LECTURE 1
Vienna, 9th April, 1914.
Our aim in this course of
lectures will be to describe the inner life of man in relation to the
life between death and rebirth, in order to show how intimately these
two realms of existence are connected. A secondary aim will be to
point out, as the result of this knowledge, certain guiding lines
which will enable human beings to take the right course in many
difficult situations in life, and which are fitted in many respects
to give a sure support to the life of the soul, affording as they do,
a thorough understanding of this soul-life. To this end it will be
necessary for you to work through these first lectures, which are
intended to provide a foundation. They will lead us into esoteric,
scientific realms which to many might perhaps at first appear to be
far removed from what human feeling would like to grasp at once; but
when we have arrived at the true goal of these lectures you will see
that this goal can only be attained in a pure manner if we first work
through the apparently remote esoteric knowledge which is now to be
put before you.
If, to begin with, we consider
the inner life of man abstractly, it appears in the three forms we
have often mentioned; in the forms of thought, feeling and will. But
in order to consider this inward life fully, we must add a fourth,
for to the inner life of man belong not only the three realms we have
just mentioned, but also that which he obtains through the
perceptions of the senses. We do not allow colours and sounds,
perceptions of warmth and other sensations to rush past our
consciousness, but we lay hold of these impressions, we turn them
into perceptions. The fact that we are able to remember these
impressions, that we are able to retain them, that we not only know a
rose is red when we have one directly in front of us, but that we are
able to carry the red of the rose with us, to preserve as it were,
the colours as a conception in the memory — this testifies that
the life of sensation, the life of perception through which we bring
ourselves into touch with the outer world belongs also to our inner
life. So that we may say, that we must count our perception of the
outer world as part of our inner life, in so far as we make it into
something inward in the very act of perceiving it.
We must reckon our thoughts, by
means of which we create knowledge for ourselves regarding what is
immediately around us, and through science regarding what is more
distant, as that, by means of which we make the outer world into our
own inner world in a much deeper sense than by perception. We do more
than merely live in our perceptions, we reflect upon them and we are
aware that through this reflection we are able to experience
something of the secrets in the things perceived.
Next, we have to reckon our
feelings as part of our inner life; in our feelings we are
immediately in that realm of the inner life of man which contains
within itself all that brings us as human beings in touch with the
world in a manner worthy of humanity. The primary foundation of our
truly human existence is that we are able to feel concerning things —
that we are able to feel pleasure in what is around us. In a certain
sense this is also the foundation of all our happiness and sorrow;
for these are made up of feeling, which wells up and again subsides.
Certain feelings arise within us, or force themselves on us, which
uplift and strengthen our life and in which we feel happy and
satisfied; other feelings arise through the events of life, through
our destiny and also through our inward life, which give us pain and
sorrow. When we use the word ‘feeling’, we are referring
to the realm which embraces the happiness and sorrow of human life.
When we refer to the will, we are
dealing with that which makes us of value to the world, which so
places us in the world that we not only live a life of knowledge and
a life of feeling within ourselves, but are able to re-act upon the
world. What a human being wills, and what flows from his will into
his actions, constitutes his value to the world. Thus we may say that
in referring to the realm of will we are dealing with that element
which shows that man is a part of the world and it is our inner life
which thus flows out into the world and forms part of it. Whether
they are the emotions and passions of criminal natures hostile to
social life that flow into the will and thence become part of the
world to the world's detriment, or whether they are the high,
pure ideals which the idealist draws down from his contact with the
spiritual ordering of the world and allows to flow into his actions,
allows to flow perhaps only into his words which act upon human
beings, stimulating them or revealing the worth of man — in
either case we are always dealing with what lies in the realm of
will, with what gives to man his value. So that all the wealth which
man can really possess as a soul-being, is expressed, when we mention
these four realms: Perceptions, Thought, Feeling and Will.
Now to one who goes somewhat more
deeply into the consideration of what we may call the four inner
spheres of the soul-nature of man, there appears a significant
difference between the first two and the last two parts of this
four-fold human being. In ordinary life, the difference does not
really enter very much into the consciousness of man; at the most it
only enters our consciousness when we reflect upon these four spheres
of human nature in the following manner.
In speaking of perception, and
reflecting upon it, we have the feeling that with perception we are
directly in touch with the outer world. Through perception we
interiorise the outer world; it furnishes something which belongs to
our inner being when we have worked upon the sensation. But we have
the feeling that we must so order our sensation that it gives us true
images of the outer world in certain conditions, and every failing or
defect in the life of perception and of sensation, every distortion
of the senses means that our inner life is impoverished through our
becoming poorer with respect to what we are able to obtain from the
outer world.
In passing from perception to
thought, we become aware that also with respect to thought we may
have the feeling that we must not be satisfied if this thought merely
stirs and dies down again within itself; thoughts only have an
ultimate value when they represent within us something which is
objective, something that is outside us. Our reflections would give
us no satisfaction if through them we could not experience something
about the outer world.
But when we pass to our feeling
and reflect a little thereon, we find that this feeling, or, perhaps
better, the life of feeling, is much more intimately connected with
our own inner being than are thought and perception. When we wish to
perceive or feel certain subtleties of the outer world in the right
way, we have the idea that we must, to begin with, develop ourselves
in a purely external manner on the physical plane. If we have a
thought which we can call true, we say of this true thought that it
must really hold good for all our fellow-men and it must also be
possible to convince others of this thought if we can only find the
right words to express it. But if we stand before a phenomenon of
nature, or, shall we say, a human work of art, and through this
develop our feelings, we know that fundamentally our human nature
alone does not help us fully to exhaust what may thus be in front of
us. It may be that when we hear a piece of music or see a painting we
remain quite dull simply because we have not educated our feeling to
be able to perceive its refinements. If we follow this direction of
thought we find that this life of feeling is very interior and that
we are unable to convey it to others directly in thought in the
manner we experience it inwardly. In our life of feeling we are,
under all circumstances, in a certain sense alone. We know at the
same time that this life of feeling is the source of a special inward
treasure, it is an inward result of evolution, and just because it is
something so subjective, it cannot directly pass over into the object
in the same way as it lives inwardly.
The same thing must be said with
respect to the will. How different we human beings are with respect
to what we will, with respect to what passes into our actions through
our will! The great variety of human action really comes about
through one person willing this and another that. When in the case of
feeling we are able to rejoice in finding a companion in life who, in
a purely inward, subjective manner, has arrived at a similar
standpoint of feeling as ourselves, one who, through feeling, can so
interiorise certain refinements in the external world that he has an
understanding which is independent of and yet connected with us, we
feel that our life is enhanced by such companionship. Each one of us
has to develop his own feelings within himself; but we are able to
find others whose feelings echo our own. For although the life of
feeling is inward, it is still possible for different human beings to
have feelings that are in unison. But there cannot be two wills which
are directed to one and the same object, that is, two human beings
who wish to do one and the same thing at the same time. The two wills
cannot unite in a single object. Even the handle we grasp to turn a
machine we can only grasp ourselves, though another helps us with it,
the part of the work that we do through our own will is only half of
the whole work. We do our half, the other person the other half. Two
will-impulses cannot exist together in one object. Although we occupy
common worlds through our will, it is exactly through this will that
we are so placed in the world that each of us is a single
individuality. It is just by this we are shown how the will
constitutes the individual worth of a human being, how from this
standpoint the will is the innermost thing.
We may gather from this that
perception and thought are more external in the inner life of man,
and that feeling and will are more internal, and constitute his true
inner nature.
Now with respect to these four
spheres of human soul-life another distinction may be seen, even
through an entirely external, exoteric method of observation. When we
confront the world with our perception we may say that this
perception does indeed bring the world to us, but from one standpoint
only. How small is that section of the world which through our
perception we are able to make into our own inner life! In perception
we are dependent upon place and time. We must allow that the very
least part of what we perceive in the world enters our inner life
through our perception. And with respect to our thought we have the
notion that no matter what efforts we make there are always further
steps that can be taken; through our thought we can always press on
further and further. In short, we have the notion that the world is
there outside, and through perception and thought we can only make
ourselves masters of a tiny portion of this world. It is different
with feeling; for in this case one asks: what possibilities of
feeling, what possibilities in the way of joy and sorrow are within
us? What might we not bring forth from the depths of our soul! And if
we did bring it forth, how much more nobly should we feel about the
things of the world!
Whereas with regard to perception
and thought one has the notion that there is a great deal outside in
the world of which one can experience only a small portion through
perception and thought; with respect to feeling one has the
sensation: within me are endless depths; could I but bring them
forth, my feeling would become richer and richer. I can only bring
forth the smallest part and transform it into actual feeling ...
through perception and thought I can only turn a tiny portion of the
world into my own inner world, in the sphere of actual experience I
can only give expression to a part of the possibilities I have within
me. And this is also the case to a much higher degree with the will.
I refer to one thing only. How strongly we feel our shortcomings in
what we do, as compared with what we might do, or in what it is
possible for us to do!
Thus we realise that we only
bring a portion of the outer world into our inner life through our
perception and thought; and we are only able to bring forth a part of
what lies deep down in the soul, through our feeling and our will.
Thus the four spheres of our soul-life are divided, as it were, into
two parts; perception and thought on the one side, feeling and will
on the other.
An entirely different light is
thrown upon these four spheres of our inner life when we try to
illumine esoterically that which we may thus explain exoterically by
means of thought.
You know that during the night
when a person is asleep, the connection between his ‘I’
and his astral body on the one hand, and his physical body and
etheric body on the other, is different from what it is while he is
awake. During the day while he is awake his physical body, etheric
body, astral body and ‘I’ are coupled together in a
normal manner. This connection is loosened during sleep, so that the
astral body and the ‘I’ are away from the sphere of the
senses and from the sphere of thought, that is, away from the entire
sphere of the instruments of consciousness, and therefore the
darkness of night is spread over normal consciousness and
unconsciousness supervenes. Now, when through his esoteric exercises
a person so strengthens his soul that he knows and perceives —
that is, he spiritually knows and perceives — in the spiritual
soul-being which he is during the night; when he is unconscious
outside the body, when he really experiences this spiritual
soul-being as his own human nature outside the body, then a new world
appears to him, a spiritual world, just as a physical world exists
for a person when he makes use of the senses and the brain which
serves thought. Thus a spiritual world is around him.
Now, the spiritual environment
which can then be observed, is by no means always the same. Were a
person to place himself in the position of a spiritual investigator,
he would see at various times and in various ways, how the intention
always affects what a person sees spiritually. It is not the
conscious intention, but rather the unconscious, instinctive
intention which always affects what he really wants to know. If, for
example, a person goes out of his body in order to come in contact
with a dead person, this intention affects the whole of his spiritual
field of consciousness; he overlooks, as it were, all that does not
belong to this intention. If he succeeds at all, he steers straight
for the dead person and his destiny, in order to see what he desires
to see in connection with him. The rest of the spiritual world
remains unnoticed — it would be better to use the word obscure
— and the person then feels his connection with the dead. Thus
what a man sees in the spiritual world, depends upon his intention.
And so you can understand, that what is described by the clairvoyant
consciousness regarding what it sees in the spiritual world, may vary
infinitely with different clairvoyant individuals. Each one may have
seen quite correctly what he did see, according to the purpose in him
when he withdrew his soul and spirit from his physical, bodily part.
In this and the following lectures I shall describe what the
clairvoyant consciousness sees when it enters into the spiritual
world with the intention of knowing the inner human-life —
these four soul-spheres of Perception, Thought, Feeling and Will —
in order actually to get behind that which ebbs and flows in this
human soul causing it happiness and sorrow.
Let us suppose that a clairvoyant
consciousness has reached the point where the spiritual and soul-part
can really leave the physical bodily-part in a way similar to what is
usually done unconsciously during sleep; and he leaves it with the
definite purpose — the definite impulse to become acquainted
with, to feel really confronted with the inner life of man. He will
meet with what I shall now try to describe.
The first thing that the
clairvoyant consciousness meets with, is in fact a complete reversal
of his entire mental outlook. As long as we are in the body we look
around us with our senses and think about what we see with our
intellect. We look upon a world of mountains, rivers, clouds, stars,
etc., and at one point in this world we see ourselves as a very small
thing compared with this great world. When the clairvoyant
consciousness begins to act outside the body, this relationship is
exactly reversed. The world which ordinarily is outspread before our
senses and which we reflect upon with the intellect that is connected
with our brain — this world disappears from our view. It no
longer provides us with thoughts, but one feels as if poured out into
this world, one really feels as if one has left one's body.
This perception is correctly
expressed when we say to ourselves, Thou art now poured out into the
world which previously thou didst look upon, thou art in it, thou
fillest the whole space up to a certain limit, and yet thou
thyself livest in time. This is a sensation to which one has
to become accustomed; it is at first a sensation which may be
expressed by saying, that what previously was outer world has now
become inner world. Not as if one now carried within one this former
outer world, but one has the feeling it has become one's inner
world; one feels: thou art living in the space in which
formerly thy sense-impressions were outspread and art regarding the
objects and processes of which thou didst think. Thou art living in
it. ... And when one develops clairvoyant consciousness to a certain
extent, the tiny being, the man, who formerly seemed to stand in the
centre of the sensible horizon, now really becomes the world, and we
look on it as we formerly looked on the whole of the outer world
which was outspread in space and ran its course in time. To a certain
extent we have become the world. Only imagine what a reversal of the
human way of considering the world it is, when that which previously
was not world, that to which one had said ‘I’ —
when this now really becomes the world outside, towards which
everything tends. It is as if from every point of space one were to
look towards a single centre and there behold oneself. It is as if
one floated back and forth in time and at a certain point, on
a wave of this stream of time, one found oneself. One has
oneself become the world.
That is the first impression
received when — and I once more lay stress on this — when
with ‘intention’ to learn to understand the inner life of
man, one develops the clairvoyant consciousness; that is the first
impression. Is it not remarkable that one goes out of the body with
intention to learn about the inner life of man and the first thing
that meets one is the human form itself? But how changed is this
human form! One cannot say it often enough: that one must go out of
the body with the intention of becoming acquainted with the inner
life of man and then all that I now tell you takes place. Naturally,
it does not necessarily always appears the same. How differently does
this human form present itself! One knows: ‘That which thou art
now looking at, is thyself; yea, it is thee. Thou who formerly didst
feel thyself within thy skin, within thy blood, art now outside.’
At first one sees only what one
might call the outer form of that which stands there; though changed.
These eyes, those parts which were eyes, shine like two suns, but
suns which inwardly vibrate with sparkling light, suns which sparkle,
whose light shines out and fades, giving forth radiant light —
thus do the eyes appear in the changed human form. The ears begin to
sound in a certain way. One does not see the ears as one does in the
physical world, but one feels a certain resonance. The whole skin
shines with a sort of radiation, which one feels rather than sees. In
short, the human form appears to one as something which gives forth
light, sound and magnetic, electric radiations. These expressions are
naturally inappropriate, because they are taken from the physical
world. Thus does the world stand before us, and this is our world at
the beginning of the clairvoyant experience we have described. One
sees the human being which sparkles with light, the whole skin
sparkles so that one can feel it, the eyes can be seen, the ears
heard. And when one has this impression, one knows: Thou hast seen
thy physical body, from outside the body. One knows: seen from the
standpoint of the spirit the physical body is like this.
If one then tries to exercise an
inner activity out there, outside the body, which may be compared to
reflection — though this differs somewhat from ordinary
thinking, for it is the exercise of an inner creative soul-force —
if one does this, one sees something more in this shining being; one
sees forces moving within it, something like a circulation of force
permeating this shining form. Then one knows: That which thou seest
like a separate part within thy light body is thy thought-life seen
from outside. One may call that of which one now sees part, the
etheric body. One sees the etheric body as the weaving thought-life.
It is like a circulation of dark waves, a spiritual blood
circulation, one might describe it as dark waves in the light-body,
giving a peculiar appearance to the whole and constraining one to
acknowledge there in thy physical body pulses and weaves the etheric
body, which thou now seest from outside, which now becomes visible to
thee.
You see, therefore, that outside
the body one gains the knowledge that the physical and etheric bodies
really exist, and how they appear when seen from outside.
But this inward strengthening may
go still further. If one were only to see what I have just described,
one would appear peculiar in the spiritual world: one would appear in
the spiritual world like a being who on the physical plane could
indeed receive impressions from the outer world, but who was inwardly
entirely void of feeling, who could feel nothing at all. What
corresponds to feeling on the physical plane, can also move us
inwardly when outside the body. It is not feeling, for feeling has
meaning and existence only within the physical body, but it is that
which corresponds to feeling in the spiritual world. Previously, for
instance, we merely felt that we were within space and moved in time;
in that space in which we observed events and beings and in that time
in which we realised that we were in it. When, however, the inner
soul-nature which corresponds. to feeling is awakened outside the
body, the soul-nature begins to develop a knowledge through which all
sorts of things come to light, through which one not only feels as if
outspread in space, but through which one perceives something in this
space, something which moves in the stream of time; as ‘being.’
One now finds, not what one formerly saw by means of the body and its
organs in the outer world, but one finds one has experiences in the
inner part of this outer world, in the spiritual part which lives and
moves in this outer world. It is as if the space, in which formerly
one had only been aware of oneself, were now filled with innumerable
stars all in motion, to which one belongs oneself. Then one knows:
Thou art now experiencing thyself in the astral body outside the
physical body in such a way that what formerly was only felt, now
comes to life as inner content.
In looking back at that part of
oneself seen previously, which we described as the outer world —
that light-body with the dark thought-circulation of the etheric body
within it — then, at the moment of concentration [outside the
body] upon the astral, the star-life of the astral body, — the
body one has left behind — appears different. The exact
difference may be expressed as follows: Thou canst concentrate upon
thyself, looking back on thy light-body and thy etheric-thought body;
thou canst so concentrate on thyself that an inner star-world comes
to life within these, regarding which thou knowest: This thou fillest
completely, now thou lookest back on thy physical body which thou
hast left behind; the shining may then cease, the thought circulation
also.
This is done to a certain extent
voluntarily and in the place of what has faded, comes an image of our
own being, which appears to us — it cannot be expressed
otherwise — it appears as our ‘personified karma.’
That, which as human beings we bear within us, that on account of
which we shall have this or that fate, is here as if rolled into one.
Before us stands our karma personified. When we see this we know:
thou art that; such thou really art in thy moral, inner being, as
thou standest as an individuality in the world, that thou thyself
really art!
Then emerges another
consciousness and this consciousness which now supervenes is very
depressing. For instance, one sees the whole of this personified fate
in such a way that one feels it in most intimate connection with
one's body, with one's earth-man, and indeed in such a
way that one knows directly: The manner in which thy muscles are
constructed in thy earthly body, the whole form of thy muscular
system is the creation of this thy fate, thy karma. Now comes the
time when one says to oneself: How different Maya or Illusion is from
reality! As long as we are on the physical plane we think that this
man of muscle consists of fleshly muscles; in reality these fleshly
muscles are crystallised karma. And they are so formed in man, so
crystallised, that, even to the finest chemical formation man bears
his crystallised karma in his muscular system. So strongly is this
the case that the spiritual observer sees quite clearly that when for
example a person has exercised his muscles so that they have taken
him to a place where an accident happens to him, it happened because
in his muscles lay the spiritual force which drove him of himself to
the place where the accident occurred. The cosmic order has
crystallised our fate within our muscular system. In our muscular
system lives the spirit (crystallised for the physical plane), which
without our apparent knowledge leads us everywhere, directing our
coming and our going in accordance with our karma.
If inward strengthening is
carried further, if the pupil while outside his body, experiences his
inner being still further, there arises within him what in physical
life on the physical plane corresponds to the impulse of the Will. As
soon as this life of Will rises within a man — but when outside
the body — he feels not only as if he were within a system of
stars, but as if he were in the sun of this system: he knows that he
is one with the sun of his planetary system. One might say that when
a person inwardly experiences his astral body he knows that he is one
with the ‘planets’ of his planetary system; when he
experiences his ‘I’ outside the body he knows that he is
one with thy sun of his solar system, to which everything turns,
around which all is ordered. If we look back on that which is now no
longer within us, but outside — and what is outside us, so long
as we are in the physical body, is within us when we are outside the
body, and what is within us, when we are in the physical body, is
outside us when we are outside the body — if one now looks
back at oneself, something else appears; in looking at oneself, one
is confronted by the necessity that what exists out there in the
physical world as one's own body, had to come into being and
must again decay.
The growth and decay of the
physical body is what confronts one. One becomes aware that there are
Spiritual Powers and Beings which guide and direct the coming forth
and growth of this physical body and that there are others which
disintegrate this physical body. One becomes aware of that into which
this actual growth and decay in the physical world again
crystallises. For one knows that this growth and decay is connected
fundamentally with the bone-system of man. With the formation of the
bone-system in the human physical body, judgement, so to say, is
given, regarding the form in which the human being experiences birth
and death in the physical body. The way in which a man comes into
being and decays, is decided by the way in which the bone-system is
crystallised within him. The knowledge comes to one — thou
couldst not be the being thou art in physical existence if the whole
world had not co-operated in order to bring about the hardening of
the physical nature, so that it appears as it does in thy
bone-system. In the skeleton one learns to reverence — curious
as this may sound — the ruling Cosmic Powers which find their
spiritual expression in all the Beings concentrated in the life of
the sun. One learns to recognise that this skeleton has been sketched
out, as it were, in the cosmic order as the fundamental plan of man,
and that the other physical organs have been attached to it.
Thus to clairvoyant vision, that
which now has become the outer world culminates in the symbol of
death, or one might say, in the vision of the skeleton. For through
such clairvoyant experiences one at length acquires knowledge of how
the spiritual worlds have fashioned an external physical symbol, as
it were, of themselves — these spiritual worlds to which one
really belongs with one's inner being and into which one enters
on going out of the body. At this fourth stage we also learn that
when we perform actions in the world, when we exercise our will, a
force is active within us of which we are unconscious on the physical
plane and which we only now learn to recognise. If we but make a
forward movement and in doing so employ the mechanism of our
skeleton, universal cosmic forces take part in the action, forces
into which we really first enter when we have experienced this fourth
stage outside our body.
Suppose a person goes for a walk
and with the aid of the mechanism of his bones moves his limbs
forward; he imagines that he does this for his own pleasure. In order
that forces might come into existence to enable us to move ourselves
forward by the mechanism of our bones, the whole world had to come
into being and the whole world had to be filled with divine spiritual
forces, spiritual forces of which we only become aware when we arrive
at the fourth stage. The divine spiritual Cosmos participates in our
every step, and though we think that it is we who move our feet
forward, we could not do so if we did not live within the spiritual
Cosmos, within the divine world. As long as we are in our physical
body we gaze around us; there we see the beings belonging to the
mineral, vegetable and animal kingdoms, we see mountains, rivers,
oceans, seas, clouds, stars, sun and moon; what we see externally has
an inner Being and we ourselves enter into this inner Being when we
live outside our body in the manner described. When we live in these
Beings we know that their spiritual essence, that which is hidden
behind the radiant Sun, behind the shining stars, behind the
mountains, rivers, seas, clouds — that which is hidden there
lives in the mechanism of our bones when we move them, and that all
this must be so.
We can now more clearly
understand what was said previously. Just as our will is inwardly
connected with the mechanism of our bones, our feelings are inwardly
connected with our muscular system. This muscular system is the
symbolical expression of our feeling-system. In order that our
muscles can be constructed as they are, permitting of expansion and
contraction, so as in their turn to set the mechanism of the bones in
motion — in order that this can come to pass, the whole
planetary system is necessary. We learn this when we find ourselves
in our astral body. In our muscular system lives the whole planetary
system, just as the whole cosmos lives in the mechanism of our bones.
What can be said in a similar way about our thoughts and our
sense-perceptions will follow in the next lectures.
Spiritual knowledge reveals such
things to us. From this we see that spiritual knowledge is truly not
merely something which gives us thoughts and ideas, but which can
permeate our whole soul so that we thereby really learn to know
ourselves; we become different human beings in all our feeling and
thinking. For when a person accepts what has just been described as
the experience of clairvoyant consciousness — and which I think
can easily be understood — if he accepts this and allows it to
work upon his mind and then gathers it together in one fundamental
feeling in his soul, how may this fundamental feeling be expressed?
How must we describe in a few words that which is enkindled within us
as an inner feeling through this clairvoyant knowledge?
We look at that which seemingly
is most ordinary, the expression of our most everyday moods, and we
receive something like an impression of what is described concerning
Capesius and Benedictus in the opening sentences of my Mystery Drama,
The Soul's Probation,
namely how in man are gathered
together the aims which divine Spiritual Beings have set before them,
how into the nature of man flows that which divine Spiritual Beings
have thought throughout the worlds, If we wish to sum this up in one
vital feeling, we may describe it by saying that we now regard human
nature differently from what we did before, we now know in a
different manner than formerly that human nature is permeated by the
divine Cosmos. Our consciousness is fired by this and waxing stronger
declares with inner understanding of soul and feeling that if we wish
to understand man, we cannot do so otherwise than by recognising that
the whole is born from out Divine-Spirituality. When we consider him
and observe how his feelings flow into his muscular activity and how
Divine-Spirituality, the Cosmos, enters into his bones, how the whole
universe lives in the movement of his bones and the whole planetary
system lives in the contraction, expansion and relaxation of his
muscles, when we ponder on this and feel it deeply, we can say with
full understanding: Of a truth man is born from God:
EX DEO
NASCIMUR.
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