VII
The Great Initiates
It may well be said that
the anthroposophical conception of the world is distinguished from
any other we may meet because it can satisfy to such a great extent
the desire for knowledge. In the present time we so often hear that
it is impossible to gain knowledge of certain things — that our
capacity for knowledge has limits and cannot rise above a certain
height. On becoming acquainted with modern philosophical
research we constantly hear of such limits to knowledge, especially
among those schools of philosophy which owe their origin to Kant. The
understanding of anthroposophists and of those who practice
mysticism is distinguished from all such doctrines through
never setting limits to man's capacity for knowledge, but rather
looking upon it as capable of being both widened and uplifted. Is it
not, to a certain extent, the greatest arrogance for anyone to regard
his own capacity for knowledge, from the point at which it stands, as
something decisive, and then to say that with our capacities we
cannot go beyond definite limits of knowledge? The anthroposophist
says: “I stand today at a certain point in human knowledge,
from which I am able to know certain things and not others. But it is
possible to cultivate the human capacity for knowledge, to heighten
it.” What is called a school of initiation has as its essential
aim to raise to a higher stage this human capacity for knowledge. So
it is quite correct if one from a lower stage of knowledge says that
there are limits to his knowledge and that certain things cannot be
known. One can, however, raise oneself above this stage of knowledge
and press on to a higher stage, so that it becomes possible to know
what at a lower stage was impossible. This is the essence of
initiation, and this deepening or heightening of knowledge is the
task of the initiation schools. This means raising man to a stage of
knowledge to which nature has not brought him, but which he must
acquire for himself through long years of patient exercise.
In all ages there have been
these initiation schools. Among all peoples, those having a higher
kind of knowledge have arisen from these initiation schools. And the
essential nature of such schools — and of the great Initiates
themselves, who have soared above the lower stages of the human
capacity for knowledge and, through their inspirations, have been
acquainted with the highest knowledge accessible to us in this world
— finds expression in Initiates giving to the various peoples
on earth their various religions and world-conceptions.
Today we wish with a few
strokes to illuminate the essential being of these great Initiates.
As in every science, in every spiritual process one must first learn
the method through which one penetrates to knowledge. This is also
the case in the initiation schools. And here too it is a matter of
our being led through certain methods to the higher stages of
knowledge, about which we have spoken precisely. I shall now briefly
refer to the stages that here concern us. Certain stages of knowledge
can only be attained in the intimate schools of initiation where
there are teachers who have themselves in their own experience gone
through each school, have devoted themselves to every exercise, and
have really pondered every single step, every single stage. And one
must entrust oneself only to such teachers in the initiation
schools.
In these schools there is,
it is true, no hint of authority, nothing that smacks of dogmatism;
the governing principle is entirely that of counsel, the imparting of
advice. Whoever has gone through a certain stage of learning, and has
himself acquired experiences of the higher, super-sensible life, knows
the inner way that leads to this higher knowledge. And it is only one
such as this who is qualified to say what one must do. What is
necessary is simply that there be trust between pupil and teacher in
this sphere. Whoever lacks this trust can learn nothing; but whoever
has it will very soon perceive that nothing is recommended by any
occult, mystic, or mystery teacher other than what the teacher has
himself gone through. What concerns us here is that, of the whole
being of man as he stands before us today, it is essentially
only the outward visible part already within human nature that is
today complete. This must be made clear to anyone aspiring to become
a student of the mysteries — that man as he stands before us
today is by no means a completed being, but is in the process of
developing so that in the future he will reach many higher
stages.
That which today has
attained to an image of God, that which has arrived at the highest
stage in man, is the human physical body, that which we can see with
our eyes and perceive in any way with our senses. That is not,
however, the only thing that man has. He has still higher members of
his nature. To begin with, he further possesses a member that we call
his etheric body. This etheric body can be seen by anyone who has
cultivated his soul organs. Through this etheric body man is not
simply a creation in which work chemical and physical forces, but a
living creation, a creation that lives and is endowed with capacities
for growth, life, and propagation. One can see this etheric body,
which represents a kind of archetype of man, if, with the methods of
the art of clairvoyance — which will be characterized still
further — one suggests away the ordinary physical body. You
know how, by the ordinary methods of hypnotism and suggestion,
the point can be reached when, if you say to anyone that there is no
lamp here, he actually sees no lamp. So you can also, if you develop
in yourself sufficiently strong willpower — a willpower
that shuts out, entirely shuts out, all observation of the physical
body — so you can, in spite of seeing into space, completely
suggest away physical space. Then you see space not empty but filled
by a kind of archetype. This archetype has practically the same
form as the physical body. It is, however, not of the same nature
through and through, but is fully organized. It is not only
interlaced with fine veins and streams but it also has organs. This
creation, this etheric body, produces man's essential life. Its color
can only be compared with the color of the young peach blossom. It is
no color that is contained in the sun spectrum; but it is something
between a violet and a reddish tinge. This is then the second
body.
The third body is the aura,
which I have often described — that cloudlike formation of
which I spoke last time when describing man's origin, in which man is
as if in an egg-shaped cloud. In this is expressed all that lives in
man as lust, passion, and feeling. Joyful self-sacrificing feelings
express themselves in this aura in luminous streams of color.
Feelings of hate, physical feelings, express themselves in dark color
tones. Sharp, logical thoughts express themselves in sharply outlined
forms. Illogical, confused thoughts come to expression in figures
with blurred outline. Thus, we have in this aura an image of what is
living in man's soul as feeling, passion, and impulse.
As man has now been
described, so he was set down on the earth — from the hand of
nature, so to speak — at the point of time that lies
approximately at the beginning of the Atlantean race. Last time
I described what is to be understood by “the Atlantean
race.” At the moment when the fertilization by the eternal
spirit had already taken place, man confronts us with the three
members — body, soul, and spirit. Today this threefold nature
of man has taken a somewhat different form, as since that time, since
nature has released him, since he has become a being with
self-consciousness, man has worked on his own being. This work on
himself means the refining of his aura; it also means sending light
into the aura out of this self-consciousness. A man who stands at a
very low stage of development and has never worked on himself —
let us say a savage — has the aura which nature has
provided him. But all those within our civilization, our
cultural world, have auras on which they themselves have helped to
work, for in so far as man is a self-conscious being he works upon
himself and this work comes into expression first through changing
his aura. All that man has learned through nature, all that he has
absorbed since he was able to speak and think self-consciously, is a
recent acquisition in his aura brought about by his own activity.
If you put yourself back
into the Lemurian age, in which man had already had warm blood
flowing in his veins for some time, and in which, in the middle of
this Lemurian age, his fertilization with the spirit had taken place,
man then was not yet a being capable of clear thinking. All this
occurred at the beginning of evolution when the spirit had just taken
possession of the corporeality. At that time the aura was still
completely a consequence of forces of nature. One could then perceive
— as one still can with men at a very low stage of development
— how at a certain place in the interior of the head
(that is to say, a place that we have to seek in the interior of the
head) there exists a smaller aura of a bluish color. This smaller
aura is the outer auric expression of the self-consciousness. And the
more a man has developed this self-consciousness through his
thought and through his work, the more this smaller aura spreads
itself over the other, so that often in a short time both become
totally different. A man who lives in outer culture, a refined man of
culture, works on his aura in the particular way that this culture
impels him. Our ordinary knowledge, which they offer in our schools,
our experiences that life brings us, are absorbed by us and they are
perpetually transforming our aura. But this transformation must be
continuous if a man wishes to enter into practical mysticism. Then he
must make a special effort to work upon himself. For then he must not
incorporate into his aura only what culture offers him, but must
exercise an influence upon it in a definite, orderly manner. And this
happens through so-called meditation. This meditation, this
inner immersion, is the first stage which a student of initiation
must undergo.
Now in what does this
meditation take an interest? Just try to bring to mind and reflect
upon the thoughts that you shelter from morning to night, and upon
how these thoughts are influenced by the time and the place in which
you live. See whether you can hinder your thoughts, and ask yourself
whether you would have them if you did not happen by chance to be
living in Berlin at the beginning of the twentieth century. At the
end of the eighteenth and beginning of the nineteenth centuries, men
did not think in the same way as men do today. If you consider how
the world has changed in the course of the last century, and what
kind of changes time has brought about, you will see that what passes
through your soul from morning to night is dependent upon time and
space. It is different when we give ourselves up to thoughts that
have an eternal worth. Actually it is only certain abstract,
scientific thoughts to which men have given themselves up, the
highest thoughts of mathematics and geometry, that have an eternal
worth. Twice two is four holds good at all times and in all places.
It is the same with the geometrical truths that we accept. But
leaving aside a certain fundamental stock of such truths, we may say
that the average man has very few thoughts that are not dependent on
time and space. What is thus dependent unites us with the world, and
only exerts a trifling influence upon that essence which is in itself
enduring.
Meditation means nothing
other than surrendering oneself to thoughts which have eternal
worth, in order to raise oneself up in a conscious way to what lies
above both space and time. Such thoughts are contained in the great
religious writings: the Vedanta, the Bhagavad Gita, the Gospel of
John from the thirteenth chapter to the end, and the
“Imitation of Christ,” by Thomas a Kempis. He who
sinks himself with patience and perseverance so that he lives
in such writings; he who deepens himself anew every day —
perhaps working for weeks on one single sentence, thinking it
through, feeling it through — will gain unlimited benefit. Just
as each day one learns more nearly to know and love a child with all
its individual characteristics, so one can daily draw into one's soul
an eternal truth of the kind that flows from the great Initiates, or
from inspired men. This has the effect of filling us with new life.
Very significant also are the sayings in the “Light on the
Path” that have been written down by Mabel Collins, under the
instruction of higher powers. Actually in the first four sentences
there is something that, when applied with patience in the
appropriate way, is capable of so seizing upon man's aura that this
aura is completely shot through with new light. One can see this
light in the human aura shining and glistening. Bluish shades arise
in the place of the reddish or of the reddish brown shimmering
shades of color, and, in the place of yellow, clear reddish ones
arise, and so on. The whole coloring of the aura transforms
itself under the influence of such eternal thoughts. The student
cannot yet perceive this in the beginning, but he gradually begins to
notice the deep influence that emanates from the greatly
transformed aura.
If a man, in addition to
these meditations, consciously and in a most scrupulous way practices
certain virtues, certain achievements of the soul, then, within
this aura, his sense-organs of the soul develop. We must have these
if we want to see into the soul-world, just as we must have physical
sense-organs to be able to see into the material world. As the outer
senses were planted into the body by nature, so must man, in a
regular way, implant the higher sense-organs of the soul into his
aura. Meditation leads man to become ripe from within outwards,
forming, developing, and interweaving the available capacities of the
soul's senses.
But if we wish to cultivate
these sense organs we must turn our attention to quite definite
accomplishments of the soul. You see, man has a series of such organs
in his organization. We call these sense organs the so-called
Lotus flowers because the astral image, which man begins to
evolve in his aura when he is developing himself in the way
described, takes on a form that may be compared with that of a Lotus
flower. It goes without saying that this is only a comparison, just
as one can speak of the wings of the lung, which also bear only a
resemblance to wings. The two-petalled Lotus flower is found in the
middle of the head above the root of the nose, between the eyes. Near
the larynx is the sixteen-petalled Lotus flower, while in the region
of the heart there is the twelve-petalled one, and in the region of
the pit of the stomach the one with ten petals. Still farther down
are found the six-petalled and four-petalled Lotus flowers.
To day I want to talk only about the Lotus flowers that have
sixteen petals and twelve petals.
In Buddha's teachings you
are given an account of the so-called eightfold path. Now ask
yourselves once why Buddha offered precisely this eightfold
path as particularly important in the attainment of the higher
stages of man's development. This eightfold path is: right resolve,
right thinking, right speech, right action, right living, right
striving, right memory, right self-immersion, or meditation. A
great Initiate such as Buddha does not speak out of a vaguely felt
ideal, but out of knowledge of human nature. He knows what influence
the practice of such exercises of the soul will have on the future
development of the body. If we look at the sixteen-petalled Lotus
flower in the average man of today we actually see very little. If I
can so express it, it is in the process of flaring up again. In the
far-distant past this Lotus flower was once present; it has gone
backward in its development. Today it is appearing again,
partly through man's cultural activity. In the future, however, this
sixteen-petalled Lotus flower will come again to full development. It
will glisten vividly with its sixteen spokes or petals, each petal
appearing in a different shade of color; and finally, it will move
from left to right. What everyone in the future will possess and
experience is today being cultivated by those who seek in a conscious
way their development in the school of initiation, in order to become
leaders of mankind. Now eight of these sixteen petals have already
been formed in the far-distant past; today eight have still to be
developed, if the mystery pupil wishes to have the use of these
sense-organs. These will be developed if man treads the eightfold
path in a conscious way, observantly and clearly, if he consciously
practices these eight soul activities given by Buddha, and if he
arranges his whole life of soul so that he takes himself in hand,
practicing these eight virtues as vigorously as he can only do when
sustained by his meditation work, thus bringing the
sixteen-petalled Lotus flower not only into bloom but also into
movement, into actual perception.
I will now speak of the
twelve-petalled Lotus flower in the region of the heart. Six petals
of this flower were already developed in the far-distant past, and
six must be developed by all men in the future, by present-day
Initiates and their pupils. In all anthroposophical handbooks you can
find reference to certain virtues in the forefront of those
that should be acquired by anyone aspiring to the stage of Chela, or
pupil. These six virtues which you find mentioned in every
anthroposophical handbook concerned with man's development are:
control of thought, control of action, tolerance, steadfastness,
impartiality, and equilibrium, or what Angelus Silesius calls
composure. These six virtues, which one must practice consciously and
attentively in conjunction with meditation, bring to unfolding the
six further petals of the twelve-petalled Lotus flower. And these are
not gathered blindly in the anthroposophical textbooks, nor are they
stamped by haphazard or individual inner feeling, but they are spoken
out of the great Initiates' deepest knowledge. Initiates know that
whoever really wishes to evolve to the higher super-sensible stages of
development must bring about the unfolding of the twelve-petalled
Lotus flower. And to this end he must today develop, through these
six virtues, the six petals that were undeveloped in the past. Thus
you see how the great Initiates essentially gave their directions for
life out of their own deeper knowledge of the human being. I could
extend these remarks to still other organs of knowledge and
observation, but I only wish to give you a brief sketch of the
process of initiation, and for that these indications should
suffice.
When the pupil has
progressed so far that he begins to form the astral sense-organs,
when he has progressed so far that he is capable of perceiving not
only the physical impressions in his surroundings but also what
belongs to the soul — in other words, to see what is in the
aura of man himself as well as what is in the aura of animals and
plants — he then begins a completely new stage of instruction.
No one can see in his environment that which has to do with his soul
before his Lotus flowers revolve, just as one without eyes can see no
color and no light. But when the barrier is pierced, when the pupil
has gone beyond the preliminary stages of knowledge so that he has
insight into the soul-world, then true “pupil-ship” first
begins for him. This leads through four stages of knowledge. Now what
happens in this moment, when man has passed beyond the first steps
and has become a Chela? We have seen how all that we have just
described related to the astral body. This is organized throughout by
the human body. Whoever has undergone such a development has a
totally different aura. When man out of his self-consciousness
has illuminated his astral body, when he himself has become the
luminous organization of his astral body, then we say that this pupil
has illuminated his astral body with Manas. Manas is nothing other
than an astral body dominated by self-consciousness. Manas and
astral body are one and the same, but at different stages of
development.
One must understand this
if, in the practice of mysticism, one wishes to apply in a practical
way what is given in anthroposophical handbooks as the seven
principles. Everyone acquainted with the mystic path of development,
everyone who knows something about initiation, will say that these
have a theoretical value for study but for the practicing mystic they
have value only if the relation existing between the lower and the
higher principles is known. No practicing mystic recognizes more than
four members: the physical body, in which work chemical and physical
laws, the etheric body, the astral body, and finally the self- or
Ego-consciousness, called at the present stage of development
Kama-Manas, the self-conscious thinking principle. Manas is
nothing other than that which has been worked into the body by the
self-consciousness. The etheric body in its present form is
deprived of any influence of the self-consciousness. We can
indirectly influence our growth and nourishment, but not in the
same way as we cause our wishes, our thoughts and ideas to proceed
from self-consciousness. We cannot ourselves influence our
nourishment, digestion, and growth. In men, these are without
connection to the self-consciousness. The etheric body has to be
brought under the influence of the astral body, the so-called aura.
The self-consciousness of the astral body has to penetrate the
etheric body — to be able to work out of itself upon the
etheric body — as man, in the way already shown, works upon his
astral body, his aura. Then, when man through meditation, through
inner immersion, and through practicing activities of the soul, which
I have described, has come so far that the astral body has organized
itself, then the work extends to the etheric body, and the etheric
body receives the inner word. Then man not only hears what lives in
the world around him, but there resounds in him his etheric body, the
inner meaning of things.
I have often said here
before that the essentially spiritual in things is a resounding. I
have drawn your attention to how the practicing mystic, when speaking
in a correct sense, talks of a sound in the spiritual world in the
same way as of a light in the astral world, or world of desire. Not
for nothing does Goethe say, when guiding his Faust to heaven:
“Die Sonne tönt nach alten Weise im
Bruderspharen Wettgesang ...” (“The sun
resounds in ancient fashion, contending with his brother
spheres”). Nor are the words of Ariel empty when Faust is being
escorted by the spirits into the spiritual world: “Tönend wird für Geistesohren schon der neue Tag
geboren” (“Hear the new day being born, Spirit
ears can hear its ringing”).
This inner sounding which,
of course, is not at all a sound perceptible to the outer physical
ear, this inner word through which things can express their own
nature, is an experience that man has when he becomes able to
influence his etheric body from his astral body. Then he has become a
Chela, a real student of the great Initiates. Then he can be led
further upon this path. A man who has thus ascended this step is
called a homeless man, because fundamentally he has found the
connection with a new world, because it rings to him out of the
spiritual world, and because he thereby no longer has his home,
so to speak, in this physical world. One must not misunderstand this.
The Chela who has reached this stage is just as good a citizen and
family man, just as good a friend, as he was before he had reached
the stage of Chela. He need not be torn away from anything. What he
has experienced is an evolution of the soul, thus acquiring a
new home in a world lying behind this physical one.
What then has happened? The
spiritual world sounds within man, and through this sounding of the
spiritual world man overcomes an illusion, the illusion which takes
in all men before they begin this stage of development. This is the
illusion of the personal self. Man believes himself to be a
personality separate from the rest of the world. Mere
reflection could teach him that even physically he himself is
not an independent being. Bear in mind that if the temperature in
this room were 200 degrees higher than it now is, none of us would be
able to survive as we now survive. As soon as the outer situation
changes, the conditions for our physical existence are no longer
there. We are simply a continuation of the external world, and are as
separate beings absolutely inconceivable. This is still more the case
in the world of the soul and of the spirit. Thus we see that man
conceived of as a self is only an illusion — that he is a
member of the universal divine spirituality. Here man overcomes
the personal self. Here arises what in the mystic chorus of
Faust Goethe has expressed in the words: “Alles Vergängliche ist nur ein Gleichnis.”
(“All that is transitory is but a likeness.”) What we see
is only a picture of an eternal being. We ourselves are only a
picture of an eternal being. When we have surrendered our separate
being — for we live a separate life through our etheric body
— then we have overcome our outer, separate life, we have
become part of universal life.
There arises in man
something which we have called Buddhi. Buddhi is now practically
reached as a stage in the development of the etheric body, that
etheric body which no longer occasions a separate existence but
enters into universal life. The man who has attained this has
arrived at the second state of Chela-ship. Then all doubts and
reservations fall away from his soul; he can no longer be
superstitious any more than he can be a doubter. Then he has no more
need to secure the truth in order to compare his ideas with the outer
environment; then he lives in tone, in the word of things; then what
it is sounds and resounds out of its being. And there is no more
superstition, no more doubt. This is called the surrendering of the
keys of knowledge to the Chela. When he has reached this stage,
within it there sounds a word from the spiritual world. Then his own
words no longer proclaim an echo of what is in this world, but his
words are an echo of what stems from another world, which works into
this world, but which cannot be perceived with our outer senses.
These words are messengers of the Godhead.
When this stage is passed
beyond, a new one comes. This is entered by man gaining influence
over what is done directly by his physical body. Before this, his
influence only extended to his etheric body, but now it extends to
his physical body. His actions must set the physical body in
motion. What man does is incorporated into what we call his
karma. Man, however, does not work on this consciously; he does not
know how each of his deeds causes a consequence. It is only now that
he begins in a conscious way so to fulfill his actions in the
physical world that he consciously works on his karma. Thus, through
his physical actions, he wins influence over his karma. And now there
is not only a sounding from the objects in his environment, but he
has come far enough to be able to utter the name of all things. Man
lives in our present stage of culture in such a way that he is only
able to utter one single name. That is the name he gives himself:
“I.” That is the only name man can really give to
himself. (Whoever immerses himself in deeper knowledge can arrive at
depths of which psychology does not dream.) It is the only instance
in which you yourself can give the name in question. No one else can
say “I” to you, only you yourself. To everyone else you
must say “you,” and they in return must say the same.
There is something in everyone to which only they themselves can
apply the name “I.” On this account the Jewish mystery
teachings speak also of an inexpressible name of God. That is
something which is immediately a proclamation of God in man. It was
forbidden to utter this name unworthily, sacrilegiously; hence the
sacred awe, the significance and reality when the Jewish mystery
teachers uttered this name. “I” is the one word that says
something to you that can never approach you from the outer world. So
now, as the average man alone names his “I,” so the Chela
in the third stage gives to all things in the world names which he
has received out of intuition. That means he has passed into
the world “I.” He speaks out of the world “I”
itself. He may call everything by its most profound name, whereas the
man today standing at the average stage can only say “I”
to himself. When the Chela has arrived at this stage, he is called a
Swan. The Chela who has been able to raise himself to the point of
naming all things is called Swan because he is the messenger of all
things.
What lies beyond these
three stages cannot be expressed in ordinary language. It demands
knowledge of a special script only taught in mystery schools. The
next stage is the stage of what is veiled. And beyond this lie the
stages which belong to the great Initiates, those Initiates who at
all times have given the great impulses to our culture. They were
Chelas to begin with. To begin with they acquired the keys of
knowledge. Next they were led further to the regions where were
disclosed to them the universal and the names of things. Then they
raised themselves to the stage of the universal, where they
could have the deep experiences through which they were qualified to
found the great religions of the world.
But it was not only the
great religions that came forth from the great Initiates; it was
every mighty impulse, all that is important in the world. Let us take
just two examples that show the kind of influence that has been
exercised on the world by the great Initiates who have gone through
the schooling. Let us go back to everyday life at the time when the
pupils of the initiation schools were guided under the leadership of
Hermes. This guidance was in the end an ordinary, so-called
esoteric, scientific instruction. I can sketch for you in only a few
strokes what such instruction contained. It was shown how the Cosmic
Spirit descended into the physical world, incarnated himself
here, and how he began afresh a material existence, how he then
reached the highest stage of man and celebrated his resurrection.
Paracelsus in particular has expressed this very beautifully in the
following words: “The individual beings we meet in the
outer world are the single letters, and the word that is formed from
them is MAN.” Outwardly we have all contributed human virtues
or failings to this creation. Man, however, is the fusion of all
this. It was taught as esoteric instruction in the Egyptian mystery
schools, in all detail and with great richness of spirit, how there
lives in man, as microcosm, the fusion of the rest of the
macrocosm.
After this instruction came
the Hermetic instruction. What I have said one can grasp with the
senses and the understanding. But what is offered in the Hermetic
instruction can only be grasped if one has attained the first
stage of Chela-ship. Then one can learn that special script which is
neither arbitrary nor a matter of chance, but which gives us the
great laws of the spiritual world. This script is not, like ours, an
external picture arbitrarily fixed in single letters and parts; it is
born out of the spiritual law of nature itself, because the man who
becomes versed in this script is in possession of this natural
law. All his conception of soul and astral space itself thus becomes
regulated by law. What he conceives is conceived in the sense of the
great signs of this script. He is capable of this when he has
renounced his self. He unites himself with primal everlasting law.
Now he has his Hermetic instruction behind him. Henceforward he
himself can be admitted to the first stage of a still deeper
initiation. Now, as the next stage, he should experience
something in the astral world, the essential soul world, that
has a significance reaching beyond the cosmic cycles. After he has
acquired the capacity for the astral senses to be fully
effective, so that they work right down into the etheric body,
then for three days he is ushered into a deep mystery of the astral
world. In that astral world he then experiences what last time I
described to you as the primal origin of the Earth and man. He has
before him and he experiences this descent of the spirit, this
separation of Sun, Moon, and Earth, and the coming forth of man
— this whole series of phenomena. And at the same time they
form themselves into a picture before him. And then he emerges. After
he has this great experience in the mystery school behind him,
he goes among the people and relates what he has experienced in the
soul and astral world. And what he relates runs approximately like
this:
“There was once a
divine couple who were united with the earth, Osiris and Isis. This
divine pair were regents of everything that happens on earth. But
Osiris was pursued by Typhon and cut into pieces, and Isis had to
search for the corpse. She did not bring it home, but graves of
Osiris were distributed among the various parts of the earth. So he
was brought completely down into the earth and buried there. But a
ray from the spiritual world fell upon Isis, fertilizing her through
immaculate conception with the new Horns.”
This picture is nothing
other than a mighty representation of what we have come to know
as the exit of Sun and Moon, as the separation of Sun and Moon and as
the dawning of mankind. Isis is the image of the Moon; Horns
stands for earthly mankind, the earth itself. Before man was
endowed with warm blood, before he was clothed with his
physical body, he felt in mighty pictures what proceeded in the soul
world. In the beginning of the Lemurian, of the Atlantean and the
Arian evolutions, man was always prepared by the great
Initiates to receive the mighty truths contained in such
pictures. For this reason, the truths were not simply represented but
were given in the pictures of Osiris and Isis. All the great
religions we meet in antiquity are from what the great Initiates
experienced in astral space. And the great Initiates emerged from
these experiences and spoke to each particular people in the way they
could understand, that is to say in pictures of what the
Initiates themselves had experienced in the mystery schools. This was
so in ancient times. Only through being in such a school of
initiation could one rise to higher astral experience.
All this was changed with
the coming of Christianity. It cut into evolution with great
significance. And since the appearance of Christ it has been
possible for man to be initiated as an initiate of nature, just
as one speaks of a poet of nature. There have been Christian mystics
who by grace have received initiation. The first who was called to
carry Christianity into all the world under the influence of the
words: “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have
believed,” was Paul. The appearance on the road to
Damascus was an initiation outside the mysteries. I cannot go
into further detail here.
It was the great Initiates
who gave the impulse to all great movements and founding's of
culture. From medieval times there comes a beautiful myth that may be
said to show us this in a time when one did not yet demand
materialistic foundations. The myth arose in Bavaria and has,
therefore, assumed the garb of Catholicism. What then happened we
will make clear as follows. There arose at that time in Europe
the so-called civic culture — modern citizenship. The onward
development of man, the progress of each soul to a higher stage, was
understood by the mystic as the advancing of the soul, of the womanly
element in man. The mystic sees in the soul something womanly that
was fertilized by the lower sense impressions of nature and by the
eternal truths. In every historical process the mystic sees such a
process of fertilization. For those who see more deeply into man's
path of development, for those who see the spiritual forces behind
physical appearances, the great and deep impulses for the progress of
mankind are given by the great Initiates. Thus the man with a
medieval world outlook ascribed to the great Initiates the raising up
of the soul to higher stages during the new period of culture that
was brought about by means of cities. This city-development was
attained by souls making a sudden move forward in history. And it was
an Initiate who brought about this move. All mighty impulses were
ascribed to the great lodge of Initiates surrounding the Holy Grail.
From there came the great Initiates who are not visible to ordinary
men. And the Initiate who at that time provided the civic culture
with its impulse was called, in the Middle Ages, Lohengrin. It is he
who was the missionary of the Holy Grail, of the great lodge; and
Elsa of Brabant stands for the soul of the city, the womanly element
that was to be fructified through the great Initiate. The mediator is
the swan. Lohengrin was brought by the swan into this physical world.
The Initiate must not be asked his name. He belongs to a higher
world. The Chela, the Swan, has been the mediator of this
influence.
I have merely been able to
indicate how this great event has again been symbolized for the
people in a myth. It is in this way that the great Initiates have
worked and have put into their teachings what they have to make
known. And in this way worked all those who have founded man's early
culture — Hermes in Egypt, Krishna in India, Zarathustra in
Persia, Moses among the Jewish people. Orpheus continued the work
— then Pythagoras, and finally the Initiate of all Initiates,
Jesus, who bore within Him the Christ.
Here only the greatest of
Initiates are mentioned. We have tried in these descriptions to
characterize their connection with the world. What has been
described here will still remain remote to many people's thoughts.
But those who have become aware of something of the higher worlds in
their own souls have always raised their eyes not only to the
spiritual world but also to the leaders of mankind. It was only from
this standpoint that they have been able to speak in as inspired a
way as Goethe. But you find among others, too, something of the
divine spark leading towards the point to which spiritual science
should again bring us. You find it in the case of a German, a young,
intelligent German poet and thinker, whose life has all the
appearance of a blessed memory of some former existence as a great
Initiate. Those who read Novalis will notice something of the breath
that guides us into the higher world. There is something in him that
also contains the magic word, though not expressed as explicitly as
usual. Thus he has written the beautiful words about the relation of
our planet to mankind that convey as much to the lowly and
undeveloped as they do to the Initiate:
“Mankind is the sense
of our earth-planet, mankind is the nerve that binds the earth-planet
with the higher worlds; mankind is the eye through which this
earth-planet lifts its gaze to the heavenly Kingdoms of the
Cosmos.”
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