TURNING POINTS IN
SPIRITUAL HISTORY
I
ZARATHUSTRA
Among the fundamental principles underlying
Spiritual Science and to which your attention has been drawn in
previous lectures, the most prominent is the idea of
Reincarnation. According to this generally unpopular and little
understood concept, it is maintained that human individuality is
constrained to manifest again and again in a single personality,
during its enfoldment in the course of repeated earth-lives. It
has been previously pointed out that many and diverse questions
are associated with this conception, and that such is the case
will become more and more apparent as we proceed.
What deep meaning, we might ask, underlies the
fact that the span of man’s life on earth is destined to
recur, not once only, but many times, and that during each
successive period between rebirth and death human individuality
persists. When we study the evolution of mankind in the light of
Spiritual Science, we find therein a progressive purport, a
design of such nature that each age and each epoch presents in
some fashion a different content, and we realize that human
evolution is ever destined to maintain a definite upward trend.
Thus do we become aware of a profound latent significance, when
we know that the varied influences which act upon mankind are
indeed potent and become absorbed over and over again by the Ego
during the course of human development. A condition which is only
possible because man, with all that comprises his being, is
brought into contact not once alone, but recurrently, with the
great living stream of evolution.
When we regard the whole evolutionary process as
a rational progression, ever accompanied by fresh contents, there
dawns a true comprehension of those Great Spiritual Beings who
set the measure of progress. We are then able to realize the
import and proper relation of these outstanding leaders, from
whom have come new thoughts, experiences and impulses destined to
further the advancement and progressive evolution of
humanity.
During this Cycle of Lectures I shall speak of
many such Spiritual Beings who have acted as guides to mankind,
and at the same time bring forward and elucidate various matters
connected with this subject. The first human individuality to
claim our attention from such a point of view is Zarathustra,
about whom, although there is much discussion in these days,
little is known; for as far as external investigation goes his
history is especially problematical, as it is shrouded in mystery
and unrecorded in ancient documents.
When we consider the characteristics of such a
personality as Zarathustra, whose gifts to mankind, as far as
they are preserved for us, seem so strange to our present age, we
at once realize how great is the dissimilarity in man’s
whole being at different periods of earthly progress. Casual
reflection might easily lead to the conclusion, that from the
very beginning humanity has always had the same ideas concerning
morality, the same general thoughts, feelings and conceptions as
those which exist in our time. From previous lectures, however,
and from others which will follow, you will know through the
teachings of Spiritual Science that during man’s
development great and important changes take place, especially as
regards the life of the human soul, the nature of human
apprehension, emotions and desires. Further, you will realize
that man’s consciousness was very differently constituted
in olden days; and that there is reason to believe that in the
future yet other stages will be reached in which the conscious
condition of mankind will vary considerably from its normal state
to-day.
When we turn our attention to Zarathustra we find
that we must look back over an extremely long period. According
to certain modern researches, he is considered to be a
contemporary of Buddha; the approximate date of his life being
fixed at some six to six and a half centuries before the birth of
Christianity. It is, however, a remarkable and interesting fact
that other investigators of late years, after carefully studying
all existing traditions concerning Zarathustra, have been driven
to the conclusion that the personality concealed beneath the name
of the ancient founder of Persian religion must have lived a
great many centuries before the time of Buddha. Greek historians
have stated over and over again that the period ascribed to
Zarathustra should be put back very many, possibly five to six
thousand years before the Trojan War [the date of which has been
placed at about 1200 B.c.]1.
From the above, and from what has been learned
through research in many directions, we can now feel certain that
historical investigators will in the end be unwillingly forced to
acknowledge that the claims of Grecian scholarship regarding the
great antiquity of the Zarathustran era, as indicated by ancient
tradition, are justly founded and must be accepted as authentic.
Spiritual Science, in its statements and theories, fully concurs
with the old Greek writers who already in olden days had fixed
the period of the founder of Persian religion so far back in
time. We have, therefore, good reason for maintaining that
Zarathustra, living as he did thousands of years before the birth
of Christianity, was doubtless confronted with a very different
class of human consciousness from that which exists in our
present age.
It has often been pointed out, and we will again
refer to this matter, that in ancient times the development of
human consciousness was such that the old ‘dream
state’, or ‘clairvoyant condition’ (we will
avoid misusing this term, as is so often done in these days), was
in every way perfectly normal to man, so that his conceptions and
ideas were such that he did not contemplate the world from that
narrow perceptual point of view that is so prevalent
to-day.
We can best picture the impressions made by the
world upon the consciousness of the ancients, if we turn our
thoughts to that last enduring remnant of the old clairvoyant
state, namely, dream consciousness. We all know those fluctuating
dream pictures that come to us at times, the most of which carry
no meaning, and are so often merely suggestive of the outer
world, although there may now and then intrude some higher level
of conscious thought; dream visions, which in these days we find
so difficult to interpret and to understand. We might say that
our sleep consciousness runs its course pictorially in
ever-changing scenes, and which are at the same time symbolical.
For instance, many of us have had the experience that events
connected with some impressive happening — say, a conflagration
— have been after a time once more figuratively manifested to us
in a dream. Let us now consider for a moment this other horizon
of our sleeping state, where clings in truth that last remnant of
a conscious condition belonging to a by-gone age in the grey and
distant past.
The consciousness of the ancients was such that
in reality they lived in a life of imagery. The visions which
came to them were not merely indefinite unrelated creations, for
they had reference to an actual outer world. In olden days
primitive man was capable of intermediate conscious states,
between those which prevail when we sleep and when we are awake;
then it was that he lived in the presence of the Spirit-World,
and the Spirit-World entered into his being. To-day this door is
closed, but in those ancient times such was not the case. It was
while in this intermediate condition that man became aware of
visions which resembled to some extent dream pictures, but were
definite in their manifestation of a spirit life and of spiritual
achievement existing beyond the perceptual world. Although in the
Zarathustran era, such visions had already become somewhat
confused and vague, there was nevertheless still close contact
with the world of spirit, therefore these ancients could say from
direct observation and experience: ‘In the same way as I
realize this outer physical world and this perceptual life, even
so do I know that there exists another conscious condition
belonging to a different region — a spiritual realm — related
to that which is material, and where I do of a verity experience
and observe the workings of the Divine Spirit.’
It is a fundamental principle underlying the
evolution of the human race, that in no case can any one quality
be developed except at the expense of some other attribute; hence
it came about that from epoch to epoch, the faculty through which
in olden times mankind obtained a clear inner vision of the
spiritual realms became ever less and less pronounced. Our
present day exact methods of thought, our power of expression,
our logic, all that we regard as the most important driving
forces of modern culture did not exist in the remote past. Such
faculties have been acquired during later periods at the expense
of the old clairvoyant consciousness, and it is now for mankind
to regain and cultivate this long-lost power. Then in the future
of human evolution a time will come when in addition to
man’s purely physical consciousness, his intellectuality
and his logic, he will again approach the condition of the
ancient seer.
We must differentiate between the upward and
downward tendency of human consciousness. Evolution has a deeper
meaning when we realize that in the beginning man was entirely of
a spiritual realm, where he lived in the soul, and that when he
descended into the physical world it was ordained that he should
gradually relinquish his clairvoyant power in order that he might
acquire qualities born of the existing purely physical
conditions; such as intellectuality and logic. When this stage in
his development has run its course he will again return to the
world of spirit.
Regarding the circumstances connected with these curious
clairvoyant states and experiences of the ancients we have no
historical record. Zarathustra lived in that same remote age, and
was one of those great leading personalities who gave immense
stimulus to the advancement of culture and civilization. Such
guiding personalities must ever draw from the creative source
that which we may term Illumination, whereby they are initiated
into the higher mysteries of the world, irrespective of the
standard of normal human consciousness existing in their time.
Other such outstanding personalities of whom mention will be made
during these lectures are: Hermes, Buddha and Moses.
Zarathustra lived at least 8000 years before the
present era, and those glorious gifts to civilization which
emanated from his illumined spirit have been reflected in the
great cultural progress of humanity. His influence has long ago
been clearly recognized, and can be detected even to this day, by
all who take note of the mysterious currents underlying the whole
of human evolution.
We now realize that Zarathustra belonged
essentially to those Great Ones in whose souls lived a measure of
the spiritual elements of truth, wisdom and perception, far
surpassing the customary standard of human consciousness of their
period. His mission was to proclaim to his fellow men, in that
part of the world later known as the Persian Empire, those grand
truths which emanated from the superperceptual regions — a world
utterly beyond the apprehension of man’s normal
consciousness in that dim and distant age.
If we would understand the true significance of
Zarathustra’s teachings, we must remember that it was his
task to present to a certain section of humanity, in an
intelligible manner, a particular world aspect; while on the
other hand, various movements which had been in progress among
the peoples of other regions, had given a different trend to the
whole sphere of man’s culture.
The personality of Zarathustra is of special
interest because he lived in a territory, contiguous upon its
South side to a country which was inhabited by Indian tribes,
upon whom spiritual blessings flowed in quite a different manner.
When we look forward from those by-gone times we find upon the
selfsame soil where dwelt these ancient Indian tribes, the
peoples among whom at a later period arose the poets of the
Vedas. To the North, where spread the great Brahman Doctrine, is
situated that region which was permeated throughout by the
powerful and compelling teachings of Zarathustra. But that which
he gave to the world was in many respects fundamentally different
from the teachings of the great Ieaders among the Indians, whose
words have lived on in the moving poetry of the Vedas, in their
profound philosophy, and has reached yet an echo in that final
glorious blaze of light — The Revelation of the
Buddha.
We can understand the difference between that
which was born of the flow of thought from Zarathustra and the
teachings of the ancient Indians, when we bear in mind that we
may approach the region of the superperceptual world from two
sides. Already in other lectures we have spoken of the path which
man must traverse in order that he may enter into the spirit
realms. There are two possible methods by which he may raise the
energy of his soul, and the capacities latent in his inner being,
so much above their normal level that he can pass out of this
perceptual into the superperceptual world. The one method is that
by which man enters or retires, more and more deeply into his
soul, and thus merges himself in his very essence. The other
leads behind the veil which is spread around us by our material
state. Man can enter the superperceptual region by both these
methods.
When we experience within our very being a
deepening of all values of our spiritual feelings, conceptions
and ideas — in short, of our soul impulses; when in fact we
creep more and more into ourselves, so that our spiritual powers
become ever stronger and stronger; then can we, as it were, in
some mystic way merge ourselves within and pass through all that
we hold of the physical world to our actual spirit essence — the
soul Ego — which Ego continues from incarnation to incarnation,
and is not perishable but everlasting. When we have overcome our
lusts and passions and all those experiences of the soul which
are ours because we are of the body in a physical world, then can
our true being pierce the surrounding veil and for ever enter the
world of spirit.
On the other hand, if we develop those powers
which will enable us not merely to be sensible of the outer world
with its colours, tone sensations, heat and cold; and if we so
strengthen our spiritual forces that we shall be aware of that
which lies beyond the colours, the sound, the heat and the cold,
and all those other earthly sense-perceptions which hang as a
mist about us — then will the enhanced powers of our soul take
us behind the enshrouding cloud and into that boundless
superperceptual region which is without confine and stretches
ever into the infinite.
There is one way leading to the Spirit-World
which we may term the ‘Mystical Method’, and another
which is properly called ‘The Method of "Spiritual
Science"‘. All great spiritual personalities have followed
these paths, in order to attain to those truths and revelations
which it was their mission to impress upon humanity in the form
of cultural progress. In primeval times man’s development
was of such nature, that great revelations could only come to the
people of any particular race, through one of these methods
alone. But from that period on, in which the Greeks lived, that
is, at the dawn of the Christian era, these two separate thought
currents commingled, and became more and more one single cultural
stream. When we now speak of entering the higher spheres, we
understand, that he who would penetrate into the superperceptual
region, develops both qualities of power in his soul.
The forces necessary to the ‘Mystical Method’ are
evolved within the inner being, and those essential to the course
of ‘Spiritual Science’, are strengthened while man is
yet conscious of the outer world. There is to-day no longer any
definite separation of these two paths, as since about the time
of that epoch marked by the life of the Grecian race, these two
currents have run their course together — in the one, revelation
comes about through a mystic merging of man’s consciousness
within his very being — in the other, the veil is torn asunder
by the enhanced power of his spiritual forces, and man’s
awareness stretches outward into the great cosmos.
In olden times before the Grecian or Christian
era, these two possible methods were in operation separately
among different peoples, and we find them working in close
proximity, but in divers ways, in the Indian culture which found
expression among the Vedas, on the one hand, and that of
Zarathustra, further North, on the other. All that we look upon
with such wonder in the ancient Indian culture, and which later
found expression through Buddha, was achieved by inner
contemplation, and turning away from the outer world — through
causing the eyes to become less sensitive to physical colours,
the ears to physical sounds, and bringing about a deadening of
the sense organs in general to the perceptual veil — so that the
inner soul forces might be strengthened: — Thus did man press on
to Brahma, there to feel himself unified with that which ever
works and weaves as the Inner Spirit of the Universe, — In this
way originated the teachings of the Holy Rishis, which live on in
the poetry of the Vedas, in the Vedantic philosophy, and in
Buddhism.
The Doctrine of Zarathustra was, however,
entirely based upon the other method above-mentioned. He taught
his disciples the secret of strengthening their powers of
apprehension and cognition, in order that they might pass beyond
the mists surrounding the outer perceptual world. He did not say
to his followers, as did the Indian teachers: ‘Turn away
from the colours, and from the sounds, and from all outer
sense-impressions, and seek the path to the spiritual realms only
through the merging of yourselves within your very souls’,
— but he spoke thus: — ‘Strengthen your powers of
perception, in order that you may look around upon all things,
the plants, the animals, that which lives in the air and in the
water, upon the mountains, and in the depths of the valleys, and
cast your eyes upon the world.’ We know that the disciples
of the Indian mystics regarded this earth upon which we live as
merely maya (illusion), and turned from it in order to attain to
Brahma. On the other hand, Zarathustra counselled his followers
not to draw away from the material world, but to pass
outward and beyond it, so that they might say: — ‘Whenever
we experience perceptual manifestations in the outer physical
world, we realize that therein lie concealed and beyond our sense
perceptions the workings and achievements of the
spirit.’
It is remarkable that the two paths should have
been thus united in early Grecian times, and just because in that
period true spiritual knowledge was more profound than in our day
(which we are inclined to regard as so amazingly enlightened!)
all things found expression in imagery, and the images gave rise
to Mythology. Thus do we find these two thought currents
commingled and fostered in the Grecian culture — The Mystical
tending inward, and the Zarathustran outward into the great
cosmos.
That such was the case becomes evident from the
fact, that one of these paths was named after
Dionysos,
that mysterious god who was reached when man merged himself ever
deeper and deeper within his inner being, there to find a
questionable sub-human element, as yet unknown, and from which he
first developed into man. It was this unclean and half-animal
residue to which was given the name of Dionysos. On the other
hand, all that comes to us when we regard our physical sense
perceptions from a purely spiritual standpoint, was termed
Apollo. Thus we find in ancient Greece, in the Apollo current of
thought, the teaching of Zarathustra; and in the Dionysos
current, the doctrine of mystical contemplation, side by side in
contrast. In Greece they united and operated conjointly — the
Zarathustran and the Mystical Methods, those methods which had
been at their highest level, working separately, in the days of
the ancient Indians.
Here we might say, that already in olden times
these two thought currents were destined to commingle in the
coming Grecian cults of Apollo and Dionysos, and thenceforward
they would continue as one; so that in our present cultural
period, when we raise ourselves to a certain spiritual
understanding, we find them still unified and enduring.
It is very remarkable, and one of the many
riddles which present themselves to the thinking mind, that
Nietzsche
in his first work,
The Birth of Tragedy from the Spirit of Music,
gave evidence of a vague suspicion that in
the Grecian creeds of Dionysos and Apollo, the Mystical current
meets the stream of scientific spiritual thought.
A further matter of interest lies in the fact,
that Zarathustra actually taught his disciples to recognize in
detail, the hidden workings of the Spirit in all material things,
and from this starting-point the whole of his gifts to culture
emanated. He emphasized that it was not sufficient for man merely
to say: — ‘There before us spreads a material world,
behind which ever works and weaves the Divine Spirit.’ Such
a statement might appear at first sight full of significance, it
leads, however, only to a general pantheistic outlook, and means
nothing more, than that some vague nebulous spirit underlies all
material phenomena. Zarathustra, like all other great
personalities of the past who were exalted and had direct contact
with the Spirit-World, did not present these matters to his
followers and the people in any such indefinite and abstract
manner; he pointed out, that in the same way as individual
physical happenings vary in import, so is it with the latent
spiritual factor, it being sometimes of greater and sometimes of
less moment. He further stated that the sun, regarded purely from
the physical point of view as a member of the stellar system, is
the source of all earthly phenomena, life, and activity, while
concealed within is the centre of spiritual existence in so far
as we are immediately concerned.
These things Zarathustra impressed earnestly and
clearly upon his disciples, and, using simple words, we can
picture him as addressing them somewhat as follows: —
‘When you regard man, you must realize that he does not
only consist of a material body — such is but an outer
expression of the spirit which is within. Even as the physical
covering is a manifestation in condensed and crystallized form of
the true spiritual man, so is the sun which appears to us as a
light-giving mass when considered as such, merely the external
manifestation of an inner spiritual sun.’ In the same way
as we term the human spirit element as distinguished from the
physical, The Aura, to use an ancient expression, so do we call
the all-embracing hidden spiritual part of the sun, The Great
Aura (Aura Mazda); in contradistinction to man’s spiritual
component, which is sometimes called the Little Aura.
Now, Zarathustra named all that lies hidden
within and beyond man’s mere apprehension of the physical
sun — ‘Aura Mazda’ or ‘Ahura Mazdao’ —
and considered this element as important to our spiritual
experiences and conditions, as is the physical sun to the
wellbeing of plants and animals, and all that lives upon the face
of the earth. There behind the physical sun lies the Spiritual
Master — The Creator — ‘Ahura Mazdao’ or
‘Aura Mazda’, and from ‘Ahura Mazdao’
came the name, ‘Ormuzd’, or, ‘The Spirit of
Light’.
While the Indians mystically searched their inner
being, in order to attain to Brahma — The Eternal — who shines
outward as a point of light from within man’s essence,
Zarathustra urged his disciples to turn their eyes upon the great
periphery of existence, and pointed out that there within the
body of the sun, dwells the great Solar Spirit — Ahura Mazdao —
‘The Spirit of Light’. He taught them that, just in
the same way as when man strives to raise his spirit to
perfection, so must he ever battle against his lower passions and
desires, against the delusive images suggested by possible
deception and falsehood, and all those antagonistic influences
within, which continually oppose his spiritual impulses. Thus
must ‘Ahura Mazdao’ face the opposition of ‘The
Spirit of Darkness’ — ‘Angra Mainyus’ or
‘Ahriman’.
We can now realize how the great Zarathustran
conception could be evolved from experiences born of sensations
and sense contents. Through these, Zarathustra could advance his
disciples to a point where he could make clear to them that: —
Within man there is a ‘Perfecting Principle’, which
tells him that whatever may be his present condition this
principle will work persistently within, and through it he may
raise himself ever higher and higher; but at the same time there
also operate impulses and inclinations, deceit and falsehood, all
tending towards imperfection. This Perfecting Principle must
therefore be developed and expanded, in order that the world may
be destined to attain to wiser and more advanced states of
perfection; it is the ‘Principle of Ahura Mazdao’,
and is assailed throughout the whole world by Ahriman —
‘The Spirit of Darkness’ — who through imperfection
and evil brings shadows into the light. By following the method
above outlined, Zarathustra’s disciples were enabled to
realize and to feel, that in truth each individual man is an
image of the outer universe.
We must not seek the true significance of such
teaching in theories, concepts and ideas; but in active vivid
consciousness and in the sensations impressed when through it man
realizes that he is so related to the universe that he can say:
— ‘As I stand here, I am a small world, and as such I am a
replica of the Great Cosmos.’ Just as we have within us a
principle of perfection, and another which is antagonistic, so
throughout the universe is Ormuzd opposed by Ahriman. In these
teachings the whole cosmos is represented as typical of a
widespread human being; the forces of greatest virtue are termed
Ahura Mazdao, while against these operate the powers of Angra
Mainyus.
When a man realizes that he is in direct contact
with the workings of the universe and the attendant physical
phenomena, but can only apprehend the perceptual, then as he
begins to gain spiritual experience, a feeling of awe may come
over him (especially if he is materialistic in thought) when he
learns through Spectrum Analysis, that the same matter which
exists upon the earth is found in the most distant stars. It is
the same with Zarathustranism, when man feels that his spiritual
part is merged in that of the whole cosmos, and that he has
indeed emanated from its great spirit. Herein lies the true
significance of such a doctrine, which was not merely abstract in
character, but on the contrary wholly concrete.
In this present age it is most difficult to make
people understand (even when they have a certain sense for the
spiritual that lies behind the perceptual) that it is necessary
to a true and spiritually scientific view of the cosmos, that
there be more than one central unity of spirit-power. But even as
we distinguish between the separate forces in Nature, such as
Heat, Light, and Chemical forces, so in the world of spirit must
we recognize not merely one centralized power (whose existence is
not denied) but we must differentiate between it and certain
subservient uplifting forces, whose spheres of action are more
circumscribed than are those of the all-embracing spirit. Thus it
was that Zarathustra made a distinction between the omnipotent
Ormuzd, and those spirit beings by whom he was served.
Before we turn to a consideration of these
subservient spirit entities, we must draw attention to the fact
that the Zarathustran theory was not a mere Dualism — a simple
doctrine of two worlds — the worlds of Ormuzd and of Ahriman;
but that it maintained that underlying this double flux of cosmic
influence, is a definite unity — a single power — which gave
birth to both The Realm of Light (Ormuzd) and to The Realm of
Darkness (Ahriman). It is not easy to gain a right understanding
of Zarathustra’s conception concerning this
‘Unity’ underlying Ormuzd and Ahriman. With reference
to this point the Greek authors state that the ancient Persians
worshipped, and regarded as a ‘Living Unity’, that
which lay beyond the light, and which Zarathustra termed
‘Zervane Akarene’. How can we gain a comprehension of
what Zarathustra in his teachings meant by ‘Zervane
Akarene’ or ‘Zaruana Akarana’?
Let us consider for a moment the course of
evolution; this we must regard as of such nature, that all beings
tend towards greater and greater perfection. So that if we look
into the future, we see more and more of the radiance from the
Light-Realms of Ormuzd; but if we turn our eyes upon the past, we
realize how the powers of Ahriman, which oppose Ormuzd, are
circumstanced; and we then know that with the passing of time,
these must be conquered and for ever ended.
We will now picture to ourselves that the path
into the future and that into the past each lead to the same
point; a conception which present-day man finds most difficult to
grasp. Let us take as an example a circle; if we pass along the
circumference from the lowest point in one direction, we come to
the opposite point above, if, however, we go along the other
side, we come to the same point. When we consider a larger
circle, then the circumference is flatter, and we must traverse a
greater distance in each case. We will now suppose a circle to
expand ever more and more, then ultimately the path on either
side becomes a straight line, and is infinite. But just before
the circle becomes infinite we would reach the same point whether
we went by the one path or the other. Why, then, should not the
same happen when the circumference is so flattened that the
periphery becomes a straight line? In this case the point at
infinity on the one must be identical with that on the other, and
therefore we must be able to travel to it, from the lowest point
in one sense (say, positive), and return as if coming from the
opposite (negative) direction. This means that when our
conception is infinite, we have a straight line extending without
limit on either side, but which is in reality the circumference
of an infinite circle.
The abstraction given above lies at the basis of
Zarathustra’s conception of what he termed Zaruana Akarana.
Here, with regard to time, we look in one direction into the
future, in the other into the past, and when we consider an
infinite period time closes in upon itself as in a circle. This
self-contained and infinite time circle is symbolically
represented as a serpent eternally biting its own tail, and into
it is woven upon the one side, The Power of Light, shedding upon
us continually a greater and greater radiance; and upon the
other, The Power of Darkness, becoming ever more and more
profound. When we are midway, then is the light (Ormuzd)
intermingled with the shadows (Ahriman); all is interwoven in the
self-embracing infinite Flux of Time, ‘Zaruana
Akarana’.
There is something more about this ancient cosmic
conception; its basic ideas were treated seriously, there were no
mere vague statements such as: — ‘Without and remote from
all that is material in this perceptual world, beyond those
things which affect our eyes, our ears, and sense organs in
general — abides The Spirit’. But it was definitely
asserted, that in everything which could be seen and apprehended,
therein could be discerned something of the nature of spirit
signs, or a manifestation of the Spirit-World.
If we take a sheet of paper upon which are
inscribed alphabetical characters, these may be combined into
words; but we must first have learnt how to read. Without this
ability no one could read about Zarathustra; for they would
merely perceive certain characters which could only be followed
with the eyes. Actual reading can only take place after it is
clearly understood how to connect such characters with that which
is within the soul. Now, Zarathustra discerned a written sign
underlying all that was in the perceptual world, particularly in
the manner in which the stars are grouped in the universe. Just
as we recognize written characters upon paper, so did Zarathustra
descry in the starry firmament something similar to letters,
conveying a message from the Spirit-World. Hence, arose an art of
penetrating into the World of Spirit, and of deciphering the
signs indicated by the arrangement of the stars, and of finding a
method of reading and construing from their movements and order,
in what manner and way those spiritual beings that are without,
inscribe the facts concerning their activities in
space.
Zarathustra and his disciples had a paramount
interest in these matters. To them it was a most important sign
that Ahura Mazdao, in order to accomplish his creations and to
reveal his message to the world, should (in the language of
Modern Astronomy) ‘describe a circular path’. This
fact was regarded as a sign traced in the heavens indicating in
what manner Ahura Mazdao worked, and the relation which his
activities bore to the universe as a whole. It is important that
Zarathustra was able to point out that the constellations of the
Zodiac, taken together as forming a closed curve in space, should
symbolize a continuous and also retroactive time flux; and we can
realize that there is indeed a most profound significance
underlying the statement, that one branch of this time-curve
stretches outward into the future, while the other leads backward
into the remote past. Zaruana Akarana is that bright band of
stars, later known as the Zodiac, that self-contained time-line
ever traversed by Ormuzd, The Spirit of Light. In other words,
the passage of the sun across the constellations of the Zodiac is
an expression of the activity of Ormuzd; while the Zodiac itself
is the symbol of Zaruana Akarana. In reality, Zaruana Akarana and
The Zodiac are identical terms, just in the same way as are
Ormuzd and Ahura Mazdao.
There are two special circumstances to be
considered in this connection. First, when the passage of the sun
through the Zodiac takes place while it is light, as in the
summer. At such time the solar radiance falls full upon the
earth, bringing with it the power emanating from those spiritual
forces ever flowing outward from the Light-Realms of Ormuzd. That
part of the Zodiac traversed by Ahura Mazdao in the daytime, or
during the summer, denotes the manner in which He works and
weaves unhindered by Ahriman. On the other hand, those Zodiacal
constellations which lie far beneath the horizon — dark regions
through which we might picture the passage of Angra Mainyus —
are symbolical of the Kingdom of The Shadows.
We have stated that Zarathustra regarded Ormuzd
as associated with the bright sections of the Zodiac (Zaruana
Akarana), while he looked upon Ahriman as connected with the
gloom. In what way do the activities of Ormuzd and Ahriman find
expression in our material world? In order to understand this
point we must realize that the effect of the solar rays is
different in the morning from that at noon; varying as the sun
ascends from Aries to Taurus, and again during its descent toward
the horizon. The influence exerted is not the same in winter as
in summer, and differs with every passing sign of the Zodiac.
Zarathustra regarded the changing aspects of the sun in
connection with the Zodiacal constellations as symbolical of the
activities of Ormuzd proceeding from different directions, and
from which came those spiritual beings that are both His servants
and His sons, and who are ready at all times to execute His
commands. These are the ‘Amschaspands’ or
‘Ameschas Pentas’, subservient entities, to each of
whom is allotted some special duty.
While Ormuzd controls all active functions in the
Light-Realms, the Amschaspands undertake that specific work which
finds expression in the transmission of the sun’s light
when in Aries, Taurus, Cancer, etc. But the true vital activity
of Ormuzd is manifested in the full radiance of the sun, shining
throughout all bright signs of the Zodiac, from Aries to Libra or
Scorpio. Following the Zarathustran line of thought, we might
say: — ‘It is as though the evil powers of Ahriman came
through the earth from those dark regions where abide his
servants — his own Amschaspands — who are opposed to the
good genii standing by the side of Ormuzd.’ Zarathustra
actually distinguished between twelve different subservient
spirit entities; six or seven on the side of Ormuzd, and five or
six on that of Ahriman. These are regarded as typical of good or
evil genii (Amaschas Pentas — lower spirits), according as to
whether their influence comes with the sun’s rays from the
bright Signs of the Zodiac, or emanates from those which are in
gloom.
Goethe
had the subservient spirits of Ormuzd in
mind when he wrote the following words at the beginning of
Faust
in the ‘Prologue of Heaven’:
‘But ye, God’s sons in love and
duty,
Enjoy the rich, the ever-living Beauty!
Creative Power, that works eternal schemes,
Clasp you in bonds of love, relaxing never,
And what in wavering apparition gleams
Fix in its place with thoughts that stand for
ever!’2
(Trans: BAYARD TAYLOR)
From the above it is apparent that the conception
which Goethe formed of ‘God’s sons’ as the
servants of the Highest Divine Power, is similar to
Zarathustra’s concept concerning the Amschaspands, of
which, as already stated, he recognized twelve different kinds.
Again, subservient to these Amschaspand entities, according to
Zarathustranism, are yet lower orders of spiritual powers or
forces, among which some twenty-eight separate types are usually
distinguished. These are the so-called ‘Izarads’ or
‘Izeds’; the number of different classes into which
they may be divided is, however, indeterminate, being variously
estimated from twenty-four up to twenty-eight, and even as high
as thirty-one. There is yet a third division of spiritual powers
or forces, termed by Zarathustra ‘Ferruhars’ or
‘Frawaschars’. According to our conceptions, the
Ferruhars have the least influence of any upon our tendencies and
dispositions in the material world, and are regarded as that
spiritual element which permeates the great macrocosm, and
underlies all perceptual physical activity. They are the reality
behind everything of which we are conscious and appears to us as
merely external and material.
While we picture the Amschaspands as controlling
the twelve forces which are at work during all physical effects
engendered by the action of light, and the Izeds, as governing
those which influence the animal kingdom, so do we consider the
Ferruhars, in addition to possessing the quality above-mentioned,
as spiritual entities having under their guidance the
‘Group-Souls’ of animals.
Thus did Zarathustra discern a specialized realm
beyond this perceptual universe — a perfectly organized
superperceptual world — and his concept was absolutely definite,
and in no sense of the nature of an abstraction. Behind Ormuzd
and Ahriman he pictured Zaruana Akarana, further the good and bad
Amschaspands, below these the Izeds, and lastly the
Ferruhars.
Man, as he is fashioned, is a replica in
miniature of the great universe, and therefore all forces
operative in the cosmos must be present in some manner within his
being. Just as the benevolent powers of Ormuzd are expressed
during that inner struggle to attain to perfection, and the
unclean forces of Ahriman are in evidence while there is gloom
and temptation, so do we find also the trace of other spiritual
powers — those of the lower genii.
I will now make a definite statement, which when
viewed from the standpoint of modern cosmic ideas, is liable to
awaken bitter feeling, namely: — I assert that before long it
will be discovered and recognized by external science, that a
superperceptual element underlies all physical phenomena, and
that latent spirit exists in everything that comes within the
limits of our sense perceptions. Further, that science will be
driven to admit, that in the physical structure of man there is
much that is a counterpart of those forces which permeate and
spread life throughout the whole universe, and which flow into
the body, there to become condensed.
Let us go back to the Zarathustran Doctrine,
which in many ways is similar to that of Spiritual Science.
According to its concepts, Ormuzd and Ahriman are regarded as
influencing mankind from without. Ormuzd being the source of
inward impulses toward perfection, while Ahriman is ever in
opposition. The Amschaspands also exert spiritual activity, if we
consider their forces as being, so to speak, condensed in man,
then it should be possible to trace and recognize their action to
the point of physical expression.
In Zarathustra’s time, anatomy, as we
understand it to-day, did not exist. Zarathustra and his
disciples, by means of their spiritual insight, actually saw the
cosmic streams to which reference has been made; they appeared to
them in the form of twelve cosmic outpourings, flooding in upon
man, there to maintain activity. Thus it came about that the
human head was regarded by Zarathustra’s followers as a
symbol of the inflowing of the seven good, and five evil,
Amschaspands. Within man we have a continuance of the Amschaspand
flux; how, then, is this flux to be recognized at this much later
period? The anatomist has discovered that there are twelve
principal pairs of brain nerves, which pass from the brain into
the body. These are the physical counterparts, as it were, of the
twelve condensed Amschaspand out-flowings, namely, twelve pairs
of nerves of extreme potency in bringing about either the highest
perfection, or the greatest evil. Here, then, we find reappearing
in our present age, but transformed into material terms, that
concept which had come to Zarathustra from the Spirit-World, and
which he preached to his disciples.
There is, however, in all this a point of
controversy. It is so easy for anyone in our day to maintain that
the statements of Spiritual Science become wholly fantastical
when it is alleged that Zarathustra, speaking of twelve
Amschaspands, had in mind something connected with the twelve
pairs of nerves which are in the human head! But the time will
come when the world will gain yet another item of knowledge, for
it will be discovered in what manner, and form the spirit, which
permeates and lives throughout the universe, continues active in
man.
The old Zarathustranism has arisen once again in
our modern physiology. For in the same way as the twenty-eight to
thirty-one Izeds are the servants of the Amschaspands, so are the
twenty-eight spinal nerves subordinate to those of the brain.
Again, the Izeds, who are present in the outer universe as a
spirit flux, enter the human body, and their sphere of action is
in those nerves which stimulate the lower soul-life of man; in
these nerves they crystallize, as it were, and assume a condensed
form. And where the Ized-flux, as such, entirely ceases, and the
term ‘nerve’ can no longer be applied, is the actual
centre where our personality receives its crowning touch.
Further, those of our thoughts which rise slightly above mere
cognition and simple brain action, are typical of the Frawaschars
or Ferruhars.
Our present period is connected in a remarkable
manner with the Doctrine of Zarathustra. Through his teachings
and by means of his spiritual archetypes, Zarathustra was enabled
to enlighten his people regarding those regions which spread
beyond the perceptual world, while his imagery was ever as a
flowing contact with that which lies hidden behind the veil. With
reference to this great doctrine it is most significant that
after it had acted as an inspiration to humanity for a long
period, always tending to promote greater and greater effort in
various directions of cultural progress — only to lose its
influence from time to time — there should arise once more, in
our day, a marked tendency toward a mystical current of
thought.
It was the same with the Greeks after the two
methods of approach to the Spirit-World had commingled, for they
also, at times, showed a preference for either the mystical or
the Spiritual Scientific thought current. It is owing to the
modern predominating interest in mysticism that many people find
themselves drawn towards the Indian Spiritual Science, or Method
of Contemplation. Hence it is, that the most essential and deeply
significant aspects of Zarathustranism — in fact, its very
essence — hardly appear in the spiritual life of our time,
although there is abundant evidence of the nature of
Zarathustra’s concepts and his methods of thought. But all
that lies at the very base, and is absolutely vital to his
doctrine, is in a sense lost to our age.
When once we realize that in Zarathustranism is
contained the spiritual prototype of so many things which we have
rediscovered in the domain of physical research (numerous
examples of which might be quoted), and of others that will be
rediscovered later, then will a fundamental chord in our culture
give place to one which will be founded upon the old Zarathustran
teachings. It is remarkable that the profound attention which
Zarathustranism paid to macrocosmic phenomena caused the world to
recede, as it were, or appear of less moment; while in nearly all
other beliefs with which a flood of mystical culture is
associated, the outer world plays an important part, this is also
the case in our materialism.
That great fundamental concept concerning two
opposing basic qualities, and which recurs again and again
throughout the religious doctrines of the world, we regard in the
following manner; we consider it as symbolized by the antithesis
of the sexes — the male and the female — so that in the old
religious systems which were founded upon mysticism, the Gods and
Goddesses were in reality, antithetical symbols of two opposing
currents which flow throughout the universe. It is amazing that
the teachings of Zarathustra should rise above these conceptions,
and picture the origin of spiritual activity in so different a
manner, portraying the good, as the resplendent, and the evil as
the shadows.
Hence, the chaste beauty of Zarathustranism and
its nobility, which transcends all those petty ideas which play
so ugly a part in our time, when any endeavour is made to deepen
man’s conception of spiritual life. Where the Greek writers
state that the Supreme Deity in order to create Ormuzd, must also
create Ahriman, so that He should obtain an antithesis; then,
since Ahriman opposed Ormuzd, we have an example of how one
primordial force is conceived as set against another. This same
idea finds expression in the Hebrew, where evil comes upon the
world through the woman — Eve — but we find nothing in
Zarathustranism concerning ills that the world suffered through
the antithesis of the sexes.
All those hateful ideas which are disseminated
throughout our daily literature, pervading our very thoughts and
feelings, distorting the true significance of the phenomena of
disease and health, while failing to comprehend the intrinsic
facts of life, will disappear, when that wholly different
concept, the antithesis exhibited by Ormuzd and Ahriman — a
conception so lofty and so powerful when compared with
present-day paltry notions — is once more voiced in the words of
Zarathustra, and enters to permeate and influence our modern
culture. In this world, all things pursue their appointed course,
and nothing can hinder the ultimate triumph of Zarathustran
conceptions, which will, little by little, insinuate themselves
into the life of the people.
When we look upon Zarathustra in this way, we
realize that he was indeed a Spirit, who in bygone times brought
potent impulses to bear upon human culture. That such was the
case becomes evident, if we but follow the course of subsequent
events which took place in Asia Minor, and later among the people
of Assyria and Babylonia, on down to the Egyptian period, and
further even to the time of the spreading of Christianity.
Everywhere we find in different lines of thought something which
may be traced back, and shown to have its origin in that Great
Light, which Zarathustra set blazing for humanity.
We can now understand how it was that a certain
Greek writer (who wished to emphasize the fact that some among
the Leaders had always given their people instruction in matters
that they would only require at a later period in their culture)
should have stated, that while
Pythagoras
had obtained all the
knowledge that he could from the Egyptians concerning the methods
of Geometry, from the Phænicians concerning Arithmetic, and
from the Chaldeans concerning Astronomy — he was forced to turn
to the successors of Zarathustra, in order to learn the secret
teachings regarding the relation of humanity to the Spirit-World,
and to obtain a true understanding of the proper conduct of life.
The writer who made these statements regarding Pythagoras further
asserts that the Zarathustran method for the conduct of life
leads us beyond antitheses, and that all antitheses can be
considered as culminating in the one great contrast of Good and
Evil, which opposing condition can be finally absorbed, only by
the purging away of all evil, falsehood and deceit. For instance,
the worst enemy of Ormuzd is regarded as that one which bears the
name of Calumny, and Calumny is one of the outstanding
characteristics of Ahriman. The same writer states that
Pythagoras failed to find the purest and most ideal ethical
practice, namely, the one directed toward the moral purification
of man, among either the Egyptians, the Phænicians, or the
Chaldeans; and that he had again to turn to Zarathustra’s
successors, in order to acquire that lofty conception of the
universe which leads mankind to the earnest belief that through
self-purification alone may evil be overcome. Thus did the great
nobility and oneness of Zarathustra’s teachings become
recognized among the ancients.
We would here mention that the statements made in
this lecture are supported in every case by independent
historical research; and we should carefully weigh all assertions
coming from the representatives of other sciences, and judge for
ourselves, whether or no they are in accord with our fundamental
concepts. For instance, take the case of Plutarch, when he said
that in the sense of Zarathustranism, the essence of Light as it
affects the earth, is regarded as of supreme loveliness, and that
its spiritual counterpart is Truth. Here is a definite statement
made by an ancient historian, which is in complete agreement with
all that has been said. We shall also find as we proceed that
many historical events become clear and understandable when we
take into consideration the various factors to which we have
drawn attention.
Let us now go back to the ancient Vedantic
conception; this was based upon the mystical merging of man
within his very being; but before he can attain to the inner
Light of Brahma, he must meet with, and pass through, those
passions and desires which are induced by wild semi-human
impulses that are within him, and which are opposed to that
mystical withdrawal within the spirit-soul, and into the eternal
inner being. The Indian came to the conclusion that this could
only be accomplished, if pending his mystic merging in Brahma, he
could successfully eliminate all that we experience in the
perceptual world which stimulates sensuous desires, and allures
through colours and through sounds. Just so long as these play a
part during our meditations, so long do we keep within us, an
enemy opposed to our mystical attainment to perfection.
The Indian teacher said: — ‘Put away from
yourselves all that can enter the soul through the powers that
are external; merge yourselves solely within your very being —
descend to the Devas — and when you have vanquished the lower
Devas, then will you find yourselves within the kingdom of the
Deva of Brahma; but shun the realm of the Asuras, whence come
those malignant ones who would thrust themselves upon you from
the outer world of Maya; from all such you must turn away,
whatsoever may befall.’
Zarathustra, on the other hand, spoke to his
disciples after this fashion: — ‘Those who follow the
leaders among the people of the South can make no advance along
the path which they have chosen, because of the different order
of their search after those things which are of the Spirit; in
such manner can no nation make headway. The call is not alone to
mystic contemplation and to dreaming, but to live in a world
which provides freely of all that is needful — man’s
mission lies with the art of agriculture, and the promotion of
civilization. You must not regard all things as merely Maya, but
you must penetrate that veil of colours, and of sounds, which is
spread around you; and avoid everything that may be of the nature
of the Devas, and which because of your inner egoism, would hold
you in its grasp. The region wherein abide the lower Asuras must
be traversed, through this you must force your way, even up to
the highest; but since your being has been especially organized
and adapted to this intent, you must ever shun the dark realms of
the Devas.’
In India, the teaching of the Rishis was
otherwise, for they said to their followers: — ‘Your
beings are not suitably organized to seek that which
lies within the Kingdom of the Asuras — therefore avoid this
region and descend to that of the Devas.’
Such was the difference between the Indian and
Persian culture. The Indian peoples were taught that they must
shun the Asuras and regard them as evil spirits; this was because
through the method of their culture they were only aware of the
lower Asuras; the Persians, on the other hand, who found only low
types of Devas in the Devas regions were adjured by their leaders
thus: — ‘Enter the Kingdom of the Asuras, for you are so
constituted that you may attain even unto the highest of
them.’
There lay within the impulse that Zarathustra
gave to mankind a great fervour, which found expression when he
said: — ‘I have a gift to bestow upon humanity which shall
endure and live throughout the ages, and will smooth the upward
path, overcoming all false doctrines, which are but obstacles
diverting man from his struggle toward the attainment of
perfection.’ Thus did Zarathustra feel himself to be the
servant of Ahura Mazdao, and as such he experienced personally
the opposition of Ahriman, over whose principles his teachings
should enable mankind to achieve a sweeping victory. This
conviction he expressed in impressive and beautiful words, to
which reference is found in ancient documents. These, however,
were necessarily inscribed at a later date; but what Spiritual
Science tells us concerning Zarathustra and his pronouncements
comes from other sources. Throughout all his telling adjurations
there rings forth the inner impulse of his mission, and we feel
the power of that great passion which overcame him, when, as the
opponent of Ahriman and the Principle of Darkness, he said: —
‘I will speak! draw nigh and listen unto me, ye that come
with longing from afar, and ye from near at hand — mark my
words! — No more shall he, the Evil One, this false teacher,
conquer the Spirit of Good. Too long hath his vile breath
bemingled human voice and human speech. But now I will denounce
him in the words which The Highest — The First One — has put
into my mouth, the words which Ahura Mazdao has spoken. To him
who will not harken unto my words, and who will not heed that
which I say unto you — to him will come evil — and that, ere
ever the world hath ended its cycles.’
Thus spoke Zarathustra, and we can but feel that
he had something to impart to humanity, which would leave its
impress throughout all later cultural periods. Those among us who
have understanding and will but pay attention to that which
persists in our time, even if only dimly apparent, who will note
with spiritual discernment the tenor of our culture, can even
yet, after thousands of years, recognize the echo of the
Zarathustran teachings. Hence it is that we number Zarathustra
among Great Leaders such as Hermes, Buddha, Moses, and others,
about whom we shall have much to say in subsequent lectures. The
spiritual gifts possessed by these Great Ones, and the position
which they occupied among men, are indicated, and fitly expressed
in the following words: —
‘God sends us Spirits that shine as
stars,
From the spheres of eternal love.
May we behold that glorious light,
They reflect from the realms above.’3
Notes for this
lecture:
1. Square
brackets indicate editorial insertions.
2. Doch ihr,
die echten Göttersöhne,
Erfreut euch der lebendig reichen Schöne!
Das Werdende, das ewig wirkt und lebt,
Umfass euch mit der Liebe holden Schranken,
Und was in schwankender Erscheinung schwebt,
Befestiget mit dauernden Gedanken.
3.
Es leuchten gleich Sternen
Am Himmel des ewigen Seins
Die gottgesandten Geister.
Gelingen möge es alien Menschenseelen,
Im Reiche des Erdenseins
Zu schauen ihrer Flammen Licht!