From the notes of a listener to an Esoteric Lesson given by Rudolf Steiner on March 5, 1911 [102 years ago today]:
Two sayings are
given to pupils in Rosicrucian schools to support them in their meditations:
Beware of drowning in your esoteric striving. Beware of burning in the fire of
your own ego.
There's an outer
and an inner way to strive towards the spiritual.
Everything
around us is like a veil, like a cover before the spiritual that we must punch
through to get to the spiritual behind it. But in which direction? This cover
surrounds us on all sides: above, below, front, back, right, and left. And inwardly,
everything that we experience as joy, pain, etc., is like a veil, like fog that
conceals the spiritual in us, and this spiritual is the same one that we find
when we break through the outer cover.
So that mankind
can evolve further and get into the spiritual there are always men from time to
time who are more advanced than is permitted by the momentary stage of human
development, and who have things to tell us about states of human evolution that
reach far into the future. Such advanced beings must exist to lead men further.
John, the writer of the Apocalypse, was such a man. When he wanted to write a
revelation of the future, he told himself: If I write this book out of the whole
surroundings in which I'm living here and now, it'll be influenced by the self
that's in my body, since I'm connected with everything around and in me. I must
free myself from all of this. He had to place himself on something like a rock
that served him as a firm support, on which he didn't wobble and wasn't
influenced by anything that surged around and in him. And he moved himself to
the evening toSeptember 30 395 A.D., to the island of Patmos, as the Sun had already disappeared
under the horizon, though its effect could still be felt, and as the Moon and
stars appeared. The Virgin constellation was there in the western sky,
irradiated by the last gleam of the Sun that had set, with the Moon under it.
This picture is reproduced in one of the seals — the Virgin with the radiating
Sun, and the Moon under her feet. Thus, all of these seals were produced out of
deep mystical connections.
John broke
through the cover that surrounds us in this one direction — that of Virgo. There
are 12 of these signs. Seven of them are good — the ones reproduced in the
seals; the other five are more or less dangerous. Just as John chose this
particular point in time and space to become completely separated from himself
and all temporal things around him, so a Rosicrucian pupil must acquire a firm
foundation in himself. The best way to do this is to let theosophical teachings
work on us. Our astral body and thereby our etheric body become expanded by
listening to theosophical ideas. This is the effect on anyone who hears anything
about theosophy But the effect on those who are inclined toward theosophy is
different than on those who aren't. The former feel the etheric body's expansion
and fill it up with theosophical teachings, by accepting them. The other feel an
emptiness in their etheric body through its expansion because they don't accept
these ideas and so don't fill the expansion. Then doubt and skepticism arise
through this emptiness. Whereas with the first men, it's like a pouring of
oneself into the universe, which they can't let go too far, for they'll get a
feeling of hollowness, of not feeling at home in these widths of space, like a
fish that's taken out of water and can't live in air, because its organs haven't
adapted themselves to this changed element. When a theosophist devotes himself
to the teachings and his astral body expands evermore, he loses himself in this
unfamiliar element One must avoid drowning here. And this is possible if one
studies theosophy seriously, takes it in, elaborates it, and grasps it with
feeling, not just with thinking and will, but permeates it completely with
feeling. One can only do this with great earnestness. One must gain a firm
support within oneself — like John when he wanted to write the Apocalypse and he
transported himself to the island ofPatmos at sundown of Sept. 30, 395.
The
configuration of the Sun, Virgo, and Moon on that evening can be checked
astronomically, and this was done. From this materialistic science draws the
conclusion: Therefore the Apocalypse was written at that time. And then we're
told that science has ascertained this. That's the way science ascertains
things.
On the inner
path one finds all the joys and sorrows, pains and blissfulness that live in us.
But all of this is attached to our lower, perishable ego This whole desire world
surrounds us like a fog that covers the spiritual for us. It keeps us from
seeing and noticing the spiritual. We must break through it to get to the
spiritual. There are forces that approach an esoteric pupil to make this fog
even denser. The fog gets even denser if we don't resist it. We must burn it to
avoid burning in the fire of our passions. If we don't overcome this fog, if we
don't resist its becoming ever denser through Luciferic and Ahrimanic forces,
we're prisoners, as occultists say. There actually are men today who are born
with great capacities and reach certain stages very quickly, but are then
completely wrapped up in such a fog by the adversarial powers that they can't
get out. One calls this occult imprisonment.
Our desire world
consists entirely of egoism. And we can only overcome this egoism in deep
humility. Which thought can lead us to an overcoming of egoism? The thought
that we already spoke about yesterday in the exoteric lecture, the thought that
we killed Christ. We're murderers, yes, that's what we are. We can transform
this fact, but only if we let Paul's words live and become truth in us, “Not I,
but Christ in me.” We shouldn't kill the divine in us through egoism, through
our life of desires, etc., we should let Christ live in us. We should begin to
carry out this easy and yet so difficult thing in us with shivering
earnestness.
We arose from
the divine: Ex Deo nascimur. We should take all suffering upon us
willingly and patiently with the thought that we killed Christ; we should devote
ourselves to him completely and die in him: In Christo morimur. Then
we'll be reborn, reawakened through the Holy Spirit: Per Spiritum Sanctum
reviviscimus. This verse sounds different exoterically than esoterically,
but the difference is in only one word that's left out in the esoteric version.
As we leave this word out and don't speak this word in shy reverence for what
this word expresses, our feeling goes out to what is left unspoken in shy
reverence.
Ex Deo
nascimur
In … morimur
Per Spiritum Sanctum reviviscimus.
In … morimur
Per Spiritum Sanctum reviviscimus.
This tells us that man arose from the
spiritual; that he was originally contained in the spirit:
In the spirit
lay the germ of my body.
And the spirit has imprinted in my body
The eyes of sense,
That through them I may see
The lights of bodies.
And the spirit has imprinted in my body
Reason and sensation
And feeling and will,
That through them I may perceive bodies
And act upon them.
In the spirit lay the germ of my body.
And the spirit has imprinted in my body
The eyes of sense,
That through them I may see
The lights of bodies.
And the spirit has imprinted in my body
Reason and sensation
And feeling and will,
That through them I may perceive bodies
And act upon them.
In the spirit lay the germ of my body.
In my body lies the germ of the
spirit.
And I will incorporate into my spirit
The supersensible eyes
That through them I may behold the light of spirits.
And I will imprint in my spirit
Wisdom and power and love,
So that through me the spirits may act
And I become a self-conscious organ
Of their deeds.
In my body lies the germ of the spirit.
And I will incorporate into my spirit
The supersensible eyes
That through them I may behold the light of spirits.
And I will imprint in my spirit
Wisdom and power and love,
So that through me the spirits may act
And I become a self-conscious organ
Of their deeds.
In my body lies the germ of the spirit.
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