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The Mission of the Archangel Michael
GA 174a

14 February 1918, Munich

VII. Michael's Battle and Its Reflection On Earth—Part I

AT THE PRESENT time of severe trials it must be quite natural to anyone who has a heartfelt interest in the endeavors of anthroposophical spiritual science to reflect upon the relations existing between the fact that this spiritual-scientific movement started at the beginning of the twentieth century to send its impulses into the evolution of mankind and the other fact that mankind of the present age has been engulfed by catastrophic events. How catastrophic these events are for mankind has not yet been fully understood, for people are accustomed today to a life without the spirit. To live without the spirit, however, is to live superficially; and to live superficially causes human beings to sleep away the important impressions of the events taking place around them. To sleep through important events is a special characteristic of the human being of the present age. There are few people today who arrive at an adequate conception of the severity and incisiveness of present-day events. Most of them live from day to day. If an attempt is made to speak of a time which might come later, people—and in many instances precisely those upon whom matters depend—reject it most violently. If among its many tasks spiritual science succeeds in making the human soul more energetic, more awake, it will have fulfilled an important one for our present time. Spiritual-scientific concepts demand a greater exertion of thinking, a greater intensity of feeling than is employed in other concepts, particularly those current in our time.

It is important today to become acquainted with the concepts of spiritual research which can direct and guide us in the understanding of the present age in the most comprehensive sense. Today I shall develop some fundamental concepts upon which we shall build ideas in our next lecture which will throw light upon important factors of the present age. I shall proceed from more general thoughts, touching upon the personal in man, which, from a certain point of view, will furnish the foundation for our subsequent spiritual-scientific considerations.

My dear friends, in the course of our spiritual-scientific studies we must, again and again, emphasize the fact that a change in our state of consciousness runs through our life between birth or conception and death: the change between sleeping and waking. In a general sense, we know the difference between sleeping and waking; in a more intimate way, only spiritual-scientific perception is able to demonstrate to the human soul the true difference between sleeping and waking. In ordinary life we believe that we sleep from falling asleep until awakening, and that we are awake from awakening until falling asleep. But this is only an approximate truth. In reality, the boundary between sleeping and waking is incorrectly drawn. For the state of dull consciousness, which in many respects is unconsciousness, through which we pass as the sleep state extends into our day life; we are also within this state with a part of our being between awakening and falling asleep. We are by no means awake with our entire being between awakening and falling asleep; we are awake only with a part of it and another part continues to sleep even though we consider ourselves to be awake. We are always, in a certain respect, sleeping human beings. It is really so. We are really awake only in regard to our perception and our thinking. By perceiving the external world through our senses, by hearing, seeing, and perceiving. We are completely awake there. We are also awake, although to a lesser degree, in thinking, visualizing. When we form thoughts, when visualizations arise in us, when memories emerge out of the dark recesses of our soul life, we are awake in regard to the processes which we experience. We are awake in regard to the processes of perception and thinking.

You know, however, that besides perception and thinking, our soul life contains feeling and willing. In regard to feeling we are not awake, even though we believe we are. The degree, the intensity of consciousness we have while feeling equals the degree and intensity of consciousness we have while dreaming. And just as dreams arise as pictures out of the unconscious recesses of our souls, so do feelings arise as forces in us. In feeling we are awake to the same degree as in dreaming; the only difference is this: we carry our dreams over from sleep into ordinary waking consciousness, remembering them and thus distinguishing them from the waking state, while in the case of feelings all this takes place simultaneously. Feeling itself is being dreamt in us, but we accompany our feeling with our conceptions. Feeling is not within the conceptions, but we look from conceptions upon feeling just as we look back, after awakening, upon the dream. And since we do this, simultaneously in the case of feeling, we are not aware of the fact that we have only the conception of feeling in actual consciousness, while feeling itself remains in the dream region, like any dream.

And will itself, my dear friends! What do you know of the process occurring when you resolve to take hold of a book and your hand then actually seized the book? What do you know of that which takes place between your conscious thought: “I want to take hold of the book,” and the mysterious processes then occurring in your organism? We know what we think about willing, but willing itself remains unknown to us in ordinary consciousness. Whereas we “dream away” our feeling, we “sleep away” the actual, essential content of our willing.

Through perception and thinking we learn to know a world around us which we designate as the physical-sense world; through feeling and willing we do not learn to know the world in which we exist as feeling and willing human beings. We are constantly in a super-sensible world; the forces of our feeling and willing originate in this super-sensible world, just as our perception and thinking originate in the physical world. We have no bodily organs for feeling and willing; we do have bodily organs for perception and thinking. Many physiologists believe that organs for feeling and willing exist; this shows that they do not know what they are talking about. Physiologists who really think do not believe this.

What I have described above is the ordered state in which we live between birth and death, a state in which we are awake in regard to perception and thinking, but asleep in regard to feeling and willing.

The condition is different between death and a new birth; it is reversed, in a certain sense. We begin then to be awake in regard to our feeling and willing, and we sleep away our perception, our thinking, although sleep is a different state in the world in which we then dwell with our souls. From what I have just stated you will see that the so-called dead are different from the so-called living in that the so-called living sleep away feeling and willing which constantly stream through their being; the dead stand within this feeling and willing. It will not be difficult for you to understand that the dead dwell in the same world in which we dwell as the so-called living. We are separated from the dead merely because we do not perceive the world in which they live and weave. The dead are always around us; we are surrounded also by those being who live without having physically incarnated. We only fail to perceive them.

You need only form the conception of a human being sleeping in a room: objects are around him, but he does not perceive them. The fact that something is not perceived is no proof that it is not there. In regard to the world of the dead we are in exactly the same position in which we are in regard to the world of physical beings while we sleep. We live in the same world with the dead and with the higher hierarchies: they are in our midst, but we are separated from them merely through the nature of our consciousness.

My dear friends, from this it follows that the human being perceives and understands only a part of that reality within which he actually exists. If the human being were to grasp full reality, his knowledge would be quite different from what it is today. This knowledge, then, would be comprised not only of the forces that come from the kingdom of nature known to us, but also of the forces of the higher spiritual beings and the forces that come from the realm of the so-called dead. Today these facts are considered extremely grotesque by the great majority of people. Yet, for ever wider circles of mankind and especially for those whose concern it is to be interested in the evolution and progress of human life these ideas should become a matter that must be penetrated by cognition. For right up to our time, more or less, the human being was guided by dark, unknown forces in regard to all that he cannot perceive in his surroundings. Guidance by these obscure, unknown forces has more or less ceased in our age. (We shall have to speak about this in our next lecture.) Today the human being must enter into conscious relationship with certain forces which reach over into our world from the realm of the so-called dead.—It will not be easy to make human beings conscious of these things to the degree that is necessary in order to put the real, the true in the place of the fantastic inadequateness which pervades our age and which has brought about such great catastrophes. In regard to this I should like to draw your attention to only one point, on fact:

Among the many so-called “scientific” courses there are historical studies. History is taught and studied in schools. But what is this history? Any well-informed person who is acquainted with the literature of earlier times knows that what today is called the science of history is not much more than a hundred years old. I do not want to say more about this. People consider and write history with the same thoughts and concepts they employ in external ordinary life when observing nature. But no one asks whether it is permissible to observe historical life in the same way one observes external nature. It is not permissible. For the historical life of mankind is governed by impulses which cannot be grasped with the concepts of our waking consciousness. Anyone who is really able to observe history knows that we are governed by impulses in historical life which, for ordinary consciousness, are only accessible to the dream state. Just as mankind dreams away the life of feeling, so it dreams away the impulses of history. If we attempt to observe the historical life of mankind with the concepts which are excellent for natural science, we cannot truly grasp it: we observe it only on its surface. What is it that is taught and studied as history in the schools? It is nothing more, in regard to real history, than the description of a corpse is in regard to the whole human being. History as it is taught today is the study of a corpse. The study of history must undergo a complete transformation. In the future it will only be possible to understand what works in history with inspired concepts, with inspiration. Then we shall have true history. Then we shall know what is in that governs mankind, what it is that works from historical life into social life.

My dear friends, what I am stating here has a deep significance. People think they understand social-historical life. They do not understand it, because they want to grasp it with the ordinary concepts of daily waking life. This does not become evident when history is written, for little seems to depend upon whether or not the facts are actually true. I should like to give you an example of this: We learn from history books that America was discovered in 1492. Generally speaking, this is correct; but from what is thus written in history books we form the conception that prior to 1492 America was completely unknown, as far as we may go back in history. But this is not the case. America was unknown for only a few centuries. Still in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries there existed a lively traffic between Iceland, Ireland and America. Medical herbs and other goods were imported into Europe from America. For certain reasons connected with the inner karma of Europe and the early role of Ireland, Rome made every possible effort to cut Europe off from America so that America would be forgotten. This effort on the part of Rome was not detrimental to European conditions at the time; it was well meant.

I only intend to show by this example that a fact need not necessarily be a historical fact; that we may be completely ignorant historically regarding an important matter.

To have historical knowing or to be historically ignorant in regard to the social life of mankind is, on the other hand, of great importance. How often today do we hear people say: we must think thus and so about this or that event because history teaches thus and so. Take modern literature, especially present-day magazines and newspapers and you will see how often the phrase is employed: “History teaches thus and so,” The human being partly sleeps away the historical events in the midst of which he lives, but he nevertheless forms a judgment about them or one is inculcated in him. The phrase: “history teaches thus and so” is very frequently heard, and at the beginning of the war, important men states what history taught them concerning the duration of the war. It was the honest conviction of the so-called “clever people” that, according to the general social and economic conditions of the earth, the war could not last longer than from four to six months! The outcome of this prophecy was similar to that of another historical prophecy made by a much greater spirit, to be sure, but which was formed by the ordinary conceptions of ever-day consciousness. Such conceptions cannot lay hold of history, because history is dreamt away, even partly slept away. It can only be grasped with great concepts. When Friedrich von Schiller became professor of philosophy at the University of Jena, he delivered his world-famous inaugural speech about the study of history. This was shortly before the outbreak of the French Revolution. He stated his conviction derived from history but gained with ordinary concepts. I am not quoting literally, but the following is what Schiller, who certainly was not an insignificant personality, propounded as his conviction: History teaches that many quarrels and wars occurred in ancient times, and from what took place then we can expect disharmony among the European peoples in the future. They will, however, consider themselves members of a great family and will no longer tear each other to pieces.—thus Friedrich von Schiller. Shortly thereafter in 1789, the French Revolution broke out. All that befell the European family of peoples in the nineteenth century, and what is happening now, so many years later, has certainly annihilated the co-called historical judgment of Schiller in a most thorough fashion.

History will only teach us something if we are able to penetrate it with inspired concepts. For the historical life of mankind is influenced not only by the so-called living, but by the souls of the dead, by the spirits with whom the so-called dead live, just as we live with the beings of the animal, plant, and mineral realms. Mankind attaches great value to mere phrases. But it must wean itself from this habit. It can do so only if it acquires true concepts, concepts permeated with reality. A very important concept is that which shows us that we are separated from the so-called dead only through our consciousness which is a sleeping consciousness in regard to the world of feeling and willing in which the dead surround us. It is a sleeping consciousness similar to the consciousness in which we dwell between falling asleep and awakening as regards the physical objects around us.

Clairvoyant consciousness confirms, step by step, that which has been characterized here in general terms.

The question, however, may arise: How is it that the human being knows nothing about the world in which he lives, through which he passes with every step of his life? Well, my dear friends, the very way in which clairvoyant consciousness offers concrete enlightenment concerning the intercourse with the so-called dead is the living proof of the fact that for ordinary consciousness the world in which the dead live must remain unknown. I need only relate some of the characteristic traits of this intercourse with the so-called dead which may take place with developed clairvoyant consciousness, and you will see from this why we know nothing in ordinary life about this intercourse with the dead. It is possible—although it is, in a certain respect, a very delicate matter—still, it is possible that the world of the dead may lay itself open to awakened consciousness, that the world of the dead may be perceived by the human being, that he may enter into conscious relationship with the individual dead person. The human being must, however, acquire a completely different consciousness if he wishes to enter into an actual and secure relation with the dead person. He must acquire a consciousness which is completely different form the one employed in the physical world. Let me describe here a few characteristic traits.

In the physical world we have certain habits in our relation to another human being. If I speak to someone here on the physical plane, ask him something, communicate something to him, I am conscious of the fact that the speech proceeds from my soul, through my speech organs, and passes over to him. I am conscious of the fact that I speak. I am conscious of this fact also in regard to external perception. And if this other human being here on the physical plane answers me or communicates something to me, then I hear his words, his words sound out to me.

This is not the case in fully conscious intercourse with the dead. (In half-conscious intercourse the matter is somewhat different, but I am speaking here of fully conscious intercourse.) In fully conscious intercourse with the dead matters are reversed. They are quite different from what we expect. When I confront the dead person, he speaks in his soul what I intend to ask him or what I wish to communicate to him: this sounds out to me from him. And what he intends to say to me sounds out of my own soul. We have to become accustomed to this, my dear friends. We must accustom ourselves to hearing what the other person says as sounding out of the spiritual outer world. This is so different from everything we are accustomed to experience here in the physical world that it does not occur to us at all to take any stand in regard to it. For just consider the following: At one time or another in life something speaks within your soul. You certainly will ascribe it to yourself. The human being is in certain respects egotistical, and if something arises within his soul he is inclined to ascribe it to his own imagination, to his own genius. We only learn to recognize through clairvoyant consciousness that much that arises in our souls is in truth told us by the dead. The realm of the dead constantly plays into our will, into our feeling. Something arises in us which we may call a good idea: in truth it is a communication from the dead. We also are unfamiliar with the other aspect of the matter and pay no attention to what may appear, out of the grey spiritual environment, as if it were our own thoughts surrounding us. If a human being can be sufficiently objective in regard to his own thoughts to experience them as if they were hovering around him, then the dead understand these thoughts.

It is true that the human being, even in ordinary consciousness, is in connection with the dead, but he does not become aware of it because he is not able to interpret the facts which I have just described. For we must realize that besides sleeping, waking and dreaming, we have two other states of consciousness. We have two other, extraordinarily important states of consciousness, but we pay not attention to them in ordinary life. We fail to pay attention to them for a certain reason which you will appreciate at once when I name these two states of consciousness: we have the state of falling asleep and the state of waking up. They are of short duration and pass so quickly that we pay no attention to their content. But the most important things occur at the moment of falling asleep and the moment of waking up. If we learn to know the real nature of these two moments, we all, in a certain respect, acquire the right concepts concerning the relationship of the human being to the world in which the dead co-exist with us.

Man is constantly in connection with the world of the dead, and this connection is especially vivid at the moment of falling asleep and the moment of waking up. Clairvoyant consciousness shows that at the moment of falling asleep the human being is especially fitted to ask questions of the dead, give information to the dead; in general, to turn to the dead. At the moment of waking up the human being is especially fitted to receive communications, messages from the dead. He receives them rapidly and since he wakes up directly afterwards, they pass him by quickly and the tumult of waking life drowns them out. Not so long ago, more primitive people in their atavistic state knew these facts and they hinted at them; but under the influence of our materialistic culture such things perish even in remote regions. Anyone who grew up among the old peasants in rural districts knows that one of their fundamental rules was that on awakening in the morning one should remain quiet for a moment and refrain from looking out of the window into the light. These people tried to protect what worked upon the soul at the moment of waking from the rush and turmoil of waking life; they tried to remain quiet for a moment in their darkened room and not look out of the window immediately upon awaking.

It is not too difficult to observe that the moments of waking up and of falling asleep are of a quite special character. But in order to become aware of such things we need a certain wakefulness of thinking. Wakefulness of thinking is a faculty which has never been lacking to such an extent as it is today. I could give you grotesque examples of this. Let me quote one of the banal examples that permeate every-day life and can be met at every turn, as it were.

A few days ago I noticed an advertisement in a newspaper which filled about one eighth of the page. It advertised the wide-spread Memory Course of a man called Poehlmann. It stated that only by employing the method of Herr Poehlmann was it possible to gain influence over other people. No other method would do. I am not speaking now about whether it is permissible or not, whether it is right or wrong to try to “gain influence” over other people; this does not concern us at the moment. I am drawing your attention to the form of the advertisement. It stated: Certain people pretend to be able to gain influence over others by means of personal magnetism or by strengthening this or that force in human nature. It can easily be proved that these people do not speak the truth, for not one will be able to say that he succeeded through his personal influence in making Mr. Rothschild, or any other rich man, give him a million dollars. Since it is a proven fact that this did not occur—and it certainly would have been tried had there been a chance of success—it is also a proven fact that no influence may be gained over people by this method. Influence may only be gained on the path of science and education.—And then the method of Poehlmann is described.

Now we know that quite a number of people will become convinced through this advertisement that all other methods of trying to influence people are useless, for, has it not been proved that they were unable to influence Mr. Rothschild to leave them his millions? But how many people are there, you may ask yourselves, who read this advertisement and at once raise the objection: does this Poehlmann have students who succeeded in gaining Rothschild's millions? You need only ask yourselves to how many people this obvious thought will occur!

This is a trivial example, but an example which shows you how thinking fails to wake up in regard to what we read. I have chosen this example, first, because of its every-day character, and secondly, because it goes without saying that among those present there is nobody who would fail to observe that even this Poehlmann did not succeed in getting the millions. It is a foregone conclusion that all those who would be taken in by such an advertisement are not present here, and out of politeness I do not mention an example which could appeal to any of my present hearers! But what I want to say is that from morning to night, people read these things. It occurs in countless instances. They say: We pay not attention to them. Is that really so? The other day I read a speech in which the following sentence occurred: “Our relationship with a certain country is the core which must give the direction to our politics in the future.” Just imagine the construction of this thought: a “relationship' is a “core” which becomes a “direction”! People who think like this are in a position to do all kinds of things in life! But we do not notice the connections that exist between such crippled thinking and the public life.

It is necessary today to pay attention to this lack of wakefulness in thinking which is a mark of our culture. To have thoughts that can be carried out: this is the first demand if we wish to become aware of the revelations of the moments of going to sleep and of awakening.

I once listened to an address by a very famous professor of literature and history; it was his inaugural address and he tried his best. He formulated all kinds of literary-historical questions and at the conclusion he said: You see, gentlemen, I have led you into a forest of question marks.—I pictured it to myself: a forest of question marks? Just think: a forest of question marks!

Only he who is accustomed to carrying through the concepts which arise in him, that is, he who develops wakefulness in his thinking, is prepared to pay attention to such things as the moments of waking up and falling asleep. However, even though something is not perceived, it nevertheless exists. And the intercourse between the human being and the dead exists and is especially strong at the moment of falling asleep and at the moment of waking up. In reality, every human being poses countless questions and gives information to his beloved dead at the moment of falling asleep and receives messages and answers from them at the moment of waking up. This intercourse with the dead, however, may be cultivated in a certain way. We have previously described several ways of cultivating it; today we shall add the following:

There is a certain difference in regard to the thoughts which will lead us to a relation with a dead person at the moment of falling asleep; not every thought is equally suitable. Anyone who does not merely lead a sensual-egotistical life will, out of a healthy feeling, have the longing not to interrupt the relation which karma has brought him with certain personalities who have now passed through the portal of death. He certainly will frequently connect his thoughts with these personalities. And the thoughts which we connect with our conception of the departed personalities may produce an actual intercourse with the dead; even though we are unable to pay attention to what happens at the moment of falling asleep. Certain thoughts, however, are more favorable than others for such an intercourse. Abstract thoughts, thoughts which we form with a certain indifference, even perhaps only from a sense of duty, are little suited to pass over to the dead at the moment of falling asleep. But thoughts, concepts, which arise from the experience of a special interest which united us in life are well suited to pass over to the dead. If we remember the dead person in such a way that we do not merely think of him with abstract thoughts and cold concepts, but recall a moment when we grew warm at his side, when he told us something dear to our heart; if we remember the moments we have lived through with him in a community of feeling, and in a community of willing; if we remember the times we undertook and decided something together which we both valued and which led us to a common action—in short, something which made our hearts beat as one; if we recall vividly this mutual beating of our hearts: then all this colors our thought of the departed one so it is able to stream over to him at our next moment of falling asleep. It does not matter whether we have this thought at nine in the morning, at noon, or at two in the afternoon. We may have it at any time during the day: it will remain and stream over to the dead person at the moment of our falling asleep.

At the moment of waking up we may, in turn, receive answers, messages from the departed one. It does not necessarily have to be at the moment of waking up that this arises in our soul, since we may be unable to pay attention to it then; but in the course of the day something may arise in our soul in the form of a good idea, an inspiration, we might say, if we believe in such things. But also in regard to this certain conditions are more favorable, others less so. Under certain conditions it is easier for the dead to find access to our soul. The conditions are favorable if we have acquired a clear conception of the being of the departed one, if we were so deeply interested in his being that it really stood before our spiritual eye. You will ask: Why does he say that? I someone was close to us we certainly have a conception of his being!—I do not believe this at all, my dear friends. People pass one another in our time and know each other very, very little. This may not alienate us from the other being here in the physical world; but it alienates us from the being who dwells in the world of the dead. Here in the physical world there are numerous unconscious and subconscious forces and impulses which bring people close to one another, even though they do not want to learn to know each other. It is supposed to happen in life, as some of you probably have read, that people may be married for decades and yet have very little knowledge of one another! In such cases the impulses which bring these people together do not rest upon mutual knowledge. Life is permeated everywhere by subconscious or unconscious impulses. These subconscious impulses bind us together here on earth, but they do not bind us to the being who has passed through death before us. In order to effect such a connection it is necessary that we have received into our soul something through which the being of the departed one lives vividly in us. And the more vividly it lives in us, the easier it is for that being to have access to our soul; the easier it is for him to communicate with us.

This is what I wanted to tell you about the intercourse, constantly occurring, between the so-called living and the so-called dead. Every one of us is in constant intercourse with the so-called dead, but the reason we do not know it is that we are unable to observe sufficiently the moment of falling asleep, the moment of waking up. I have told you all this in order to give a more concrete form to your connection with the super-sensible world in which the dead dwell. This connection will take on a still more definite shape if we consider the following relationships:

The young die and the old die. The death of younger people is different from the death of older people in its relation to the living human beings they leave behind. Such things can only be discussed if it is possible to focus one's attention upon definite individual conditions in this field. I describe this not out of a general knowledge, but as a summary of what has actually occurred in definite individual cases. If clairvoyant consciousness observes what happens when children die, when young people leave their parents and family and pass through the portal of death, and if one learns to know how these souls live on, the knowledge which thus arises may be summarized in the following words:

The consciousness of these young people that have passed through the gate of death may be characterized by saying that they are not lost to the living; they remain here, they remain in the neighborhood, in the being of those they have left behind. For a long time these young people do not separate from those they have left behind; they remain within their sphere—The matter is different in the case of older people that have died. It is easiest to express these things epigrammatically. The souls of these human beings who have died in the later years of their lives do not lose, on their part, the souls of those who have stayed behind. Thus, while those who have remained behind do not lose the younger souls, the older people, after having passed through death's door, do not lose the souls of the living in spite of the latter's being here on earth. They take along with them, as it were, what they wish to have from us. It is easy for them to do so; while the souls of younger people can have what they need from us only if they remain more or less within the sphere of the survivors. And this is just what they do.

It is possible to study these relationships in a way that will ascertain the facts I have just described. The study will, of course, have to be carried out with clairvoyant consciousness. If clairvoyant consciousness studies grief and the pain of separation, it will find that these are two completely different states. Human beings do not know this, but if one observes the grief, the sorrow in the soul of a person over a deceased child, one will find it something quite different from the grief and sorrow which may be observed if an older person has died. Although human beings do not know it, these inner soul states are fundamentally different.

It is a strange fact: If parents mourn a child that has died at an early age, this mourning, has it its actual content and deeper impulse, is only a reflection in the soul of the parents of what the child experiences. The child has remained here and what he feels penetrates into the souls of those who mourn him, calling forth an impulse. It is a pain of compassion; it is in reality the pain or sorrow of the child himself which the parents experience; of course, they ascribe it to themselves, but it is a compassionate grief. Do not misunderstand me, my dear friends; we must take the expression I am going to use in a reasonable sense, without attaching to it any secondary meaning. We might say: If a young person dies we are possessed by the pain from the departed one's soul life (—we are “possessed” in a normal fashion which is not detrimental), he lives on in us, and what expresses itself as pain in his life in us.

It is different when we mourn an older person who has left us. There a pain appears which is not the reflection of what lives in the departed one, for he is really able to receive what lives in our soul; he himself does not lose us. It is impossible for us to be possessed by his pain, by his feelings, for he has no longing to penetrate us with his feelings, for he has no longing to penetrate us with his feelings, because he draws us after him. He does not lose us. Therefore this pain, this mourning is an egotistical path, an egotistical mourning. This is not meant as a reproof, for such pain and mourning are justified; but it is necessary to differentiate between the two kinds of mourning.

After having thus spoken about mourning our departed ones and the way we continue to live with them, let us now proceed in our considerations to the dead themselves. Since the relation to a person that has died in youth is so different from the relation to a person that departed later in life, you will readily understand that there must be a difference in the way of commemorating them. In regard to a child we shall choose the right ritual, the right commemoration, we shall bear him in our memory in the right way, if we take into consideration that the child has remained with us, that he lives with us and that he loves to become familiar with that which we would have been able to impart to him, had he lived. Experience shows that children after their death long to find in the commemoration which we offer then, general human relationships; they long to find in the funeral service that which is of general interest and has little to do with special interests. Therefore, the Roman-Catholic funeral service is most suitable for children; it is a general ritual, valid for everyone in the same way. A child that has died would like to have a funeral service that is of a general human character, valid for everyone, and not for him alone.

The Protestant funeral service during which a speech is made, entering upon the special, individual life relationships of the departed one is most suitable for the commemoration of an older person who has died. And if we wish to foster the memory of an older departed person, it is best to cling to details of his life which were characteristic of him and to look in his special, individual life for the thought with which we celebrate his memory.

From this you see, my dear friends, that, properly considered, spiritual science cannot remain mere theory. It shows us something of the relationships which exist in the world from which we are separated merely through the fact that we dream away our feelings and sleep away our will impulses. It speaks of the worlds within which we exist with feeling and will. If we take hold of spiritual-scientific thoughts with sufficient intensity, with proper energy, they will not remain thoughts but will act upon feeling and will.—Just imagine the fruitful effect of these ideas upon life! Clergymen who do not adhere to mere abstract theology will be helped by these ideas in conducting funeral services in the proper way and with the proper tact.

This is not surprising; for the world of which spiritual science speaks is the real world in which our feelings and our will impulses live. Thus, what spiritual science is able to give works, in turn, upon feeling and will. It works upon feeling if we develop our feelings in regard to the dead. But it must also work upon the will impulses. We should pay special attention to this in our time. For, my dear friends, if we were to trace the will impulses of the human beings of the present day, we would not come upon very deep regions of the human soul. It is imperative today that men look for spiritual impulses for their external life. As I have already said, people still reject this. But they will have to learn it; for this age will become the great task master for the generation that must live through it, the task master to a much greater degree than has been the case so far.

We shall link our next lecture to the concepts I offered to you today, which were concerned with the individual personal element, and shall then speak about the conditions of our present age from a truly spiritual-scientific viewpoint.

Neunter Vortrag

Bevor ich zu dem Gegenstand unserer heutigen Betrachtung übergehe, ist es mir ein Herzensbedürfnis, in meinem persönlichen und im Namen unserer Sache meine tiefste Befriedigung darüber auszusprechen, daß die Räumlichkeiten, in denen wir uns heute hier zusammenfinden, einem Ziel, einer Arbeit, einer Bestrebung hier in München dienen können, die in so außerordentlich segensreicher Weise zu wirken verspricht, zu wirken auch schon begonnen hat, und von der wir uns denken müssen, daß sie bedeutende Impulse senden kann in das Geistesleben unserer Zeit.

Übergehend zu dem Gegenstand unserer Betrachtung, möchte ich, insbesondere in dieser Zeit, bei dieser Gelegenheit, nicht unterlassen, darauf hinzuweisen, daß demjenigen, der sich für die Bestrebungen unserer anthroposophisch orientierten Geisteswissenschaft wirklich herzlich interessiert, naheliegen muß in dieser Zeit schwerster Menschheitsprüfung, nachzusinnen über die Beziehungen, welche bestehen zwischen der Tatsache, daß gerade in dieser Zeit vom Beginne des 20. Jahrhunderts an, diese geisteswissenschaftliche Richtung versuchte, ihre Impulse in die Menschheitsentwickelung hineinzusenden, und der anderen Tatsache, daß die Menschheit in der Gegenwart mit ihren anderen Bestrebungen, wie man wohl zugeben muß, in katastrophale Ereignisse auf vielen Gebieten hineingekommen ist. In welch katastrophalen Ereignissen die Menschheit darinnen ist, davon macht man sich heute in den weitesten Kreisen noch nicht einen genügend schweren und eindrucksvollen Begriff. Man ist ja heute vielfach gewohnt, ohne den Geist leben zu wollen. Ohne den Geist leben zu wollen, heißt aber im Grunde genommen doch oberflächlich leben, und oberflächlich leben bedingt auf der anderen Seite, daß man vieles verschläft, was im besonderen Eindruck macht aus den Ereignissen, die um uns herum sind. Und man muß schon sagen, die Menschen in der Gegenwart sind besonders darauf hinorganisiert, vieles zu verschlafen. Die wenigsten suchen sich einen hinlänglichen Begriff von der Schwere und Eindringlichkeit der Gegenwartsereignisse zu machen. Die meisten leben von heute auf morgen. Und wenn man je einmal den Versuch macht, von einer Zeit zu sprechen, die später kommen könnte, dann weisen das die Menschen, und oftmals gerade diejenigen, auf die mancherlei ankommt, in der heftigsten Weise zurück. Wenn Geisteswissenschaft unter ihren mancherlei Aufgaben diese erfüllt, die Menschenseele etwas energischer zu machen, etwas aufgewachter zu machen, dann hat sie ja im Grunde genommen gerade für unsere Gegenwart ein Wichtiges erfüllt. Geisteswissenschaftliche Begriffe erfordern eben eine größere Anstrengung des Denkens, eine größere Intensität des Fühlens und Empfindens als andere Begriffe, namentlich als diejenigen, die die Gegenwart eigentlich beherrschen.

Insbesondere in dieser Zeit ist es nicht unwichtig, sich bekanntzumachen gerade mit den aus der Geistesforschung zu gewinnenden Begriffen, die hineinweisen, hineinleiten können in das Verständnis der Gegenwart im weitesten Sinn. Ich will heute einige grundlegende Begriffe entwickeln, auf denen wir dann am nächsten Zweigabend einiges aufbauen können, Begriffe, die geeignet sind, Wichtiges in der Gegenwart zu beleuchten. Heute will ich von allgemeineren Vorstellungen, von mehr das Persönliche des Menschen berührenden Vorstellungen ausgehen, die aber dann, von einem gewissen Gesichtspunkte aus, die Grundlagen für die nächsten Betrachtungen im geisteswissenschaftlichen Sinne uns bieten sollen.

Man muß es ja im Verlaufe der geisteswissenschaftlichen Betrachtungen immer wieder und wiederum betonen, wie ein Wechsel unserer Bewußtseinszustände unser Leben durchzieht zwischen unserer Geburt oder Empfängnis und unserem Tode: der Wechsel zwischen Schlafen und Wachen. Im allgemeinen Sinne, in großen Zügen kennt der Mensch den Unterschied zwischen Schlafen und Wachen; in intimerer Bedeutung kann erst eine geisteswissenschaftliche Anschauung den wahren Unterschied zwischen Schlafen und Wachen vor die menschliche Seele führen. Im gewöhnlichen Leben meint man, man schlafe nur eben vom Einschlafen bis zum Aufwachen, und man sei wach vom Aufwachen bis zum Einschlafen. So ist aber die Sache nur in groben Zügen. In Wahrheit ist diese Grenze, die wir da ziehen zwischen Schlafen und Wachen, durchaus falsch gezogen. Denn der Zustand des dumpfen Bewußstseins, der in vieler Beziehung kein Bewußtsein ist, das, was wir so als Schlafzustand durchmachen, das dehnt sich hinein in unser Tagesleben, darin sind wir mit einem Teil unseres Wesens auch vom Aufwachen bis zum Einschlafen. Wir wachen nämlich vom Aufwachen bis zum Einschlafen keineswegs mit unserem gesamten menschlichen Wesen, sondern wir wachen nur mit einem Teil davon, und ein anderer Teil schläft fort, auch wenn wir uns wachend meinen. Wir sind immer in einer gewissen Beziehung schlafende Menschen. Richtig wach sind wir eigentlich nur mit Bezug auf unser Wahrnehmen und mit Bezug auf unser Vorstellen. Indem wir durch unsere Sinne die Außenwelt wahrnehmen, indem wir hören, sehen und so weiter, sind wir in diesem Hören, Sehen, kurz, in diesem Wahrnehmen wachend; da wachen wir vollständig. Wir sind auch wachend, obwohl in einem geringeren Grade, im Vorstellen. Wenn wir uns Gedanken bilden, wenn Vorstellungen in uns ablaufen, wenn die Erinnerungen heraufziehen aus dunklen Untergründen des Seelenlebens, dann sind wir wach in bezug auf die Vorgänge, die wir da durchleben, also mit Bezug auf die Vorgänge des Wahrgenommenen, des Wahrnehmens, des Vorstellens.

Sie wissen aber, wir haben in unserem Seelenleben außer dem Wahrnehmen und dem Vorstellen noch das Fühlen und das Wollen. Mit Bezug auf das Fühlen sind wir nicht wach, wenn wir uns auch wachend meinen, sondern mit Bezug auf das Fühlen wissen wir von alldem, was in uns vorgeht, wenn wir fühlen, nicht mehr, als was wir wissen, wenn wir im Schlafe träumen. Der Grad, die Intensität des Bewußtseins, in denen wir sind, während wir fühlen, ist ganz gleich dem Grad, der Intensität des Bewußtseins, wenn wir träumen. Und wie die Träume als Bilder heraufsteigen aus unbewußten Untergründen der Seele, so steigen als Gefühlskräfte eben die Gefühle herauf. Nicht wachender sind wir, indem wir fühlen, als indem wir träumen; nur daß wir die Träume, nachdem wir geschlafen haben, in das gewöhnliche wache, vorstellende Bewußtsein hereinbringen und den Traum von dem Wachen dadurch unterscheiden, daß wir uns an den Traum erinnern, während wir beim Gefühl das gleichzeitig machen. Das Gefühl selbst wird geträumt in uns, aber wir begleiten unser Gefühl mit den Vorstellungen. In den Vorstellungen haben wir nicht das Gefühl drinnen, sondern wir schauen von dem Vorstellen auf das Gefühl so hin, wie wir nach dem Aufwachen auf den Traum hinschauen; nur tun wir das beim Gefühl gleichzeitig, daher werden wir dessen nicht bewußt, daß wir eigentlich im wirklichen Bewußtsein nur die Vorstellung des Gefühls haben. Das Gefühl ist unten in den Traumregionen wie der Traum selbst.

Und der Wille selber, Sie können es schon rein äußerlich erkennen: Was wissen Sie von dem, was eigentlich geschieht, wenn Sie den Entschluß fassen, ein Buch zu ergreifen und die Hand dann dieses Buch ergreift? Was wissen Sie, was sich da abspielt zwischen Ihren Vorstellungen, die Sie allein im Bewußtsein haben: Ich will das Buch ergreifen — und all den geheimnisvollen Vorgängen, die sich dann im Organismus abspielen? Wir kennen das, was wir über das Wollen denken, aber für das gewöhnliche Bewußtsein wissen wir nichts von dem Wollen. Während wir das Gefühl verträumen, verschlafen wir den eigentlichen wesentlichen Inhalt des Wollens. Indem wir wahrnehmender, vorstellender Mensch sind, wachen wir; indem wir aber während des Wachens fühlen und wollen, träumen und schlafen wir. So dehnt sich im Fühlen und im Wollen der Schlafzustand in unser wachendes Bewußtsein herein. Wir müssen daher sagen: Der Zustand, in dem wir vom Einschlafen bis zum Aufwachen mit Bezug auf unseren ganzen Menschen sind, eignet uns in bezug auf unser Fühlen und unser Wollen auch, wenn wir wachen.

Durch das Wahrnehmen und durch das Vorstellen lernen wir eine Welt um uns herum erkennen, die wir als die physisch-sinnliche Welt bezeichnen; durch das Fühlen und durch das Wollen lernen wir die Welt, in der wir sind als fühlende und wollende Menschen, nicht kennen. Wir sind fortwährend in einer übersinnlichen Welt. Aus dieser übersinnlichen Welt stammt unser Fühlen und unser Wollen mit Bezug auf ihre Kräfte gerade so, wie unser Wahrnehmen und unser Vorstellen aus der physisch-sinnlichen Welt stammt. Für das Fühlen und für das Wollen haben wir keine körperlichen Organe, für das Wahrnehmen und Vorstellen haben wir körperliche Organe. Daß die Physiologen glauben, es gäbe für Fühlen und Wollen Organe — manche Physiologen, denkende Physiologen, glauben es nicht —, das kommt nur daher, daß sie nicht wissen, wovon sie reden und doch über etwas reden, wovon sie etwas wissen wollen und nichts wissen.

Das, was ich eben beschrieben habe, ist gewissermaßen der gesetzmäßige Zustand, in dem wir leben zwischen der Geburt und dem Tode. Da wachen wir in bezug auf unser Wahrnehmen und Vorstellen, da schlafen wir in bezug auf unser Fühlen, in bezug auf unser Wollen.

Anders ist es zwischen dem Tode und einer neuen Geburt. Da ist es in gewissem Sinne umgekehrt, da beginnen wir zu wachen in bezug auf unser Fühlen und unser Wollen. Und in einer gewissen Beziehung verschlafen wir dann — obwohl der Schlaf ein anderer Zustand ist in der Welt, in der wir dann mit unserer Seele leben - unser Wahrnehmen, unser Vorstellen. Aber Sie werden aus dem, was ich jetzt gesagt habe, erkennen können, daß sich die sogenannten Toten von den sogenannten Lebendigen im Grunde genommen nur dadurch unterscheiden, daß der sogenannte Lebendige dasjenige verschläft, in dem der sogenannte Tote eigentlich drinnensteht. Der sogenannte Lebendige verschläft das Fühlen und das Wollen, das fortwährend durch sein Wesen strömt; der Tote steht in diesem Fühlen und Wollen drinnen. Nicht schwer wird es Ihnen sein, zu verstehen, daß in derselben Welt, in der wir sind als sogenannte Lebende, auch die Toten sind. Wir sind von ihnen nicht anders getrennt als dadurch, daß wir die Welt, in der sie sind, in der sie leben und weben, nicht wahrnehmen. Immer sind um uns diejenigen, die tot sind, immer sind um uns diejenigen Wesen, die da leben, ohne daß sie es zu einer physischen Inkarnation gebracht haben. Wir nehmen sie nur nicht wahr. Sie brauchen sich nur die Vorstellung zu bilden eines im Zimmer schlafenden Menschen: die Gegenstände sind um ihn herum, er nimmt sie nicht wahr. Daß irgendetwas nicht wahrgenommen wird, ist ja kein Beweis dafür, daß es nicht da ist. Es sagt überhaupt gar nichts darüber aus, ob es um uns da ist oder nicht. In der Tat sind wir mit Bezug auf die Welt der Toten ganz in derselben Lage, in der wir mit Bezug auf die physischen Wesen sind, wenn wir schlafen. Wir leben in derselben Welt, in der die Toten und in der die übergeordneten Reiche der höheren Hierarchien sind; sie sind mitten unter uns, wir sind nur durch unsere Art des Bewußtseins von ihnen getrennt.

Dann aber ist die Sache doch so, daß der Mensch gewissermaßen nur einen Teil derjenigen Wirklichkeit wahrnimmt, nur einen Teil derjenigen Wirklichkeit auffaßt, in der er eigentlich drinnen ist. Wenn der Mensch die volle Wirklichkeit auffassen würde, dann würde selbstverständlich sein Wissen ganz anders aussehen, als es jetzt aussieht. Aber innerhalb dieses Wissens würden nicht nur die Kräfte sein, die aus den uns bekannten Naturreichen kommen, sondern innerhalb dieses Wissens würden auch die Kräfte von höheren geistigen Wesenheiten liegen und auch die aus dem Reiche der sogenannten Toten. Dies ist heute noch für die weitesten Kreise der Menschheit eine groteske Sache. Dies muß für weitere Kreise der Menschheit, insbesondere für diejenigen, die sich zu interessieren haben für Entwickelung und Fortgang des Menschenlebens, eine Sache werden, die erkenntnismäßig durchdrungen wird. Denn bis in unsere Zeit herein war der Mensch mehr oder weniger von dunklen, unbekannten Kräften geführt mit Bezug auf all dasjenige, was er nicht wahrnehmen kann in seiner Umgebung. Diese Führung durch dunkle, unbekannte Kräfte — wir werden davon noch zu sprechen haben am nächsten Zweigabend -, die hat in unserer Zeit mehr oder weniger aufgehört. Der Mensch muß in unserer Zeit in bewußter Art sich in Verbindung setzen mit gewissen Kräften, die aus jenem Reiche hereinragen in das unsere, in dem auch die sogenannten Toten sind. Es wird allerdings einige Schwierigkeiten machen, solche Dinge zu dem Bewußtseinsgrade der Menschheit zu bringen, der erforderlich ist, wenn anstelle mancher Phantastik, manches Ungenügenden, das die Gegenwart durchschwirrt und sie so katastrophal gestaltet hat, das Wirkliche, das Wahre treten soll. Ich will in dieser Richtung nur auf einen einzigen Punkt, auf eine einzige Sache einleitungsweise aufmerksam machen.

Unter mancherlei Betrachtungen, die man als sogenannte «wissenschaftliche» anstellt, befinden sich auch historische. Geschichte zum Beispiel wird gelehrt und gelernt in den Schulen. Aber was ist diese Geschichte? Geschichtswissenschaft ist ja — der Kundige weiß das nicht viel älter als etwas über hundert Jahre. Wer die Literatur früherer Zeiten kennt, der weiß, daß das, was man jetzt Geschichtswissenschaft nennt, nicht viel älter ist. Darauf will ich nicht weiter eingehen. Aber das, was jetzt Geschichte ist, das wird aufgefaßt von den Menschen, begründet von den Menschen mit denselben Vorstellungen, mit denselben Begriffen, die man im äußeren gewöhnlichen Leben hat, mit denselben Begriffen, die man anwenden kann, wenn man die Natur betrachtet. Und niemand frägt sich, ob es denn eigentlich angehe, das geschichtliche Leben auch so zu betrachten, wie man die äußere Natur betrachtet. Das geht nämlich nicht an. Denn in dem geschichtlichen Leben der Menschheit walten Impulse, die nicht erfaßt werden können mit den Vorstellungen, die wir in unserem wachen Bewußtsein haben. Aber wer Geschichte wirklich betrachten kann, der weiß, daß wir von solchen Impulsen im geschichtlichen Leben beherrscht werden, die für das gewöhnliche Bewußtsein nur dem Traumzustand zugänglich sind, höchstens dem Traumzustand. Das, was als Geschichte verfließt, verträumt die Menschheit. Geradeso wie die Menschheit ihr Gefühlsleben verträumt, so verträumt sie auch, was Geschichtsimpulse sind. Und will man mit den gewöhnlichen, für die Naturwissenschaft sehr guten Begriffen das geschichtliche Leben der Menschheit betrachten, so kann man es nicht erfassen. Man betrachtet es nur an seiner Oberfläche. Was ist das, was in den Schulen gelehrt und gelernt wird als Geschichte? Es ist nicht mehr in bezug auf die wirkliche Geschichte, als wenn Sie einen Leichnam betrachten, und das, was Sie beschreiben können an dem Leichnam, für die Beschreibung des Menschen halten. Leichnambetrachtung ist die ganze Geschichte, wie sie heute üblich ist. Die Geschichte muß die gründlichste Umgestaltung erfahren. Und dasjenige, was in der Geschichte waltet, wird man in der Zukunft nur mit Inspiration, mit inspirierten Begriffen erfassen können. Dann wird man eine wahre Geschichte haben. Dann wird man wissen, was in der Menschheit waltet, wird auch wissen, was aus dem geschichtlichen Leben in das soziale Leben hereinwirkt.

Das, was ich damit sage, hat eigentlich eine tiefgehende Bedeutung. Die Menschen glauben, das sozialgeschichtliche Leben zu verstehen. Sie verstehen es nicht, weil sie es nur auffassen wollen mit den gewöhnlichen Vorstellungen des wachen Tageslebens. Das zeigt sich natürlich nicht, wenn man Geschichte schreibt, denn da kommt nicht viel darauf an, ob man das Richtige trifft. Man könnte an naheliegenden Beispielen zeigen, daß nicht viel darauf ankommt! Nun, ich will solch ein naheliegendes Beispiel einmal vorbringen: Sie lernen in den Geschichtsbüchern gewöhnlich, glaube ich, daß 1492 Amerika entdeckt worden ist. Das ist ja auch der Fall. Aber man bildet sich dann durch das, was in den Geschichtsbüchern so vorkommt, überhaupt in der Geschichte vorkommt, die Vorstellung, daß Amerika früher ganz unbekannt war, so weit man auch zurückgehen mag. Das ist nicht der Fall. Amerika war kaum wenige Jahrhunderte hindurch unbekannt. Noch im 12., 13. Jahrhundert gab es einen lebhaften Verkehr von Island, von Irland nach Amerika hinüber. Insbesondere Heilkräuter und anderes wurde durch den lebhaften Verkehr nach Europa geführt. Und aus gewissen Gründen, die mit dem inneren Karma von Europa, mit der Rolle zusammenhängen, die in früheren Zeiten Irland gespielt hat, geschah es, daß von Rom aus alles getan worden ist, um Europa von Amerika abzuschließen und Amerika geradezu vergessen zu machen. Es war eigentlich das, was dazumal von Rom aus geschah, nicht einmal zu ungunsten der europäischen Verhältnisse; es war gut gemeint mit Europa. Ich will mit diesem Beispiel nur anführen, daß dasjenige, was eine Tatsache ist, noch nicht eine historische Tatsache zu sein braucht, daß man über eine wichtige Sache historisch ganz unwissend sein kann. Nun, auf der anderen Seite ist es aber bedeutsam, historisch wissend oder historisch unwissend zu sein in bezug auf das soziale, das gesellschaftliche Leben der Menschheit überhaupt. Das ist bedeutsam. Wie oft hört man heute, daß die Leute sagen: Über dieses Ereignis, über jenes Ereignis muß man so oder so denken, denn die Geschichte lehrt dies oder jenes. — Versuchen Sie einmal, sich die heutige, namentlich äußere publizistische Literatur vorzunehmen, so werden Sie sehen, wie oft Sie heute auf die Phrase stoßen: Die Geschichte lehrt dies oder jenes. — Historische Ereignisse, die der Mensch miterlebt, werden zwar zum Teil verschlafen, aber ihnen gegenüber bildet er sich doch ein Urteil, oder läßt es sich einimpfen. Sehr häufig hört man die Phrase, die Geschichte lehre das oder jenes. Und sehr bedeutsame Männer haben im Anfange dieses Krieges etwas darüber gesagt, was die Geschichte lehre. Es war dazumal die ehrliche Überzeugung von sogenannten gescheiten Leuten, daß dieser Krieg höchstens vier bis sechs Monate dauern könne nach den allgemeinen sozialen und ökonomischen Verhältnissen der Erde. Das haben viele vorausgesagt; höchstens vier bis sechs Monate! Es ist dies geradeso eingetroffen, wie eingetroffen ist, was von einem viel Größeren als eine historische Prophetie ausgesprochen worden ist, aber eben nur als eine historische Prophetie aus gewöhnlichen Vorstellungen des gewöhnlichen Bewußtseins der Menschheit, welche eben Geschichte nicht einfangen können, weil Geschichte höchstens geträumt, zum Teil verschlafen wird und nur mit großen Begriffen erfaßt wird. Schiller, als er seine philosophische Jenenser Professur antrat, hielt die weltbekannte Antrittsrede über das Studium der Geschichte. Diese Rede hielt er kurz vor Ausbruch der Französischen Revolution. Da sagte Schiller, also wahrhaftig keine unbedeutende Persönlichkeit, als seine aus der Geschichte geschöpfte Überzeugung — aber er hatte eben auch nur eine mit den gewöhnlichen Vorstellungen aus der Geschichte geschöpfte Überzeugung -, nicht wörtlich, aber dem Sinne nach: Die Geschichte lehrt uns zwar, daß in älteren Zeiten viele Streitigkeiten und Kriege unter den Menschen stattgefunden haben; aber aus alledem, was sich zugetragen hat, können wir entnehmen, daß in der Zukunft die europäischen Völker zwar noch Disharmonien haben werden, daß sie sich aber immer fühlen werden als die Glieder einer großen Familie und sich nicht gegenseitig zerfleischen werden. — So Friedrich von Schiller! Danach ist 1789 die Französische Revolution gekommen. Und was alles im 19. Jahrhundert gekommen ist über die Völkerfamilien von Europa, und was jetzt, so und so viele Jahre nachher, gekommen ist, das alles hat das sogenannte historische Urteil Schillers wahrhaftig in der gründlichsten Weise zunichte gemacht.

Geschichte wird erst dann etwas lehren, wenn man sie mit inspirierten Begriffen wird durchdringen können. Denn in das geschichtliche Leben der Menschheit spielen nicht nur die Lebenden herein, sondern die Seelen der sogenannten Toten, die Geister, mit denen die sogenannten toten Seelen so leben, wie wir mit den Wesenheiten des Tierreiches, des Pflanzenreiches und des Mineralreiches leben. Heute nimmt man das vielfach als Phrase. Aber die Menschheit wird sich gründlich abgewöhnen müssen, der Phrase jene Anerkennung entgegenzubringen, die sie ihr gegenwärtig entgegenbringt. Das wird sie aber nur können, wenn sie wirklichkeitsgesättigte Begriffe, wahre Begriffe sich aneignet. Und ein besonders wichtiger, wahrer Begriff ist eben jener, der uns das Bewußtsein übermittelt, daß wir von den sogenannten Toten nicht getrennt sind durch etwas anderes als durch unser Bewußtsein, das mit Bezug auf die Welt, in der die Toten um uns herum sind, mit Bezug auf unsere Gefühls- und unsere Willenswelt ein schlafendes Bewußtsein ist, so wie sonst das Schlafbewußstsein ist vom Einschlafen bis zum Aufwachen gegenüber den Gegenständen um uns herum. Das hellsichtige Bewußtsein bietet auf Schritt und Tritt die Bestätigung für dasjenige, was ich jetzt in mehr allgemeinen Worten charakterisiert habe.

Aber es kann da doch die Frage auftauchen: Wie kommt es denn, daß der Mensch von der Welt, in der er so eigentlich drinnen lebt, die er mit jedem Schritt seines Lebens durchwandert, nichts weiß? — Ja, sehen Sie, gerade die Art und Weise, wie das hellsichtige Bewußtsein im Konkreten aufklärt über das, was wir den Verkehr mit den sogenannten Toten nennen können, ist der lebendige Beweis dafür, daß für das gewöhnliche Bewußtsein zunächst diese Welt, in der die Toten leben, unbekannt bleiben muß. Ich brauche Ihnen nur einige Züge jenes Verkehrs zu erzählen, der — allerdings bei einer gewissen Entwickelung des hellsichtigen, des schauenden Bewußtseins — mit den sogenannten Toten eintreten kann, dann werden Sie daraus sehen, worauf es beruht, daß man im gewöhnlichen Leben nichts weiß über den Verkehr mit den Toten. Es ist durchaus möglich, wenn es auch nach gewissen Richtungen hin seine bedenkliche Seite hat, daß der Mensch nach einer bestimmten Seite hin sein Bewußtsein so zum Erwachen bringt, daß die Welt der Toten offen ist, daß er die Welt der sogenannten Toten wahrnehmen kann, daß der Mensch mit den einzelnen Toten, wenn ich so sagen darf, zu verkehren in der Lage ist. Dann muß er, wenn er wirklich mit dem Toten sich verständigen will, eine ganz andere Art sich aneignen, im Bewußtsein sich zu verhalten, wenn er zu einem sicheren Verkehr kommen will. Eine ganz andere Art muß er sich aneignen, als die Bewußtseinsart ist, die man hier für die physische Welt hat. Ein paar Züge will ich anführen.

Sehen Sie, wenn man hier in der physischen Welt mit einem anderen Menschen verkehrt, hat man für diesen Verkehr gewisse Gewohnheiten. Wenn ich mit jemandem rede, so bin ich hier für den physischen Plan gewöhnt, daß, wenn ich ihn etwas frage, ihm etwas mitteile, ich dann rede, und ich bin mir bewußt, daß die Rede aus meiner Seele heraus, durch meine Sprachwerkzeuge zu ihm hingeht. Ich bin mir bewußt, daß ich rede. Auch mit Bezug auf die äußere Wahrnehmung bin ich mir dessen bewußt. Und wenn er mir antwortet oder mir etwas mitteilt, dieser andere Mensch hier auf dem physischen Plan, dann vernehme ich seine Worte, dann tönen seine Worte zu mir herüber.

So ist es nicht bei vollbewußtem Verkehr — bei halbbewußtem Verkehr ist es etwas anderes —, mit dem Toten. Da ist es gerade umgekehrt. Und es ist — wenn man sich so ausdrücken darf auf einem solchen Gebiete — so, daß es eben ganz anders ist, als wie man es erwartet. Wenn ich dem Toten gegenüberstehe, dann redet er in seiner Seele dasjenige, was ich ihn frage, oder was ich ihm mitteilen will; das bekomme ich von ihm her gesagt. Dasjenige, was er mir sagt, das tönt aus meiner eigenen Seele herauf.

An das muß man sich gewöhnen. Man muß sich daran gewöhnen, daß dasjenige, was der andere sagt, aus der eigenen Seele herauftönt, und das, was man selber sagt, einem von der geistigen Außenwelt entgegentönt. Das ist so unähnlich alledem, was der Mensch hier gewohnheitsmäßig in der physischen Welt erlebt, daß er gar nicht darauf kommt, irgendwie sich zu einer solchen Sache zu stellen. Denn denken Sie nur einmal: Wenn Sie durch das Leben gehen und bei irgendeiner Gelegenheit etwas aus Ihrer Seele herauftönt, so schreiben Sie es sich ja zu. Der Mensch ist in gewisser Beziehung doch wohl, wie mancher sagt, ein egoistisches Wesen, und er ist nicht leicht geneigt, dasjenige, was aus seiner Seele heraufsteigt, nun nicht seiner Eingebung oder seinem Genie — wie man es nun nennen will — zuzuschreiben. Daß unter dem, was aus unserer Seele aufsteigt, vieles ist, was uns in Wahrheit die Toten sagen, das lernt man erst erkennen im schauenden Bewußtsein. Das Reich der Toten spielt in unseren Willen, spielt in unsere Gefühle fortwährend hinein, steigt fortwährend herauf. Wir schreiben vielleicht irgend etwas, was in uns aufsteigt, einem guten Einfall zu: in Wahrheit ist es die Verständigung mit einem Toten. Und das andere ist ja dem Menschen auch recht ungewöhnlich. Daher gibt er überhaupt auf so etwas nicht acht, ob aus der grauen Geistumgebung heraus, möchte ich sagen, ihm sein kann, wie wenn seine eigenen Gedanken ihn umgäben. Wenn er seinen Gedanken gegenüber so objektiv sein kann, daß sie ihn wie umschwirren, dann versteht der Tote diese Gedanken. Der Mensch steht schon im gewöhnlichen Bewußtsein in Verbindung mit den Toten, doch wird er das nicht gewahr, weil er die Tatsache, die ich eben angeführt habe, nicht auszudeuten in der Lage ist.

Um das einzusehen, muß man allerdings ins Auge fassen, daß wir noch zwei andere Bewußtseinszustände haben außer dem Schlafen und dem Wachen und dem Traume. Zwei andere wichtige Bewußtseinszustände, sogar außerordentlich wichtige Bewußtseinszustände haben wir noch, aber wir beachten sie nicht im gewöhnlichen Leben. Wir beachten sie aus einem gewissen Grunde nicht, der Ihnen einleuchten wird in dem Augenblick, wo ich diese zwei anderen Bewußtseinszustände nenne: Wir haben den Zustand des Einschlafens und den Zustand des Aufwachens. Nur dauern sie nicht lange; sie gehen so rasch vorüber, daß der Mensch sie ihrem Inhalte nach nicht beachtet. Im Momente des Einschlafens und im Momente des Aufwachens gehen die wichtigsten Dinge vor sich. Und lernt man ihrer Wesenheit nach die Momente des Einschlafens und des Aufwachens erkennen, dann bekommt man auch von einem gewissen Gesichtspunkte her rechte Begriffe über das Verhältnis des Menschen zu der Welt, in der auch die Toten mit uns zusammen sind.

Ich sagte: Der Mensch steht eigentlich fortwährend mit der Welt der Toten in Verbindung, und besonders rege ist diese Verbindung im Momente des Einschlafens und im Momente des Aufwachens. Und zwar ist es so, wie das hellsichtige Bewußtsein zeigt, daß im Momente des Einschlafens der Mensch besonders geeignet ist, Fragen an die Toten zu stellen, Mitteilungen den Toten zu bringen und so weiter, eben sich an die Toten zu wenden. Im Momente des Aufwachens ist der Mensch besonders geeignet, Mitteilungen, Botschaften von den Toten zu empfangen. Er bekommt sie rasch, diese Botschaften, er ist dann sogleich aufgewacht. Das, was so vorübergehuscht ist, wird gleich übertönt von dem tumultuarischen Wachsein. In atavistischen Zuständen hat man das vor gar noch nicht langer Zeit bei primitiveren Menschen gewußt und auch angedeutet. Aber selbst in primitiveren Gegenden gehen solche Dinge nach und nach unter dem Einflusse unserer materialistischen Kultur zugrunde. Wer bei unseren alten Leuten in Bauerngegenden aufgewachsen ist, der weiß, daß eine Grundregel der Leute war, man solle morgens, wenn man aufwacht, möglichst ein bißchen stille bleiben, nicht gleich ins durchleuchtete Fenster schauen, nicht ins Licht schauen, weil die Leute das, was aus dem Schlafe nachwirkt, was namentlich im Aufwachen an die Seele herantrat, sich nicht übertönen lassen wollten durch das stürmische Wachwerden. Der primitive Mensch wollte noch etwas im dunkeln Zimmer ruhig liegen, wollte nicht zum Fenster hinausschauen, wenn er aufgewacht war.

Nun gehört allerdings schon etwas dazu, obwohl es nicht allzu schwierig ist, es wahrzunehmen, daß mit dem Momente des Aufwachens und des Einschlafens etwas Besonderes verbunden ist. Um auf solche Dinge achten zu können, dazu gehört, wenn ich so sagen darf, eine gewisse Wachsamkeit des Denkens, eine Eigenschaft, die zu keiner Zeit so wenig vorhanden war wie zu unserer Zeit. Man könnte groteske Beispiele anführen, wie es mit der Wachsamkeit des Denkens ist. Banale Beispiele, die das alltägliche Leben durchziehen, man kann sie gewissermaßen auf der Straße finden. Ich will ein ganz banales Beispiel anführen.

Vor einigen Tagen fiel mein Blick auf eine Annonce, die so ziemlich ein Achtel des Blattraumes einer großen Zeitung ausfüllte, eine Annonce, von der ich aber gesehen habe, daß sie sehr verbreitet ist. Sie behandelte eine reklamehafte Anpreisung einer sehr weit verbreiteten Gedächtnislehre: Pöhlmann, oder so etwa heißt es. Es wird ja viel Reklame gemacht. Diese Annonce begann etwa in der folgenden Weise: Sie wolle anzeigen, daß man nicht Einfluß gewinnen könne auf andere Menschen, wenn man sich nicht der Methode des Herrn Pöhlmann bediene, sondern einer anderen Methode. — Ich spreche jetzt nicht über die Erlaubtheit oder Unerlaubtheit, über Recht oder Unrecht von «Einflußgewinnen» und so weiter, das geht uns hier nichts an, aber ich spreche über das, was in formaler Beziehung über die Sache gesagt wird in der Annonce. Da stand also: Gewisse Leute geben vor, durch Pflege des persönlichen Magnetismus, durch Erstarken von was weiß ich im menschlichen Wesen, Einfluß zu gewinnen auf andere. Man könne leicht diesen Menschen nachweisen, daß sie nicht die Wahrheit sprechen, denn es soll einer der Leute nur sagen, ob es ihm schon gelungen sei, durch persönlichen Einfluß es dahin zu bringen, daß ihm Rothschild oder andere reiche Leute eine Million überlassen haben. Da das nachweislich nicht gelungen sei, und es ganz gewiß versucht worden wäre, wenn es hätte gelingen können, so beweise das, daß man durch diese Methode keinen Einfluß auf die Menschen gewinnen könne. Denn Einfluß gewinne man nur auf dem Wege von Wissenschaft und Bildung. - Dann wird die Methode Pöhlmann beschrieben. Man weiß nun, daß eine ganze Anzahl von Menschen überzeugt werden davon: Die anderen Kerle alle gewinnen nicht die Möglichkeit, Fähigkeiten zu kultivieren, die einen Einfluß auf die Leute gewinnen, denn das zeige sich ja ganz klar, nicht wahr: Sie haben nicht einen solchen Einfluß auf Rothschild gewonnen, daß er ihnen seine Millionen überlassen hat. — Wie viele Menschen — das fragen Sie sich selbst — lesen einmal diese Annonce und machen sich nicht sofort den Einwand: Ja, hat denn der Pöhlmann so viele Schüler, die dem Rothschild eine Million abgewonnen haben? — Sie brauchen sich nur zu fragen, wie vielen dieser naheliegende Gedanke kommt!

Das ist ein triviales Beispiel, das Ihnen aber zeigt, wie das Denken gegenüber Gelesenem nicht aufwacht. Ich habe dieses Beispiel gewählt, erstens wegen seiner Alltäglichkeit, und zweitens, weil ja selbstverständlich unter den hier Anwesenden niemand ist, der diesen Gedanken nicht hätte, daß es auch wohl dem Pöhlmann nicht gelungen ist, die Million zu bekommen. Selbstverständlich, jene, die auf eine solche Annonce hereinfallen würden, sind alle draußen, und aus einer gewissen Höflichkeit erwähne ich kein Beispiel, auf das irgendeiner der Anwesenden hereinfallen könnte! Was ich aber sagen will, ist, daß es in zahllosen Fällen des Lebens von morgens bis abends fortwährend vorkommt, daß der Mensch diese Dinge liest. Man sagt, man achte gar nicht darauf. Man achtet nicht darauf. Ich habe neulich einmal eine Rede gelesen, da kam der Satz vor: «Unsere Verbindung mit einem bestimmten Reiche ist der Kernpunkt, welcher unserer Politik in der Zukunft die Richtung geben muß.» Stellen Sie sich ein so konstruiertes Denken vor: eine Verbindung ist ein Kernpunkt, der zu einer Richtung wird! Wer so denkt, ist in der Lage, allerlei zu behandeln und zu tun im Leben. Aber man merkt nicht, welche Zusammenhänge zwischen einem so verkrüppelten Denken und dem öffentlichen Leben sind.

Man hat aber heute nötig, auf die Unwachsamkeit des Denkens, die gerade ein Kennzeichen unserer Kultur ist, einzugehen, gerade auf diese Unwachsamkeit des Denkens zu achten. Vollziehbare Gedanken: das ist das erste Erfordernis, wenn man achten können will auf so etwas wie die Offenbarungen des Augenblickes von Einschlafen und Aufwachen.

Ich nahm einmal an der Vorlesung eines sehr berühmten Literaturhistorikers teil. Es war seine Antrittsvorlesung, und er gab sich sehr viel Mühe. Da hatte er alle möglichen literarhistorischen Fragen formuliert und zum Schlusse sagte er: Also, meine Herren, Sie sehen, ich habe Sie in einen Wald von Fragezeichen geführt! — Ich mußte mir dazumal vorstellen: einen Wald von Fragezeichen! Denken Sie sich einmal: ein Wald von Fragezeichen!

Wer gewöhnt ist, die Vorstellungen zu vollziehen, die sich in ihm bilden, wer also Wachsamkeit in seinem Denken entwickelt, der nur ist vorbereitet, auch zu achten auf solche Dinge wie die Augenblicke des Aufwachens und des Einschlafens. Was aber nicht wahrgenommen wird, das ist doch da. Und der Verkehr des Menschen mit den Toten ist da, und er ist insbesondere rege im Moment des Einschlafens und des Aufwachens. Im Grunde genommen stellt jeder Mensch im Momente des Einschlafens unzählige Fragen und gibt unzählige Mitteilungen an geliebte Tote, und empfängt Kundschaften und Antworten im Momente des Aufwachens von den Toten. Man kann aber in einer gewissen Weise, ich möchte sagen, kultivieren diesen Verkehr mit den Toten. Mancherlei Arten, den Verkehr mit den Toten zu kultivieren, haben wir ja öfter besprochen, aber wir wollen noch das Folgende heute sagen.

Es ist ein Unterschied, ob irgendein Gedanke, den wir in Verbindung mit einem Toten haben, dazu führt, daß wir uns im Momente des Einschlafens an ihn richten können, oder ob er nicht dazu führt. Das ist ein gewisser Unterschied. Derjenige, welcher sich nicht einzig und allein in sinnlich-egoistischer Weise in das Leben hineinstellt, wird ja schon aus einem gesunden Empfinden heraus das Bedürfnis haben, den Verkehr nicht zu unterbrechen, den das Karma ihm gebracht hat mit gewissen Persönlichkeiten, die nun durch die Pforte des Todes vor kurzer oder vor längerer Zeit gegangen sind, und er wird wohl seine Gedanken öfter verbinden mit solchen hingegangenen Persönlichkeiten. Es kann durchaus sein, daß solche Gedanken, die wir anknüpfen an die Vorstellung dahingegangener Persönlichkeiten, einen richtigen Verkehr mit den Toten ergeben, auch wenn wir sie nicht kennen, auch wenn wir nicht achten können auf das, was im Momente des Einschlafens vor sich geht. Aber gewisse Gedanken sind günstiger für einen solchen Verkehr, andere Gedanken sind ungünstiger. Abstrakte Gedanken, Gedanken, die wir in einer gewissen Gleichgültigkeit, vielleicht gar nur aus Pflichtgefühl hegen, die sind wenig geeignet, im Momente des Einschlafens zu dem Toten hinüberzugehen. Dagegen Gedanken, Vorstellungen, welche hervorgehen aus dem Erfühlen eines besonderen Interesses, das uns vereinigt hat im Leben mit dem Toten, diese Gedanken sind geeignet, zum Toten hinüberzugehen. Erinnern wir uns an den Toten so, daß wir nicht bloß mit abstrakten Gedanken, mit kalten Vorstellungen an ihn denken, sondern einen Moment in unsere Seele rufen, wo wir an seiner Seite warm geworden sind, wo uns das, was er sagte, nicht nur Mitteilung war, sondern etwas Liebes war, erinnern wir uns eben derjenigen Momente, die wir mit dem Toten verbracht haben in einer Gefühlsgemeinschaft, in einer Gemeinschaft auch der Willensimpulse, erinnern wir uns solcher Momente, wo wir mit dem Toten zusammen dies oder jenes unternommen, beschlossen haben, was uns beiden wert ist, was uns beide geführt hat zu einer gemeinsamen Handlung, kurz, an irgend etwas, was die Herzen zusammenklingen ließ, machen wir dieses Zusammenklingen der Herzen lebendig, dann färbt das den Gedanken an den Toten so, daß der Gedanke zu ihm hinüberströmt im Momente des nächsten Einschlafens. Ob man diesen Gedanken um neun Uhr, um zwölf Uhr, um zwei Uhr hat, der ganze Tag kann uns irgendwelche Zeit geben, um diesen Gedanken zu haben, er bleibt und geht im Momente des Einschlafens zum Toten. Im Momente des Aufwachens können wir von dem Toten wieder Antwort, Mitteilung, Botschaften bekommen. Das braucht nicht gerade im Moment des Aufwachens, wenn man nicht darauf achten kann, an unsere Seele heranzutreten, sondern es kann im Laufe des Tages irgendwie aus unserer Seele heraufkommen in Form irgendeines Einfalles, wie wir glauben, wenn wir überhaupt an solche Dinge glauben. Aber auch da wiederum ist einiges günstiger, einiges ungünstiger. Unter gewissen Verhältnissen finden die Toten eher den Zugang zu unserer Seele, um uns dieses oder jenes in unsere Seele hereinzusprechen, so daß es in unserer Seele selbst spricht; in anderen Fällen sind die Verhältnisse für so etwas ungünstiger. Günstiger sind insbesondere die Verhältnisse, wenn wir eine gute, treffsichere Vorstellung von dem Wesen der Toten uns angeeignet haben, wenn wir so starkes Interesse an dem Wesen der Toten haben, daß uns dieses Wesen vor dem geistigen Auge wirklich gestanden hat. Sie werden sich fragen: Warum sagt er denn das eigentlich? Wenn einem jemand nahegestanden hat, so hat man doch eine Vorstellung von seinem Wesen! — Das glaube ich gar nicht, meine lieben Freunde, insbesondere nicht in unserer Zeit! In unserer Zeit gehen die Menschen aneinander vorüber und kennen einander sehr, sehr wenig. Das entfremdet einen vielleicht gar nicht für hier, für die physische Welt; das entfremdet einen aber gar sehr für die Welt, die der Tote durchlebt. Sehen Sie, für hier, für die physische Welt, sind zahlreiche unbewußte oder unterbewußte Kräfte und Impulse, welche die Menschen einander nahebringen, auch wenn sie sich nicht kennenlernen wollen. Es soll ja vorkommen im Leben, wie vielleicht manche von Ihnen schon gelesen haben, daß man schon Jahrzehnte verheiratet sein kann und sich sehr wenig wirklich kennenlernt. Aber da gibt es eben andere Impulse, die nicht auf der gegenseitigen Erkenntnis beruhen, die die Menschen zusammenführen. Das Leben ist überall durchsetzt von unterbewußten und unbewußten Impulsen. Aber wie gesagt, diese unterbewußten Impulse, sie binden uns hier, sie binden uns nicht mit den Wesen zusammen, die durch den Tod uns vorangegangen sind. Da ist es schon notwendig, daß wir wirklich etwas in die Seele aufnehmen, wodurch das Wesen des anderen lebendig in uns lebt. Und je lebendiger es in uns lebt, desto leichter hat es zu unserer Seele den Zugang, desto leichter kann es sich mit uns verständigen.

Das ist es, was ich Ihnen charakterisieren möchte über den fortdauernden, immer und immer vorkommenden Verkehr der sogenannten Lebenden mit den sogenannten Toten. Jeder von uns verkehrt fortwährend mit den sogenannten Toten, und daß es nicht gewußt wird, kommt nur daher, weil man nicht in genügender Weise beachten kann den Moment des Einschlafens, den Moment des Aufwachens. Ich sagte dieses, um Ihnen konkreter dieses Zusammensein mit der übersinnlichen Welt, in der die Toten sind, zu gestalten. Es wird sich uns noch konkreter gestalten, wenn wir einige andere Verhältnisse noch in Erwägung ziehen.

Es sterben jüngere Leute, es sterben ältere Leute. Und doch ist der Tod bei jüngeren Leuten, die dahinsterben, im Verhältnis zu den zurückbleibenden Lebenden etwas anderes als der Tod alter Leute, die dahinsterben. Über solche Dinge läßt sich ja wirklich nur reden, wenn man einzelne konkrete Verhältnisse auf diesen Gebieten ins Auge zu fassen vermag. Es ist durchaus nicht aus einer allgemeinen Wissenschaft heraus, daß ich das schildere, sondern ich fasse nur zusammen dasjenige, was in einzelnen konkreten Fällen wirklich vorgekommen ist. Wenn man mit dem schauenden Bewußtsein verfolgt, was geschieht, wenn Kinder ihren Eltern wegsterben, wenn junge Leute von ihren Angehörigen hinweg durch die Pforte des Todes gehen, und wenn man dann erkennen lernt, wie diese Seelen weiterleben, dann stellt sich diese Erkenntnis so dar, daß man sie in folgende Worte zusammenfassen möchte. Man muß sagen: Im Bewußtsein dieser durch die Pforte des Todes gegangenen jüngeren Leute lebt das, was man damit charakterisieren kann, daß man sagt: Sie sind eigentlich den Lebenden nicht verloren, sie bleiben da, sie bleiben in der Nähe, in der Wesenheit der Überlebenden. Sie trennen sich als jüngere Leute durch lange Zeit hindurch nicht von den Zurückgebliebenen, sie bleiben in ihrer Sphäre. Von älter hingestorbenen Menschen, von Eltern zu Kindern und so weiter, kann man etwas anderes sagen. Diese Dinge sind vielleicht am besten, wenn man sie epigrammatisch ausdrückt. Von älter Hingestorbenen kann man sagen: Die Seelen dieser im späteren Leben hingestorbenen Menschen, die verlieren ihrerseits die Seelen derer, die zurückgeblieben sind, nicht. — Also, während die Zurückgebliebenen die jüngeren Seelen nicht verlieren, verlieren die älteren Leute, wenn sie durch die Pforte des Todes gegangen sind, diese, die dann auf der Erde sind, die Seelen der Zurückgebliebenen nicht, trotzdem diese anderen hier sind. Sie ziehen gewissermaßen dasjenige mit, was sie von uns haben wollen; sie haben von den hier gebliebenen Seelen alles leichter, was die Jüngeren nur haben können, wenn sie da bleiben. Das tun diese auch, sie bleiben mehr oder weniger in der Sphäre der Übriggebliebenen, die jüngeren Seelen.

Man kann diese Verhältnisse auf eine ganz bestimmte Weise studieren, so daß einem das, was ich jetzt gesagt habe, zur Gewißheit werden kann. Man muß natürlich diese Dinge mit dem schauenden Bewußtsein studieren. Und man kann mit dem schauenden Bewußtsein studieren die Trauer, den Trennungsschmerz. Trauer und Trennungsschmerz sind eigentlich zwei ganz verschiedenartige Zustände. Die Menschen wissen das nicht, aber wenn man in der Seele eines Menschen die Trauer, den Schmerz über ein hingestorbenes Kind beobachtet, so ist das ganz etwas anderes, als die Trauer und der Schmerz, den man beobachten kann, wenn ein älterer Mensch dahingestorben ist. Die Menschen wissen es nicht, aber es ist doch grundverschieden, wenn man es in der Seele als einen inneren Zustand beurteilt.

Das Merk würdige ist dieses: Wenn, sagen wir, Eltern ihre früh gestorbenen Kinder betrauern, so ist dies eine Trauer, die eigentlich ihrem wirklichen Inhalte nach, ihrem tieferen Impulse nach, nur ein Reflex, ein Widerschein desjenigen ist, was das dagebliebene Kind hineinlebt in die Seele der Zurückgebliebenen. Das Kind ist dageblieben, und es empfindet, indem es dageblieben ist, allerlei, und das lebt sich hinein in die Seele des Zurückgebliebenen und erweckt da einen Impuls. Es ist ein Mitleidsschmerz, ein Mitgefühlsschmerz, es ist eigentlich der Schmerz oder das Leid des Kindes selber, den man in sich erlebt. Man schreibt ihn natürlich sich zu, den Schmerz, aber es ist ein Mitgefühlsschmerz. Sie müssen mich nicht mißverstehen — wir müssen ja diese Ausdrücke in vernünftiger Weise nehmen, nicht mit allerlei schlimmen Nebendeutungen -, man könnte sagen: Wenn ein jüngerer Angehöriger einem dahinstirbt, so ist man von dem Schmerze aus dem eigenen Seelenleben des Dahingestorbenen heraus besessen, wenn auch in normaler Weise besessen, so daß es nicht schadet, er lebt in einem weiter, und was sich als Schmerz interpretiert, das ist sein Leben in uns.

Anders ist es bei der Trauer einem älteren Menschen gegenüber, der uns verlassen hat. Da tritt ein Schmerz ein, der nicht der Widerschein ist desjenigen, was in dem anderen lebt, denn der andere kann das wirklich hinaufbekommen, was in unserer Seele ist; er verliert uns nicht von sich aus. Wir können nicht von seinem Schmerz besessen sein, überhaupt nicht von seinen Empfindungen in dieser Weise besessen sein, denn er hat keine Sehnsucht danach, mit seinen Empfindungen in uns hineinzudringen, weil er uns ja mitzieht. Er verliert uns nicht. Deshalb ist dieser Schmerz, diese Trauer eine egoistische Trauer, ein egoistischer Schmerz. Das ist kein Tadel, es ist gewiß berechtigt, aber wir müssen diese beiden Arten der Trauer in ganz wesentlicher Art voneinander unterscheiden.

Wichtig wird die Sache dann, wenn man übergeht in der Betrachtung von der Beschreibung des Schmerzes oder des Zusammenlebens mit den dahingegangenen Toten zu den Toten selbst. Wenn das Verhältnis zu einem in jüngeren Jahren dahingegangenen Menschen ganz anders ist als das Verhältnis zu einem in späteren Jahren hingegangenen Menschen, dann wird es begreiflich sein, daß auch für die Pflege des Andenkens, für die Pflege des Gedächtnisses gegenüber den Toten in dem einen und dem anderen Falle es anders sein muß. Einem jüngeren Kinde gegenüber werden wir den richtigen Kultus, das richtige Gedächtnis haben, wenn wir darauf Rücksicht nehmen, daß das Kind dageblieben ist, daß das Kind mit uns lebt und sich besonders gerne einlebt in das, was hier uns möglich gewesen wäre, an das Kind heranzubringen, wenn das Kind hier geblieben wäre. Die Erfahrung zeigt, daß solche Kinder nach ihrem Tode besonders begehren, im Gedächtnis, in dem, was man ihnen entgegenbringt, allgemein menschliche Verhältnisse zu finden, auch im Totenkultus etwas zu finden, was mehr allgemeine Interessen darbietet, was wenig zu tun hat mit speziellen Interessen. Für Kinder, die dahingestorben sind, ist zum Beispiel die katholische Totenfeier angemessener, wo ein allgemeiner Ritus ist, wo man einen Ritus hat, der für alle in gleicher Weise gilt. Ein dahingestorbenes Kind möchte eine Totenfeier haben, die mehr allgemeinmenschlich, die nicht für es allein, für es speziell ist, sondern die für alle sein könnte.

Für einen dahingestorbenen älteren Menschen ist die protestantische Totenfeier besser, wo man sich einläßt auf die besonderen Lebensverhältnisse, wo man eine Leichenrede hält, die sich auf seine speziellen individuellen Verhältnisse bezieht. Und will man das Andenken pflegen für einen solchen älteren Dahingestorbenen, dann ist es besonders günstig, sich an Einzelheiten des Lebens, die ihm eigen waren, an sein spezielles, an sein individuelles Leben anzuklammern und dort die Gedanken zu suchen, durch die man das Andenken des älter Dahingestorbenen feiert.

Sie sehen daraus, daß, richtig betrachtet, Geisteswissenschaft nicht bloß Theorie bleiben kann. Sie zeigt uns etwas über die Verhältnisse, die in der Welt sind, von der wir nur abgeschlossen sind, weil wir unsere Gefühle verträumen, unsere Willensimpulse verschlafen. Sie redet von den Welten, in denen wir mit Gefühl und Wille drinnen sind. Fassen wir mit genügender Intensität, mit rechter Energie die geisteswissenschaftlichen Vorstellungen, so bleiben sie nicht Vorstellungen, so wirken sie auf Gefühl und Wille. Denken Sie, wie befruchtend auf das Leben diese geisteswissenschaftlichen Vorstellungen wirken können! Geistliche, die den Totenkultus zu leiten haben, werden die richtige Art, den richtigen Takt für diesen Totenkultus in ganz anderer Weise finden, als wenn man bei der bloßen abstrakten Theologie bleibt.

Nun ist dies ja wirklich kein Wunder, da die Welt, von der die Geisteswissenschaft redet, die wirkliche Welt ist, in der unsere Gefühle, unsere Willensimpulse leben, so daß, was sie zu geben vermag, auch wiederum in Gefühl und Wille hineinspielt. In das Gefühl spielt sie hinein — aber überall sonst auch —, wenn wir zum Beispiel unsere Gefühle den Toten gegenüber entwickeln. Doch auch in die Willensimpulse soll sie hineinspielen. Das sollte insbesondere in unserer Zeit bedacht werden. Denn wenn man nachgehen würde den Willensimpulsen der Menschen unserer Zeit, man würde auf nicht sehr tiefe Untergründe der menschlichen Seele stoßen. Das ist gerade das Eigentümliche unserer Zeit, daß die Menschheit nötig hat, für ihren Willen geistige Impulse zu suchen. Und das ist das Tragische der gegenwärtigen Zeit, daß man bisher nicht entschlossen ist, sie zu suchen. Erlösung aus den Wirren unserer Zeit wird es nur geben, wenn man aus dem Geiste heraus Impulse für das äußere Leben wird suchen wollen. Das weisen in weitesten Kreisen, wie ich heute abend schon gesagt habe, die Menschen heute noch zurück. Sie werden es lernen müssen, denn diese Zeit wird für das Geschlecht, das sie zu durchmessen hat, in noch viel reicherem Maße der große Lehrmeister werden, als es schon der Fall gewesen ist.

An diese heute gegebenen, mehr auf das einzelne Persönliche bezüglichen Begriffe wollen wir dann am nächsten Sonntag vormittag anknüpfen, um gerade mit Bezug auf die gegenwärtigen Zeitverhältnisse, aber in rechtem geisteswissenschaftlichem Sinn, zu sprechen.

Ninth Lecture

Before I move on to the subject of our discussion today, it is my heartfelt desire to express, both personally and on behalf of our cause, my deepest satisfaction that the premises in which we are gathered here today can serve a purpose, a work, an endeavor here in Munich that promises to have such an extraordinarily beneficial effect, has already begun to have an effect, and which we must believe can send significant impulses into the spiritual life of our time.

Moving on to the subject of our consideration, I would not wish to omit, especially at this time and on this occasion, to point out that anyone who is genuinely interested in the endeavors of our anthroposophically oriented spiritual science must, in this time of severe trial for humanity, reflect upon the relationship that exists between the fact that, precisely at this time, from the beginning of the 20th century, this spiritual scientific direction attempted to send its impulses into human evolution, and the other fact that humanity in the present, with its other endeavors, has, as one must admit, entered into catastrophic events in many areas. Even in the broadest circles, people today do not yet have a sufficiently serious and impressive understanding of the catastrophic events in which humanity finds itself. Today, many people are accustomed to wanting to live without the spirit. But to want to live without the spirit means, in essence, to live superficially, and superficial living means, on the other hand, that one misses much of what makes a particular impression from the events around us. And it must be said that people today are particularly organized to miss much. Very few seek to form an adequate concept of the gravity and urgency of contemporary events. Most live from one day to the next. And if one ever attempts to speak of a time that may come later, people, and often precisely those on whom much depends, reject this in the most vehement manner. If the humanities fulfill one of their many tasks, which is to make the human soul a little more energetic, a little more alert, then they have fulfilled something important, especially for our present time. Concepts from the humanities require greater effort of thought, greater intensity of feeling and perception than other concepts, especially those that actually dominate the present.

Especially in this day and age, it is important to familiarize oneself with the concepts that can be gained from spiritual research, concepts that can point the way to an understanding of the present in the broadest sense. Today I would like to develop some basic concepts on which we can build further at the next branch evening, concepts that are suitable for illuminating important aspects of the present. Today I would like to start with more general ideas, ideas that touch more on the personal side of human beings, but which, from a certain point of view, should provide the basis for further considerations in the spiritual-scientific sense.

In the course of spiritual scientific considerations, it must be emphasized again and again how a change in our states of consciousness pervades our lives between our birth or conception and our death: the change between sleeping and waking. In a general sense, in broad terms, human beings know the difference between sleeping and waking; in a more intimate sense, only a spiritual scientific view can reveal the true difference between sleeping and waking to the human soul. In ordinary life, we think that we sleep only from the moment we fall asleep until we wake up, and that we are awake from the moment we wake up until we fall asleep again. But this is only a rough outline of the matter. In truth, the boundary we draw between sleeping and waking is completely wrong. For the state of dull consciousness, which in many respects is not consciousness at all, what we experience as the state of sleep, extends into our daily life, and in it we are also present with part of our being from the moment we wake up until we fall asleep. From the moment we wake up until we fall asleep, we are by no means awake with our entire human being, but only with a part of it, while another part continues to sleep, even when we think we are awake. We are always, in a certain sense, sleeping human beings. We are only truly awake in relation to our perception and our imagination. By perceiving the outside world through our senses, by hearing, seeing, and so on, we are awake in this hearing, seeing, in short, in this perception; there we are completely awake. We are also awake, albeit to a lesser degree, in our imagination. When we form thoughts, when ideas run through our minds, when memories rise up from the dark depths of our soul life, then we are awake in relation to the processes we are going through, that is, in relation to the processes of perception, of perceiving, of imagining.

But you know that in our soul life, apart from perception and imagination, we also have feeling and willing. With regard to feeling, we are not awake, even if we think we are awake; but with regard to feeling, we know no more about what is going on within us when we feel than we know when we dream in our sleep. The degree, the intensity of consciousness in which we are while we feel is exactly the same as the degree, the intensity of consciousness when we dream. And just as dreams arise as images from the unconscious depths of the soul, so feelings arise as emotional forces. We are no more awake when we feel than when we dream; it is only that after we have slept, we bring our dreams into our ordinary waking, imagining consciousness and distinguish the dream from waking by remembering the dream, whereas with feeling we do the same thing simultaneously. The feeling itself is dreamed within us, but we accompany our feeling with ideas. In our ideas, we do not have the feeling within us, but we look from the idea to the feeling in the same way as we look at the dream after waking up; only we do this simultaneously with the feeling, which is why we are not aware that we actually only have the idea of the feeling in our real consciousness. The feeling is down in the dream regions like the dream itself.

And the will itself, you can already recognize it purely externally: What do you know about what actually happens when you make the decision to pick up a book and then your hand picks up that book? What do you know about what is happening between your ideas, which you have alone in your consciousness: I want to pick up the book — and all the mysterious processes that then take place in your organism? We know what we think about wanting, but for ordinary consciousness we know nothing about wanting. While we dream away our feelings, we sleep through the actual essential content of wanting. By being perceptive, imaginative human beings, we are awake; but by feeling and wanting while awake, we dream and sleep. Thus, in feeling and wanting, the state of sleep extends into our waking consciousness. We must therefore say: The state in which we are from falling asleep to waking up with regard to our whole being also applies to our feeling and willing when we are awake.

Through perception and imagination, we learn to recognize a world around us, which we call the physical-sensory world; through feeling and willing, we do not learn to know the world in which we are as feeling and willing human beings. We are constantly in a supersensible world. Our feelings and our will, with reference to their powers, originate from this supersensible world, just as our perception and imagination originate from the physical-sensory world. We have no physical organs for feeling and willing, but we do have physical organs for perception and imagination. The fact that physiologists believe there are organs for feeling and willing—some physiologists, thinking physiologists, do not believe this—is only because they do not know what they are talking about and yet talk about something they want to know something about and know nothing about.

What I have just described is, in a sense, the lawful state in which we live between birth and death. There we are awake in relation to our perception and imagination, and asleep in relation to our feeling and willing.

It is different between death and a new birth. There, in a certain sense, it is reversed: we begin to wake up in relation to our feelings and our will. And in a certain sense, we then sleep through our perceptions and our imagination — although sleep is a different state in the world in which we then live with our soul. But you will be able to see from what I have just said that the so-called dead differ from the so-called living only in that the so-called living sleep through what the so-called dead actually stand within. The so-called living sleep through the feeling and willing that flow continuously through their being; the dead stand within this feeling and willing. It will not be difficult for you to understand that the dead are in the same world in which we are as so-called living beings. We are not separated from them in any other way than that we do not perceive the world in which they are, in which they live and move. Those who are dead are always around us, those beings who live without having achieved physical incarnation are always around us. We simply do not perceive them. Just imagine a person sleeping in a room: the objects are around him, but he does not perceive them. The fact that something is not perceived is no proof that it is not there. It says nothing at all about whether it is there or not. In fact, with regard to the world of the dead, we are in exactly the same position as we are with regard to physical beings when we sleep. We live in the same world as the dead and the higher realms of the higher hierarchies; they are in our midst, we are only separated from them by our type of consciousness.

But then the thing is that human beings perceive only a part of the reality in which they actually exist, they grasp only a part of that reality. If human beings were to perceive the full reality, then their knowledge would naturally be very different from what it is now. But within this knowledge there would not only be the forces that come from the natural realms known to us, but within this knowledge there would also be the forces of higher spiritual beings and also those from the realm of the so-called dead. Today, this is still a grotesque thing for the vast majority of humanity. This must become a matter of insight for wider circles of humanity, especially for those who are interested in the development and progress of human life. For until our time, human beings have been guided more or less by dark, unknown forces in relation to everything they cannot perceive in their environment. This guidance by dark, unknown forces — we will speak more about this at the next branch meeting — has more or less ceased in our time. In our time, human beings must consciously connect with certain forces that reach into our realm from the realm in which the so-called dead also reside. It will, however, be somewhat difficult to bring such things to the level of consciousness of humanity that is necessary if the real, the true, is to take the place of some of the fantasy and inadequacy that pervades the present and has made it so catastrophic. I would like to draw attention to just one point, one thing, by way of introduction.

Among the various considerations that are made as so-called “scientific” considerations, there are also historical ones. History, for example, is taught and learned in schools. But what is this history? The science of history is, as the expert knows, not much older than a hundred years. Anyone familiar with the literature of earlier times knows that what we now call the science of history is not much older. I will not go into this further. But what is now history is understood by people, justified by people with the same ideas, with the same concepts that one has in ordinary external life, with the same concepts that one can apply when observing nature. And no one asks whether it is actually appropriate to view historical life in the same way as we view external nature. That is not possible. For in the historical life of humanity, impulses are at work that cannot be grasped with the ideas we have in our waking consciousness. But anyone who can truly look at history knows that we are governed in historical life by impulses that are accessible to ordinary consciousness only in the dream state, at most in the dream state. What passes as history is dreamed by humanity. Just as humanity dreams its emotional life, so it also dreams what historical impulses are. And if one wants to view the historical life of humanity with the ordinary concepts that are very good for natural science, one cannot grasp it. One only sees its surface. What is it that is taught and learned in schools as history? It has no more relation to real history than if you were to look at a corpse and consider what you can describe about it to be a description of the human being. Corpse-gazing is the whole of history as it is commonly understood today. History must undergo the most thorough transformation. And what prevails in history will only be comprehensible in the future with inspiration, with inspired concepts. Then we will have true history. Then we will know what prevails in humanity, and we will also know what influences social life from historical life.

What I am saying here actually has a profound meaning. People believe they understand social and historical life. They do not understand it because they only want to comprehend it with the ordinary ideas of everyday life. This is not apparent when one writes history, of course, because it does not matter much whether one gets it right. One could show with obvious examples that it does not matter much! Well, let me give you an obvious example: I believe you usually learn in history books that America was discovered in 1492. That is indeed the case. But then, based on what appears in history books, you form the idea that America was completely unknown in the past, no matter how far back you go. That is not the case. America was unknown for only a few centuries. Even in the 12th and 13th centuries, there was lively traffic from Iceland and Ireland to America. Medicinal herbs and other things were brought to Europe through this lively traffic. And for certain reasons connected with the inner karma of Europe and with the role played by Ireland in earlier times, everything was done from Rome to cut Europe off from America and to make America virtually forgotten. It was actually what happened at that time from Rome, not even to the detriment of European conditions; it was well meant for Europe. I only want to use this example to show that what is a fact does not necessarily have to be a historical fact, that one can be completely ignorant of an important matter historically. On the other hand, however, it is significant to be historically knowledgeable or historically ignorant with regard to the social life of humanity in general. That is significant. How often do we hear people say today: You have to think this way or that way about this event or that event, because history teaches this or that. — Try to take a look at today's journalistic literature, especially the external literature, and you will see how often you come across the phrase: History teaches this or that. — Historical events that people witness are partly overlooked, but they nevertheless form an opinion about them, or allow themselves to be indoctrinated. One very often hears the phrase that history teaches this or that. And at the beginning of this war, very important men said something about what history teaches. At that time, it was the honest conviction of so-called intelligent people that this war could last at most four to six months, given the general social and economic conditions on earth. Many predicted this; at most four to six months! This has come to pass just as it was predicted by someone much greater than a historical prophet, but only as a historical prophecy based on the ordinary ideas of the ordinary consciousness of mankind, which cannot grasp history because history is at best dreamed, partly slept through, and can only be grasped with grand concepts. When Schiller took up his philosophical professorship in Jena, he gave his world-famous inaugural lecture on the study of history. He gave this speech shortly before the outbreak of the French Revolution. Schiller, who was certainly no insignificant figure, expressed his conviction, which was drawn from history—but it was only a conviction based on the ordinary ideas of history—not verbatim, but in essence: History teaches us that in ancient times there were many disputes and wars among men; but from all that has happened, we can conclude that in the future the European peoples will still have their disagreements, but that they will always feel themselves to be members of one great family and will not tear each other apart. — So said Friedrich von Schiller! Then came the French Revolution in 1789. And everything that happened to the families of nations in Europe in the 19th century, and everything that has happened now, so many years later, has truly and thoroughly destroyed Schiller's so-called historical judgment.

History will only teach us something when we are able to penetrate it with inspired concepts. For it is not only the living who play a role in the historical life of humanity, but also the souls of the so-called dead, the spirits with whom the so-called dead souls live as we live with the beings of the animal, plant, and mineral kingdoms. Today, this is often taken as a mere phrase. But humanity will have to thoroughly wean itself from giving this phrase the recognition it currently enjoys. It will only be able to do so, however, if it acquires concepts that are saturated with reality, true concepts. And a particularly important, true concept is precisely that that conveys to us the awareness that we are not separated from the so-called dead by anything other than our consciousness, which, in relation to the world in which the dead are around us, in relation to our world of feelings and our world of will, is a sleeping consciousness, just as sleeping consciousness is from the moment we fall asleep until we wake up in relation to the objects around us. Clairvoyant consciousness offers confirmation at every turn of what I have now characterized in more general terms.

But the question may arise: How is it that human beings know nothing about the world in which they actually live, which they wander through with every step of their lives? — Yes, you see, it is precisely the way in which clairvoyant consciousness concretely enlightens us about what we can call communication with the so-called dead that is living proof that, for ordinary consciousness, this world in which the dead live must remain unknown at first. I need only tell you a few things about the communication that can occur with the so-called dead—admittedly, with a certain development of clairvoyant, seeing consciousness—and you will see why we know nothing in ordinary life about communication with the dead. It is entirely possible, even if it has its questionable aspects in certain respects, that human beings can awaken their consciousness in such a way that the world of the dead is open to them, that they can perceive the world of the so-called dead, that human beings are able to communicate with individual dead people, if I may put it that way. Then, if he really wants to communicate with the dead, he must adopt a completely different way of behaving in his consciousness if he wants to achieve reliable communication. He must adopt a completely different way of consciousness than the one we have here for the physical world. I will mention a few characteristics.

You see, when you interact with another person here in the physical world, you have certain habits for this interaction. When I talk to someone, I am accustomed to the physical plane that when I ask them something or tell them something, I speak, and I am aware that the speech comes from my soul and goes to them through my speech organs. I am aware that I am speaking. I am also aware of this in relation to my external perception. And when he answers me or tells me something, this other person here on the physical plane, then I hear his words, then his words sound to me.

This is not the case with fully conscious communication—with semi-conscious communication it is something else—with the dead. There it is exactly the opposite. And it is—if one may express it in such a way in this field—that it is completely different from what one would expect. When I stand before the dead, they speak in their soul what I ask them or what I want to tell them; I receive this from them. What they say to me sounds from my own soul.

One has to get used to this. One has to get used to the fact that what the other person says sounds from one's own soul, and what one says oneself sounds back from the spiritual world outside. This is so unlike everything that human beings habitually experience in the physical world that they cannot even begin to imagine such a thing. Just think about it: when you go through life and something comes out of your soul on some occasion, you attribute it to yourself. In a certain sense, human beings are, as some say, egoistic beings, and they are not easily inclined to attribute what rises from their souls to their inspiration or genius, whatever you want to call it. That much of what rises from our soul is actually what the dead are telling us is something we only learn to recognize in contemplative consciousness. The realm of the dead plays continuously in our will, in our feelings, and rises up continuously. We may attribute something that arises within us to a good idea: in truth, it is communication with a dead person. And the other thing is also quite unusual for human beings. That is why they do not pay any attention to such things at all, whether they come from the gray spiritual environment, I would say, as if their own thoughts were surrounding them. If he can be so objective toward his thoughts that they seem to swirl around him, then the dead understand these thoughts. Even in ordinary consciousness, human beings are in contact with the dead, but they are not aware of this because they are unable to interpret the fact I have just mentioned.

To understand this, however, we must consider that we have two other states of consciousness besides sleeping, waking, and dreaming. We have two other important states of consciousness, even extremely important states of consciousness, but we do not pay attention to them in ordinary life. We do not pay attention to them for a certain reason, which will become clear to you the moment I name these two other states of consciousness: we have the state of falling asleep and the state of waking up. However, they do not last long; they pass so quickly that humans do not pay attention to their content. The most important things happen at the moment of falling asleep and at the moment of waking up. And if you learn to recognize the nature of the moments of falling asleep and waking up, then from a certain point of view you will also gain a correct understanding of the relationship between human beings and the world in which the dead are also present with us.

I said: Man is actually in constant contact with the world of the dead, and this connection is particularly active at the moment of falling asleep and at the moment of waking up. And indeed, as clairvoyant consciousness shows, at the moment of falling asleep, human beings are particularly suited to asking questions of the dead, to communicating with them, and so on, in other words, to turning to the dead. At the moment of waking up, human beings are particularly suited to receiving communications, messages from the dead. They receive these messages quickly, and are immediately awake. What has flitted by is immediately drowned out by the tumultuous state of wakefulness. In atavistic states, this was known and even hinted at not so long ago among more primitive peoples. But even in more primitive regions, such things are gradually disappearing under the influence of our materialistic culture. Anyone who grew up with our elderly people in rural areas knows that one of their basic rules was that when you wake up in the morning, you should remain as quiet as possible, not look immediately at the bright window, not look at the light, because people did not want to allow the after-effects of sleep, which particularly affected the soul when waking up, did not want to be drowned out by the stormy awakening. Primitive man wanted to lie quietly in the dark room for a while, did not want to look out of the window when he woke up.

Now, it does take something, although it is not too difficult to perceive, to realize that there is something special about the moment of waking up and falling asleep. To be able to pay attention to such things requires, if I may say so, a certain alertness of mind, a quality that has never been as lacking as it is in our time. One could cite grotesque examples of what it means to be alert in one's thinking. Trivial examples that pervade everyday life can be found, so to speak, on the street. I will give a very banal example.

A few days ago, my gaze fell on an advertisement that took up about an eighth of the space in a large newspaper, an advertisement that I noticed was very widespread. It was an advertisement for a very widely used memory technique: Pöhlmann, or something like that. There is a lot of advertising. This advertisement began something like this: It claimed that you cannot influence other people unless you use Mr. Pöhlmann's method, but rather another method. I am not talking now about the permissibility or impermissibility, about the right or wrong of “gaining influence” and so on; that is not our concern here, but I am talking about what is said about the matter in formal terms in the advertisement. It said: Certain people claim to gain influence over others by cultivating personal magnetism, by strengthening whatever it is in the human being. It is easy to prove that these people are not telling the truth, because all one has to do is ask them whether they have succeeded in using their personal influence to get Rothschild or other rich people to give them a million dollars. Since this had demonstrably not been achieved, and it would certainly have been attempted if it could have been achieved, this proved that this method could not be used to gain influence over people. For influence could only be gained through science and education. - The Pöhlmann method is then described. We now know that a whole number of people are convinced of this: the other fellows do not have the opportunity to cultivate abilities that gain influence over people, because that is quite clear, isn't it? They did not gain such influence over Rothschild that he gave them his millions. How many people, you ask yourself, read this advertisement and do not immediately object: “Yes, does Pöhlmann have so many students who have won a million from Rothschild?” You only need to ask yourself how many people have this obvious thought!

This is a trivial example, but it shows you how thinking about what you read does not awaken. I chose this example, first because of its everyday nature, and second because there is obviously no one here who would not think that Pöhlmann did not succeed in getting the million. Of course, those who would fall for such an advertisement are all out of here, and out of a certain politeness I will not mention any examples that any of those present might fall for! But what I want to say is that in countless cases in life, from morning to night, people read these things all the time. They say they don't pay any attention to them. They don't pay attention to them. I recently read a speech that contained the following sentence: “Our connection with a particular empire is the key point that must determine the direction of our politics in the future.” Imagine a way of thinking like this: a connection is a core point that becomes a direction! Anyone who thinks like this is capable of dealing with and doing all kinds of things in life. But one does not notice the connections between such crippled thinking and public life.

But today we need to address the lack of vigilance in thinking that is a hallmark of our culture, to pay attention to this very lack of vigilance in thinking. Feasible thoughts: that is the first requirement if we want to be able to pay attention to such things as the revelations of the moment of falling asleep and waking up.

I once attended a lecture by a very famous literary historian. It was his inaugural lecture, and he had put a lot of effort into it. He had formulated all kinds of questions about literary history, and at the end he said: “Well, gentlemen, you see, I have led you into a forest of question marks!” At the time, I had to imagine a forest of question marks! Just imagine: a forest of question marks!

Only those who are accustomed to carrying out the ideas that form in their minds, who have developed alertness in their thinking, are prepared to pay attention to things such as the moments of waking up and falling asleep. But what is not perceived is still there. And human contact with the dead is there, and it is particularly active at the moment of falling asleep and waking up. Basically, every human being asks countless questions and gives countless messages to beloved dead people at the moment of falling asleep, and receives messages and answers from the dead at the moment of waking up. But in a certain way, I would say, one can cultivate this contact with the dead. We have often discussed various ways of cultivating communication with the dead, but we would like to add the following today.

There is a difference between whether a thought we have in connection with a dead person leads us to be able to address them at the moment of falling asleep, or whether it does not. That is a certain difference. Those who do not place themselves in life in a purely sensual and egoistic way will, out of a healthy sense of feeling, feel the need not to interrupt the communication that karma has brought them with certain personalities who have passed through the gate of death recently or long ago, and they will probably connect their thoughts more often with such departed personalities. It may well be that such thoughts, which we connect with the idea of departed personalities, result in real communication with the dead, even if we do not know them, even if we cannot pay attention to what is happening at the moment of falling asleep. But certain thoughts are more conducive to such communication, while other thoughts are less so. Abstract thoughts, thoughts that we entertain with a certain indifference, perhaps even out of a sense of duty, are not very suitable for passing over to the dead at the moment of falling asleep. On the other hand, thoughts and ideas that arise from a feeling of special interest that united us with the dead during their lifetime are suitable for passing over to the dead. Let us remember the dead in such a way that we do not think of them merely with abstract thoughts, with cold ideas, but call to mind a moment in our soul when we felt warm at their side, when what they said was not just communication but something loving. Let us remember those moments we spent with the dead in a community of feelings, in a community of impulses of the will. let us remember those moments when we did this or that together with the dead, when we decided what was important to both of us, what led us both to a common action, in short, anything that made our hearts resonate together. Let us bring this resonance of hearts to life, then it will color our thoughts of the dead in such a way that our thoughts flow over to them in the moment we fall asleep. Whether we have this thought at nine o'clock, at twelve o'clock, at two o'clock, the whole day can give us some time to have this thought, it remains and goes to the deceased at the moment of falling asleep. At the moment of waking up, we can receive answers, messages, or communications from the deceased. This does not have to happen at the moment of waking up, when we cannot pay attention to approaching our soul, but it can somehow arise from our soul during the course of the day in the form of an idea, as we believe, if we believe in such things at all. But even then, some things are more favorable, some less favorable. Under certain circumstances, the dead find it easier to access our soul in order to speak this or that into our soul, so that it speaks within our soul itself; in other cases, the circumstances are less favorable for such things. The conditions are particularly favorable when we have acquired a good, accurate idea of the nature of the dead, when we have such a strong interest in the nature of the dead that this nature has really stood before our mind's eye. You will ask yourselves: Why does he say that? If someone was close to you, you must have an idea of their nature! — I don't believe that at all, my dear friends, especially not in our time! In our time, people pass each other by and know very, very little about each other. That may not alienate you from here, from the physical world, but it alienates you very much from the world through which the dead pass. You see, here, in the physical world, there are numerous unconscious or subconscious forces and impulses that bring people closer together, even if they do not want to get to know each other. It can happen in life, as some of you may have read, that you can be married for decades and still know very little about each other. But there are other impulses that do not rely on mutual understanding that bring people together. Life is permeated everywhere by subconscious and unconscious impulses. But as I said, these subconscious impulses bind us here; they do not bind us to the beings who have gone before us through death. It is therefore necessary that we truly absorb something into our soul through which the essence of the other lives on in us. And the more vividly it lives in us, the easier it has access to our soul, the easier it can communicate with us.

That is what I would like to characterize about the continuous, ever-occurring interaction between the so-called living and the so-called dead. Each of us is constantly in contact with the so-called dead, and the only reason we are not aware of this is because we are unable to pay sufficient attention to the moment of falling asleep and the moment of waking up. I said this in order to give you a more concrete idea of this coexistence with the supersensible world in which the dead reside. It will become even more concrete to us if we consider a few other circumstances.

Younger people die, older people die. And yet, in relation to those who remain alive, the death of younger people who pass away is something different from the death of older people who pass away. Such things can really only be discussed if one is able to consider individual concrete circumstances in these areas. I am not describing this from a general scientific point of view, but am merely summarizing what has actually happened in individual concrete cases. If one follows with observing consciousness what happens when children die away from their parents, when young people pass through the gate of death away from their relatives, and if one then learns to recognize how these souls live on, then this knowledge presents itself in such a way that one would like to summarize it in the following words. One must say: in the consciousness of these younger people who have passed through the gate of death, there lives something that can be characterized by saying: they are not actually lost to the living, they remain there, they remain nearby, in the essence of the survivors. As younger people, they do not separate themselves from those left behind for a long time; they remain in their sphere. Something different can be said about older people who have died, about parents and children, and so on. These things are perhaps best expressed in epigrammatic form. Of those who have died at an advanced age, one can say: the souls of these people who died in their later life do not lose the souls of those who have remained behind. — So, while those who remain behind do not lose the younger souls, the older people, when they have passed through the gate of death, do not lose those who are then on earth, the souls of those who remain behind, even though these others are here. They take with them, so to speak, what they want from us; they have everything from the souls who have remained here that makes life easier for them, everything that the younger ones can have if they remain there. They do this too; they remain more or less in the sphere of those who have remained behind, the younger souls.

These conditions can be studied in a very specific way, so that what I have just said can become certain. Of course, these things must be studied with the seeing consciousness. And with the seeing consciousness, one can study grief and the pain of separation. Grief and the pain of separation are actually two very different states. People do not know this, but when one observes the grief and pain in a person's soul over the death of a child, it is quite different from the grief and pain one observes when an elderly person dies. People do not know this, but it is fundamentally different when one judges it in the soul as an inner state.

What is noteworthy here is this: when, say, parents mourn their children who have died prematurely, this grief is, in terms of its actual content, its deeper impulse, only a reflex, a reflection of what the child who has remained behind lives into the soul of those left behind. The child has remained, and by remaining, it feels all kinds of things, and these feelings live their way into the soul of those left behind and awaken an impulse there. It is a pain of compassion, a pain of sympathy; it is actually the pain or suffering of the child itself that one experiences within oneself. Of course, one attributes the pain to oneself, but it is a pain of compassion. Do not misunderstand me — we must take these expressions in a reasonable way, not with all kinds of negative connotations — one could say: When a younger relative dies, one is possessed by the pain from the soul of the deceased, albeit in a normal way, so that it does no harm; he lives on in us, and what we interpret as pain is his life within us.

It is different when we mourn an older person who has left us. A pain arises that is not a reflection of what lives in the other person, because the other person can truly bring up what is in our soul; they do not lose us of their own accord. We cannot be obsessed with their pain, or obsessed with their feelings in this way at all, because they have no desire to penetrate us with their feelings, since they are taking us with them. They do not lose us. That is why this pain, this grief, is selfish grief, selfish pain. This is not a reproach; it is certainly justified, but we must distinguish between these two types of grief in a very fundamental way.

The matter becomes important when we move from describing the pain or coexistence with the deceased to the deceased themselves. If the relationship with a person who died at a young age is completely different from the relationship with a person who died in later years, then it is understandable that the way we cherish their memory and keep their memory alive must also be different in each case. Towards a younger child, we will have the right cult, the right memory, if we take into account that the child has remained, that the child lives with us and particularly enjoys settling into what we would have been able to offer the child if the child had remained here. Experience shows that after their death, such children particularly desire to find general human relationships in the memory and in what is offered to them, and also to find something in the cult of the dead that offers more general interests and has little to do with special interests. For children who have died, for example, the Catholic funeral service is more appropriate, where there is a general rite, where there is a rite that applies to everyone in the same way. A child who has died would like to have a funeral service that is more universal, that is not just for them, but that could be for everyone.

For an elderly person who has passed away, the Protestant funeral service is better, where one focuses on the particular circumstances of their life and gives a eulogy that refers to their specific individual circumstances. And if one wants to preserve the memory of such an elderly person who has passed away, then it is particularly appropriate to cling to details of their life that were unique to them, to their special, individual life, and to seek out the thoughts through which one can celebrate the memory of the elderly person who has passed away.

You can see from this that, when viewed correctly, spiritual science cannot remain mere theory. It shows us something about the conditions that exist in the world, from which we are cut off only because we dream away our feelings and sleep through our impulses of will. It speaks of the worlds in which we are present with our feelings and will. If we grasp the spiritual scientific ideas with sufficient intensity and with the right energy, they do not remain ideas, but have an effect on our feelings and will. Think how fruitful these spiritual scientific ideas can be for life! Clergy who are responsible for leading the cult of the dead will find the right way, the right rhythm for this cult in a completely different way than if they remain with mere abstract theology.

Now this is really no wonder, since the world of which spiritual science speaks is the real world in which our feelings and our impulses of will live, so that what it can give also plays back into feeling and will. It plays into our feelings — but also everywhere else — when, for example, we develop feelings toward the dead. But it should also play into our impulses of will. This should be considered especially in our time. For if one were to follow the impulses of the will of the people of our time, one would not encounter very deep foundations of the human soul. It is precisely the peculiarity of our time that humanity needs to seek spiritual impulses for its will. And that is the tragedy of the present age, that people have not yet decided to seek them. Salvation from the turmoil of our time will only come if we are willing to seek impulses for our outer life from the spirit. As I said this evening, people in the widest circles still reject this. They will have to learn it, because this time will become a great teacher for the generation that has to live through it, in an even richer measure than has already been the case.

Next Sunday morning, we will take up these concepts, which are more related to the individual personality, in order to speak specifically about the current circumstances, but in a truly spiritual scientific sense.