EVOLUTION, INVOLUTION
AND CREATION OUT OF NOTHINGNESS
17th June 1909
Today we intend adding
something to round off the many facts and views we have been studying
here this winter. We have often emphasised the way in which spiritual
science should take hold of human life, and how it can become life,
action and deed. Today, however, we want to give a few concluding
aspects on the subject of the great evolutionary processes of the
cosmos, as these are expressed in man. And to start with I should
like to draw your attention to a fact that can tell you a great deal
about the nature of cosmic evolution, if only you are prepared to
look at it in the right way.
Consider,
in a purely external way to begin with, the difference between the
evolution of the animal and that of man. You need only say one word
and hold one idea before you, and you will soon notice the difference
between the concept of animal and human evolution. Think of the word
‘education’. Actual education is impossible in the animal
world. To a certain extent you can train the animal to do things that
are foreign to its natural instincts and inborn way of life. But only
an extremely enthusiastic dog-lover would want to deny that there is
a radical difference between the education of a human being and what
can be undertaken with animals. We need merely bear one particular
anthroposophical insight in mind, and we shall understand the basis
for this apparently superficial fact.
We
know that man's development is a gradual and very complicated
process. We have repeatedly emphasised that in the first seven years
of his life, up to the change of teeth, man develops in quite a
different way from the later period up to fourteen, and again from
the fourteenth to the twenty-first year. We will only touch on this
today, for you already know it. According to spiritual science man
passes through several births. The human being is born into the
physical world when he leaves his mother's body and frees himself of
the physical maternal sheath. But we know that when this has happened
he is still enclosed in a second maternal sheath, an etheric one.
During the first seven years of his life the child's etheric body is
completely enveloped in external etheric currents that come from the
outer world, just as the physical body is enveloped until birth in a
physical maternal sheath. At the change of teeth this etheric sheath
is stripped off, and not until now, at the age of seven, is the
etheric body born. Then the astral body is still enclosed in the
astral maternal sheath that is stripped off at puberty. After this
the astral body develops freely until the twenty-first or
twenty-second year, which is the time when strictly speaking the
actual ego of man is born. Not until then does the human being awaken
to his full inner intensity and the ego that has evolved through the
course of his earlier incarnations work its way free.
To
clairvoyant consciousness a very special fact becomes apparent here.
If you watch a very young child for several weeks or months, you will
see the child's head surrounded by etheric and astral currents and
forces. However, these currents and forces gradually become less
distinct and vanish after a while. What is really taking place there?
You can actually discover what is happening, even without clairvoyant
vision, although clairvoyant vision confirms what we are about to
say. Immediately after the birth of a human being his brain is not
the same as it will be a few weeks or months later. The child already
perceives the outer world, of course, but its brain is not yet an
instrument capable of connecting external impressions in a definite
way. By means of connecting-nerves running from one part of the brain
to another, the human being learns by degrees to link together in
thought what he perceives in the external world, but these connecting
nerve-strands develop only after birth. A child will hear and see a
bell, for instance, but the impression of the sound and the sight of
the bell do not immediately combine to form the thought that the bell
is ringing. The child learns this only gradually, because the part of
the brain that is the instrument for the perception of sound and the
part that is the instrument for visual perception become connected
only in the course of life. And not until this has happened is it
possible for the child to reach the conclusion: ‘What I see is
the same thing that is making the sound’. Connecting-cords like
this are developed in the brain, and the forces that develop these
connecting-cords can be seen by the clairvoyant in the first weeks of
the child's development as an extra covering round the brain. But
this covering passes into the brain and subsequently lives within it,
no longer working from outside but from within. What works from
outside during the first weeks of the child's development could not
go on working at the whole development of the growing human being
were it not protected by the various sheaths. For when that which has
been working from outside passes into the brain, it develops under
the protecting sheath first of the etheric body then of the astral
body and only when the twenty-second year has been reached does that
which first worked from outside become active from within. What was
outside the human being during the first months of his existence and
then slipped inside, is active for the first time independently of
sheaths in the twentieth to the twenty-second year; then it becomes
free and awakens into intense activity.
Now
let us consider the gradual development of the human being and
compare it with that of the plant. We know that the plant only has
its physical and etheric body here in the physical world, whereas its
astral body is outside it; but only the physical and etheric body
within it. The plant emerges from the seed, forms its physical body,
and then the etheric body gradually develops. And this etheric body
is all that the plant has in addition. Now we have seen that man's
etheric body is still enveloped in the astral body until puberty, and
that man's astral body is not actually born until then. But the
plant, after reaching its puberty, cannot give birth to an astral
body, for it has none. Therefore the plant has nothing further to
develop after puberty. It has accomplished its task in the physical
world when puberty occurs, and after it has been fertilised, it
withers. You can even observe something similar in certain lower
animals. In these lower animals the astral body has quite evidently
not penetrated into the physical body to the same extent as in the
higher animals. Lower animals are characterised by the very fact that
their astral body is not yet entirely within their physical body.
Take the may-fly; it comes into being, lives until it is fertilised,
and then dies. Why? Because it is a creature which, like a plant, has
its astral body for the most part outside it, and therefore it has
nothing further to develop when puberty has occurred. In a certain
respect man, animal and plant develop in a similar way until puberty.
Then the plant has nothing else to develop in the physical world, and
so it dies. The animal still has an astral body, but no ego.
Therefore after puberty certain possibilities of development remain
in the animal. The astral body becomes free, and as long as it
develops freely and possibilities of development remain, further
development continues in the higher animal after puberty. But the
astral body of the animal has no ego within it in the physical world.
The animal's ego is a group ego; it embraces a whole group and exists
as group ego in the astral world, where its possibilities of
development are quite different from those of the single animal here
in the physical world. What the animal possesses as astral body has a
limited possibility of development, and the animal already has this
possibility within it as a natural tendency when it comes into the
world. The lion has something in his astral body that expresses
itself as a sum of impulses, instincts and passions. And this
tendency continues to live itself out to the full until an ego might
be born; but the ego is not there, it is on the astral plane.
Therefore when the animal has just reached the stage when man attains
his twenty-first year, its possibilities of development are all used
up. The length of life varies according to circumstances, of course,
for animals do not all live to be twenty-one. But up to the age of
twenty-one, when the ego is born in man, his development is
comparable to that of the animal. This must not lead to the
conclusion that human development up to the age of twenty-one is
identical to that of an animal, for that is not the case. The ego is
already within the human being from the beginning, right from
conception, and it now becomes free. Hence, because there is
something within man from the beginning that becomes free at the age
of twenty-one, he is from the outset no animal being, for the ego,
although not free, is nevertheless working in him from the start. And
it is essentially this ego that can be educated. For it is this ego,
together with what it has accomplished in the astral, etheric and
physical bodies, that passes from one incarnation to another. If this
ego received nothing new in a further incarnation, man would not be
able to take anything with him at his physical death, from his last
life between birth and death. And if he were not able to take
anything with him, he would be at exactly the same stage in the
following life as he was in the previous one. Through the fact that
you see man going through a development in life, and acquiring what
the animal cannot acquire, because the animal's possibilities of
development do not go beyond its inborn capacities, man is constantly
enriching his ego, and reaches higher levels from one incarnation to
another. It is because man bears within him an ego that has already
been at work, although it only becomes free at his twenty-first year,
that education is practicable, and something further can be done with
him beyond his original possibilities. The lion brings its lion
nature with it and lives it out. Man not only brings with him his
nature as a member of the general human species, but also what he has
attained as an ego in his Previous incarnation. This can be
transformed more and more by education and life, and it will have
acquired new impetus by the time man passes through the portal of
death and has to prepare for a new incarnation. The point is that man
acquires new factors of development and is constantly adding to his
store.
Now
let us ask what actually happens when man adds to his store from
outside? To answer this we must reach three very important, rather
difficult concepts. But as we have been working for some years in
this group, we ought to be able to understand them. Let us start by
taking a fully developed plant, for instance a lily of the valley.
Here you have the plant before you in another form, as a small seed.
Imagine holding the seed; there you have a minute structure. When you
lay it in front of you, you can say: Everything that I shall see
later on as root, stalk, leaves and blossom is in this seed. So here
I have the plant in front of me as a seed and there as a fully grown
plant. But I could not have the seed in front of me if it had not
been produced by a previous lily of the valley. The case is different
for clairvoyant consciousness. When clairvoyant consciousness
observes the fully grown lily of the valley, it sees the physical
plant filled with an etheric body, a body consisting of streams of
light permeating it from top to bottom. In the lily of the valley,
however, the etheric body does not extend very far beyond the
physical body of the plant and does not differ from it very much. But
if you take the small seed of the lily of the valley you will find
that although the physical seed is small it is permeated by a
wonderfully beautiful etheric body raying out all round in such a way
that the seed is situated at one end of the etheric body like a comet
with a tail. The physical seed is really only a denser point in the
light or etheric body of the lily of the valley. When a spiritual
scientist has the fully grown lily of the valley in front of him
then, for him, the being that was hidden to begin with is developed.
When he has the seed in front of him where the physical part is very
small and only the spiritual part is large, he says: the actual being
of the lily of the valley is rolled up in the physical seed. So when
we look at the lily of the valley we have to distinguish two
different states. One state is where the whole being of the lily of
the valley is in involution: the seed contains the being rolled up,
involved. When it comes forth it passes over to evolution, and then
the whole being of the lily of the valley slips more into the newly
developing seed. Thus evolution and involution alternate in the
successive states of a plant. During evolution the spiritual
disappears further and further and the physical grows great, whilst
in involution the physical will disappear further and further and the
spiritual become greater and greater.
In
a certain respect we can speak of evolution and involution
alternating in man to an even greater extent. In the human being
between birth and death a physical body and an etheric body
interpenetrate to form the physical, and the spiritual
interpenetrates them too in a certain way, as an earthly being man is
in evolution. But when man is seen clairvoyantly passing through the
portal of death, he does not leave behind in physical life as much as
the lily of the valley leaves in the seed; the physical disappears so
completely that you no longer see it, it is all rolled up in the
spiritual. Then man passes through Devachan, where he is in
involution as regards his earthly being. For this earthly being of
man, evolution is between birth and death, involution between death
and a new birth. Yet there is a tremendous difference between man and
the plant. In the plant we can speak of involution and evolution, but
in the case of man we have to speak of yet a third factor. If we were
not to speak of a third factor, we should not comprise the whole of
human development. Because the plant always passes through involution
and evolution, every new plant is an exact repetition of the last
one. The being of the lily of the valley is perpetually going into
the seed and out again. But what is happening in the case of man?
We
have just realised that man receives new possibilities of development
during his life between birth and death. He adds to his store. Hence
it is not the same with man as it is with the plant. Each evolution
of man on the earth is not a mere repetition of the previous one, but
a raising of his existence on to a higher level. What he takes into
himself between birth and death is added to what was there
previously. That is why no mere repetition occurs, for what is
evolving appears at a higher stage. Where does this new element
actually come from? In what way are we to understand the fact that
man receives and takes in something new? I beg you to follow very
closely now, for we are coming to a most important and most difficult
concept. And not without reason do I say this in one of the last
sessions, for you will have the whole summer to ponder over it. We
should ponder over such concepts for months if not years, then we
gradually begin to realise their depth. Where does all that is
constantly being added to man come from? We will make this
comprehensible by taking a simple example.
Suppose
you see a man standing opposite two other people. Let us take into
consideration everything that belongs to evolution. Let us take the
one who is observing the other two, and say to ourselves that he has
passed through earlier incarnations and has developed what has been
planted in him in these previous incarnations. The same applies to
the other two people. Then let us suppose that the first man thinks
to himself: The one person looks splendid beside the other. He is
pleased to see just these two particular people standing together.
Another person might not feel this satisfaction. The satisfaction the
man feels in seeing the two standing side by side has nothing
whatever to do with the possibilities of development in the other
two, for they have done nothing that deserves the pleasure their
standing together gives him. It is something quite different, and it
depends entirely on the fact that it is he in particular that
is standing opposite the two people. The point is that the man
develops a feeling of joy over the two men in front of him standing
together. This feeling is not caused by anything to do with
development. There are things like this in the world that arise
simply through coincidence. It is not a question of the two men being
karmically connected. Our concern is the joy the man feels because he
likes seeing the two people standing together.
Let
us take a further example. Imagine a man standing here at a certain
spot on the earth and looking up at the sky. He sees a particular
constellation of stars. If he were to stand five paces away he would
see something else. This looking at the sky creates in him a feeling
of joy that is something quite new. Man experiences a number of
totally new things that have nothing to do with his previous
development. Everything that comes forth in the lily of the valley is
determined by its previous development; but this is not the case with
what works on the human soul from the environment. Man is concerned
with a lot of affairs that have nothing to do with any previous
development, but which are there because various circumstances bring
him into contact with the outer world. Because he feels this joy,
however, it has become for him an experience. Something has arisen in
the human soul that is not determined by anything preceding it but
which has arisen out of nothingness. Such creations out of
nothingness are constantly arising in the human soul. These are
experiences of the soul not experienced through given circumstances
but through the relationships we ourselves create connecting the
circumstances one with another. I want you to distinguish between the
experiences produced by given circumstances and those produced by the
relationships between the various circumstances.
Life
really falls into two parts, with no distinguishing line between
them: those experiences strictly determined by previous causes, by
karma, and those not determined by karma but appearing on our horizon
for the first time. There are whole areas in human life that come
under these headings. Suppose you hear that somewhere someone has
stolen something. What has happened is, of course determined by
something karmic. But suppose you only know something about the theft
and not the thief — therefore there is a particular person in
the objective world who has done the stealing, but you know nothing
about him. The thief is not going to come to you, though, and say:
‘Lock me up, I have committed a theft’, on the contrary,
it is up to you to line up the facts so as to produce the evidence as
to who is the thief. The ideas you put together have nothing to do
with the objective facts. They depend on quite different things, even
on whether you are clever or not. Your train of argument does not
make the person a thief, it is a process taking place entirely within
you that gets associated with what is there outside. Strictly
speaking, any kind of logic is something added to things from
outside. And all opinions of taste, as well as judgments we make
about beauty, are additions. Thus man is constantly enriching his
life with things that are not determined by previous causes, but
which he experiences by bringing himself into a relationship with
things.
If
we make a rapid survey of human life and visualise man's development
through ancient Saturn, Sun and Moon as far as our Earth evolution,
we find that on Saturn there could be no question of man being able
to relate to things in this way. Everything was pure necessity then.
It was the same on old Sun and also on old Moon, and the animals are
still in the situation today that man was in on the Moon. The animal
experiences only what is determined by preceding causes. Man alone
has entirely new experiences, independent of previous causes.
Therefore in the truest sense of the word man alone is capable of
education; man alone can continually add something new to what is
determined by karma. Only on Earth did man attain the possibility of
adding something new. On the Moon his development had not reached the
point where he would have been capable of adding anything new to his
innate capacities. Although not an animal, he was then at the stage
of animal development. His actions were determined by external
causes. To a certain extent this is still so today, for those
experiences that are free experiences are only slowly making their
way into man. And they appear to a greater and greater extent the
higher the level at which man is. Imagine a dog standing in front of
a Raphael painting. It would see what is there in the picture itself,
in so far as it is a sense object. But if a man were to stand in
front of the picture, he would see something quite different in it;
he would see what he is capable of creating through the fact that he
has already developed further in previous incarnations. And now
imagine a genius like Goethe; he would see even more, and he would
know the significance of why one thing is painted like this and the
other like that. The more highly developed a man is the more he sees.
And the more he has enriched his soul the greater his capacity to add
to it the soul experiences from soul relationships. These become the
property of his soul and are stored up within it. All this, however,
has only been possible for humanity since Earth evolution began. But
now the following will take place.
Man
will develop in his own way through the subsequent ages. We know that
the Earth will be succeeded by Jupiter, Venus and Vulcan. During this
evolution the sum of man's experiences over and above those resulting
from previous causes will become greater and greater, and his inner
being become richer and richer. What he has brought with him from
ancient causes, from the Saturn, Sun and Moon stages, will have less
and less significance. He is developing his way out of previous
causes and casting them off. And when, together with the Earth, man
will have reached Vulcan, he will have stripped off all he received
during the Saturn, Sun and Moon evolution. He will have cast it all
off
Now
we come to a difficult concept which shall be made clear by an
analogy. Imagine you are sitting in a carriage that has been given or
bequeathed to you. You are taking a ride in this carriage when a
wheel becomes faulty, so you replace it with a new one. Now you have
the old carriage but a new wheel. Suppose that after a while a second
wheel becomes faulty. You replace that, and you now have the old
carriage and two new wheels. Similarly you replace the third and
fourth wheels, and so on, until you can easily imagine that one day
you will actually have nothing left of the old carriage, but will
have replaced it all with new parts. You will have nothing left of
what you received as a gift or inheritance; you will still drive
about in it, but strictly speaking it will be an entirely new
vehicle. And now transfer this idea to human evolution. During the
Saturn period man received the rudiments of his physical body, on the
Sun his etheric body, on the Moon his astral body and on the Earth
his ego, and he has been gradually developing these principles. But
within the ego he is increasingly bringing experiences of a new kind
into being and stripping off what he inherited, what he was given on
Saturn, Sun and Moon. And a time will come — the Venus
evolution — when man will have cast off all that the gods gave
him during the Moon, Sun and Saturn evolution and the first half of
the Earth evolution. He will have discarded all this, Just as in our
analogy the single parts of the carriage were discarded. And he will
have gradually replaced all this by something he has taken into
himself from relationships, something previously nonexistent. Thus on
reaching Venus, man will not be able to say: Everything from Saturn,
Sun and Moon evolution is still in me — for by then he will
have cast it all off. And at the end of his evolution he will bear
within him only what he has gained through his own efforts, not what
he was given, but what he has created out of nothingness. Here you
have the third thing in addition to evolution and involution:
creation out of nothingness. Evolution, Involution and creation out
of nothingness are what we must have in mind if we are to picture the
whole magnitude and majesty of human evolution. Thus we can
understand how the gods have first of all given us our three bodies
as vehicles, and how they built up these vehicles stage by stage, and
then endowed us with the capacity to surmount them again stage by
stage. We can understand how we may throw away the parts, piece by
piece, because the gods wish to make us member by member into their
image, so that we may say: The rudiments of what I am to become were
given me, and out of them I have created for myself a new being.
Thus
what man sees before him as a great and wonderful ideal in the far
distant future, of having not only a consciousness of himself but a
consciousness of having created himself, was already developed in
earlier times by mighty spirits on a higher level than man. And
certain spirits already engaged in the past in our evolution are
developing at the present time what man will experience only in a
distant future. We have said that during the Saturn evolution the
thrones poured forth what we call the substance of mankind, and that
into this human substance the spirits of personality poured what we
call the forces of personality. But the spirits of personality, who
at that time were sufficiently powerful to let the character of their
personality flow into this substance poured out by the thrones, have
since then ascended higher and higher. Today they have reached the
point where they no longer need any physical substance for their
further development. On Saturn, in order to be able to live at all,
they needed the physical substance of Saturn which was at the same
time the rudiment of human substance; on the Sun they needed the
etheric substance that poured forth for man's etheric body; on the
Moon they needed the astral substance, and here on Earth they need
our ego. Henceforth, however, they will need what is formed by the
ego itself, man s new creation out of pure relations, which is no
longer physical, etheric or astral body or even ego as such, but that
which the ego produces out of itself. This the spirits of personality
will use, and they are already using it to live in today. On Saturn
they lived in what is now our physical body, on the Sun in what is
now our etheric body, on the Moon in what is now our astral body.
Since the middle of Atlantean times they have begun living in the
higher elements that man can bring forth out of his ego.
What
are these higher elements man produces from out of his ego? They are
of three kinds. First, what we call thinking in accordance with law,
our logical thinking. This is something that man adds to things. If
man does not merely look at the external world or merely observe it,
or merely chase after the thief to find him, but observes in such a
way that he sees the law inherent in the observation, availing
himself of thoughts that have nothing to do with the thief and yet
they catch him, then man is living in logic, pure logic. This logic
is something that is added to things by man. When man devotes himself
to this pure logic, the ego creates something beyond itself.
Secondly,
the ego creates beyond itself when it develops pleasure or
displeasure in the beautiful, the exalted, the humorous, the comic;
in short, in everything that man himself produces. Let us say you see
something in the world that strikes you as silly, and you laugh at
it. This laughter has nothing whatever to do with your karma. A
stupid person might come along, and the very thing you are laughing
at could strike him as clever. That is something that arises out of
yourself in that particular situation. Or, let us say, you see people
attacking a brave man who for a time holds his own but eventually
comes to a tragic end. What you witness was determined by karma, but
the feeling of tragedy you have about it is something new.
Though
necessity is the first thing, pleasure and displeasure are the
second, and the third is the way you feel the urge to act under the
influences of relationships. Even the way you feel compelled to act
is not determined solely by karma, but by your relationship to the
matter. Supposing two people are on the one hand so situated with
regard to their relationship with one another that they are
karmically destined to pay off something together, but at the same
time one is further advanced in his development than the other. The
more advanced one will pay up, the other will hold it back for later
payment. The one will develop kindness of heart, the other's feelings
will not be touched. That is something new coming into evolution. You
must not look on everything as determined, rather it depends on
whether or not we allow our actions to be guided by the laws of
justice and fairness. New things are constantly being added to our
morality, to the way we do our duty and to our moral judgment.
Particularly in our moral judgment there lies the third element by
means of which man goes beyond himself and then advances further and
further. The ego puts this into our world, and what is thus put into
the world does not perish. What men have introduced into the world
from epoch to epoch, from age to age, as the result of logical
thought, aesthetic judgment or the fulfillment of duty, forms a
continuous stream, and provides the substance in which, in their
phase of evolution, the spirits of personality take up their abode.
That
is the way you live and evolve. And whilst you are evolving, the
spirits of personality look down upon you, asking continually: Will
you give me something, too, that I can use for my development? And
the more man develops his thought content, his treasures of thought,
the more he tries to refine his aesthetic judgment, and carry out his
duty beyond the requirements of karma, the more nourishment there is
for the spirits of personality; the more we offer up to them, the
more substantial these spirits of personality become. What do these
spirits of personality represent? Something which from the point of
view of our human world conception we call an abstraction: the spirit
of the age, the spirit of the various epochs. To anthroposophists
this spirit of the age is a real being. The spirits of the age, who
are actually the spirits of personality, move through the ages. When
we look back into ancient times, the Indian, Persian,
Chaldean-Babylonian, Greco-Latin times and right into our own time,
we find that apart from the nations and apart from all the other
differences among men, what we call the spirit of the age is always
changing. People thought and felt quite differently five thousand
years ago than they did three thousand years ago and from the way
they do today. And it is the spirits of the age or, according to
spiritual science, the spirits of personality who change. These
spirits of personality are going through their evolution in the
super-sensible world just as the human race is going through its
evolution in the sense world. But all that the human race develops of
a super-sensible nature is food and drink for these spirits of
personality, and they benefit from it. If there were an age in which
men were to spend their lives without developing any treasures of
thought, without pleasure or displeasure, nor any feeling for duty
beyond the limits of karma — in such an age the spirits of
personality would have no nourishment and they would become
emaciated. Such is our connection with the beings who are invisibly
interwoven with our life.
As
I told you, man adds something new to development, creates as it were
something out of nothingness in addition to involution and evolution.
He could not create anything out of nothingness, however, had he not
previously received the causes into which he has placed himself as in
a vehicle. This vehicle was given him during the Saturn evolution,
and bit by bit he is discarding it and developing on into the future.
He had to receive the foundation for this, however, and if the gods
had not provided this foundation for him in the first place, he would
not have been able to perform any action that can be created out of
nothingness. That relationships in the surrounding world affect us in
such a way that they really help our further development is due to
this laying of a good foundation.
For
what has become possible through the fact that man can create
something new out of relationships, and that he can make use of the
connections into which he is placed so as to form the foundation for
something new that he himself creates? And what does it mean that man
has become capable of extending his thoughts beyond the things he
experiences in the surrounding world, and feeling more than what is
objectively there in front of him? What has come about as a result of
man being able to work beyond the dictates of karma, and live in duty
towards truth, fairness and kindness of heart?
By
becoming capable of logical thinking, of developing thought in
accordance with its necessity, the possibility of error has been
created. Because of the pleasure man can take in what is beautiful,
the possibility has also been created for him to introduce the
element of ugliness and impurity into world evolution. Because man is
capable of both setting himself the concept of duty and of fulfilling
it beyond the extent of karma, the possibility of evil and of
resistance to duty has been created. So it is this very possibility
of being able to create solely out of relationships that has placed
man in a world in which he can also work on his own spiritual part,
so that it becomes full of error, ugliness and evil. And not only had
the possibility to be provided for man altogether to create out of
these relationships, but the possibility had to be given for him by
dint of struggle and striving gradually to create out of these
relationships what is right, what is beautiful and those virtues that
really further his evolution.
Creating
out of relationships is called in Christian esotericism ‘creating
out of the spirit’. And creating out of right, beautiful and
virtuous relationships is called in Christian esotericism ‘The
Holy Spirit’. When a man is able to create out of nothingness
the right or true, the beautiful and the good, the Holy Spirit fills
him with bliss. But for a man to be able to create in the sense of
the Holy Spirit, he had first to be given the foundation, as is the
case for all creation out of nothingness. This foundation was given
him through the coming of Christ into our evolution. Through
experiencing the Christ Event on earth, man was able to ascend to
creating in the Holy Spirit. Thus it is Christ Himself Who creates
the greatest, most profound foundation. If man becomes such that he
stands firmly on the basis of the Christ experience, and the Christ
experience is the carriage he joins for his evolutionary progress,
then the Christ sends him the Holy Spirit, and man becomes capable of
creating the right, beautiful and good in the course of his further
evolution.
So
we see the coming of the Christ to the Earth as a fulfillment as it
were of all that had been put into man through Saturn, Sun and Moon.
And the Christ Event has given man the greatest thing possible, the
power that makes him capable of living on into the perspectives of
the future and of increasingly creating out of relationships, out of
all that is not predetermined, but depends on how man relates to the
facts of the world around him, which is in the widest sense the Holy
Spirit. This again is an aspect of Christian esotericism. Christian
esotericism is connected with the profoundest thought in the whole of
our evolution, the thought of creation out of nothingness.
Therefore
no true theory of evolution will ever be able to leave out the
thought of creation out of nothingness. Supposing there were only
evolution and involution, there would be eternal repetition like
there is with the plant, and on Vulcan there would be only what
originated on Saturn. But in the middle of our development creation
out of nothingness was added to evolution and involution. After
Saturn, Sun and Moon had passed away, Christ came to Earth as the
enriching leaven which ensures that something quite new will be there
on Vulcan, something not yet present on Saturn. Whoever speaks of
evolution and involution only, will speak of development as though
everything were merely to repeat itself in circles. But such circles
can never really explain world evolution. Only when we add to
evolution and involution this creation out of nothingness, that adds
something new to existing relationships, do we arrive at a real
understanding of the world.
Beings
of a lower order show no more than a trace of what we called creation
out of nothingness. A lily of the valley will always be a lily of the
valley; at most the gardener could add something to it from outside
to which the lily of the valley would never have attained of itself.
Then there would be something which with regard to the nature of the
lily of the valley would be a creation out of nothingness. Man,
however, is himself capable of including in his being this creation
out of nothingness. Yet man only becomes capable of doing so, and
advancing to the freedom of individual creativity through the
greatest of all free deeds, and one which can serve him as an
example. What is this greatest deed of freedom? It is that the
creative and wise Word of our solar system Himself resolved to enter
into a human body and to take part in Earth evolution through a deed
unconnected with any previous karma. There was no preceding karma
forcing the Christ to His resolution to enter a human body; He
undertook to do it as a free deed entirely based upon foreseeing
mankind's future evolution. This deed had no precedent, having its
origin in Him as a thought out of nothingness, out of His pre-vision.
This is a difficult concept, but it will always be included in
Christian esotericism, and everything depends on our being able to
add the thought of creation out of nothingness to those of evolution
and involution.
When
we are able to do this we shall acquire great ideals which, although
they may not extend to what may be called cosmic dimensions, are
essentially connected with the question: Why, for instance, do we
join an anthroposophical society? To understand the purpose of an
anthroposophical society we must return to the thought that we are
working for the spirits of personality, for the spirits of the age.
When a human being comes into the world at birth, to start with he is
educated by all manner of circumstances; these influence him and form
the first step of his own creative activity. If only it could be
clearly understood that the place where a man is born is only the
first step, and that the prevailing circumstances work upon him with
overwhelming suggestive power. Let us try to imagine how different a
man's circumstances would be were he to be born in Rome or Frankfurt
instead of in Constantinople. Through his birth he would be placed in
different circumstances, into different religious affiliations. Under
these influences a certain fanaticism could develop in him for
Catholicism or Protestantism. If, through a slight turn of the wheel
in karmic connections, he had been born in Constantinople, might he
not also have turned out to be quite a good Turk? Here you have an
illustration of the suggestive force with which environmental
conditions affect man. But man is able to extricate himself from the
purely suggestive nature of conditions and unite with other people in
accordance with principles he himself chooses and acknowledges. Then
he can say: “Now I know why I am working with other people”.
In this way there arise out of human consciousness those social
groups in which material is created for the spirits of the age, the
spirits of personality. And the anthroposophical society is a group
of this kind in which this connection is created on a basis of
brotherhood. This means nothing else than that each individual is
active in the group in such a way that he acquires in himself all the
good qualities that make him an image of the whole society. Thus all
the thoughts, wealth of feeling and virtues he develops through the
society he bestows as nourishment upon the spirits of personality.
Hence in a society like this all that creates communal life is
inseparable from the principle of individuality. Each single member
becomes capable through such a society of offering what he himself
produces as a sacrifice to the spirits of personality. And each
individual prepares himself to reach the level of those who are the
most advanced, and who, as the result of spiritual training have
progressed to the point where they have the following ideal: “When
I think, I do not do so for my own satisfaction, but in order to
create nourishment for the spirits of personality. I lay upon the
altar of the spirits of personality my highest and most beautiful
thoughts; and what I feel is not prompted by egoism, I feel it
because it is to be nourishment for the spirits of personality. And
what I can practise in the way of virtue, I do not practise for the
sake of gaining influence for myself, but in order to bring it as a
sacrifice to provide food for the spirits of personality.” Here
we have placed before us as our ideal those whom we call the masters
of wisdom and the masters of harmony and feeling. For thus do they
think and prepare for the development which will bring man nearer and
nearer to the point where he will always be creating what is new
until he will finally develop a world from which the workings of the
old causes will have disappeared, and out of which new light will
stream forth into the future. The world is not subject to perpetual
metamorphosis into different forms, but the old is perfected and
becomes the vehicle of the new. Then even this will be thrown off and
will disappear into nothingness, so that out of this nothingness
something new may arise. This is the tremendous idea of progress,
that new things can perpetually arise.
But
the worlds are complete in themselves, and you will have seen in the
example given that we cannot speak of anything actually coming to an
end. It has been shown how on the one hand the spirits of personality
lose their influence over man, but on the other hand how they again
pursue their own evolution. Thus ours is a world that is constantly
being rejuvenated by new creations, yet it is also true that what is
stripped off would hinder progress, and it is passed on so that
others for their part can progress. Nobody should believe that he
must allow something to sink into nothingness, for we have been given
the possibility of creating out of nothingness. What on Vulcan will
prove itself to be something new, will continually build new forms
and discard the old, and what is thrown off will seek its own path.
Evolution,
involution and creation out of nothingness are the three concepts we
have to apply in order to understand the evolution of world phenomena
as it really is. Only by this means shall we arrive at accurate
concepts that both enlighten man about the world and engender in him
inner warmth of feeling. If man had to admit his incapacity to do
anything except create in accordance with impulses implanted into
him, this would not steel his will nor kindle his hopes to the same
extent as being able to say: “I can create my own life values
and constantly add something new to what has been given me as a
foundation. My ancient heritage will in no way hinder me from
creating new blossoms and fruits which will live on into the future.”
This, however, is part of what we can describe by saying that the
anthroposophical conception of the world gives man strength, hope and
confidence in life, for it shows him that he can, in the future, have
a share in working at creations which, today, not only lie in the
womb of causality but in nothingness. It shows him the prospect that,
through his own efforts, he is working his way in the true sense of
the word from being a ‘creature’ to being a
‘creator’.
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