The
Influence of the Dead on the Life of Man on Earth
By Rudolf Steiner
A lecture given in Zurich,
3 December 1916
Published in Anthroposophy Today ~ Winter 1988
FROM YESTERDAY'S
lecture you will have seen how the spiritual world, in which we are
between death and a new birth, and the physical world interpenetrate.
Not only so; the spiritual world and the physical interpenetrate even
in our so-called physical life between birth and death. We ourselves
give the directions, as it were, for the way we are born with such
and such characteristics. For we are connected between death and a
new birth with what is taking place here in the physical world, and,
among other things, with the stream of inheritance which eventually
leads to our own birth.
We may now consider in a more inward way the whole line of evolution
which we studied yesterday more externally. We will try to bring
before our souls the connection of man with the spiritual world from
a certain special aspect. Between birth and death we are living here
in the physical world, and the physical world is known to us through
our sense perceptions. It is a trite saying and we need scarcely
repeat it: If we did not have our sense organs, we could know nothing
of our connection with this physical world. All that gives us this
connection through the sense organs with the physical world, falls
away from us when we pass through the gate of death. Hence we may
even say: It is our specific task between birth and death to make
acquaintance with the physical world. We are incorporated in this
physical body in order to make ourselves acquainted through it with
the physical world.
Now we are not only members of the physical world, but equally of the
spiritual worlds. The next spiritual world, as it were adjoining this
physical, is the world which we have grown accustomed to call the
ethereal or elemental. Whether or not the expression is really
fitting is a matter of less consequence. To begin with, this
elemental world is an unknown world for the human being as he now
lives in the physical. It is, in fact, the first of the super-sensible
worlds but it is no less fraught with significance for man than this
physical world of the senses. For as soon as our sense is awakened
for the elemental world — which happens when we are able to
perceive Imaginatively — we realise that this world is peopled
by many beings, no less abundantly than is the physical. Man himself,
inasmuch as he has an etheric body, belongs to the elemental world.
As an ether-being, man too is a citizen of the elemental world; only
the conditions in the elemental world are somewhat different from the
conditions in the physical.
To begin with, I must say something on this one point: the power of
perception for the elemental world cannot begin in man till he is
able entirely to free himself from that which makes him earthly man.
In general it is not even difficult for him to do this. True, it is
more difficult for the man of today than for the man of primeval
times. We have all heard of the primeval atavistic clairvoyance. For
the most part it consisted in this very fact: man was able to free
himself from that which makes him earthly man. As earthly men, as you
all know, we are formed of solid matter only to a very small extent.
To a large extent we consist of liquid; and the moment we can
emancipate ourselves from what is solid in us, the moment we feel
ourselves only in our liquid part, Imaginative experiences can
emerge. It is only our existence in the solid element which prevents
our knowing by Imaginative perception all that surrounds us as the
elemental world. Imaginative perception will surely return to mankind
even as it has been lost. Only the old Imaginative clairvoyance which
is lost was in a way unconscious and dream-like, while that which
will gradually arise in our Fifth post-Atlantean epoch will be a
fully conscious Imaginative seership. By a perfectly normal and
natural process of evolution it will enter into human nature.
Let us now return to what I said before. Our relation to the
elemental world is different from our relation to the ordinary,
physical world. To begin with, I will give one example to confirm
this. In the physical world — apparently at any rate — we
determine our relationships with other beings by our own free human
choice. We form our friendships for ourselves, likewise our other
relations to the beings that surround us. In the elemental world, in
which we are through our etheric body, this is no longer the case in
the same direct way. Through our whole life in the elemental world we
are in a more or less close relationship to certain other elemental
beings. As an independent elemental being — for such we are by
virtue of our etheric body — we are related to a number of
other elemental beings, who accompany us throughout our life, and we
may compare this relationship to the relation of the Sun to the
encircling planets. Our own etheric body is a kind of Sun elemental
being, and is actually accompanied by a number of elemental beings
belonging to it, like the planets to the Sun. These elemental beings,
together with it, constitute a kind of sevenfold entity, as do the
planets and the Sun according to the older conception.
During our whole physical life between birth and death, there is a
constant interplay between these our elemental satellites and
ourselves. Not only does our feeling, our condition, depend on the
way in which our elemental or etheric body is related to its
‘planets’; our relation to the outer world, to certain
outer beings, and notably to other human beings, is regulated by the
mutual relations between these ‘planets’ and our own
etheric body. In future time there will be a kind of medicine which
will reckon especially with what I have now said; there will be a
medical, physiological conception which will ascertain how the one or
the other satellite is related to the etheric body; and according to
this, it will be possible to diagnose the sick or healthy condition
of the patient. For what is called illness today is in truth only the
outer physical picture of what is there in reality. In reality there
is some kind of irregularity in what I have here compared to a
planetary system, and the illness is but an image of this
irregularity.
Of course, one might say forthwith: ‘Well, let the people who
know this establish a new pathology. Hic Rhodus, hic salta, now
let occultism show its art!’ Well, it will do so the moment its
legs are freed! A man cannot dance whose legs are tied, and by the
fettering of the legs in this case I mean the presence of modern
materialism which has simply confiscated the science of medicine.
This state of affairs cannot be improved by one individual or another
doing this or that it can only be improved by the common will of a
larger number of people, strong enough to bring about a system of
medical practice which will make the penetration of medicine with
spiritual principles a practical possibility.
One thing it is important to perceive. St. Paul did not speak in vain
words of untold importance which have, however, never been rightly
understood. For people keep on imagining that they are Christian
while in reality they are not. St. Paul said that sin came into the
world through the law, i.e. sin is there through the law. In a
wider sense, that which mars the order of things is there through the
law. Even today these truths can only be hinted at. For as a rule, if
anything is not in order, our materialistic age will always cry aloud
for a law — quite unaware that whatever is not in order comes
from the very laws that are made. But, as I said, such a thing can
only be hinted at. A very great deal will yet be necessary towards an
understanding of these things. I said, people only imagine that they
are Christians. For such a passage as this one by St. Paul, though it
is read by countless people, is very little understood.
Through the fact that we are etheric beings, we belong to an
elemental world, and there is a certain system which stands in a near
relation to ourselves. This system consists of the elemental beings
or ether-beings who accompany us. Their forces are ordered or
arranged in a certain way; and when we pass through the gate of
death, it is they, by their forces, who draw our etheric body out of
our physical body, and place it — that is to say, place the
human being himself to begin with — into the elemental world.
The elemental world, as I have indicated, is clearly to be perceived
by Imaginative cognition. In it are a multitude of beings whom we may
call nature-spirits, but not only these. In it are also all those
human beings who have just passed physically through the gate of
death. They are only there, however, for a short time, as you know,
for a few days. Then what we call the etheric body is given over to
the elemental world; a second corpse is laid aside. But we must not
imagine that this, the second body which we lay aside, is at all
rapidly disintegrated in that world. That is not so. True, in a
certain sense, it does become dissolved in the elemental world. It
dissolves, it becomes ever more tenuous. But it does not become
imperceptible to those beings who by their very nature can perceive
Imaginatively.
The elemental or etheric body is always perceptible, for instance, to
the human being himself, who has passed through the gate of death.
True, he has laid aside this elemental body and he now lives on
through the time between death and a new birth. But he remains
constantly related to the elemental body which he has laid aside. It
is not as with the physical body, to which man loses his relationship
when he has cast it off. With the elemental body the opposite is the
case; man preserves his relationship to it. Moreover, this
relationship of man to his elemental or etheric body can work right
down into the physical world.
When a human being here in the physical world has made his soul
receptive, when he has acquired the elemental or Imaginative power of
perception, then, too, he can consciously converse in his life of
thought with the dead. Only, of course, these thoughts are far more
refined and delicate than those of ordinary life. Thus he is
consciously connected with the dead. Now the connection of which man
thus becomes conscious is always there in the subconscious, whenever
there was a relation during earthly life between the one who has
remained behind in the physical, and the one who has risen into the
spiritual world. Let us assume that we lost a beloved friend through
death. One who has attained Imaginative perception will be aware of
it but, whether we know it or not, the dead human being works upon
us. He works — if I may so describe it — as though he
were pouring his will into the etheric body which he has laid aside,
as into a mirror, and the mirror, in its turn, were sending on the
rays to us. Via the elemental or etheric body, the dead react
upon the living. This, as it were, is the mediate influence of the
dead upon the living.
To describe where this mediate influence comes to expression, I may
say, it is expressed in our ordinary conceptions and ideas which we
carry with us through the world. As a rule, the human being —
especially in our materialistic age — is aware only of the
conceptions and ideas which portray to him the outer physical
reality. But among the conceptions which we thus carry through the
world, some are perpetually living which are so fine and delicate
that they are not directly perceptible; we simply do not pay
attention to them. If we were wont to observe our soul's life
more intimately, we should soon recognise their presence. But we
constantly let this finer, more delicate life of the soul be
overwhelmed and drowned by the coarser ideas which flow into us from
the surrounding physical world. If it were not so, we should soon
perceive that finer, more intimate thoughts are constantly there in
us. These are due to those who were connected with us and have passed
before us through the gate of death; and who, especially in the first
period after their passage through the gate of death, are able to
communicate their deeds to us.
Through the fact that as ether-beings we belong to the elemental
world, we thus bear the being of the dead with us in our own
conceptions, in our own life of ideas, for a certain length of time.
If we would speak of ‘Monism’ on any basis of reality, we
should chiefly speak of the Monism which I have just described —
the Monism that is formed by the working together of the living and
the dead. In truth, those who have passed through the gate of death
are by no means far away from us; they are far nearer to us than we
believe.
Now man develops more and more as he lives through the time between
death and a new birth, and so he becomes able to work upon the world
down here not only indirectly but directly. From a certain time
onward we can perceive this influence upon us of the departed; their
rays of force begin to penetrate into our soul's life. But this
immediate influence cannot work its way directly into our thoughts,
into our conceptual life. It works its way rather into our habits,
into our whole way of life and conduct; into all this there streams
an influence working downward from spiritual worlds, coming to us
from those who have passed before us through the gate of death.
We must however realise that this working together of the dead and
the living depends on many different conditions. The dead man is in
an environment wherein there are beings of his own kind, that is,
beings of soul, and all the beings who belong to the higher
Hierarchies, down to man himself. And inasmuch as the etheric body
which he has laid aside is his mediator, he can also have perceptions
of the human beings down here, who are, as it were, veiled from him
through the physical body. With the help of his etheric body, he can
penetrate the veil. He who has passed through the gate of death is of
course subject to the conditions under which man must live in the
world of soul and Spirit; he must submit to them. I need only mention
one main point, and you will understand what I mean in this
connection. We know that throughout the world in which we live
Luciferic and Ahrimanic forces are working in the most manifold ways.
If these Luciferic and Ahrimanic forces did not entice us, all that
comes to expression in man as wrong and evil actions would not be
there in the world. The Luciferic and Ahrimanic forces must work upon
man, and must give him the opportunity to follow and obey them. Once
this fact is brought home to us strongly enough, we shall recognise
that man, after all, is a very different being from what we often
make him out to be with our hostile criticisms. If we had the
faculty, already in the physical world, always to see how the
Luciferic and the Ahrimanic work in man, we should judge our fellow
men quite differently.
I do not say that we should generally be less critical; for when we
divert our adverse judgement from man — though we should no
longer be fighting against man himself — we must still be
fighting Lucifer and Ahriman. But against man as man, we should be
infinitely more tolerant. Now he who lives in the soul life in the
time between death and a new birth, practises this tolerance both in
relation to the beings who are with him in the spiritual world and in
relation to those who are still incarnated as men here in the
physical life. It is part of the very character of man, when he has
passed through the gate of death, that he acquires this tolerance. He
always sees through the fact that Lucifer and Ahriman are playing
such and such a part in a human being. He does not say, ‘That
is a bad man, following evil desires’, but he sees through the
fact that Lucifer is playing such and such a part in him. He does not
say, ‘That is an envious fellow’ but he says, ‘Ahriman
is playing such and such a part in him’.
He who lives above, between death and birth, judges in this way, it
belongs to his very being to do so, just as it belongs to our being
to have good eyesight (if we are sound and healthy). Moreover, since
this belongs to his very being, it hurts the dead man infinitely
when, maintaining his connection with us in the physical life (the
connection which was begun during his own life on Earth), he comes up
against an altogether different spirit in ourselves. Assume, for
instance, that out of our personal antipathy we meet with peculiar
hate another human being, who was also connected with the dead man.
This hate will signify infinite pain for the dead who tries to
approach us — as he must do, since he is still connected with
us. This hatred must first be overcome by him; it is like a sword, a
jagged sword, a spear that is shivered constantly against him.
And so the way in which the dead man tries to work into us —
his own experience as he does so — depends very, very much on
the attunement of our soul. Into our ordinary thoughts and ideas
borrowed from the surrounding world, into our feelings and
sentiments, into our temperament and habits, these influences of the
dead are working as I have now described. And there is a constant
mutual interaction between what goes on in the realm of those who
have passed through the gate of death, and our own souls.
If you bear all this in mind, you will say to yourself: Complicated
workings are contained in that which we bear within us as our soul;
and much is necessary fully to perceive all the mysterious forces
that pulsate in the human soul. The soul has very little in its own
consciousness of all that is pulsating in it. But the mood and
attunement of the soul, and its ability or inability in one direction
or another, depend on all these things. For on a large scale all this
is determined once more through our karma. The fact that we are
brought together here with this man or that, and that they in turn
work down upon us in the way I have described, is, of course,
connected with our karma in the widest sense.
In bringing all this before us, we must realise, of course, that our
age has a real longing for what Spiritual Science brings to men; and
the real longings are frequently satisfied today by quite erroneous
methods. Thus there are many people today who have decidedly got
beyond the prejudice which people had in the middle of the 19th
century, and even in the last third of the 19th century — the
prejudice that all things of the soul can still be explained from
physical and physiological effects. Frequently, however, half- or
quarter-truths have far worse effects than complete errors. Thus it
is a half- or quarter-truth which underlies what is so frequently
described today as analytical psychology or psychoanalysis. People
are truly seeking but they are groping in the dark; they divine that
many things are hidden in the foundations of the soul, but they
cannot resolve to take the real steps into the spiritual world, so as
to find what is hidden there, in the depths of the soul.
What do the psychoanalysts say? They say: Observe a human being as he
meets us just in ordinary life. His feeling and condition as a whole
depends very largely, not only on what is there in his consciousness,
but on a variety of factors which lie in the unconscious, beneath the
threshold of consciousness. There comes a man, feeling in a depressed
mood; an irregularity in his whole nervous apparatus is apparent. In
such a case — the psychoanalyst opines — we must look and
see what he may have experienced perhaps many years ago; experiences
which he may not altogether have assimilated, but which he pressed
down into the subconscious.
The psychoanalyst divines quite well that that which has been removed
from consciousness has not therefore been removed from reality; it is
still there, down in the subconscious. But his idea is this: If we
can only entice it forth into the consciousness by a kind of
catechising process, then we shall perceive what is consuming and
gnawing at him down below. (I cannot, of course, explain
psychoanalysis here in all its ramifications; I will only show you a
few features of it.)
Starting from this point, the psychoanalyst looks for many things in
the foundations of the soul. Years ago, the human being had perhaps
this or that ideal of life, this or that hope or plan. He did not
carry it out; he was not able to do so. It is no longer in his
consciousness, for he is living in his present life. But it is not
eliminated from the reality of his soul; there it goes on gnawing
away and consuming him. And his whole mood and condition depends on
what is there beneath in his subconsciousness. Perhaps he had an
unhappy love affair — that is what the psychoanalysts generally
find, for they are on the lookout for it. It is an isolated province
in his subconsciousness; he has fought against it, but it goes on
working. Notably it will go on working — so believe the
psychoanalysts — if feelings of love were there, while the
beloved being was removed; that is to say, if the love remained
unsatisfied.
In addition to these disappointed spring time hopes of life —
in addition to what I have just indicated — the psychoanalyst
seeks in the depths of the soul for what we might call the ‘animal
morass’ at the very basis of human life — the ‘animal
morass’ or slime of life working constantly upward to the
surface — connected, as they conceive it, with all that man
possesses as an animal being, playing upward into his soul's
life. Some psychoanalysts will go still further: if we get further
and further down, we find at length what plays upward into the soul
out of racial and national connections and the like, playing into the
soul's life in more or less unconscious ways. And at last, at
the very bottom, there is something demonic — the most
undefined of all — lying even beneath the ‘animal
morass’, at the very ground of life. Such people, who are among
the special followers of the modern psychoanalysts, will sometimes
gently hint that in these demonic depths beneath are to be found the
impulses that lead people to such subjects as Gnosis, Theosophy and
Anthroposophy. Although it is hinted at in a rather veiled way, still
the hint is there. Read one of the last numbers of the periodical
Wissen und Leben — I think it is called — and you
will find such hints at one place and another, albeit they are rather
hidden between the lines.
I said half- or quarter-truths often have a far worse effect than
complete mistakes. Analytical psychology in its search for the
sub-conscious foundations of the soul contains half and
quarter-truths. Compare it with what we have pointed out today. The
realities that live in the foundations of the soul work in towards us
from the realm of the dead. Here we are led to quite a different way
of thinking; we shall not seek for the ‘animal morass’ of
the soul; we shall not try to interpret this or that mood of the soul
from the aspect of disappointed love affairs. On the contrary, we
shall often have to seek the underlying cause of an unhappy mood of
soul in this or that departed one, for whom we are making
difficulties through our own conduct — which difficulties find
expression in dissatisfactions of one kind or another, surging up
into our consciousness.
In short, we shall do well to bring home to ourselves with true
reverence this actual connection with the spiritual world. It is the
connection of our world, not with an abstract, vaguely pantheistic
spiritual world, but with the real spiritual world wherein those who
have passed through the gate of death are living as real beings. They
are with us even now, as they were with us in life. But what they do
with us now touches our soul far more nearly than what they did in
life, when we were always separated from them by our body and theirs,
which stood between us like a barrier.
Then comes a later time, when man has become utterly free from the
astral body — when he has laid aside the astral. Not long after
this, man is able to work down from the spiritual world into the
physical in a more inward way. In former times, the outer life was
frequently arranged instinctively according to these truths. Customs
that arose in outer life might often be referred, it is true, to
ordinary outer reasons, but an inner reason underlay the outer,
though it was often only known by instinct. I said: the dead, soon
after passing through the gate of death, are in direct connection
with the human beings whom they have left behind, especially with
those to whom they are lovingly united, and the connection is such
that they work upon our habits. For this reason, in the times when
such things were still felt instinctively, care was taken that a son
should remain as far as possible in the whole circle with which his
parents were connected. Learning the same business, spending his life
in the same profession, he should remain where access was easier for
them. All in all, this conservative way of holding on to the same
stream of life was an instinctive expression of the desire to make it
easier for those who had passed through the gate of death to work in
upon those whom they had left behind. For if the latter were in
similar circumstances to those in which the dead themselves had
lived, it made it easier for the dead to find the way to them. In
time to come historians will well observe such intimate impulses and
underlying reasons in the historic evolution of mankind.
Now, as we know, when man has been still longer dead, he will have
completely laid aside the astral body. But this only happens after
decades, for we experience things much slower in the spiritual world
than in the physical. One year of the spiritual world corresponds to
30 years of the physical. Man has a way of hastening here in the
physical world whereas in the spiritual world, so to speak, he always
has to revolve in far larger circles. So, as one spiritual year is
equal to 30 earthly years, in one year of the spiritual he
experiences approximately the same piece of the world as in 30 years
of the physical. He thereby experiences it more intensively, more
inwardly.
All in all, what man lives through on Earth is multiply connected
with the great universe, the macrocosm. Therefore, what is
experienced in the microcosm, in man himself, always finds expression
even in the numerical relations to the macrocosm. I will only draw
your attention to one point: Reckon up the number of days in an
average human life; you get the same number of years — purely
as a number — which the Sun requires to process through the
complete Platonic year, the cosmic year. Man's life is numbered
by as many days as the Sun requires years to advance through the
whole cosmic circle in its precession from one sign of the zodiac to
another. The Sun requires about 25,900 and a few more years to
process through all the signs of the zodiac. Man lives for about as
many days — though, of course, it is not always equal —
in his individual life between birth and death.
Another interesting connection is this one: man has as many breaths
in one day as the number of days he lives, or as the number of years
it takes for the Sun to process through the whole zodiac. You see,
therefore, in the very deepest sense the world is ordered according
to measure and number. One should imagine that this delicate
incorporation of man into the universe — this correspondence of
the harmonies — would lead the crude materialists of our time
beyond their limited outlook which sees nothing more in the whole
universe than a great mechanism. Truly it is a strange mechanism
which contains all its individual beings organically within itself,
in wondrously harmonious numerical relation to the whole.
It is indeed a strange thing. When we consider the world spiritually,
we can actually say: In the evolution which takes its course between
death and a new birth, man advances more slowly in order that he may
do things more thoroughly. Not only so; he advances as many times
more slowly in the spiritual world as Saturn courses around the sun
more slowly than the Earth. Saturn runs its course around the Sun as
many times more slowly than the Earth, as man in the spiritual world
moves more slowly than he moves on the physical Earth. For this
reason, and not because they knew less than the astronomers of today,
the ancients reckoned Saturn as the outermost planet of the solar
system. Even astronomically speaking, they were right, for the other
planets which are now included — Uranus and Neptune —
joined the system at a later time; moreover, they circle around in
quite a different order, even in a different rotation than the
planets belonging to the solar system proper.
Now at least one such spirit-year — that is, 30 earthly years —
must have elapsed before the soul (assuming, needless to say, that a
normal age of 70 or 80 was attained) can enter not merely into the
habits, but into the whole thought and outlook, into the spiritual
life of those whom they have left behind or who join on of their own
free will. Nevertheless, in this way too the dead work into our life
on a very large scale. It is so indeed. In the whole spirit, in the
whole way of thought in which we live, we bear within us the impulses
of men who died long ago and who work into us. Altogether, the
connection of the future with the past is brought about precisely in
this way, through this actual connection of the dead with the living.
The mediate manifestation of the dead, through the etheric body which
they have laid aside, works upon our Imaginative cognition. That
influence which enters, as above described, into our habits, works
upon our Inspirational cognition. And the influence to which I now
refer, which can only work when man has passed through a whole
spirit-year, works — if we are conscious of it — into our
Intuitive cognition. But in any event these influences are working
all the time; nor can we truly understand the sense of evolution
unless we bear these things in mind.
Forgive my inserting at this point a personal remark — you know
I am not fond of doing so, and I do so seldom. Anyone who looks at
what I wrote when I first began my work, decades ago, will see that
at that time I disregarded what I had to bring forward as my own
opinion. I did not write my opinion about Goethe, but tried to
express the thoughts that came forth from Goethe. I did not write my
own Theory of Knowledge, but a Theory of Knowledge implicit
in Goethe's Conception of the World. In this way it is
possible quite consciously to connect oneself with men long dead and
work out of their spirit. Indeed this is what gives one, as it were,
a true, legitimate certificate to influence the living. It is a bad
certificate which people of our time are so very keen upon: namely,
that every individual, scarcely has he conceived an opinion, should
wish to communicate it forthwith to as many followers as possible.
He who is aware of the conditions of existence, the fundamental laws
that work from the spiritual world, knows that in truth a man cannot
rightly work into the depths of the souls of his fellowmen until he
is dead — strange as it may sound. Even then he cannot, till he
has passed through a spirit-year, that is to say, 30 earthly years.
Infinitely much would be achieved if once this selflessness gained
ground a little in the world, so that those who lived later would
connect their own work with the dead, and consciously try to maintain
the continuity in evolution. Whether it be a pure elective affinity,
or some other relationship brought about by karma, to attach
ourselves to those who are trying so hard to send the pure rays of
their influence out of the spiritual world is of infinite
significance, and it is so most of all if we do it consciously.
I have tried to call forth in you a feeling for the way in which the
so-called dead and the so-called living work together. Now we must
realise that the conditions are very different in the spiritual world
and here. You will find a great deal about the conditions of
experience in the spiritual world in the lectures Life Between
Death and a New Birth which I gave a few years ago in Vienna. But
of course one can only select a few points especially important from
one aspect or another. Now here it must be said that there is in the
spiritual world something very similar, and again dissimilar, to our
physical experience.
Before we enter the physical world in the full sense, we undergo the
embryo period of existence. There the conditions of life are very
different from what they become the moment we enter fully into the
physical world as breathers of the outer air. Now in a certain sense
and style, the time we go through after death in the first spirit
year, which is so often called the period of Kamaloca, is very like
the embryo period of existence. Just as the human being calls to his
aid, as it were, another human being by whom he lets himself be borne
into the physical world through the 10 lunar months, so likewise,
through all the wishes and cravings which hold him to the physical
and which he slowly casts aside, he lets himself be borne into the
spiritual world. Moreover, his consciousness in this first year of
the spirit still to some extent resembles his consciousness in the
physical world, although the faculties which are only to be acquired
in the physical world can only be transmitted mediately through the
etheric body. But after this first spirit-year a far higher
consciousness ensues than anything which we can have here in the
physical body.
If you remember many things that were said in the above-mentioned
lectures, you will see how very different is this consciousness in
the spiritual world. You need only remember how much our
consciousness depends on what can enter into us. When we go about as
ordinary men in the physical world, the phenomena of the mineral,
plant and animal kingdoms of nature, and of the physical human
kingdom, come into us along with other experiences of soul —
experiences of civilisation and the like. But after death, what
becomes of the major part of that which enters our soul life through
the faculties we possess here in the physical world? The mineral
world as such — this we no longer perceive at all, as you are
well aware; and of the plant world we only see the all-pervading
life. You can read in my Theosophy how these things are, as we
ascend within the spiritual world.
Experience in the spiritual world is in fact quite different in kind.
Indeed, for these things, there are no words which you can
understand. Our language after all is created for the physical; hence
it is always difficult to describe these things correctly, and one
can easily be misunderstood. Above all, we can only express ourselves
by comparisons. Consider the following: here in the physical world you
stand as it were, in a single point of the whole world structure, and
look out with your eyes in all directions of the surrounding sphere.
In the spiritual world it is not so; there you look in from the
circumference as it were, towards the interior of a hollow sphere.
But this is only a comparison; in reality it is not a hollow sphere,
for time plays a greater part in it than space. Nevertheless, it is
from the circumference that you observe all things. Hence the
conditions of ideation are quite different; even within your
thinking the conditions are quite different.
I will describe it somewhat crudely: suppose a man had passed through
the gate of death 60, 70 or 80 years ago, or even earlier. He feels
distinctly a certain inner experience. When you feel hunger in the
physical life, you do not say ‘the hunger is here’ or
‘the hunger is there’ but ‘the hunger is in
you’. Or again, take the case when you feel pain in this or
that part of your body. So it is when you look inward from the whole
surrounding sphere; you feel that at a certain place there is
something. You know there is something that wishes to have something
to do with you, and now you must begin making great efforts to get
rid of it. Think what this means: to get rid of that which has
manifested itself. And only when you have got rid of it, only then
does there emerge the true being that is trying to reveal itself.
Thus we may say: as spiritual beings we have an idea within us, but
the idea tells us nothing whatever as yet; we must first get rid of
it. Then, when we have got rid of it, then do we find within us —
strange as it may sound, it is so — an angel or archangel who
is revealing himself to us. His presence is first announced to us in
the idea; yet we ourselves must first achieve the actual presence.
Perception in the spiritual world is thus bound up with real labour,
with a strong exertion of our forces. And only the souls who have
remained here in the physical body can to some extent manifest
themselves upward to the dead without their undergoing this exertion.
This is what happens when you concentrate your thoughts on the dead
man, or bring something before him by reading to him or the like. In
all that I have been saying, I only wished to make it clear to you
how altogether different are the conditions of life and experience in
the spiritual world. This being so, you will no longer find it
surprising that one year of spirit time represents 30 years of
physical time. For in the spirit we are in the circumference and look
in towards the centre; it is very important to remember this.
I made it my chief task today to describe to some extent how the
souls who have passed through the gate of death work down into the
world in which the others have remained behind, with whom they were
connected while in the physical body. Thus you have seen once more,
from another aspect, how the world is an interconnected whole. Truly
it is only for outer physical perception that the dead are dead. In
reality, the moment they pass through the gate of death they have a
new way of access to our souls. That is the difference. They now work
into us from within, whereas they formerly worked into us from
without. For us, these things should more and more become no mere
external theories; they should live their way into our consciousness,
till they are no longer a merely theoretic ‘world conception’,
but world perception, or even world feeling. Then will Spiritual
Science bear the fruits which it is meant to bear, and which it truly
can.
One more remark in conclusion. Think what it means that at a certain
period between death and a new birth man must have the inner Feeling
that he carries the Hierarchies within him as his own inner
experience. It is really so. This might well lead the human being to
the most appalling arrogance, which would live as a dim feeling in
his soul when he is reborn. In ancient times there was a natural
limit to such arrogance, in this way: human beings passing through
the gate of death and entering into the spiritual world were somehow
aware that it was not they themselves who were beholding, but that
the highest beings of the Hierarchies were living in them and
communicating the vision to them. But man has lost this connection in
the spiritual world, just as in the physical world he has lost the
old atavistic clairvoyance. Instead there must now come into us what
St. Paul expressed in the words ‘Not I, but Christ in me’,
which words are endowed with real spiritual feeling when we say ‘Out
of God we are born; into Christ we die’.
If we learn this in all its depths, through the feeling which can
come to us in Spiritual Science, that Christ is for the Earth, then
we shall rightly place ourselves into the vision from the surrounding
sphere. Then, having lived through the gate of death with the right
feeling: ‘Into Christ we die’, and gazing in from the
surrounding sphere, among all the beings whom we behold —
beings of the Hierarchies, elemental beings, beings such as the human
souls, incarnate or discarnate — among all these, we shall also
find our own Ego-being; and we shall behold from outside the
relation of this our own Ego to all the other beings. To be able to
have this feeling after we have passed through the gate of death is
of infinite importance. Only if we can have this feeling towards our
own Ego, only then can we find our true way again into physical
incarnation. And there is no other way of having this feeling; we can
only owe it to the right passage through the gate of death —
the passing through the gate of death with the inner feeling: ‘we
have died into Christ’. This union with Christ gives us the
possibility to behold, as it were with the eye of the soul of Christ
Himself, our relation within the spiritual world, to behold ourselves
as Ego being among the other beings.
This, my dear friends, is what I would always like to attain. When,
as a result of such studies as we have made today, we take with us
once more a new piece of knowledge, the knowledge should also be
transformed into inner feeling. Even if all the ideas developed in
this lecture should have passed by us like a dream; if the one
fundamental feeling remains, which I have sought to gather up in
these concluding words, then we shall carry with us into our further
life the real fruits of such a line of thought. For I have tried to
show how the death in Christ can place us rightly into the spiritual
world — so rightly, so abundantly, that we can carry it with us
through the physical world in our next earthly incarnation
We remain together in such feelings, recognising that they have power
to unite us more intensely. So there will by and by arise in the
world the true, invisible community of those who are devoted to
Anthroposophy, holding together through such inner feelings born out
of the clear ideas of Spiritual Science. The world has need of this
indivisible community of souls, able to carry into it the inner force
of such communion as I have just described. In this sense we will be
together spiritually for the future, though for a time we may not be
together physically. So indeed it should always be among us; our
communion in the spirit should sustain our coming together in the
physical.
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