PROPHECY
Words spoken by Shakespeare's
most famous character: There are more things in heaven and
earth than are dreamed of in your philosophy are, of course,
perfectly true; but no less true is the saying composed by
Lichtenberg, a great German humourist, as a kind of rejoinder: In
philosophy there is much that will be found neither in heaven nor
earth. Both sayings are illustrations of the attitude adopted
nowadays to many things in the domain of Spiritual Science. It seems
inevitable that widespread circles, especially in the world of
serious science, will repudiate such matters as prophecy even more
emphatically than other branches of Spiritual Science. If in these
other branches of Spiritual Science in many of them at least
it is difficult to draw a clear line between genuine research
and charlatanism, or maybe something even worse, it will certainly be
admitted that wherever super-sensible investigation touches the
element of human egoism, there its dangers begin. And in what realm
of higher knowledge could this be more apparent than in all that is
comprised in the theme of prophecy as it has appeared through the
ages! Everything covered by the term prophecy is
closely connected with a widespread, and understandable, trait in the
human mind, namely, desire to penetrate the darkness of the future,
to know something of what earthly life in the future holds in store.
Interest in prophecy is connected
not only with curiosity in the ordinary sense, but with curiosity
concerning very intimate regions of the human soul. The search for
knowledge concerning the deeper interests of the human soul has met
with so many disappointments that earnest, serious science nowadays
is unwilling to listen to such matters and this is really not
to be wondered at. Nevertheless it looks as though our times will be
obliged at least to take notice of them, and also of the subjects of
which we have been speaking in previous lectures and shall speak in
the future. As will be known to many of you, the historian Kemmerich
has written a book about prophecies, his aim being to compile facts
which can be confirmed by history and go on to show that important
happenings were pre-cognised or predicted in some way. This historian
is driven to make the statement at the moment we will not
question the authenticity of his research that there are very
few important events in history that have not at some time been
predicted, conjectured and announced in advance. Such statements are
not well received in our time; but ultimately, in the sphere where
history can speak with authority, it will not be possible to ignore
them because proof will be forthcoming, both in respect of the past
and of the present, from outer documents themselves.
The domain we are considering
today has never been in such disrepute as it is nowadays, nor
regarded as so dubious a path of human endeavour. Only a few
centuries ago, for instance in the 16th century, very distinguished
and influential scholars engaged in prognostication and prophecy.
Think of one of the greatest natural scientists of all time and of
his connection with a personage whose tendency to be influenced by
prophecies is well known: think of Kepler, the great
scientist, and his relations with Wallenstein. Schiller's deep
interest in this latter personality was due in no small measure to
the part played in his life by prophecy. The kind of prophecy in
vogue in the days of Kepler and only a couple of centuries
ago leading scientific minds all over Europe were still occupied with
it was based upon the then prevailing view that there is a
real connection between the world of the stars, the movements and
positions of the stars, and the life of man. All prophesying in those
times was really a form of astrology. The mere mention of this word
reminds us that in our day too, many people are still convinced that
there is some connection between the stars and coming events in the
life of individuals, even, too, of races. But prophetic knowledge,
the prophetic art as it is called, was never so directly connected
with observation of the movements and constellations of the stars as
was the case in Kepler's time.
In ancient Greece an art of
prophecy was practised, as you know, by prophetesses or seeresses. It
was an art of predicting the future induced by experiences arising
perhaps from asceticism, or other experiences leading to the
suppression of full self-consciousness and the presence of mind of
ordinary life. The human being was thus given over to other Powers,
was in an ecstatic condition and then made utterances which were
either direct predictions of the future or were interpreted by the
listening priests and soothsayers as referring to the future. We need
only think of the Pythia at Delphi who under the influence of vapours
rising from a chasm in the earth was transported into a state of
consciousness quite different from that of ordinary life; she was
controlled by other Powers and in this condition made prophetic
utterances. This kind of prophecy has nothing to do with calculations
of the movements of stars, constellations and the like. Again,
everyone is familiar with the gift of prophecy among the people of
the Old Testament, the authenticity of which will certainly be called
into question by modern scholarship. Out of the mouths of these
prophets there came not only utterances of deep wisdom, which
influenced the life of these Old Testament people, but fore-shadowed
the future. These predictions, however, were by no means always based
upon the heavenly constellations as in the astrology current in the
15th and 16th centuries. Either as the result of inborn gifts,
ascetic practices and the like, these prophets unfolded a different
kind of consciousness from that of the people around them; they were
torn away from the affairs of ordinary life. In such a condition they
were entirely detached from the circumstances and thoughts of their
personal lives, from their own material environment. Their attention
was focused entirely on their people, on the weal and woe of their
people. Because they experienced some thing superhuman, something
reaching beyond the individual concerns of men, they broke through
the boundaries of their personal consciousness and it was as though
Jahve Himself spoke out of their mouths, so wise were their
utterances concerning the tasks and the destiny of their people.
Thinking of all this, it seems
evident that the kind of divination practised at the end of the
Middle Ages, before the dawn of modern science, was only one specific
form and that prophecy as a whole is a much wider sphere, connected
in some way with definite states of consciousness to which a man can
only attain when he throws off the shackles of his personality.
Astrological prophecy, of course, can hardly be said to be an art in
which a man rises above his own personality. The astrologer is given
the date and hour of birth and from this discovers which
constellation was rising on the horizon and the relative positions of
other stars and constellations. From this he calculates how the
positions of the constellations will change during the course of the
man's life and, according to certain traditional observations
of the favourable or unfavourable influences of heavenly bodies upon
human life, predicts from these calculations what will transpire in
the life of an individual or of a people. There seems to be no kind
of similarity between this type of astrologer and the ancient Hebrew
prophets, the Greek seeresses or others who, having passed out of
their ordinary consciousness into a state of ecstasy, foretold the
future entirely from knowledge acquired in the realm of the
Supersensible. For those who consider themselves enlightened men of
culture today, the greatest stumbling-block in these astrological
predictions is the difficulty of realising how the courses of the
stars and constellations can possibly have any connection with
happenings in the life of an individual or a people, or in the
procession of events on the Earth. And as the attention of modern
scholarship is never focused on such connections, no particular
interest is taken in what was accepted as authentic knowledge in
times when astrological prophecy and enlightened science often went
hand in hand.
Kepler, the very distinguished
and learned scientist, was not only the discoverer of the Laws named
after him; not only was he one of the greatest astronomers of all
time, but he devoted himself to astrological prophecy. In his time
also during the periods immediately preceding and following it
numbers of truly enlightened men were votaries of this art. Indeed if
we think objectively about life as it was in those days, we realise
that from their standpoint it was as natural to them to take this
prophetic art, this prophetic knowledge, as seriously as our
contemporaries take any genuine branch of science. When some
prediction based upon the constellations and made perhaps, at
the birth of an individual comes true later on, it is of
course easy to say that the connection of this constellation with the
man's life was only a matter of chance. Certainly it must be
admitted in countless cases that astonishment at the fulfilment of
astrological prediction is caused simply because it came true and
because people have forgotten what did not come true. The
contention of a certain Greek atheist is, in a sense, correct. He
once came in his ship to a coastal town where, in a sanctuary, tokens
had been hung by men who had vowed at sea that if they were saved
from shipwreck they would make such offerings. Many, many tokens were
hanging there all of them the offerings of men who had been
saved from shipwreck. But the atheist maintained that the truth could
only be brought to light if the tokens of everyone who in spite of
vows had actually perished in shipwreck, were also displayed. It
would then be obvious to which category the greater number of tokens
belonged. This implies that a really objective judgment could only be
reached if records were kept not only of those astrological
predictions which have come true, but also of those which have not.
This attitude is perfectly justified but on the other hand there is
certainly much that is very astonishing. As in these public lectures
I cannot take for granted a fundamental knowledge of all the
teachings of Spiritual Science, I must speak in a way which will
convey an idea of the significance of the subjects we are studying.
Even a confirmed sceptic must
surely feel surprise when he hears the following. Keeping to
well-known personages, let us take the case of Wallenstein.
Wallenstein wished to have his horoscope drawn up by Kepler a
name honoured by every scientist. Kepler sent the horoscope. But the
matter had been arranged with caution. Wallenstein did not write to
Kepler giving him the year of his birth and saying that he would like
him to draw up the horoscope, but an intermediary was chosen. Kepler
therefore did not know for whom the horoscope was intended. The only
indication given was the date of the birth. There had already been
many important happenings in Wallenstein's life and he
requested that they too should be recorded, as well as predictions
made of those still to come. Kepler completed the horoscope as
requested. As is the case with many horoscopes, Wallenstein found
very much that tallied with his experiences. He began (it was often
so in those days) to have great confidence in Kepler and on many
occasions was able to adjust his life according to the
prognostications. But it must be said too, that although many things
tallied, many did not, so far as the past was concerned and, as
subsequently transpired, the same was true of the predictions made
about the future. It was so with numbers of horoscopes and in those
days people were accustomed to say that there must be some inaccuracy
in the alleged hour of birth and that the astrologer might be able to
correct it. Wallenstein did the same. He begged Kepler to correct the
hour of birth; the correction was only very slight but after it had
been made, the prognostications were more accurate. It must be added
here that Kepler was a thoroughly honest man and it went very much
against the grain to correct the hour of birth. From a letter on the
subject written by Kepler at the time it is obvious that he did not
favour such procedure on account of the many possible consequences.
Nevertheless he undertook to do what Wallenstein asked it was
in the year 1625 and gave further details about Wallenstein's
future; above all he said that according to the new reading of the
positions of the stars, the constellation that would be present in
the year 1634 would be extremely unfavourable for Wallenstein. Kepler
added as well he might, for the date lay so far ahead
that even if this were a cause of alarm, the alarm would have passed
away by the time of these unfavourable conditions. He did not
therefore consider them dangerous for Wallenstein's plans. The
prediction was for March 1634. And now think of it: within a few
weeks of the period indicated, the causes occurred which led to the
murder of Wallenstein. These things are at least striking!
But let us take other examples
not of second-rate astrologers but of really enlightened men. The
name of an extraordinarily learned man in this sphere will at once
occur to us Nostradamus. Nostradamus was a doctor of
high repute who, among other activities, had rendered wonderful
service during an epidemic of the plague; he was a man of profound
gifts and the selflessness with which he devoted himself to his
profession as a doctor is well known. It is known, too, that when on
account of his selflessness he had been much maligned by his
colleagues, he retired from his medical work to the isolation of
Salon where, in 1566, he died. In Salon he began to observe the
stars, but not as Kepler or others like Kepler had observed them.
Nostradamus had a special room in his house into which he often
withdrew and, as can be gathered from what he himself says, from this
room he watched the stars, just as they presented themselves to his
gaze. In other words he made no special mathematical calculations but
immersed himself in what the soul, the heart, the imagination can
discover when gazing with wonder at the starry heavens. Nostradamus
spent many an hour of reverent, fervent contemplation in this curious
chamber with its open views on all sides to the heavens. And from him
there came not only specific predictions, but long series of diverse
and remarkably true prophecies of the future. So much so, that
Kemmerich, the historian of whom I spoke just now, cannot but be
astonished and attach a certain value to the prophetic utterances of
Nostradamus. Nostradamus himself made some of his prophecies known to
the public and was naturally laughed to scorn in his day, for he
could quote no astrological calculations. As he gazed at the stars
his predictions seemed to rise up in him in the form of strange
pictures and imaginations, for instance of the outcome of the battle
at Gravelingen in the year 1558, where the French were defeated with
heavy loss. Another prediction, made long beforehand, for the year
1559, was to the effect that King Henry II of France would succumb
in a duel as Nostradamus put it. People only laughed,
including the Queen herself, who said that this clearly showed what
reliance could be placed upon prediction for a King was above
engaging in a duel. But what happened? In the year predicted, the
King was killed in a tournament. And it would be possible to quote
many, many predictions that subsequently came true.
Again there is Tycho de Brahe, one of the brilliant
minds of the 16th century and of outstanding
significance as an astronomer. The modern world knows little of Tycho
de Brahe beyond that he is said to have been one who only half
accepted the Copernican view of the world. But those who are more
closely acquainted with his life know what Tycho de Brahe achieved in
the making of celestial charts, how vastly he improved the charts
then existing, that he had discovered new stars and was, in short, an
astronomer of great eminence in his day. Tycho de Brahe was also
deeply convinced that not only are physical conditions on the Earth
connected with the whole Universe, but that the spiritual experiences
of men are connected with happenings in the great Cosmos. Tycho de
Brahe did not simply observe the stars as an astronomer but he
related the happenings of human life with happenings in the heavens.
And when he came to Rostock at the age of 20, he caused a stir by
predicting the death of the Sultan Soliman, which although it did not
occur exactly on the day indicated, did nevertheless occur. The
indication was not quite exact but this will probably not
bring an outcry from historians, for they might well argue that if
anyone were intent upon lying he would not tell a half-lie by
introducing the difference of a mere day or so into the prediction.
Hearing of this, the King of
Denmark requested Tycho de Brahe to cast the horoscopes of his three
sons. Concerning his son, Christian, the indications were accurate;
less so in the case of Ulrich. But about Hans, the third son, Tycho
de Brahe made a remarkable prediction, derived from the movements of
the stars. He said: The whole constellation and everything to be seen
goes to show that he is and will remain frail and is unlikely to live
to a great age. As the hour of birth was not quite accurate, Tycho de
Brahe gave the indications very cautiously ... he might die in his
eighteenth or perhaps in his nineteenth year, for the constellations
then would be extremely unfavourable. I will leave it an open
question whether it was out of pity for the parents or for other
reasons, that Tycho de Brahe wrote of the possibility of this
terrible constellation in the eighteenth or nineteenth year being
overcome in the life of Duke Hans ... if so, he said, God would have
been his protector; but it must be realised that these conditions
would be there, that an extremely unfavourable constellation
connected with Mars was revealed by the horoscope and that Hans would
be entangled in the complications of war; as in this constellation,
Venus had ascendancy over Mars, there was just a hope that Hans would
pass this period safely, but then, in his eighteenth and nineteenth
years, there would be the very unfavourable constellation due to the
inimical influence of Saturn; this indicated the risk of a moist,
melancholic illness caused by the strange environment in which
Hans would find himself. And now, what was the history of Duke Hans'
life? As a young man he was involved in the political complications
of the time, was sent to war, took part in the battle of Ostend and
in connection with this, as Tycho de Brahe had predicted, had to
endure the ordeal of terrible storms at sea. He came very near death,
but as the result of friendly negotiations set on foot for his
marriage with the daughter of the Czar he was recalled to Denmark.
According to Tycho de Brahe's interpretation, the complications
due to the unfavourable influences of Mars had been stemmed by the
influences of Venus the protector of love-relationships:
Venus had protected the Duke at this time. But then, in his
eighteenth and nineteenth years the inimical influence of Saturn
began to take effect. One can picture how the eyes of the Danish
Court were upon the young Duke: all the preparations for the marriage
were made and the news that it had taken place was hourly awaited.
But there came instead the announcement that the marriage was
delayed, then news of the Duke's illness, and finally of his
death. Such things made a great impression upon people at the time
and must surely surprise posterity.
Now world-history sometimes has
its humorous sides! There was once, in a different domain altogether,
a certain Professor who asserted that the brain of the female always
weighs less than that of the male. After his death, however, his own
brain was weighed and proved to be extremely light. He was the victim
of humour in world-history!
The horoscope of Pico de
Mirandola (a descendant of the famous philosopher) prophesied that
Mars would bring him great misfortune. He was an opponent of all such
predictions. Tycho de Brahe proved to him that all his arguments
against prognostications from the stars were false, and he died in
the year that had been indicated as the period of the unfavourable
influence of Mars.
Numbers of examples could be
quoted and we shall probably realise that in a certain sense it is
not difficult to make objections. For example, a very distinguished
modern astronomer a man greatly to be respected too, for his
humanitarian activities has argued that Wallenstein's
death cannot be said to have been correctly predicted in the
horoscope drawn up by Kepler. In a certain respect such arguments
must be taken seriously. We cannot altogether ignore Wilhelm
Foerster's argument that
Wallenstein knew what had been predicted; that in the corresponding
year he remembered his horoscope, hesitated, did not take the firm
stand he would otherwise have taken and so was himself the cause of
the misfortune. Such objections are always possible.
But on the other side it must be
remembered that although in illustrations produced by science,
external data are of value, the modern age accepts these data as an
absolutely adequate basis for scientific truths. Many things may be
problematical. But we should not shut our eyes to the fact that
careful comparison of events that had actually occurred in life with
indications obtained from the stars, did indeed lead, in earlier
times, to confidence in prognostications of the future. People were
certainly alive to mistakes but they did not conceal things that were
genuinely astonishing, nor did they accept these things entirely
without criticism. In those times too they were quite capable of
criticism and in all probability applied it on many occasions.
I wanted to quote very striking
examples in order to show that in accordance with the standards of
modern science too, it is possible to take these matters seriously.
And even when we take what there is to be said against them, we shall
have to admit that the reasons which in times of the relatively near
past made brilliant minds place firm reliance in them, were not bad
but sound and well-founded reasons. Even if these reasons are
rejected, it must be admitted that the impression they made on
brilliant and enlightened minds was such that these men believed
quite apart from details that there is a connection between
events in the lives of individuals and of peoples, and happenings in
the Cosmos. These men believed that there is a real connection
between the macrocosm, the great world, and the microcosm, the little
world.
They believed that human life on
the Earth is not a chaotic flow of events but that law manifests in
these events, that just as celestial events are governed by cyclic
law, so too a certain cyclic law, a certain rhythm is manifest in
human and earthly conditions. To explain what is here meant, I shall
speak of certain facts that can be collated by observation, as truly
as the most exacting facts of chemistry or physics today. But the
observations must be made in the appropriate spheres. Suppose we
observe something that happens in a man's life during his
childhood. If we study the longer sweep of human life, remarkable
connections will come to light, for example, between the life of
earliest childhood and that of very old age; a connection is
perceptible between what a man experiences in the evening of his life
and what he experienced in early youth. We shall be able to say: If,
during youth, we were shaken by emotions due to alarm or fright, we
may possibly have been exempt from their effects all through our
life, but in old age things may appear of which we know that their
causes are to be sought in very early childhood. Again there are
connections between the years of adolescence and the period
immediately preceding old age. Life runs a circular course.
We can go still further, taking
as an example the case of someone who, say at the age of 18, was torn
right away from the course his life had taken hitherto. Until then he
may have been able to devote himself to study but was suddenly
obliged to abandon this and become a merchant, perhaps because his
father lost his money, or for some other reason. To begin with he
gets on quite well but after a few years, great inner difficulties
make their appearance. In trying to help such a person to overcome
these difficulties, we cannot apply any general, abstract principles.
We shall have to say to ourselves: At the age of 18 there was a
sudden change in his life and at the age of 24 that is to
say, six years later difficulties cropped up in his life of
soul. Six years earlier, in his twelfth year or thereabouts, certain
things happened in his soul which actually explain the difficulties
appearing in his twenty-fourth year: six years before, six years
later the change of profession lies between. Just as above a
pendulum swinging to right and left there is a point of equilibrium,
so, in the case quoted, the eighteenth year is a pivotal point. A
cause generated before this pivotal point has its effect the same
number of years afterwards. So it is in man's life as a whole.
Human life takes its course not with irregularity but with
regularity and according to law. Although the individual does not
necessarily realise it, there is in every human life one
centre-point; what lies before youth and childhood
allows causes to rest in the depths of subsequent happenings, and
then what took place a number of years before this centre-point of
life reveals itself in its effects an equal number of years
afterwards. In the sense that birth is the point polar to death, the
happenings of childhood are the causes of happenings during the years
that precede death. In this way life becomes comprehensible.
In the case, for example, of
illness occurring, say, at the age of 54, the only really intelligent
approach is to look for a pivotal point at which a man passed through
a definite crisis, reckoning back from there to some event related to
the fifty-fourth year somewhat in the same sense as death is related
to birth, or the other way round. The fact that happenings in human
life reveal conformity to law and principle does not gainsay our
freedom. Many people are apt to say that this conformity to law in
the course taken by events contradicts man's freedom of will.
But this is not the case and it can only appear so to superficial
thinking. A human being who at the age, say, of 15, lays into the
womb of time some cause, the effects of which he experienced in, say,
his fifty-fourth year, no more deprives himself of his freedom than
does someone who builds a house and then moves into it when it is
ultimately ready. Logical thinking will never say that the man
deprives himself of his freedom when he moves into the house. Nobody
deprives himself of freedom by anticipating that causes will have
their effects later on. This principle has nothing directly to do
with freedom in life.
Just as there are cyclic
connections in the life of the individual, so too are there cyclic
connections in the life of the peoples, and in life on the Earth in
the general sense. The evolution of mankind on the Earth divides
itself into successive epochs of culture. Two of the epochs most
closely connected with our own, are the period of
Assyrian-Egyptian-Chaldean civilisation and that of the later culture
of Greece and Rome; then, reckoning from the decline of Greek and
Roman culture and its aftermaths, comes our present epoch. According
to all the signs of the times this will last for a very long time
yet. There, then, we have three consecutive periods of culture.
Close observation of the life of
the peoples during these three epochs will reveal, during the
Greco-Latin period, something like a pivotal point in the evolution
of mankind. Hence, too, the curious fascinating of the culture of
Greece and Rome. Greek art, Greek and Roman political life, Roman
equity, the conception of Roman citizenship ... it all seems to stand
like a kind of pivotal point in the stream of the evolutionary
process: After it our own epoch; before it the
Egypto-Chaldean epoch. In a remarkable way, those who observe deeply
enough will perceive certain conditions of life during the
Egypto-Chaldean period operating again today, in quite a different
but nevertheless related form. In those times, therefore, causes were
laid into the womb of the ages, which now in their effects come again
to the fore. Certain methods of hygiene, certain ablutions customary
in ancient Egypt, also certain views of life are now, strangely
enough, in the forefront again naturally in absolutely
different forms; in short, the effects of causes laid down in ancient
Egypt are becoming perceptible today. In between like a
fulcrum lies the culture of Greece and Rome.
The Egypto-Chaldean epoch was
preceded by that of the most ancient Persian culture. According to
the law of cyclic evolution, then, it can be foreshadowed that just
as in our civilisation there is a cyclic re-emergence of
Egypto-Chaldean culture, so ancient Persian culture will re-emerge in
the epoch following our own. Law is revealed everywhere in the flow
of evolution! Not irregularity, not chaos but also not the
kind of law conjectured by historians: that the causes of everything
happening today are to be sought in the immediately preceding period,
the causes of happenings in the recent past again in the immediately
preceding period, and so forth. This is how historians build up a
chain of events the one directly following the other. Closer
observation, however, reveals the existence of cycles, breaks ...
what was once present appears again at a very much later time.
External observation itself can
discern this. But it will be quite apparent to those who study the
evolution of humanity in the light of Spiritual Science that there is
evidence of spiritual law in the flow of happenings, in the stream of
the Becoming and that a certain deepening of the life
of soul will enable men actually to perceive the threads of these
inner connections. And although it is not easy to grasp everything
that belongs to this sphere, although it may sometimes tend to
charlatanry or humbug and direct its appeal to the lower impulses and
instincts, nevertheless the following is true: When a man is able to
eliminate personal interests and quicken the hidden forces of
spiritual life, so that his knowledge is drawn not merely from his
environment or from remembrances of his own life and that of his
nearest acquaintances, when he is uninfluenced by material and
personal considerations ... then he grows beyond his own personality
and becomes conscious of the presence of higher forces with him,
which it is only a matter of developing by appropriate exercises.
When these deeper forces are brought to the surface, happenings in
the life of a human being will also reveal their hidden causes and
such a soul will then glimpse the truth that whatever has transpired
through the ages throws its effects into the future. The law
presented to us by Spiritual Science is that no happenings
and this also applies to the domain of the Spiritual float
meaninglessly along the stream of existence; they all have their
effects and we must discover the law underlying the manifestation of
these effects in later times. Therewith the insight will come that
this law also embraces the return of the individuality into the
present earthly life, where the effects of earlier lives are working
themselves out.
Just as knowledge of the workings
of Karma, the Law of Destiny, arises from insight into how causes lie
in the womb of time and appear again in transformation, so too this
insight was present in all those who have taken prophecy seriously or
have actually engaged in it; they have been convinced that laws
prevail in the course taken by human life and that the soul can
awaken the forces whereby these laws may be fathomed. But the soul
needs points of focus. In its facts, the world is an interconnected
whole. Just as in his physical life the human being is affected by
wind and weather, it is not difficult to assume that there are
connections in everything around us, even though the details are
obscure. Without actually seeking for laws of Nature, something in
the courses of the stars and constellations evokes the thought: The
harmonies perceptible there can call forth in us similar harmonies
and rhythms according to which human life runs its course. Further
observations will then lead on to the details.
As may be read in the little book,
The Education of the Child in the Light of Spiritual Science,
epochs can be distinguished in the life of the
individual: from birth to the change of teeth, from then to puberty,
then the years up to twenty-one and again from twenty-one to
twenty-eight ... 7-year periods clearly different in character and
after which new kinds of faculties are present. If we know how to
investigate these things we shall find clear evidence of a rhythmic
stream in human life, which can as it were be found again in the
starry heavens. Strikingly enough, if life is observed from this
point of view (but such observation must be calm and balanced,
without the wonted fanaticism of opponents) it will be found that
round about the twenty-eighth year something in the life of soul
indicates, in many cases, a culmination of what has come into being
after four periods of seven years each. Four times seven years
twenty-eight years ... although the figure is not absolutely exact,
this is the approximate time of one revolution of Saturn. Saturn
revolves in a circle consisting of four parts, passes therefore
through the whole Zodiacal circle, and its course has an actual
correspondence with the course of man's life from birth to the
twenty-eighth year. Just as the circle divides into four parts, so
too these twenty-eight years divide into four periods of seven years
each. There, in the revolution of a star in cosmic space, we see
indications of similarity with the course taken by human life.
Other movements in the heavens,
too, correspond to rhythms in human life. Little attention is given
today to the very brilliant researches made by Fliess, a doctor in
Berlin; they are still only in the initial stage but if ever they are
properly studied, the rhythmic flow of births and deaths in the life
of humanity will be clearly perceived. All such research is only at
the beginning; but in time to come it will be realised that one need
only regard the stars and their movements as a great celestial clock
and human life as a rhythm that runs its own course but is in a
certain sense determined by the stars. Without looking for actual
causes in the stars, it is quite possible to conceive that
because of this inner relationship, human life runs its course with a
like rhythm. Suppose, for example, we often go outside the door of
our house or look out of the window at some particular time in the
morning and always see a certain man on the way to his office ... we
glance at the clock, knowing that every day he will pass at a
definite time. Are the hands of the clock the cause of it? Of course
not! ... but because of the invariable rhythm we can assume that the
man will pass the house at a definite time. In this sense we can see
in the stars a celestial clock according to which the life of man and
of peoples runs its course.
Such things may well be
vantage-points for the observation and study of life, and Spiritual
Science is able to indicate these deeper connections. We shall now
understand why Tycho de Brahe, Kepler and others, worked on the basis
of calculations Kepler especially, Tycho de Brahe less. For
insight into the soul of Tycho de Brahe reveals a certain similarity
with that of Nostradamus. Nostradamus, however, does not need to make
calculations at all; he sits up in his attic and gives himself up to
the impressions made by the stars. He ascribes this gift to certain
inherited qualities in his organism, which for this reason is no
cause of hindrance to him. But he also needs that inner tranquillity
of soul that arises after he has put away all thoughts, emotions,
cares, and excitements of everyday life. The soul must face the stars
in purity and freedom. And then what Nostradamus prophesies rises up
in him in pictures and images; he sees it all before him in pictures.
If he spoke in astronomical terms of Saturn or Mars being injurious,
he would not, in predicting destiny, have been thinking of the
physical Saturn or the physical Mars, but he would have pondered in
this way: Such and such a man has a warlike nature, a temperament
that loves fighting, but he also has a kind of melancholy making him
subject to moods of depression which may even affect him physically.
Nostradamus lets this interweave in his contemplation and a picture
rises before him of future happenings in the man's life: the
tendency to melancholy and the fighting spirit intermingle
Saturn and Mars. This is only a
sense-image. When he speaks of Saturn and Mars,
his meaning is: There is something in this man which presents itself
to me as a picture but which can be compared with the opposition or
conjunction between Saturn and Mars in the heavens. This was merely a
way of expressing it; contemplation of the stars evoked in
Nostradamus the seership that enabled him to see more deeply into
souls than is otherwise possible.
Nostradamus, therefore, was a man
who by acting in a certain way was able to waken to life inner powers
of soul otherwise slumbering within the human being. In a mood of
devotion, of reverence, he completely put away all cares and
anxieties, all concerns of the outer world. In utter forgetfulness of
self, with no feeling of his own personality, his soul knew the truth
of the axiom he always quoted: It is God Who utters through my
mouth anything I am able to tell you about your concerns. Take it as
spoken to you by the Grace of your God I ... Without such
reverence there is no genuine seership. But this very attitude
ensures that those who have it will not abuse or make illicit use of
their gift.
Tycho de Brahe represents a stage
of transition between Nostradamus and Kepler. When we contemplate the
soul of Tycho de Brahe, he seems to be one who is calling up
remembrances from an earlier life, rather reminiscent of Greek
soothe-saying. He has in him something that is akin to the soul of an
ancient Greek seeking everywhere for the manifestations of cosmic
harmony. Such is the attunement of his soul and his
astrological insight is really an attitude of soul it is as
if astronomical calculation were merely a prop helping him to call up
those powers which enable pictures of happenings in the past or the
future to take shape before him. Kepler's mind is more
abstract, in the sense that modern thought is abstract in a
still higher degree. Kepler has to rely more or less upon pure
calculation in which there is, of course, accuracy, for according to
knowledge derived from clairvoyance there is an actual relation
between the constellations and the actions of men. As time went on,
astrology became more and more a matter of reckoning and calculation
only. The gift of seership gave place to purely intellectual thought
and it can truly be said that astrological forecasts now are nothing
but intellectual deduction.
The farther we go back into the
past, the more we shall find that the utterances of the ancient
prophets concerning the life of their peoples rose up from the very
depths of their souls. So it was among the Hebrew prophets; in
communion with their God and free of their personal interests and
affairs, they were wholly given up to the great concerns of their
people and could perceive what was in store. Just as a teacher
foresees that certain qualities in a child will express themselves
later on, and takes account of them, the Hebrew prophet beheld the
soul of his people as one unit; the Past mellowed in his soul and
worked in such a way that the consequences were revealed to him as a
great vision of the Future.
But now, what does prophecy mean
in human life, what does it really signify? We shall find the answer
by thinking of the following: There are certain great figures to whom
we always trace streams of happenings in history. Although today the
preference is for everyone to be at one level, because it goes
against the grain when a single personality towers over all the
others (in their desire that all faculties shall be equal, people are
loath to admit that certain men are more forceful than the rest)
in spite of this, great and advanced leaders are at work in
the process of historical evolution. Things have come to such a pass
nowadays that the mightiest happenings are conceived to be the
outcome simply of ideas and not to lead back to any one personality.
There is a certain school of theology, which still claims to be
Christian, although it contends that there need have been no Christ
Jesus as an individual. In reply to the retort that world-history is
after all made by men, one of these theologians said: That is as
obvious as the fact that a forest is composed of trees; human beings
make history in the same sense that trees make a forest ... But think
of it surely the whole forest could have grown up from a few
grains of seed? Certainly the forest is composed of trees but the
primary step is to find out whether it did not originate from grains
of seeds once laid in the soil. So, too, it is a matter of inquiring
whether it is not, after all, the case that events in human evolution
lead back to this or that individual who inspired the rest.
This conception of world-history
suggests the thought of surplus forces in men who play
leading parts in the evolution of humanity. Whether they apply these
forces for good or ill is another matter. Such men work upon their
environment out of the surplus forces within them. These surplus
forces, which need not be drawn upon for the affairs of personal
life, may express themselves in deeds or they may find no outlet in
deeds; but with others, some kind of hindrance always seems to
prevent this. Nostradamus is an interesting example: he was a doctor
and in this capacity brought blessing to very many human beings. But
the thought that someone is doing good, often goes against the grain!
Nostradamus became an object of envy and jealousy and was
accused of being a Calvinist. To be a Jew or a Calvinist was looked
upon askance and circumstances therefore forced him to withdraw from
his work of healing and abandon his profession. But were the forces
used in this inspiring work no longer within him when he had retired?
Of course they were! Physics believes in the conservation of energy
or force. What happened in the case of Nostradamus was that when he
threw up his work, the forces in him took a different direction. If
his medical activities had continued, these forces would have
produced quite other effects in the
future. For where can our deeds really be said to end? If, like
Nostradamus, we withdraw from some activity, the flow of our deeds is
suddenly stemmed but the forces themselves are still there.
The forces in Nostradamus' soul remained and were transformed,
so that what might have expressed itself in deeds at some future
time, rose up before him in pictures. In his case, deeds were
transformed into the gift of seership. The same may be true of human
beings endowed with a faculty for prophecy today; and it was true in
the case of the ancient Hebrew prophets. As biblical history
indicates, these men had a real connection with forces belonging to
the past and to the future of their people; their own soul, their
personal life, was nothing to them. They were not war-like by nature
but had within them surplus forces which from the very beginning took
the same form as those of Nostradamus after their transformation.
Forces, which in others poured into deeds, revealed themselves to the
Hebrew prophets in the form of mighty pictures and visions. The gift
of seership is directly connected with the urge to action in men,
with the transformation of surplus forces in the soul.
Seership is therefore by no means
an incomprehensible faculty; it can be reconciled with the kind of
thinking pursued in natural science itself. But it is obvious, too,
that the gift of seership leads beyond the immediate Present. What is
the way, the only way, of reaching out beyond the Present? It is to
have ideals. Ideals, however, are usually abstract: man sets
them before him and believes that they conform to the realities of
the Present. But instead of setting up abstract ideals, a man who
desires to work in line with the aims of the super-sensible world
tries to discover causes lying in the womb of the ages, asking
himself: How do these causes express themselves in the flow of time?
He approaches this problem not with his intellect but with his deeper
faculty of seership. True knowledge of the Past when this is
acquired by the operations of deeper forces and not by way of the
intellect calls up before the soul pictures of the Future,
which more or less conform to fact. And one who rightly exercises the
gift of seership today, after having pondered the stream of evolution
in olden times, will find a picture rising up before him as a
concrete ideal. This picture seems to tell him: Mankind is standing
at the threshold of transition; certain forces hitherto concealed in
darkness are becoming more and more apparent. And just as today
people are familiar with intellect and with imagination, so in a
Future by no means distant, a new faculty of soul will be there to
meet the urge for knowledge of the super-sensible world.
The dawn of this new power of
soul can already be perceived. When such glimpses of the Future
astonish us, our attitude will not be that of the fanatic, neither
will it be that of the pure realist, but we shall know why we
do this or that for the sake of spiritual evolution. This,
fundamentally, is the purpose of all true prophecy. We realise that
this purpose is achieved even when the pictures of the Future
outlined by the seer may not be absolutely accurate. Anyone who is
able to perceive the hidden forces of the human soul knows better
than others that false pictures may arise of what the Future holds in
store; he understands, too, why the pictures are capable of many
interpretations. To say that although certain indications have been
given, they are vague and ambiguous does not mean very much. Such
pictures may well be ambiguous. What matters, is that impulses
connected with evolution as it moves on towards the Future, shall
work upon and awaken slumbering powers in man. These prophesyings may
or may not be accurate in every detail: what matters is that powers
shall be awakened in the human being!
Prophecy, therefore, is to be
conceived less as a means of satisfying curiosity by prediction of
the Future than as a stimulating realisation that the gift of
seership is within man's grasp. Shadow-sides there may well be
but the good sides are there too! The good side will be
revealed above all when men do not go blindly through the day nor
blindly onwards into a remote future but can set their own goals and
direct their impulses in the light of knowledge. Goethe, who has said
so many wonderful things about the affairs of the world, was right
when he wrote down the words: If a man knew the Past, he would
know what the Future holds; both are linked to the Present as a Whole
complete in itself. [Wer das Vergangene
kennte, der wusste das Kunftige; beides schliesst an heute sich rein,
als ein Vollendetes, an.] This is a beautiful saying
from the Prophecies of Bakis.
And so the raison d'être of prophecy does not lie
in the appeasement of curiosity or the thirst for knowledge, but in
the impulses it can give to work for the sake of the Future. The
unwillingness to be really objective about prophecy today is due to
the fact that our age sets too high a value on purely intellectual
knowledge which does not kindle impulses of will. But
Spiritual Science will bring the recognition that although there have
been many shadow-sides in the realm of ancient and modern prophecy,
nevertheless in this striving for consciousness of the Future a seed
has formed, not for the appeasement of cravings for knowledge or of
curiosity, but as fire for our will. And even those who insist upon
judging everything in the human being by cold, intellectual
standards, must learn from this vista of the world that the purpose
of prophecy is to stimulate the impulses of will.
Having considered how attacks
against prophecy may be met and having recognised its core and
purpose, we have a certain right to say: In this domain lie many of
those things with which academic philosophy will have nothing to do
... that is certainly true. But the light of this very knowledge will
reveal, in connection with those facts which illustrate the other
saying, that data of intellectual knowledge however correct
they may be are sometimes completely valueless because they
are incapable of engendering impulses of will. Just as it is true
that there are many things undreamed of by philosophy, so on the
other side it is true that a great deal in the realm of scientific
research into the things of heaven and earth comes to nothing because
it does not quicken the seed of right endeavour. But progress in life
must be made in the light of a kind of knowledge which reveals that
at the beginning, the middle and the end, everything turns upon human
activity, human deeds!
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