thought language
is spoken in the realm of the spirit! However, this thought language
in its totality is not only speech but represents the deeds of the
spiritual world as well. It is in speaking that these beings work,
move, and take action.
When we cross the threshold, we enter a
world where thoughts are entities, entities are thoughts; however,
these beings of the spiritual world are much more real than people of
flesh and blood in the sense world. We enter a world where the action
consists of spiritual conversation, where words move, here, there,
and everywhere, where something happens because it is spoken out. We
have to say of this spiritual world and of the occurrences there what
is said in Scene Three of
The Guardian of the Threshold:
At this place words are deeds
and further deeds must follow them.
All occult perception attained for mankind by the
initiates of every age could behold the significance in a certain
realm of this spirit conversation that is at the same time spirit
action. It was given the characteristic name, “The Cosmic
Word.”
Now observe that our study has brought us to the very
center of the spiritual realm, where we can behold these beings and
their activities. Their many voices, many tones, many activities,
sounding together, form the Cosmic Word in which our own soul being —
itself Cosmic Word — begins to find itself at home, so that,
sounding forth, we ourselves perform deeds in the spiritual world.
The term “Cosmic Word” used throughout past ages by all
peoples expresses an absolutely true fact of the spirit land. To
understand its meaning at the present time, however, we have to
approach the uniqueness of the spiritual world in the way we have
tried to describe in this study.
In the various past ages and peoples, occult knowledge
has spoken with more or less understanding of the Cosmic Word; now,
too, it is necessary, if mankind is not to be devastated by
materialism, to reach an understanding for such words about the
spiritual world, from the Mystery Drama:
At this place words are deeds
and further deeds must follow them.
It is imperative in our time that when such words are
spoken out of the knowledge of the spiritual world, our souls should
feel their reality, should feel that they represent reality. We must
be aware that this is just as much an exact characteristic of the
spiritual world as when in characterizing the physical sense world we
apply ordinary sense images.
Just how far our present age can bring understanding to
bear on such words as “Here in this place words are deeds and
further deeds must follow them” will depend on how far it takes
up spiritual science and how well people today will be prepared to
prevent the dominating force of materialism that otherwise will
plunge human civilization into impoverishment, devastation and decay.
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