XI.
Concerning Beings of the Spirit-Worlds
IF the
soul enters the supersensible world with clairvoyant consciousness, it
learns to know itself there in a way of which in the physical world it
can have no conception. It finds that through its faculty of transformation
it becomes acquainted with beings to whom it is more or less related; but
in addition to this it becomes aware of meeting beings in the supersensible
world to whom it is not only related, but with whom it must compare
itself, in order to know itself. And it further observes that these
beings in supersensible worlds have become what the soul itself, through
its adventures and experiences in the physical world, has become. In
the elemental world beings confront the human soul who have developed
within that world powers and faculties which man himself can only unfold
through still having about him his physical body, in addition to his
etheric body and the other supersensible principles of his being. The
beings here alluded to have no such body with physical senses. They
have so evolved that through their etheric body they have a soul-nature
such as man has through his physical body. Although to a certain degree
they are beings of like nature to himself, they differ from him in not
being subject to the conditions of the physical world. They have no
senses of the kind which man possesses. Their knowledge is like man's;
only they have not acquired it through the gateway of the senses, but
through a kind of ascent, or mounting-up of their ideas and other soul-experiences
out of the depths of their being. Their inner life is, as it were, at
rest within them, and they draw it up out of the depths of their souls,
as man from the depths of his soul draws up his memory-pictures.
In this
way man becomes acquainted with beings who have become within the supersensible
world that which he may become within the physical world. Owing to this,
these beings are a stage higher than man in the order of the universe,
although they may be said to be, in the manner indicated, of the same
nature as he. They constitute a kingdom above man, a hierarchy superior
to him in the scale of beings. Notwithstanding their similarity to man,
their etheric body is different from his. Whereas man is woven into
the supersensible etheric body of the earth through the sympathies and
antipathies of his etheric body, these beings are not earth-bound in
the life of their soul.
If man
observes what these beings experience through their etheric bodies,
he finds that their experiences are similar to those of his own soul.
They have thinking power; they have feelings and a will. But through
their etheric body they develop something which man can only develop
through the physical body. Through their etheric body they arrive at
a consciousness of their own being, although man would not be able to
know anything about a supersensible being unless he carried up into
supersensible worlds the forces which he acquires in the physical body.
Clairvoyant consciousness learns to know these beings through developing
a faculty for observing them by the help of the human etheric body.
This clairvoyant consciousness lifts the human soul up into the world
in which these beings have their field of activity and their abode.
Not till the soul experiences itself in that world, do pictures or conceptions
arise in its consciousness which bring about knowledge of these beings.
For these beings do not interpose directly in the physical world, nor
therefore in man's physical body. They are not present in the experiences
which may be made through that body. They are spiritual, supersensible
beings, who do not, so to say, set foot in the physical world.
If man does not respect the boundary between the physical world and
supersensible worlds, it may happen that he drags into his physical
consciousness supersensible images which are not the true expression
of these beings. These images arise through experiencing the Luciferic
and Ahrimanic beings, who though of like nature to the supersensible
beings just described, are contrasted with them through having transferred
their field of activity and their abodes to the world which man perceives
as the physical world.
When man with clairvoyant consciousness contemplates the Luciferic
and Ahrimanic beings from the supersensible world, after having through
his experience with the guardian of the threshold, learned the right
way to observe the boundary between that world and physical existence,
he learns to know these beings in their reality, and to distinguish
them from those other spiritual beings who have remained in the sphere
of action adapted to their nature. It is from this standpoint that spiritual
science must portray the Luciferic and Ahrimanic beings.
It then
appears that the field of activity adapted to the Luciferic beings is
not the physical but, in a certain respect, the elemental world. When
something penetrates into the human soul which rises as though out of
the waves of that world like pictures, and when these pictures work
with a vivifying effect on man's etheric body, without assuming an illusive
existence in the soul, then the Luciferic essence may be present in
these images, without its activity transgressing against the order of
the universe. In this case the Luciferic nature has the effect of emancipation
upon the human soul, raising it above mere entanglement in the physical
world. But when the human soul draws into the physical body the life
which it should only develop in the elemental world, when it allows
feeling within the physical body to be influenced by sympathies and
antipathies which should only hold sway in the etheric body, then the
Luciferic nature gains through that soul an influence which is opposed
to the general order of the universe. This influence is always present
when in the sympathies and antipathies of the physical world, something
is working besides that love which is based on sympathy with the life
of another being present in that world. Such a being may be loved because
it comes before the one loving it endowed with certain qualities; in
this case there is no admixture of a Luciferic element with the love.
Love which has its basis in those qualities in the beloved being which
are manifest in physical existence, keeps clear of Luciferic interference.
But love, the source of which is not thus in the beloved being, but
in the one loving it, is prone to the Luciferic influence. A being loved
because it has qualities to which, as lovers, we incline by nature,
is loved with that part of the soul which is accessible io the Luciferic
element.
We should therefore
never say that the Luciferic element is bad under all circumstances,
for events and beings of supersensible worlds must be loved by the human
soul in the manner of the Luciferic element. The order of the universe
is not transgressed until the kind of love with which man ought to feel
himself drawn to the supersensible is directed to physical things. Love
for the supersensible rightly calls forth in the one loving it an enhanced
feeling of self; love which in the physical world is sought for the
sake of such an enhanced feeling of self is equivalent to a Luciferic
temptation. Love of the spiritual when it is sought for the sake of
the self has the effect of emancipation; but love for the physical
when it is sought on account of the self has not this effect, but, through
the gratification gained by its means, only puts the self in fetters.
The Ahrimanic
beings make themselves felt in the thinking soul just as the Luciferic
beings affect the feeling soul. The former chain thought to the physical
world. They turn it away from the fact that thoughts of any kind are
only of importance when they assert themselves as part of the universal
order, whose discovery is not bound within physical existence. In the
world into which the human life of the soul is woven, the Ahrimanic
element must exist as a necessary counterbalance to the Luciferic. Without
the Luciferic element, the soul would dream away its life in observation
of physical existence, and feel no impulse to rise above it. Without
the counter-effect of the Ahrimanic element, the soul would fall a victim
to the Luciferic influence; it would underrate the importance of the
physical world, in spite of the fact that some of its necessary conditions
of existence are in that world. It would not wish to have anything to
do with the physical world. The Ahrimanic element has the right degree
of importance in the human soul when it leads to a way of living in
the physical world which is suitable to that world; when we take it
for what it is, and are able to dispense with everything in it which
in its nature must be transitory.
It is
quite impossible to say that a person could avoid falling a victim to
the Luciferic and Ahrimanic elements by rooting them out of himself.
It is, for instance, possible that if the Luciferic element in him were
rooted out, his soul would no longer aspire to the super-sensible; or,
if the Ahrimanic element were eradicated, that he might not any more
realise the full importance of the physical world: the right relation
to one of these elements is arrived at when the proper counterpoise
to it is provided in the other. All harmful effects from these cosmic
beings proceed entirely from one of them becoming the unlimited master
of the situation, whatever it may be, and from not being brought into
the right harmony through the opposite force.
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