LECTURE
TEN
INFLUENCES
OF THE EXTRA-TERRESTRIAL COSMOS UPON THE CONSCIOUSNESS OF MAN
Blackboard Drawing 11, August 21, 1924
Yesterday I
spoke of abnormal and pathological approaches to the spiritual world:
the path through enrichment of inner understanding, the path of
deeper penetration into the world of dream on the one hand, and on
the other, the path which sets out to investigate the external
manifestations of somnambulists and mediums by methods which
are really a travesty of those of natural science. I pointed out that
it is essential to follow both these paths and to pursue them
purposefully if we are to develop true Initiation-knowledge.
Today I propose to examine this problem more closely and to explore
those cosmic influences to which man's consciousness and his total
being are subject.
It is easy
to see that amongst the influences working upon man, apart from those
of the Earth, the influences of the Sun and Moon are paramount.
Although people as a rule do not pay much attention to this, it is
none the less evident today, even to the scientist, that nothing
would exist on Earth without solar radiations.
Sun forces
conjure plant life out of the Earth. They are essential to all animal
life and to the physical and etheric bodies of man. Sun activities
are to be found everywhere if we are prepared to look for them; they
are vitally necessary to the higher members of man's being. Less
attention, however, is paid to the Moon influences. They often
survive today in the form of superstitious beliefs, and any precise
knowledge about them is frequently distorted by the existence
of superstitious notions about such influences. Those who propose to
work in the scientific field today feel themselves to be above
superstition; in consequence they deny that Moon influences have any
significance and refuse to consider them seriously. Now and then,
however, not only poets who are aware that the magic of the Moon
stimulates their poetic imagination, not only lovers who exchange
their tender passion by the light of the Moon, but also sages have a
presentiment of the influences of the Moon upon the Earth, each in
their different way. And this can prove highly
instructive.
In the
middle of the nineteenth century there lived in Germany two
professors, Schleiden and Gustav Theodor Fechner. Fechner was
attracted to a scientific study of the more mysterious workings in
man and in the wider kingdom of nature. He collected data and
statistical evidence to show that the rainfall over a particular area
was related to Full Moon and New Moon and he concluded that rainfall
varied with the phases of the Moon. He did not hesitate to defend his
point of view against the scientific theories of the day. His
colleague at the university, the eminent botanist Professor
Schleiden, held a different opinion. He ridiculed the ideas of
Fechner and declared that it was nonsense to speak of Moon influences
of this kind. Now both professors were married and in the relatively
small university town of the day conditions were still patriarchal.
At that time it was customary for the wives to collect rainwater
because they believed it was ideal for washing linen. Not only the
two professors debated the issue, but their wives also tried to get
to the bottom of the question. One day Professor Fechner said to his
wife: “Professor Schleiden refuses to believe that the phases
of the Moon have any influence on the rainfall. I want you to collect
the rainwater that falls during one phase of the Moon, and Frau
Professor Schleiden to collect the rainwater that falls during the
following phase. As Professor Schleiden does not believe that the
Moon phases play any part in the matter, there can be no possible
objection.” But Frau Professor Schleiden was unwilling to grant
to Frau Professor Fechner that phase of the Moon during which,
according to her husband, a higher rainfall was impossible! A regular
quarrel ensued; university and families took sides.
Now this
incident has a scientific basis. When we investigate these
influences with the methods of Spiritual Science we find that we can
speak of powerful Sun and Moon influences, not merely as a relic of
superstitious beliefs, but as a scientific fact. Having stated this,
we have virtually exhausted all that modern man in normal
consciousness can know on this subject. Modern man lives, so to
speak, under the influences of Earth, Sun and Moon, and his
consciousness also is fundamentally dependent upon them. For,
as I have already pointed out, the external, visible aspect of the
stars, Sun and Moon, is not the decisive factor. We have already
emphasized that the Moon sphere harbours those Beings who were once
the primordial teachers of mankind. The Sun sphere also harbours a
vast multitude of spiritual beings. Every star is a colony of beings,
just as the Earth is the cosmic colony of humanity. As I have already
indicated, man lives today almost exclusively under the influence of
Earth, Sun and Moon during the period between birth and death. We
must now acquire a more precise knowledge of the spiritual, psychic
and physical conditions in which man lives under the influence of Sun
and Moon.
Let us
consider the two poles of consciousness between which lies the state
of dream — the waking consciousness and the emptied
consciousness of sleep, of dreamless sleep. If we observe man during
sleep when his physical and etheric bodies are detached from his
astral body and Ego, we find that between falling asleep and waking
he carefully preserves in the astral body and Ego the Sun
influences which are withdrawn from the physical and etheric
bodies.
From waking
to sleeping we experience the Sun externally. We are aware of
its effects even when totally blanketed by rain, for we owe our
perception of objects around us to the reflected rays of the Sun.
During the whole of our waking life we are exposed to the influence
of the Sun which illumines objects from without. The moment we pass
over into the condition of sleep the Sun begins to shine in our Ego
and astral body and we perceive it with our spiritual eyes. Between
sleeping and waking the Sun is within us. You are aware that certain
minerals when left in a dark room after exposure to irradiation
absorb the light and then become luminous. To spiritual perception
the Ego and astral body of man follow the same pattern. In the waking
state they are to some extent overpowered by the external sunlight.
They begin to glow and to shine, since they are now imbued with
sunlight between sleeping and waking.
To sum up:
in waking life man lives under the influence of the external Sun
forces; during sleep he is under the influence of the Sun forces
which he now bears within himself until the moment of waking.
During sleep we have the Sun within us and only the physical and
etheric bodies are left behind. But from the spiritual world during
sleep we irradiate from without our physical and etheric bodies with
the sunlight stored within us. If we should omit to do this, if we
did not irradiate our skin and the innermost recesses of the
sense-organs with the sunlight stored within us, then we would soon
collapse and die. In fact we provide for the vigour, growth and
vitality of our organism by directing the stored-up sunlight from
without on to our skin or by assimilating it into the
sense-organs.
In effect,
therefore, when man's astral body and Ego are outside his physical
and etheric bodies during sleep, he first of all irradiates his skin
with sunlight and then directs the sunlight through the eyes and ears
to the nervous system.
This is the
phenomenon of sleep. The Sun shines from the human Ego and astral
body, irradiating the skin and penetrating into the human being
through the doors of the senses.
Then,
irrespective of whether it is New Moon or Full Moon — for the
influences are always present, although they change with the phases
of the Moon — Moon forces from without invade man's physical
and etheric bodies. Thus, in the physical and etheric bodies during
sleep we see the workings of the Sun proceeding from the Ego and
astral body; in the physical and etheric bodies the workings of the
Moon.
We have thus
characterized the state of sleep in relation to the Cosmos. During
sleep man's inner life is related to the Sun, his external life to
the Moon. For, although the astral body and Ego are outside, they
are, in reality, his inner being.
In waking
life, the situation is reversed. When we are awake, Moon influences
permeate our whole inner being, whilst Sun influences invade us from
without. In waking life, therefore, Sun influences stream directly
into our physical and etheric bodies, and the Ego and astral
body within us are subject to the stored-up Moon forces.
During
waking life, therefore, the Sun forces stream into our physical and
etheric bodies from without and our inner being is permeated with the
stored up Moon forces. During sleep the Sun inhabits the astral body
and Ego; during waking life, the Moon. In waking life the Sun
inhabits the physical and etheric bodies, during sleep, the
Moon.
Even when
man becomes a night-reveller and by sacrificing sleep invites
the next day's hang-over, even then these influences are still
present. For although we may choose to ignore nature's laws, the fact
remains that things will take their normal course for man by virtue
of their inherent inertia, by virtue of the law of cosmic
continuity.
If man
sleeps by day and wakes by night, the Moon influences are still
active within his Ego and astral body during his nocturnal waking
life; and the Sun influences also stream into him, but he experiences
them as he would normally experience the light shed by street lamps,
or dim starlight were he to lie out in the open and look up at the
stars. But the Sun forces which man stores up during sleep and the
Moon forces which pervade his inner being during waking life are
present everywhere. With the physical and etheric bodies the position
is reversed.
Man owes his
ordinary consciousness between birth and death to this pattern of
events. We shall now consider how the situation changes when man
attains to higher forms of consciousness. For the relationship of the
Initiate to Sun and Moon is progressively modified, and through this
change of relationship to the Cosmos man finds his way into the
spiritual world.
There is no
need for me to describe man's relationship to the world, to the Sun
and Moon in normal consciousness; everyone is aware of this when he
recalls how man lives in his day consciousness and his night
consciousness. The moment man begins to strengthen his inner
soul-forces in relation to the normally chaotic dream consciousness,
the moment he succeeds in transforming this dream consciousness
into an instrument for the apprehension of reality, in that moment he
becomes aware that the accumulated Moon forces are present in his Ego
during waking life. The moment he actually transforms the dream into
reality through Initiation-knowledge, he feels the presence of a
second being within him, but he knows that the forces of the Moon
sphere live within this second being.
In the early
stages of Initiation consciousness man becomes aware that Moon forces
are within him and that they always tend to develop within him a
second man who is encased within the first man. A conflict now sets
in. When the Moon forces begin to be inwardly active in this second
man of whom I am speaking, not in waking consciousness, but during
sleep, in such a way that this second man is released naturally by
these inner Moon forces — when he is set free by the presence
of the Moon at night and begins to wake to consciousness in the
passive condition of sleep, then this second man concealed within the
first, the normal man, seeks to wander around in the light of the
Moon and takes the other with him. This is the origin of the
somnambulistic condition peculiar to sleep-walkers.
When the
Moon is shining outside, it is possible to awaken the second man who
then makes contact with magical forces, i.e. anomalous forces which
differ in kind from those of nature. He begins to wander around. As a
sleep-walker in a diminished state of consciousness he behaves in a
way that would be foreign to ordinary consciousness. Instead of
lying in bed, as he would normally do, he wanders around and climbs
on roofs. He is looking for the sphere which, in reality, he ought to
experience outside his physical body. .
When this
becomes a conscious inner experience and is directed into normal
channels we take the first step in Initiation-consciousness. In
this case however, we do not contact the actual external Moon
influences; but the Moon forces in our inner being enable the second
man to develop his consciousness. We must at all costs prevent this
second man from breaking loose. There is always the danger that the
second man might break loose, wander phantom-like abroad and stray
along false paths. He must be kept under control.
Inner
stability and self-control are essential for the acquisition of
Initiation-knowledge in order to ensure that this potentially errant
second man stays within the body and remains linked to the ordinary,
matter-of-fact consciousness associated with the physical body. We
must perpetually struggle to prevent this second being, the creation
of the strengthened inner Moon nature, from dissociating itself from
us. The second being is strongly attracted to everything associated
with metabolism, peristalsis, the stomach and other organs, and makes
heavy demands upon them.
The first
indication, the first experience, of man's dawning
Initiation-knowledge is that he follows one of the two paths which
have to be traversed — the path that leads through the
development, through the conscious realisation of the dream
world.
And if he
now becomes aware (in the dream state) — and, as I have pointed
out, this is a necessary step — he realizes that though it is
day without, within himself he bears the night. In the daytime there
awakens within him something like an inner night.
When this
Initiate-consciousness awakens, the day is still day to the outward
eyes and for the external apprehension of things; but in the course
of this day the spiritual light of the Moon with its refulgent beams
begins to invade and illumine all around — and the spiritual
begins to shine.
We know,
therefore, that by inner effort man brings the night consciousness
into the day consciousness. When this happens in full consciousness,
just as other activities are performed consciously during the day,
when this vigilant man is able to invoke the night activities of the
Moon into the waking experiences of the daytime, then he is on the
true path. If he allows anything to enter into him when he is not
fully conscious so that out of their own inner momentum the night
experiences arise in the day consciousness, then he finds himself on
the false path that ultimately leads to mediumism.
The
essential point is, therefore, that we must be fully conscious, in
full control of experiences. The phenomena and experiences as such
are not the decisive factors, but the way in which we respond to
them. If the ordinary sleepwalker could develop full
consciousness at a time when he is climbing on the roof top, he would
at that moment experience an intimation of Initiation. Since he
fails to develop this consciousness he falls to the ground when we
shout at him to awaken him. If he did not fall, but developed full
waking consciousness and could maintain this condition, he would then
be an Initiate. The task of Initiation-knowledge is to develop along
sound lines, sound in every respect, what is developed in the
sleep-walker pathologically.
You will
note, then, how a hair's breadth separates the true from the false in
the spiritual world. In the physical world there is no difficulty in
distinguishing between the true and the false because man can appeal
to common sense and practical experience. As soon as he enters the
spiritual world, it is exceedingly difficult to establish this
distinction; he is wholly dependent on inner control, inner
awareness. Furthermore, when man has awakened the night in the day,
the moonlight gradually loses its character of external radiance. We
experience it less externally; it creates a general feeling of
inner well-being. We become aware however of something else. The
wonderful glowing light of Mercury illumines this spiritual
night-sky. The planet Mercury actually rises in this night that has
been wooed into the day; it is not the physical aspect of Mercury,
for we realize that we are in the presence of something living. We
cannot recognize immediately the living spiritual Beings who are the
inhabitants of Mercury, but we have a general impression that,
from the way in which Mercury appears to us, we are in touch with a
spiritual world.
When the
spiritual moonlight becomes a universal life-giving force
within us in which we participate, then the spiritual planet Mercury
gradually rises in the night consciousness that has been wooed
into the day consciousness. Out of this sparkling twilight in which
Mercury appears there emerges the Being whom we call the Divine Being
Mercury. We have absolute need of him for otherwise confusion
will set in. We must first of all find this Being in the spiritual
world, the Being whom we know for certain belongs to Mercury. Through
our knowledge of this Divine Being (Mercury) we are able to control
at will the “second man” who is awakened within us. We no
longer need to stumble along undefined paths like the sleep-walker,
but we can be led by the hand of Mercury, the messenger of the Gods,
along the clearly defined paths that lead into the spiritual world.
.
If, then, we
wish to find the true paths into the spiritual world we must first
undergo certain definite experiences which serve to guide and direct
us. The ordinary mystic looks inward. Through introspection he sets
up an emotional ferment compounded of God, the universe, angels
and devils. At best his introspection leads to normal dream states
where it is impossible to tell whether they come from the sexual or
the intellectual plane. As a rule the experiences are confused and
chaotic. This is the vague and nebulous mysticism which does
not illumine the dream, but, as only the Initiate can understand,
makes the confusion more confounded.
Such
experiences, so instinct with wonder and poetry as described by
Catherine of Siena and others, can only be understood by the
Initiate, for only he knows what they really experience. Hence, if we
pursue our Initiation with the same clear and lucid consciousness
with which we calculate, or study geometry, if we penetrate with full
consciousness into these things, we are on the right path. Only
through the realization that we woo the inner night of the Moon into
the external day, do we discover the real spiritual world. Just as no
one can deny that the Moon or Mercury rises in the outer world of
space, that this is a reality, not a dream delusion, so we find that
the spiritual world is equally real and no delusion when we enter it
in full consciousness and meet with spiritual Beings, just as we meet
with human beings here on Earth. When we seek the spirit without
becoming conscious of the nature of the spiritual world we are at all
times on a false track. If we remain on Earth and are content to
experiment with mediums and their manifestations and do not
have direct contact with the spiritual, then we are on the false
path. Every activity that fails to awaken consciousness in the
spiritual world, that stumbles along blindly and only looks for
effects, as superficial occultism for example, is on the false
path. Everything which, on penetrating into the spiritual world,
immediately experiences this world as a spiritual reality, is
on the right path.
And thus an
inner, living knowledge of the Moon sphere is the starting-point of
the one path of Initiation. And we may say: man's normal experiences
in relation to Sun and Moon which are normally experienced in sleep,
the Initiate now experiences in waking life. Man becomes aware of the
Moon influences as though they were external to him. He woos the
night into the day. And instead of the night sky which we normally
see studded with stars when we look out into the night, we see first
of all the planet Mercury rise up before our inward vision: and if we
have followed the instructions described in my book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds
and have succeeded in developing real Imaginations, then in this Moon
sphere during waking life, the world of Imaginations is revealed to us
as a reality.
When we
enter into the sphere of Mercury influences these Imaginations pass
over to the Mercury Beings. We do not now experience mere visions
devoid of reality, but we perceive visions as Imaginations. These
Imaginations pass over to the beings corresponding to them.
Therefore, if we have not advanced far enough along the path of
Initiation we may have the vision of an Archangel, but it remains a
vision. Only at a further stage does the vision really contact the
Archangel and then the real Archangel is revealed within the vision.
At an earlier stage, when we experienced the light of the Moon within
us, the Archangel was not of necessity there. But now the Archangel
has become a reality. Thus we become conscious of the Mercury
influences in that our world of visions passes over into a world in
which we really perceive the spiritual. I must emphasise constantly
that all this can only be achieved in the right way when we are fully
conscious.
And then if
we pursue our meditations further, strengthen and vitalize our inner
being in increasing measure, we attain to the sphere where the Venus
influences are added to those of Mercury. Then, when we contact the
Venus influences, when Venus rises in this inner night which has been
wooed into the day, the visions of the Beings who have appeared in
the Imagination pictures, in the images of the true visions, are lost
and we face the spiritual world with emptied consciousness. We know
that the spiritual Beings are there; we have attained to the Venus
sphere where the spiritual Beings dwell. We wait until the Sun sphere
draws near to us. The whole process is a preparation for experiencing
the Sun a second time. All this takes place during the waking
consciousness of day, when we are subject to the influences of the
Sun from without. We take the path I have described through Moon,
Mercury and Venus. Then the visions vanish. We press on. The entire
path was a path leading from Earth, to Moon, to Mercury, Venus and
finally to the Sun. We enter into the inner being of the Sun and
behold the Sun a second time, spiritually. Its appearance is fleeting
and undefined, but we know that we are perceiving it spiritually. We
gaze into the inner being of the Sun.
If I may use
a crude analogy, it is as if we were to say to ourselves: I see
something in the distance, and draw near to it. At first I take it
for an inanimate object, take hold of it, whereupon it bites my hand.
Now I know that it is not an inanimate object, but a real dog; I
realize that it is possessed of inner being.
This crude
comparison may draw your attention to the fact that these experiences
are rooted in reality. We pass from the Earth through the influences
of the Moon, Mercury, Venus, and arrive at the stage where we
behold the Sun; we realize that it is a living spiritual Being and
that spiritual Beings dwell within it.
In the first
place this is the path that can be followed. At every stage along the
path it becomes abundantly clear that as the Initiate progresses, he
must retain his full consciousness and that he is then on the
right path, and that if man, irrespective of the way he leaves his
body, loses consciousness and enters into the Cosmos that has
become spiritual reality before his spiritual gaze, then he is on the
false path. We must have an inner realization of the difference
between the true and false paths of inner spiritual
perception.
Yesterday I
indicated how, in accordance with the demands of the time, various
psychic and occult societies, using methods which are a travesty of
those of natural science, are attempting to investigate the spiritual
world through external phenomena. Please do not misunderstand me. I
have no wish to disparage these methods for I know only too well how
ardently men desire to know scientifically the real nature of the
spiritual world through observation of external phenomena. I only
wish to point out how these paths must lead into error and what must
be the nature of the true paths. Since we are living today, and must
continue to live, in a scientific age, it is perfectly understandable
that there should be men who wish to investigate the spiritual world
by the direct methods of natural science and who consider other,
purely spiritual paths to be unreliable. And they come to the
conclusion that there exists, on the one hand, the ordinary world in
which men live and fulfil the demands of social life and who think
and act in terms of this social life. There is nothing unusual in
this. It is the accepted way of life. This is the field of scientific
investigation which is concerned with external phenomena, with the
phenomena of heat, light, electricity, magnetism and so
on.
On the other
hand, however, abnormal situations occur in life. Men practise
automatic writing; they perform various acts under the
influence of hypnosis and suggestion. They suspect that an unknown
world is revealed in this way in the ordinary world and they want to
interpret these external signs and abnormal phenomena. They want to
explain how the thoughts and experiences of someone in New York are
communicated telepathically to a friend living in Europe who
has a psychic affinity with him, whereas normally the news is
transmitted by wireless telegraphy. Phenomena of this kind of which
innumerable instances could be cited, are investigated by the
statistical methods of natural science. This path cannot lead to any
goal or final understanding because man lacks the necessary spiritual
orientation which must be sought in the spiritual world itself. All
these phenomena, wonderful as they may seem, are seen to be
aggregates of unrelated phenomena in the external world. We cannot
arrive at any knowledge or understanding of them, we can only record
them, regard them as extraordinary and formulate hypotheses about the
spiritual world which are meaningless, because the phenomena
themselves have their source in the spiritual world and do not betray
their real nature. However much we concern ourselves with mediums and
scientific facts, the spiritual world is always with us, but it does
not reveal its real essence.
In this
context I would like to recall the investigations which I mentioned
yesterday when I stated that Dr. Wegman and I are now
endeavouring to provide an accurate description of these phenomena.
This method of investigation, even as the other line of enquiry
I have just described which seeks to throw light on the inner life of
dreams, cannot dispense with spiritual insight. It proceeds in
such a way that the phenomena to be investigated are related directly
with their counterpart in the spiritual world itself.
But these
phenomena are not associated with the isolated and miraculous events
which we encounter in the external world in the manner I have just
described. They belong to the realm that is perceived by the person
who is trained in medicine, anatomy and physiology when his
perception of the external form of a human organ — the lung,
the liver, or some other organ — is transformed into an
imaginative apprehension of this organ, when he gradually begins to
be able to see the human organisation in Imaginations.
This becomes
possible therefore when we are able to study the organs of man which
normally function after the fashion of the abnormal rather than the
normal external phenomena of nature, i.e. when we are in a
position to transform our initial human, scientific, anatomical
knowledge into spiritual penetration into the human organisation. In
the method which I described before, we take our starting-point from
the total being of man. The path that starts from the individual
human organs which we apprehend and perceive directly through a
spiritual anatomy is the path that can lead to true results in
contrast to the false approach that seeks to understand external
phenomena by statistical methods that are a travesty of natural
science. You will appreciate, therefore, that before these matters
could be discussed, we needed the co-operation of a medical
practitioner trained along these lines. Furthermore you will realize
that when a human organ is apprehended spiritually in this way by a
person who looks at anatomy from this standpoint, he must harbour no
doubts about the goal before him. And now there is disclosed to
spiritual perception not an inner man such as I described earlier,
but an external, cosmic man, still nebulous of course, but in the
form of a mighty, gigantic being — man as he is perceived, not
as a totality, but as he appears through an inner spiritual
perception of his organs. Because these organs are seen spiritually,
not merely the physical man, but the cosmic man stands revealed. Just
as formerly the world of night — the Moon-sphere — was
wooed into the day, so we now woo into this being — who is not
the complete man, but a being who consists of the single organs
— the impulses of the Saturn sphere.
Just as at
an earlier stage the Moon sphere was charmed into the ordinary waking
consciousness, the Saturn sphere is now charmed into the scientific
consciousness. We become aware that the forces of Saturn work in a
special way in every organ, most strongly in the liver, relatively
feebly in the lungs and least of all in the head.
We thus
become conscious of the goal which demands of us that we seek the
Saturn influences everywhere. Just as in the earlier stages we
advanced spiritually through the practice of meditation, so
now, through identification with the search for Saturn, for the inner
spiritual structure of each organ, we penetrate into the Jupiter
sphere and come to recognize that every organ is in effect the
terrestrial counterpart of a divine-spiritual Being.
In his
organs man bears within him the images of divine-spiritual
Beings. The entire Cosmos first appeared as a gigantic Being in the
Saturn sphere and the whole man is seen as a gigantic cosmic Being
appearing as the sum-total, as the inner-organic, cooperative
activity of generations of Gods.
Once again
we must pursue this path in full consciousness so that we are
activated by forces which are able to support and sustain us in the
course of our spiritual experiences. We must bear in mind that all
these influences are in the first instance in the embryonic stage,
but their appearance is transient. It is indeed easy to recognize
their presence, but it is impossible to describe them, to retain a
clear impression of them and mould them into mental images if we
succumb to the inherent danger, namely, that all that arises in this
sphere may immediately disappear from our consciousness, so that we
are never in a position to contemplate it.
Now those
who are today engaged in psychical research never dream of taking the
spiritual into account. They prefer to work experimentally in their
own way, by inviting certain individuals for laboratory tests. But
spiritual realities cannot be reduced to the human level, especially
when the declared intention is to apprehend them by these methods and
to arrive gradually at a scientific explanation.
The medical
book of which I spoke yesterday can only offer a first, elementary
introduction to what will become a fully developed science in the
distant future. But to the extent to which these things exist in the
spiritual world today and are natural to the Beings who live, not on
Earth, but on the Sun — to that extent they can be brought into
earthly consciousness in the manner I have described. We should not
imagine that we can develop spiritual insight by means of laboratory
experiments or the abstract anatomy to be found in text-books. The
essential point is that all spiritual matters must be directly
experienced by man himself. Why is this so?
We can only
hold these realities steady in the light when they are supported and
sustained by the forces which arise from the common endeavours of
man, by the forces which man derives from earlier incarnations on
Earth. When this happens there enters into the world of the Saturn
and Jupiter spheres what we may call the Mars sphere. From then
onwards these things begin to speak. They are revealed through
Inspiration. Then we return to the Sun once more with the
consciousness of Inspiration.
This is the
other path that is demanded of natural science today and which the
Initiates of whom I spoke yesterday would prefer to avoid. They feel
ill at ease when they are brought in contact with this path, but none
the less it is a path which must be traversed.
The path
through the Moon sphere, as you will realize from the present
discussions, was admirably suited to the old Initiates and we have
remarkable information about this Moon path in H. P. Blavatsky's
Secret Doctrine.
If we can distinguish fact from fiction, many
important truths are to be found in the
Secret Doctrine. But
this path leads through the sphere of the Lunar-astral light with
which H. P. Blavatsky was intimately associated and where an
exalted Mercury messenger directed her interpretations. When we
follow her disquisitions we realize how she always directed her
imagination to the right source. The remarkable thing about Blavatsky
is that no sooner does she feel the first promptings of an
Imagination than it is immediately realized. Guided by the
Mercury messenger, she is led to a secret library. The idea takes
shape within her and the Mercury messenger leads her to a book
carefully guarded by the Vatican. She reads the book and we find in
her writings a variety of information to which she would otherwise
not have had access because it had been jealously guarded by the
Vatican for centuries! This path is indeed a well trodden path which
must be carefully distinguished from everything that is achieved
under firm inner control.
The other
path takes the course I have described and relies upon the methods of
modern natural science which H. P. Blavatsky detested like the
plague. This is the path that must be trodden in the manner I have
described, in the full realization that it finds its strength and
support in the karmic development of the forces of human
beings, not so much for the sake of awakening karmic memories, but in
order to hold fast to them for the purpose of describing
them.
The science
of today must be imbued with human values such as I described
yesterday, when I referred to my collaborator in this sphere.
It is by discussing concrete examples, not through definitions that
we can best discover the origin of the true and false paths. In order
to conclude this course of lectures I propose tomorrow to add as much
information upon this subject as is possible in the short time at our
disposal.
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