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Death
will stop being a mystery
Something that must be a fact for all people, when they think about
it, is that they must die some day. Most people do not think about it
except when they, through the death of friends or relatives, come closer
to life than
usual, and then the thought strikes them with terror. Death is a riddle
to most people. "No one has come back and told how it is on the
other side, and perhaps there is no 'other side' at all", people
usually say. It is therefore natural that I, in my lectures, deal with,
among other things, the mystery of death, which will gradually stop
being something about which people feel anxious or terrified.
What then is death? First and foremost it is an experience that comes
to absolutely all physical beings in this world. No one doubts that
they will have to experience it as it is too apparent in all things
around us. Furthermore, death is not only a process that will come some
day; it is already present within us. You began to die when you were
born. Where is the tiny baby's body in which you came to the world?
Where is the little child's face with which you in excited expectation
looked forward to Christmas Eve, the little face that shone both when
you, as a child, heard the wonderful adventure of Christmas and when
you experienced all the other happy hours of childhood?
This face does not exist any more on the physical plane. You have another
face now. And if you are an old person today one can ask where the young
and agile body with which you embraced the one you loved is now. And
where is the mature body with which you crowned your life's work and
experienced the peak of your physical appearance in this life? These
bodies are, if you are today an old man or woman, long since dead. The
old person has actually already experienced reincarnation or rebirth
several times before he or she has to die.
The
transformation of the organism
It cannot be denied that these physical bodies no longer exist. Here you
will perhaps argue that an older person's present body is the same as
the body the person in question had as a child and as a young person,
only now it is worn out. But such a view is based on an illusion. An organism
is a "living thing", an organisation of living micro-individuals
that we call organs, cells, molecules and atoms. With the exception of
the organs, the cycles of these micro-individuals are so quick that their
physical existence is of a far shorter duration than that of the macro-being.
These beings are therefore continuously replaced in the organism of the
macro-being. Every minute there are cells and atoms that are born and
die in our organism, so our organism is in fact subject to a continuous
process of transformation and in the course of only a few months is almost
totally renewed. So it is not an insignificant number of bodies an older
person has already left behind. Every renewal must be perceived as a new
body. But you do not notice these reincarnations or rebirths much since,
behind these transformations, you go on with a continuous, uninterrupted
experience of life. The replacement takes place gradually and in such
a gentle and harmonious way that it does not normally disturb or interrupt
the experience of life. But if one imagines that the replacement of these
micro-beings took place at the same time the organism would have to die
and an entirely new organism would have to replace it. A kind of deathprocess
would then have to take place between these replacements. The body we
had as a child would then be unchangeable until that moment when we were
mature enough to take possession of the body we had as a youth, and the
concept of "growing'', in the sense in which we know it, would be
unknown to us. The replacement that could not happen gradually must then
happen suddenly. We would have to fall into a kind of sleep or hibernation,
and during this sleep the new body, which should bear our youth-consciousness,
would have to grow quickly and the child-body would just as quickly have
to shrivel up and be discarded in favour of the new. We would then wake
up in a new body and use it for a period until a new replacement should
take place.
There are in fact beings in this physical world who experience their renewal
of life according to this principle, namely various insects who go through
the caterpillar, chrysalis and butterfly stages. These beings must experience
a kind of death-process between each of the stages within each local terrestrial
life. Imagine if we had to go through the same! One fine day we would
be overwhelmed by an intense desire to sleep deeply, and the body by which
our relatives and friends were used to identifying us would shrivel up
and wither, and a new body would grow in its place. The day-consciousness
would thereby again be able to manifest itself and we would wake up in
a new, beautiful body that no one would recognise as ''us". Indeed,
we could even participate in the burial of our recently discarded body.
For some people all this will sound comical, for others perhaps alarming,
but there are however beings in the universe and even on this planet that
experience the physical renewal of life according to such a principle.
The
replacement of the organisms of terrestrial human beings
I have touched on all of this only because it in reality lifts a first
little corner of the veil that covers the process that people call "death"
and that is so often terrifying for them. But the human being has no cause
to be afraid of death other than those causes he himself creates. And
through spiritual science the modern seeker has the possibility to make
himself familiar with what happens during the process of death so that
the anxiety and uncertainty can be overcome and be replaced by confidence
and security. It is quite true that after the deathprocess with which
people are familiar there is only the discarded physical body or corpse
left. One is not able to see the being appear in a new form. But is this
an unshakeable proof that the consciousness is wiped out on the decomposition
of the organism? No - we can only physically experience another person's
consciousness when this other person has a physical body through which
to manifest himself, just as we can only experience radio waves when there
is a radio through which they are transformed into sound waves.
But we are in no doubt that radio waves exist even if we cannot hear them.
The consciousness or mentality of the living being is also a reality that
exists in ray- and waveform. It is these energies that cause the complete
renewal of life and the transformation of the organism, both where it
occurs in various stages as is the case with the above-mentioned insects,
and where a gradual, almost imperceptible transformation takes place as
in the case of the terrestrial human being. And if one compares the replacement
of the organism of the above-mentioned insects and the replacement of
the organism in that species of beings to which terrestrial human beings
belong does one not have a proof that this ability to replace the organism
is, like all other abilities, subject to evolution? The ability of the
terrestrial human being to replace his organism is in reality far more
developed than that of the insects.
To be able to replace one's organism quite imperceptibly as the terrestrial
human being does in one physical incarnation through the stages of childhood,
youth, maturity and old age without having to interrupt the functioning
of the day-consciousness, and to be able to have the feeling that it is
still the same organism, without this in reality being the case, is something
of an ideal in relation to the stage of evolution where the beings in
one incarnation have to go through a kind of deathprocess several times.
The terrestrial human being has reached a step in evolution where he is
free from that kind of unpleasant interruption in the transformation of
the organism until his earthly life, through ill-health, accident or the
natural wear and tear of old age, is interrupted and his consciousness
is carried by the spiritual or ray-formed bodies, which also carry the
consciousness during sleep. But when a more primitive way of replacing
the organism than that of the human being exists, is it not just as natural
that there also exists a way in relation to which that of the human being
must be said to be primitive, but that the human being can gradually learn
to use? This means a replacement of the organism where the process we
call ''death'' can also be changed into a gradual process of transformation
instead of an abrupt transition from one state to another. And thereby
the "horror of death'' will be overcome and there will be no more
state of shock associated with this process of transformation, which can
be the case for people now when they see, with their physical eyes, the
physical bodies of other people become corpses without being able, with
the same eyes, to see the same people in the ray-formed bodies now carrying
their consciousness.
Total
and partial replacement of the organism
When the transformation of the organism, the principle of rebirth or reincarnation,
is thus subject to evolution, there must be a goal for this evolution,
and this is to make the replacement more and more imperceptible. Terrestrial
human beings and the categories of beings related to them have thus reached
this goal to perfection within the individual terrestrial life. Indeed,
they have reached such a degree of perfection that the human being does
not at all notice the replacement of his organism, and denies reincarnation.
They at the moment only notice the process of replacement where it is
still not perfect and is called "death". Here they have not
yet been able to create a partial replacement of the organism, and; because
they are only used to a "partial death", they believe that the
total replacement of the organism is tantamount to "total death".
But it is only a short time that people will have such a belief based
on lack of knowledge of the eternal laws of life. Many seeking people
have already begun to succeed in finding a solution to the riddle of death.
But
it is not the purpose of life that people should concern themselves with
"death" and ''the spiritual world" on a mystical plane:
it has to become crystal-clear science, and the human being with his knowledge
and creative ability will in time be able to overcome death.
It is the will of Providence or the Godhead that the living being, after
a long period in the spiral of evolution, will reach a stage where he
is able to experience his eternal existence without the interruptions
in the organism that have to occur in the plant kingdom and the animal
kingdom of the spiral of evolution. This means that such an imperceptible
replacement of the organism as that which the terrestrial human being
has come to master within a single terrestrial life, will one day in the
future also be mastered by the same being when he glides from the physical
state to the ray-formed state.
It is really the concept "resurrection" that will in time be
a reality for the terrestrial human being who, when he has reached such
a step in evolution, where he is able to control matter with his will,
can no longer be described as a "terrestrial human being" but
as a "real
human being", a "human being in God's image."
In
my cosmic analyses and symbols I show where in the spiral of evolution
this goal will become a reality. In the last part of the third kingdom
of the spiral, the real human kingdom, such a perfect existence will begin
to become a fact. Then the being's transition from the physical to the
spiritual experience of life will no longer be hindered by any "deathprocess''.
The transition will be just as perfect as the transition from childhood
to youth, from youth to maturity and from maturity to old age is today
for the terrestrial human being.
Learning to die by learning to live
Until this epoch of evolution has been reached the terrestrial human being
must, however, still experience his existence as an appearance demarcated
into physical and spiritual separate lives where the transition can only
take place as the total replacement of the organisms. This in turn usually
causes the being to be conscious in only one of the two spheres, that
in which he at the moment finds himself, and often during his stay, at
any rate in the physical world, he is apt to deny the existence of the
other sphere. In principle it is in a way the same as if the caterpillars
were to deny the existence of the butterfly. Through modern spiritual
science the seeking "human caterpillars" of our time have, however,
the possibility to get to know something other than their own little local
"caterpillar-world". They can acquire an overview of the evolution
of life, of the process of creation in the midst of which they are situated,
and they can acquire knowledge about what promotes the development of
that state in which pain, suffering and death are totally overcome.
This state of the imperceptible replacement of the organism that the terrestrial
human being now experiences in a physical incarnation has taken him a
very long time to reach, and it is just as much a matter of course that
it must take some time before the transition to the spiritual world can
take place in the same way. But even now the individual terrestrial human
being has the possibility to turn death into something beautiful instead
of something horrifying. He can learn to die by learning how to live,
that is, by getting to know the laws of life and trying to live in accordance
with them. The more the human being with his thoughts, feelings and actions
lives on the same wavelength as the basic note of the universe or universal
morality - to be a joy and a blessing for all living beings - the easier
death will be when it one day comes. It will be felt like a renewal of
life, a lovely rest from the, at times, rather difficult life in physical
matter. But it will not be the kind of rest one can get in an armchair
or on a sofa. No - it will be as if one experiences the most wonderful
holiday one can imagine. With one's thoughts as the means of transport
one can visit zones and spheres at will. This too is based on universal
laws. Then a replacement of the organism again occurs. The being must
go back to that world in which there is resistance (which causes evolution),
that world in which it hurts to think wrongly. But now he gets a new,
healthy organism, which is built up in his mother's womb, and new possibilities
in a coming physical life to learn to think and to learn to live so that
he can gradually overcome death.
The above article is edited from a transcription of
a lecture.
Published
with permission from ©Martinus Idealfon 2001-06-18
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