|
|
|
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
|
|
Esoteric Christianity and the Mission of Christian Rosenkreutz
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
|
|
Esoteric Christianity and the Mission of Christian Rosenkreutz
Schmidt Number: S-2539
On-line since: 1st July, 2004
INTIMATE WORKINGS OF KARMA
Vienna, 9th February 1912
Another version of this Lecture can be found at:
|
There was one point in the lecture yesterday about which I should not
like misunderstanding to arise, but a conversation I had today
indicated that this might be possible. It is, of course, difficult to
formulate in words these matters connected with the more intimate
workings of karma, and one point or another may well not be quite
clear at the first time of hearing. In the lecture yesterday it was
said that we have to regard our sufferings as having been sought out
by the wiser being within us in order that certain imperfections may
be overcome, and that by bearing these sufferings calmly we may make
progress along our path. That, however, was not the point on which
misunderstanding might have occurred. It was the other point, namely,
that happiness and joy must not be regarded as due to our own merit or
individual karma, but deemed a kind of grace whereby we are interwoven
with the all-prevailing spirit. Please do not think that the emphasis
here lies in the fact that joy comes to us as a mark of favour from
the divine-spiritual powers; the emphasis lies in the fact that these
experiences are made possible through grace. That is what our attitude
must be if we are to reach a true understanding of karma. Happiness
and joy are acts of grace. A man who imagines that the happiness and
joy in his karma indicate a desire on the part of the gods to single
him out and place him above the others will achieve just the opposite.
We must never imagine that happiness is allotted to us as a mark of
favour or distinction but rather as a reason for feeling that we have
been recipients of the grace outpoured by the divine spiritual beings.
It is this realisation of grace which makes progress possible; the
other attitude would throw us back in our development. Nobody should
ever believe that joy comes to him because of special karmic
privileges; he should far rather believe that it comes to him because
he has no privileges. Joy and happiness should move us to deeds of
compassion and mercy, which we shall perform more effectively than if
we are suffering the pangs of sorrow. What brings us forward is the
realisation that we must make ourselves worthy of grace. There is no
justification for the very prevalent view that one whose life abounds
in happiness has deserved it. This is the very attitude that must be
avoided. Please take this as an indication so that no misunderstanding
may arise.
Today we will extend and widen the scope of our studies of karma, and
talk about karma and our experiences in the world, so that Spiritual
Science may become a real life force within us. Observation of life
and its happenings will reveal, to begin with, experiences of two
kinds. On the one hand we might say to ourselves: Yes, a misfortune
has befallen me, but thinking about it, I can see that it would not
have come my way if I had not been careless or negligent. This
realisation, however, will not always be within the power of ordinary
consciousness; many a time we shall find it impossible to see any
connection between the misfortune and the circumstances of our present
life. With regard to much that befalls us, ordinary consciousness can
only conclude that it was pure chance, unconnected with anything else.
It will also be possible to make this distinction concerning
undertakings which may either be successful or the reverse. In many
cases we shall realise that failure was inevitable because of
laziness, inattentiveness, or something of the kind, on our part; but
in many others we shall be quite unable to discover any connection. It
is a useful exercise to take stock of our own experiences and
distinguish between things which have failed through no fault of our
own, and others which succeed contrary to our expectations. We will
try to get to the bottom of these matters, and of events which, on the
face of them, seem to be due to pure chance, without any apparent
cause, and also things we have done that are seemingly unrelated to
our actual faculties. We will now make a close study of all these
things.
We will proceed in rather a curious way. As an experiment, we will
imagine that we ourselves have willed whatever may have happened to
us. Suppose a loose tile from the roof of a house happened to crash
down on us. We will picture, purely by way of experiment, that this
did not happen by chance, and we will deliberately imagine that we
ourselves climbed on that roof, loosened the tile and then ran down so
quickly that we arrived just in time to be hit by it! Or, let us say,
we caught a chill without any apparent cause; how would it be though,
if we had given it to ourselves? Like the unfortunate lady who, being
discontented with her lot, exposed herself to a chill, and died of it!
In this way, therefore, we will imagine that things otherwise
attributable to chance have been deliberately and carefully planned by
ourselves. And we will also apply the same procedure to matters which
are obviously dependent upon the faculties and qualities we happen to
possess. Say some arrangement does not work out as planned. If we miss
a train, for example, we shall not blame external circumstances but
picture to ourselves that it was due to our own slackness. If we think
of it in this way, as an experiment, we shall gradually succeed in
creating a kind of being in our imagination, a very extraordinary
being, who was responsible for all these things for a stone
having crashed upon us, for some illness, and so forth. We shall
realise, of course, that this being is not ourselves; we simply
picture such a being vividly and distinctly. And then, after a time,
we will have a strange experience with regard to this being. We shall
realise that though it is a creature we have only conjured up, yet we
cannot free ourselves from him nor from the thought of him, and
strange to say he does not stay as he is; he becomes alive and
transforms himself within us. And then, when he has gone through this
transformation, we get the impression that he really is there within
us. And then we become more and more certain that we ourselves have
had something to do with the things thus built up in imagination.
There is no suggestion whatever that we once actually did them; but
such thoughts do, nevertheless, correspond in a certain way with
something we have done. We shall tell ourselves: I have done this and
that, and I am now having to suffer the consequences. This is a very
good exercise for unfolding in the life of feeling a kind of memory of
earlier incarnations. The soul seems to feel: I myself was there and
prepared these things myself.
You will readily understand that it is not easy to awaken the memory
of previous incarnations. For just think what mental effort is
required to recall something only recently forgotten; genuine mental
effort is required. Experiences which occurred in earlier incarnations
have sunk into the depths of forgetfulness and much has to be done if
they are to be remembered. One such exercise has just been described.
In addition to what was said in the public lectures, let it be said
here that a man will notice a kind of memory arising in his feeling:
in former times you prepared this for yourself!
The principles indicated should not be ignored, for if we follow them
we shall find that more and more light will be shed upon life, so that
we grow stronger and stronger. Once the feeling has arisen that we
ourselves were there and carried out the deeds ourselves we shall have
quite a different attitude to events confronting us in the future; our
whole life of feeling will be transformed. Whereas formerly we may
have experienced fear and all the other similar feelings when
something happened to us, we now have a kind of inner memory. And now
when something happens, our feeling tells us that it is for a purpose;
and that it is a memory of an earlier life. Life becomes much more
tranquil and intelligible, and that is what men need, not only those
who are sustained by a longing for Anthroposophy, but those too who
are outside. It is no excuse to say: How can earlier incarnations
matter if we cannot remember them! The right attitude towards earthly
existence will certainly awaken memory, only it is a memory belonging
to the heart, to the life of feeling, that must be developed, not the
kind of memory that is composed of thoughts and concepts.
I considered it important during this particular visit to bring home
to you how much can be given practical application, and how
Anthroposophy can become actual experience in those who pursue it
actively.
Now in addition to what accrued in earlier incarnations other factors
are also of importance in a man's karma. We have a life between death
and a new birth too, and this is by no means uneventful, it is filled
with happenings and experiences. And the consequences of these
experiences in the spiritual world appear in our earthly life, but in
a peculiar form which often makes us inclined to attribute such
occurrences to chance. Nevertheless they can be traced to significant
experiences in the spiritual world.
I want to speak to you therefore of something which may seem remote
from the first part of the lecture. But you will see that it is
important for every human being and that what appear to be chance
happenings may be deeply indicative of mysterious connecting threads
in life.
I am now going to speak of an historical fact that is not preserved in
history books but is in the Akashic Record. To begin with I have to
draw your attention to the fact that the souls of all of us here now
have been incarnated many times in earthly bodies, among the most
diverse conditions of life, in ancient India, Persia, Egypt and
Greece; again and again we have experienced different environments and
conditions of existence, and there is purpose and meaning in the fact
that we pass through one incarnation after another. Our present life
could not be as it is if we had not lived through these other
conditions. An extraordinary experience fell to the lot of men living
in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries of our era, for very
exceptional conditions broke in upon humanity at that time
roughly speaking not quite seven hundred years ago. Conditions were
such that the souls of men were completely shut off from the spiritual
world; spiritual darkness prevailed, and it was impossible even for
highly developed individuals to achieve direct contact with the
spiritual world. In the thirteenth century even those who in earlier
incarnations had been initiates were unable to look into the spiritual
world. The gates of the spiritual world were closed for a certain
period during that century, and although men who in former times had
received initiation were able to call up memories of their earlier
incarnations, in the thirteenth century they could not themselves gaze
into the spiritual worlds. It was necessary for men to live through
that condition of darkness, to find the gates to the spiritual world
closed against them. Men of high spiritual development were, of
course, also in incarnation at that time, but they too were obliged to
experience the condition of darkness. When about the middle of the
thirteenth century the darkness lifted, strange happenings occurred at
a certain place in Europe. The name of this place cannot now be given,
but sometime it may be possible to communicate it in a group lecture.
Twelve men in Europe of great and outstanding wisdom, whose spiritual
development had taken an unusual course, emerged from the condition of
twilight that had obscured clairvoyant vision. Of these twelve wise
men, seven, to begin with, have to be distinguished from the others.
These seven men had retained the memory of their earlier initiations
and this memory, together with the knowledge still surviving, was such
that the seven men recapitulated in themselves conditions they had
once lived through in the period following the Atlantean catastrophe
the ancient Indian epoch of culture. The teachings given by the
seven holy Rishis of India had come to life again in the souls of
these seven wise men of Europe; seven rays of the ancient wisdom of
the sacred Atlantean culture shone forth in the hearts of these seven
men who through the operations of world karma had gathered at a
certain place in Europe in the thirteenth century and had found one
another again. To these seven came four others. In the soul of the
first of these four the wisdom belonging to the ancient Indian culture
shone forth he was the eighth among the twelve. The wisdom of
the ancient Persian culture lived in the soul of the ninth; the wisdom
of the third period that of Egyptian-Chaldaean culture
lived in the soul of the tenth, and the wisdom of Greco-Roman culture
in the soul of the eleventh. The wisdom of the culture as it was in
that particular age contemporary wisdom lived in the
soul of the twelfth. In these twelve men who came together to perform
a special mission, the twelve different streams in the spiritual
development of mankind were represented. The fact that all possible
religions and all possible philosophies belong to twelve basic types
is in itself a mystery. Buddhism, Brahmanism, Vedanta philosophy,
materialism, or whatever it may be all of them can be traced to
the twelve basic types; it is just a matter of being quite exact. And
so all the different streams of man's spiritual life the
religions, the philosophies and world conceptions that are spread over
the earth were united in that council of the twelve.
( 56 )
After the period of darkness had passed and spiritual achievement was
possible again, a thirteenth came in remarkable circumstances to the
twelve. I am telling you now of one of those events which take place
secretly in the evolution of mankind once and once only. They cannot
occur a second time and are mentioned not as an indication that
efforts should be made to repeat them but for quite other reasons.
When the darkness had lifted and it was possible to develop
clairvoyant vision again, the coming of the thirteenth was announced
in a mysterious way to the twelve wise men. They knew that the time
had come when a child with significant and remarkable incarnations
behind him was to be born. Above all they knew that one of his
incarnations had been at the time of the Mystery of Golgotha. It was
known, therefore, that one who had been a contemporary of the events
in Palestine was returning. And the birth of the child in these
unusual circumstances during the thirteenth century could not have
been said to be that of a person of renown. In speaking of previous
lives there is a deplorable and only too widespread tendency to refer
back to important historical personages. I have come across all kinds
of people who believe that they were incarnated as some historical
personage or figure in the Gospels. Quite recently a lady informed me
that she had been Mary Magdelene, and I could only reply that she was
the twenty-fourth Mary Magdelene I had met in my life. In these
matters the greatest care must be taken to prevent fantastic notions
arising.
History tells us very little about the incarnations of the thirteenth.
He was born many times with great and profound qualities of heart. It
was known that this individuality was to be born again as a child and
that he was destined for a very special mission. This knowledge was
revealed to the twelve seers who took the child entirely into their
charge and were able to arrange that from the very beginning he was
shut off from the outside world. He was removed from his family and
cared for by these twelve men. Guided by their clairvoyance they
reared the child with every care in such a way that all the forces
acquired from previous incarnations were able to unfold in him. A kind
of intuitive perception of this occurrence has arisen in men who know
something of the history of spiritual life. Goethe's poem The Mysteries
( 57 )
has been recited to us many times. Out of a
deep, intuitive perception Goethe speaks in that poem of the council
of the twelve, and he has been able to convey to us the mood of heart
and feeling in which they lived. The thirteenth is not brother Mark
but the child of whom I have been telling you, and who almost
immediately after his birth was taken into the care of the twelve and
brought up by them until the age of early manhood. The child developed
in a strange and remarkable way. The twelve were not in any sense
fanatics; they were full of inner composure, enlightenment and peace
of heart. How does a fanatic behave? He wants to convert people as
quickly as possible; while they, as a rule, do not want to be
converted. Everybody is expected immediately to believe what the
fanatic wants them to believe and he is angry when this does not
happen. In our day, when someone sets out to expound a particular
subject, people simply do not believe that his aim may be not to voice
his own views but something quite different, that is, the thoughts and
opinions of the one of whom he is writing. For many years I was held
to be a follower of Nietzsche
( 58 )
because I once wrote an
absolutely objective book about him. People simply cannot understand
that the aim of a writer may be to give an objective exposition. They
think that everyone must be a fanatic on the subject of which he
happens to be speaking.
The twelve in the thirteenth century were far from being fanatics, and
they were very sparing with oral teaching. But because they lived in
communion with the boy, twelve rays of light as it were went out from
them into him and were resolved in his soul into one great harmony. It
would not have been possible to give him any kind of academic
examination; nevertheless there lived within him, transmuted into
feeling and sensitive perception, all that the twelve representatives
of the twelve different types of religion poured into his soul. His
whole soul reflected the harmony of the twelve different forms of
belief spread over the earth.
In this way the soul of the boy had to bear a great deal, and
consequently it worked in a strange way upon the body. And it is
precisely for this reason that the process of which I am telling you
now may not be repeated: it could only be enacted at that particular
time. Strange to say, as the harmony within the boy's soul increased,
his body became more delicate more and more delicate, until at
a certain age it was transparent in every limb. The boy ate less and
less until he finally took no nourishment at all. Then he lay for days
in a condition of complete torpor: the soul had left the body, and
returned into it again after a few days. The youth was now inwardly
quite changed. The twelve different rays of human outlook were united
in one single radiance, and he gave utterance to the greatest,
most wonderful secrets; he did not repeat what the first, or the
second, or the third had said, but gave forth in a new and wonderful
synthesis all that they would have said had they spoken in unison; all
the knowledge they possessed was gathered into one whole, and when he
uttered it, it was as though this new wisdom had just come to birth in
him. It was as though a higher spirit were speaking in him. Something
entirely and essentially new was thus imparted to the twelve wise men.
Wisdom in abundance was imparted to them; and to each, individually,
greater illumination concerning what had been known to him hitherto.
I have been describing to you the first school of Christian
Rosenkreutz, for the thirteenth is the individuality known to us by
that name. In that incarnation he died after only a brief earthly
existence; in the fourteenth century he was born again and lived then
for more than a hundred years. All those things again appeared in him
that had developed in him in the thirteenth century. Then his life had
been brief, but in the fourteenth century it was very long. During the
first half of this later incarnation he went on great journeys in
search of the different centres of culture in Europe, Africa and Asia,
in order to gather knowledge of what had come to life in him during
the previous century; then he returned to Europe. A few of those who
had brought him up in the thirteenth century were again in incarnation
and were joined by others. This was the time of the inauguration of
the rosicrucian stream of spiritual life. And Christian Rosenkreutz
himself incarnated again and again.
To this very day he is at work during the brief intervals, too,
when he is not actually in incarnation; through his higher bodies he
then works spiritually into human beings, without the need of spatial
contact. We must try to picture the mysterious way in which his
influence operates.
And I want to begin here by giving an example. Those who participate
consciously in the occult life of the spirit had a strange experience
from the eighties on into the nineties of the previous century; they
became aware of certain influences emanating from a remarkable
personality (I am only mentioning one case among many). There was,
however, something not quite harmonious about these influences. Anyone
who is sensitive to influences from contemporaries living a great
distance away, would, at that time, have been aware of something
raying out from a certain personality, which was not altogether
harmonious. When the new century dawned, however, these influences
became harmonious. What had happened? I will tell you the reason for
this.
On the 12th August 1900 Soloviev had died a man far too
little appreciated or understood. The influences of his ether body
radiated far and wide, but although Soloviev was a great philosopher,
in his case the development of the soul was in advance of that of the
head, the intellect; he was a great and splendid thinker, but his
conscious philosophy was of far less significance than that which he
bore in his soul. Up to the time of his death the head was a hindering
factor and so, as an occult influence, he had an inharmonious effect.
But when he was dead and the ether body, separated from the brain,
rayed out in the ether world, he was liberated from the restrictions
caused by his thinking, and the rays of his influence shone out with
wonderful brilliance and power.
People may ask: How can such knowledge really concern us? This very
question is an illusion, for the human being is through and through a
product of the spiritual processes around him; and when certain
occultists become aware of the reality of these processes, that is
because they actually see them. But spiritual processes operate too in
those others who do not see. Everything in the spiritual world is
interconnected. Whatever influence may radiate from a highly developed
Frenchman or Russian is felt not only on their own native soil, but
their thought and influence has an effect over the whole earth.
Everything that happens in the spiritual world has an influence on us,
and only when we realise that the soul lives in the spiritual world
just as the lung within the air, shall we have the right attitude.
The forces in the ether bodies of highly developed individualities
stream out and have a potent effect upon other human beings. So too,
the ether body of Christian Rosenkreutz works far and wide in the
world. And reference must be made here to a fact that is of the
greatest significance to many people; it is something that transpires
in the spiritual world between death and a new birth and is not to be
ascribed to chance.
Christian Rosenkreutz has always made use of the short intervals of
time between his incarnations to call into his particular stream of
spiritual life those souls whom he knows to be ripe; between his
deaths and births he has concerned himself as it were with choosing
those who are ready to enter his stream. But human beings themselves,
by learning to be attentive, must be able to recognise by what means
Christian Rosenkreutz gives them a sign showing them that they may
count themselves among his chosen. This sign has been given in the
lives of very many human beings of the present time, but they pay no
heed to it. Yet among the apparently chance happenings in a man's
life, there is for many people one in particular that is to be
regarded as an indication that between death and a new birth Christian
Rosenkreutz has found him mature and ready; the sign is given by
Christian Rosenkreutz on the physical plane, however. This event may
be called the mark of Christian Rosenkreutz. Let us suppose a man is
lying in bed in other places I have mentioned different forms
of such a happening, but all of them have occurred for some
unaccountable reason he suddenly wakes up and, as though guided by
instinct, looks at a wall that is usually quite dark. The room is
dimly lit, the wall is dark, when suddenly he sees written on the
wall: Get up at once! It all seems very strange, but he gets up and
leaves the house, and hardly has he done so when the ceiling over his
bed collapses; although nobody else would have been in danger of
getting hurt, he himself would inevitably have been killed. The most
thorough investigation proves that nobody on the physical plane warned
him to get up. If he had remained lying there he would certainly have
been killed.
Such an experience may be thought to be an hallucination or something
of the kind; but deeper investigation will reveal that these
particular experiences and they come to hundreds of people
are not accidental. A beckoning call has come from Christian
Rosenkreutz. The karma of the one called in this way always indicates
that Christian Rosenkreutz bestows the life he may claim. I say
explicitly: such occurrences occur in the lives of many people at the
present time, and it is only a question of being alert. The occurrence
does not always take such a dramatic form as the example quoted, but
numbers of human beings nowadays have had such experiences. Now when I
say something more than once during a lecture, I do so quite
deliberately, because I find that strange conclusions are apt to be
drawn from things that are half or totally forgotten. I am saying this
because nobody need be discouraged who has had no such experience;
this might not be the case, for if he searches he will certainly find
something of the kind in his life. Naturally I can only single out a
typical example. Here then we have in our life a fact of which we may
say that its cause does not lie in the period of actual incarnation;
we may have met Christian Rosenkreutz in the spiritual world. I have
laid particular stress on this outstanding event of the call. Other
events, too, could be mentioned, events connected directly with the
spiritual world that occur during the life between death and a new
birth; but in our spiritual context this particular event should be of
special significance for us as it is so intimately connected with our
spiritual movement.
Such a happening surely indicates that we must develop quite a
different attitude if we want to have a clear vision of what actually
plays into life. Most human beings rush hectically through life and
are not thoughtful and attentive; many people say that one should not
brood but engage in a life of action. But how much better it would be
if precipitate deeds were left undone and people were to brood a
little their deeds, then, would be far more mature! If only the
beckoning call were heeded with composure and attentiveness. Often it
only seems as if we were brooding. It is precisely through quiet
composure that strength comes to us and then we shall follow
when karma calls, understanding, too, when it is calling. These are
the things I wanted to call your attention to today, for they do
indeed make life more intelligible.
I have told you of the strange event in the thirteenth century, purely
in the form of historical narrative, in order to indicate those things
which men must heed if they are to find their proper place in life and
understand the beckoning call of Christian Rosenkreutz. To make this
possible the preparation by the twelve and the coming of the
thirteenth were necessary. And the event in the thirteenth century was
necessary in order that in our own time and hereafter such a beckoning
or other sign may be understood and obeyed.
Christian Rosenkreutz has created this sign in order to rouse the
attention of men to the needs of the times, to indicate to them that
they belong to him and may dedicate their lives to him in the service
of the progress of humanity.
|
Last Modified: 02-Nov-2024
|
The Rudolf Steiner e.Lib is maintained by:
The e.Librarian:
elibrarian@elib.com
|
|
|
|
| |