VI
Transformation of the Human Being in the
Course of Evolution
Dornach 29th December, 1918
Someone may think that
the events described in connection with initiation are conjured up, as
it were, by initiation itself. This would be particularly incorrect for
our time. What can be described as the process of initiation, especially
in our time, takes place in the soul, or in the relation of the soul
to the world, for the majority of people in the world today. And they
know nothing of it; it occurs unconsciously. The important fact, then,
in connection with initiation is this: that some individual notices
in himself an increasing consciousness of something that takes place
in most other people unconsciously. That is, the difference between
the initiate and the non-initiate lies in the perception of processes
that most people of the present time experience as a matter of course
but unconsciously. Therefore, when speaking of these things we are really
speaking of something that concerns everyone more or less, especially
in our time.
Now I have said that from
the very description of these events — that is, of what may be
perceived when they are carefully followed by initiation science —
from the description itself can be learnt what transformations man has
gone through in the course of his development, even in historic times.
We have pointed out a few features of these transformations, especially
in relation to the evolution of Christianity. In our external daily
life only the outer reflection of these changes is noticed, a reflection
that is really hardly comprehended even by one who wants to understand
and is developing the impulse in himself toward understanding.
Let us consider this outer
reflection, for example, in the development of the Christ concept during
nearly two thousand years since the Mystery of Golgotha. If you are
trying sincerely to understand, you will surely find much that is incomprehensible
and you will have many questions calling for answers, unless you are
willing to be superficial or to accept blindly some kind of dogma. But
if you persevere, you will learn — it can even be learnt from
external history — that when the Christ Impulse entered the world,
a certain luminous remnant of the Gnosis still existed; and in the early
centuries an effort was made to understand the Christ Impulse and its
passage through the Mystery of Golgotha by the help of concepts acquired
from gnosticism. These concepts contained much relating to things entirely
alien to present-day concepts that come from the external world. They
had much to say of the evolution of the world, of the place of Christ
in this evolution, of what led to His descent to humanity and His union
with the human being. Much was said also about the return of Christ
to the spiritual world, which then was the beginning of the spiritual
earth-world.
[
Note 15 ]
In short, what the Gnosis had to say about the Mystery of Golgotha was
contained in illuminating — broadly illuminating —
comprehensive conceptions,
the heritage of the primeval wisdom of mankind. The Church saw to it
in the early centuries that the concepts of the ancient Gnosis should
disappear, leaving only meager remnants that tell very little. And I
have indicated to you that people are endeavoring today, wherever possible,
to declare a certain world conception heretical, because it is becoming
inconvenient, by saying that its intention is to warm up the ancient
gnosticism—by which they think they are saying something very
dreadful!
Then in place of this conception
of the Mystery of Golgotha there appeared another one, which recognized
the fact that human concepts were becoming more and more primitive,
that people were no longer able to bring to life within themselves anything
of the comprehensive and illuminating teachings of the Gnosis. I told
you that what remained of the Gnosis forms the beginning of the
Gospel of Saint John:
really nothing more than a suggestion that the Christ
has some connection with the supersensibly-perceptible Logos, the Cosmic
Word; that the Christ as such is the Creator of all that surrounds man,
of all that man experiences. But for the rest, nothing remained but
the Gospel narratives; these, to be sure, are found to contain much
gnostic wisdom when they are penetrated by spiritual science, but they
were not interpreted according to the Gnosis. In fact, in the early
centuries they were entirely withheld from believers, reserved for the
priesthood only. But from them a sort of world conception was built
up that included the Mystery of Golgotha, but that was based upon the
increasingly abstract ideas of the so-called cultured world —
ideas with little tendency toward the spiritual. People wanted, I might
say, more and more simple concepts, whose comprehension required little
effort. That is the reason also for the peculiar development that has
come about in Gospel interpretation. While in the earliest centuries
people were fully aware that the Gospels were to be interpreted out
of spiritual depths, the effort was made more and more to regard them
as mere narratives of the earthly life of that Being concerning Whose
cosmic connection nothing more was to be admitted — at least through
human knowledge — than the beginning of the
Gospel of Saint John
and a few abstractions such as the Trinity abstraction and
similar ones. These were culled from abstract forms, from the ancient
gnostic concepts, divested of their gnostic impulse, and given to the
faithful as dogma. Interpretation of the Gospels became more and more
primitive. They were to become increasingly a mere narrative concerning
that Being called Christ Jesus Who lived here on earth, but about Whose
nature from higher, supersensible points of view people troubled themselves
very little.
Then it became more and
more urgent to make the Gospels also available to the public; and out
of this, Protestantism arose. At first this too held fast to the Gospels.
And as long as a connection with the Gospel of John still existed, a
connection of knowledge, there was still a sort of bond uniting individual
souls with cosmic heights — heights into which one must look if
one wishes to speak of the real Christ.
But now not only the understanding
for Saint John's Gospel disappeared more and more, but even any inclination
toward it. The consequence was that a true relation to the Christ Impulse,
to that Being Who lived in the body of Jesus, was altogether lost for
later Protestantism, in fact, for all thinking Christendom. The Christ
concept gradually faded away, since, to begin with, its interpretation
was limited to a human narrative of the earthly destiny of Christ Jesus.
The possibility completely vanished of having any concept of the Christ
at all, because the subject was brought more and more into a materialistic
channel. The human Jesus remained. Thus the Gospels were increasingly
taken as mere descriptions of the human life of Jesus; and then the
belief in immortality, in the divine nature, and so on, was attached
to this description in very abstract form. (I spoke about the concept
of belief yesterday.) It is not surprising that it gradually came about
that people knew very little when the concept “Christ Jesus”
was brought up. Christ was placed on one side, so to speak, and Jesus
on the other, as synonyms signifying the same thing.
[
Note 16 ]
And what was the inevitable consequence? It was this, that
finally this description of the mere earthly life of Jesus, from which
all consciousness of his connection with the Christ had vanished, also
lost the essence of Jesus himself; in fact, it lost all connection with
the beginnings of Christianity. For when people gradually reduced everything
to the merely material Gospels, to nothing but these material Gospels,
they reached the so-called Gospel criticism. And that could lead to
no other result than to show that the Mystery of Golgotha and all that
is related to it cannot be proved historically, because the Gospels
are not historical documents. Finally the connection was lost with Jesus
himself. Nothing could be proved, in the way proof is regarded by modern
science. And since science was the authority, people — even theologians
— gradually lost the Jesus-concept, because there are no external,
historical, authenticated records.
Harnack, who is a Christian
theologian, even a leading one at the present time, has said: All that
can be written historically about Jesus (the Gospels are not historical
records) could be written on half a page… But even what can be
written on half a page — the passage from Josephus, and so forth
— does not hold up before modern historical research; so there
is nothing left with which to prove the starting-point of Christianity.
Those who have followed the development of Christianity with modern
thinking could have taken no other path than that which finally led
humanity away from Christ Jesus, even from Jesus.
This emphasizes the necessity
for seeking another path, a path of supersensible knowledge such as
can be sought only through the modern spiritual life. For modern Gospel
criticism and modern historical research can easily be brought forward
to oppose all other ways of approaching the Christ Jesus today. They
are in accord with the scientific conscience of our time, and cannot
support the establishing of any historical event as the starting-point
of the evolution of Christianity. Indeed, we have experienced in our
time the strangely grotesque fact that Christian pastors (though Protestants,
to be sure) such as Pastor Kalthoff in Bremen, have considered it their
task to deny the Mystery of Golgotha altogether as historical fact,
and to trace back the origin of Christianity to certain ideas that arose
from the common social attitude of humanity at the beginning of the
Christian era. Although Kalthoff was a Christian pastor, his preaching
did not rest upon an historical Christ as the basis of his world conception
or his interpretation of life. He believed that an idea had simply developed
in people's heads from premises that heads contained at the beginning
of the Christian era. Christian pastors without belief in a real Christ
Jesus are the inevitable result. This could not have been otherwise,
for it is connected with all the evolutionary impulses of which I have
been speaking during these days, especially yesterday.
It is absolutely necessary
to keep in mind that the way to Christ Jesus in our time must be by
a supersensible path, that this can only be pursued by a science which
itself seeks supersensible methods, but which employs the scientific
conscience of modern natural science.
With regard to the modern
method of finding a super-sensible path even to the Christ, it is well
to bear in mind that up to our day transformations have occurred and
have developed in the science and knowledge of initiation. For this
reason I would like to allude once more to something to which I referred
here a short time ago, but from a different point of view.
We know very well in connection
with these things that there needs to be understanding for the great
change that occurred in more recent evolution, toward the beginning
of the fifteenth century and particularly in the fifteenth century,
although it was in preparation earlier than that. This is actually passed
over in silence by external history. For us it marks the beginning of
the fifth post-Atlantean period, which replaced the fourth, the Greco-Latin
period.
Now the problem has arisen
for external science (although only among a few of the more intelligent
scholars), to provide an explanation for what is usually spoken of merely
as the appearance of the Renaissance — and thereby characterized
in a most superficial way — of the Renaissance which played its
role with elemental power throughout the cultured world from the twelfth
century into the fifteenth. A strange impulse, a strange longing —
mentioned even by materialistic scholars — arose in the human
beings themselves, that cannot be explained by external causes, but
simply showed that some elemental force was heaving and surging in mankind
to bring them to a certain state of soul.
It is interesting and important
to note the following: In the twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth centuries
we are still concerned with the expiring Greco-Latin period. Then the
change came. At this point, then, something special had to become manifest;
and what external science has discovered is exactly what did become
manifest. Science took account not so much of the change as of the gradual
fading-out during the twelfth, thirteenth and fourteenth centuries of
the soul-state that had been characteristic of the fourth post-Atlantean
epoch. Science considered this very carefully, recognizing various riddles
it presented. While the Renaissance was coming into being — the
usual description of it stops with the external factors — something
of extraordinary significance was taking place in the soul of European
humanity. It was noticed that something must be dying out. Certain things
were still experienced in the soul which after a time would have to
be experienced differently. There was a feeling that humanity had to
hurry to experience these things if they wanted to keep step with evolution,
for later, after the change, they would no longer be able to experience
them.
It is this to which I referred
at the beginning of today's lecture. What is occurring now subconsciously
— when recognized, it is the process of initiation — is
something constantly taking place, as I have said, in the vast majority
of people. Through observation of the precept “Know thou thyself!”,
a few individuals really succeed in becoming conscious of these things.
There is a great difference between this event now and what took place
in the human soul as an experience of the Mysteries in the fourth post-Atlantean
epoch, a greater difference than there was, for example, between that
of the fourth epoch and that of the third epoch. A few days ago I characterized
for you approximately what happened in the third post-Atlantean period
when a neophyte passed through the "gate of man," then through
the second stage, then the "gate of death," then still further
until he became a “Christophorus.” These events, as I described
them to you, occurred subconsciously, and then through initiation could
be brought up into consciousness in the great majority of people in
the third post-Atlantean epoch. But for the people of the fourth post-Atlantean
epoch the entire process had already become different. Actually it was
not yet so very different in the first third of this new epoch, preceding
the Mystery of Golgotha. (The fourth period began, as you know, in 747
B.C., and the Mystery of Golgotha occurred at about the end of the first
third of it.) But then began a time — the Mystery of Golgotha
was now an accomplished fact—a time in which a more significant
change occurred in what took place in the subconscious, which could
then be raised to consciousness through initiation. Up to the time,
approximately, of the Mystery of Golgotha, in order to attain initiation
and to pass through all the stages, it was necessary (with only a few
exceptions) for a man to be chosen by one of the priest-sages connected
with the Mysteries, who could make this choice by virtue of a certain
discernment. This necessity gradually disappeared after the Mystery
of Golgotha; initiation, although still oriented to the ancient Mysteries,
was nevertheless adapted to the new conditions. There have always been
Mysteries of this sort, which later passed over into the modern secret
societies, where for the most part ancient ceremonies and processes
of initiation are imitated, but only in abstract symbols, and they no
longer affect people. Real initiation is less and less attained in them,
because people do not penetrate to an experience of what is simply displayed
symbolically before their eyes. There did occur, however, more and more
extensively — and characteristically, just at the end of the fourth
post-Atlantean epoch — initiations which were directed, I might
say, from the spiritual world itself; that is, initiations in which
the choice of the individual to be initiated was not made by a priest,
but by the spiritual world itself. Naturally, it then had the appearance
of being a self-initiation, because the guiding being was a spirit and
not a man. (Of course, a man is a spirit too, but you know what I mean.)
Thus, especially toward the end of the fourth post-Atlantian epoch,
initiations very often took place under such direct spiritual guidance.
I have previously pointed out that the initiation experienced in this
way by Brunetto Latini,
[
Note 17 ]
the teacher and master of Dante, is to be understood as a real
initiation.
You see, what Brunetto Latini
related as an external occurrence of the greatest importance appears
to be a tale of fiction, though a tale with a legendary character. But
Brunetto Latini intended it as a description of his initiation. He describes
it in somewhat the following way, and you can see how his experiences
affected the whole composition and imaginative form of Dante's great
poem, "The Divine Comedy." Brunetto Latini was ambassador
from his native city, Florence, to the King of Castile. He tells how
he was making the return journey from his ambassador's post and learned
as he was approaching his native city that his party, the Guelphs, had
been defeated; therefore all that had bound him to Florence had in a
sense been undermined, and in his external relations he suddenly felt
no ground under his feet. When such an experience is described by a
man of the Dante period, we must not think of present-day conditions
or of contemporary points of view. In this respect our soul-constitution
has changed enormously. If in our day someone in Switzerland learns
that the city of Cologne, for example, with which he has been connected
for a long time, suddenly has entirely new world-relations, is governed
on an entirely new basis, he does not feel — at least inwardly
— that the ground has been taken from under his feet. But we must
not form mental pictures of that time from our present state of mind.
For a man like Brunetto Latini it was like the end of the world. His
position in the world was conditioned by his connection with the world-relations
of his native city. That was gone, as he learned when he approached
Florence. The world in which he had worked simply no longer existed.
After calling attention to these facts, he relates further that he was
led into a wood, that by spiritual guidance he was brought out of the
wood and led to a mountaintop which was surrounded by the whole of creation,
so far as it was known to him. We perceive immediately what Brunetto
Latini wishes to indicate. He had gone through life in such a way that
at a certain moment when a shocking event confronted his soul, his soul-spiritual
entity separated from his physical body: he went out of his physical
body. He had a spiritual experience. You have here the intervention
of a spiritual guide who led this man into the spiritual world, according
to his karma, at a moment when he was so startled, so spiritually shocked,
that the shock was able to separate his soul-spiritual entity from his
physical body. Then Brunetto Latini describes how the created universe
was spread out around the mountain, and how a gigantic feminine figure
appeared to him on the mountain, at whose command and direction the
creation round about the mountain changed and assumed other forms. We
notice that Brunetto Latini speaks of this feminine figure in the way
that Persephone was spoken of in the old Mystery initiations. Now the
conception of Persephone had undergone a change between the time of
ancient Greece and the end of the Greco-Latin period. Brunetto Latini
did not describe her as the ancient Greek poets had described her, but
as she existed in human souls at the end of the Greco-Latin age. Nevertheless,
we may compare what an ancient Egyptian heard in initiation as the description
of Isis, and what a Greek heard as the description of Persephone, with
what Latini relates of this feminine figure at whose command the forms
of creation transform themselves. Strong similarities are to be found
here. In fact, anyone who merely observes superficially will surely
assert that what Brunetto Latini says about the feminine figure and
what the ancients say about Persephone is exactly the same. But it is
not the same. If you look more closely, you will notice that when the
ancient Greeks spoke of Persephone, or the Egyptians of Isis, they were
more concerned with a description of something permeating all that is
at rest, all that is enduring. Brunetto Latini's concern was to describe
how a certain force, a certain impulse — the Isis impulse, the
Persephone impulse — as the impulse of Natura (for that
is what his figure is called) pervades everything, but in a way that
sets it in motion, that constantly transforms it. That is the great
difference.
When Brunetto Latini saw
everything changing, saw creation being transformed at the
command of the Goddess Natura, the impulse was given him to practice
self-knowledge in the new way—not in the easy way described by
modern mystics, but in concrete details. He describes how, after beholding
this ever-changing creation, he next saw the world of the human
senses. He gradually learned to know the human being from without.
There is a difference whether we see and describe the external world
which our senses perceive in ordinary consciousness, or describe what
happens in the senses, that is, what takes place within the human being.
For with our ordinary consciousness we do not enter into the inner life
of the senses: we only see the outer world. When we look at the senses
within, we cannot describe the outer world, for we no longer see it.
In the paintings of the
larger dome here in our building,
[
Note 18 ]
I have tried in a way adapted to our time — I will say
more about this presently — to bring to effective expression this
viewing of the inner being of man from the sense-world. The paintings
will give you an idea of what is meant by “Know thou thyself!”
in the realm of the senses. You will see clearly, for instance, that
on the west side of the dome an effort has been made to capture the
inner eye, the microcosmic element revealed in the inner eye. It is
not what the eye sees outwardly, nor the physical part of the eye, but
what is experienced inwardly when we are within the eye with soul-vision.
This, of course, is only possible when we refrain from the ordinary
use of our eyes as organs of external sense-perception, and perceive
what is within them in the same way that at other moments we perceive
the outer world through them.
Brunetto Latini experienced
this somewhat differently, not as it must be experienced today. He mentions
it only briefly. Then he continues to penetrate from without into the
essentially human within, and reaches the four temperaments.
Here one learns to know man in a different way. One learns how man is
affected by the interaction of melancholic, choleric, phlegmatic and
sanguine impulses, and how people are differentiated externally when
one of these four impulses predominates. Thereby one penetrates more
deeply through the realm of the senses into the inner human being. The
difference between observation of the sense realm and observation of
the temperaments is that when we observe the sense realm the separate
regions of the senses are sharply distinguished from one another; but
through the temperaments we enter more deeply into the essentially human,
where more of the universal nature of man is revealed.
An attempt was made in
the painting in the little dome to show at least one part, I might say,
of this perception, but only one part of it, with orientation in definite
directions, but again adapted to the supersensible perception of our
present time.
This is the way man must
press forward. You see, Brunetti Latini describes his initiation step
by step. Spiritual guidance underlies it. Next he arrived in a region
where a man can no longer truly distinguish himself from the outer world.
When he observes the realm of his senses and the realm of the temperaments,
he can still make the distinction very well; but in this next region
he can do so only slightly. There his being mingles with the outer world,
so to speak: it is the region of the four elements. Here he
experiences his own weaving within earth, water, fire, and air: how
he lives with these in the universe. He no longer distinguishes very
clearly between his subjective self and the outer objective world. At
most he still experiences a distinction with regard to the earthly element,
but with the watery, fluid element, he feels already that he is swimming
in a sort of All. There was still a difference between subjective and
objective, but much less definite in the experience of the temperaments
than in that of the physical sense organs. Of the latter he knows that
they exist in man only in the physical world, not also outside it.
Brunetto Latini then describes
how he went on into the region of the planets and passed through
it. Afterward he came to the ocean, reaching a place that various
mystics designate as the Pillars of Hercules. Now that the precept “Know
thou thyself!” had brought him to the Pillars of Hercules, he
went out beyond them. He was now prepared to receive enlightenment about
the supersensible world. For the mystic, especially the mystic in that
time of which I am now speaking, the Pillars of Hercules are the experience
through which a man goes out of himself more completely than through
the four elements or the planets. He enters the outer spiritual world,
whose concrete beings reveal themselves only at the third stage of initiation.
In the first stage, which Brunetto Latini is describing here, he enters
the spiritual world as a widely extending ocean, a universal spirituality.
Latini then goes on to tell
how a strong temptation came to him — inevitable, of course, at
this point. He describes it very concretely: how he was faced with the
necessity of forming new conceptions of good and evil, because what
had enlightened him about them while he was in the sense world was useless
here. He then tells how he reached these new conceptions and thereby
became a different man, how he became a participant in the spiritual
world from experiencing all these things. We see quite clearly from
his description how at that time, the end of the Greco-Latin period,
the human being was led by a spiritual being out of the physical world
into the supersensible world.
Let us keep this description
in mind. Even in the external development of humanity it had the immensely
significant effect of inspiring Dante, Latini's pupil, for the Divina
Commedia. If we remember that what Latini described was a typical
initiation, that he actually described what was taking place in the
subconscious of humanity at that particular time, and that it could
also be attained through a real initiation, then we will understand
what existed as soul-constitution when the fourth post-Atlantean epoch
was dying out.
Now it will be important
to ask what changes have occurred since, within a rather brief space
of time. For what I have described is not very far in the past, only
a few centuries. In this short period, what changes have taken place
in the experience that humanity goes through subconsciously, which rises
up into consciousness through initiation? Certainly, my dear friends,
the higher the stages of initiation that a man attains, the more do
the important elements of the earlier stages disappear from his vision.
But one must carefully consider what is significant in the first stages.
For these first stages represent precisely what is taking place in the
depths of the majority of human souls, even though they neither know
it nor have any desire to know it through spiritual science, not to
mention initiation. It is very important to give attention to the following
example: I said that Brunetto Latini describes how he was brought before
the Goddess Natura. Then he passed through certain stages: through the
senses, the temperaments, the elements, the planets, the ocean. There,
at the Pillars of Hercules, he was already at the boundary of the essentially
human. Then, in the ocean, he passed over into what was spread out before
him. And now there was not even the condition that had prevailed with
the elements, when he could not distinguish himself. Now he had lost
himself, in a certain sense, and simply floated in the ocean of existence.
The Pillars of Hercules
later play a prominent role in symbolism as the pillars of Joachim and
Boaz.
[
Note 19 ]
In this connection
it should be noted that in the secret societies of the present time
these pillars can no longer be erected in the right way. They should
no longer be erected, because the correct way is only revealed in a
truly inwardly-experienced initiation. Besides, they cannot be set up
in space, as they are revealed in reality when the human being leaves
his body.
In what has now been given,
you have the pattern — if I may use a prosaic expression —
the pattern of events experienced at the turn of the twelfth and thirteenth
centuries, experienced also by those who went through initiation in
the same way as Brunetto Latini, the teacher of Dante. This may be compared
with what takes place today in the depths of men's souls. And indeed,
it is not so very different. If, however, an individual in our time
should wish at the first stage of initiation to approach the created
universe directly, as revealed to him by the still-existing, gigantic
feminine figure, the Goddess Natura, and should wish to be under her
guidance, then his supersensible path only begins in the created universe.
If an individual in our
time should wish to enter into the senses directly, he would be very
much in the dark in this realm. He would not have proper illumination,
and would be unable to distinguish anything adequately. The point is
that today it is necessary to go through another experience before approaching
the sense-region, for only this makes it then possible to penetrate
into the sense-region in the right way. I mentioned this experience
yesterday. It consists simply in the ability to see the spiritually
ideal as external reality in the metamorphosis of forms in
this world. Thus, before entering into the sense-region one should endeavor
to study the metamorphosis of forms in the outer world. Goethe gave
only the first elements, but he did provide the method. As I have said,
further study of the metamorphosis which Goethe discovered with regard
to plants, and with regard to the skeleton in the animal kingdom, reveals
the fact that our head points to our previous earth-life and our limb-organization
to our coming earth-life. Thus, a necessary preparation for initiation
at the present time is the ability not to think of the world as a finished
static formation, but to see in whatever form lies before us an indication
toward another form.
At the very beginning of
my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds,
you will find the
essential facts for developing this kind of perception in the way best
suited to our time. If you follow the instructions given there correctly,
you will have the experience when you meet another human being that
something like a picture of his previous incarnation will flash out
of his head to you. You cannot help sensing in his head something of
the form of his previous incarnation. If you follow him as he walks
and notice how he puts his feet down and swings his arms, or if you
are facing him and observe the gestures of his arms and hands, you will
get a feeling of the way his body will be built in the next incarnation.
Therefore I often said in public lectures years ago: the idea of repeated
earth lives is really not so bad that materialism needs to oppose it
so vigorously. If only a few things were understood about the human
form, the idea of repeated earth lives would not make materialism bristle
with opposition. For these things are obvious. If you are a phrenologist,
for example — not by profession, but with experienced insight
— then by means of the skull you are really inquiring into the
form of the previous incarnation; it is quite obviously the previous
incarnation. We must of course extend the metamorphosis aspect, the
metamorphosis view of life into this region. We must acquire—I
have often spoken of this from the social point of view — such
a strong interest in the individual human being that something of a
sense of his former incarnation flashes out of his skull to us. This
is because the skull is in a certain sense the transformed human being
of the earlier incarnation, especially with regard to the forms of the
face and head. Thus we acquire a view of the world that does not stop
at one form. Just as Goethe did not stop at the blossom or at the green
leaf, but related one to the other, so we may gain a perception that
does not stop at the single form, but proceeds from form to form, with
attention upon the metamorphosis.
I sought to arouse a feeling
for this by applying it to our work on the pillars in the Goetheanum:
in the transition from one capital to the next and on to the succeeding
ones, and in the successive development of the architraves. It was all
carved according to this principle of metamorphosis. Whoever looks at
the sequence of the pillars in this building of ours, will have a picture
of the flexible soul-attitude one must maintain toward the outer world.
If someone will complete this first step which is necessary for present
humanity, and which will still be necessary for a long time for future
humanity, if he will find his way to a real, inner understanding of
the emergence of the second column from the first—in pedestal,
capital, and architrave, of the third from the second, and so on, then
in this understanding he will have a starting-point from which to press
forward (in accordance with present possibilities) into the inner nature
of the sense-region. Thus, something connected with the present principle
of initiation is preserved below in the pillars; and above in the domes,
something else is connected with it. From this point, things proceed
somewhat differently.
At the time of Brunetto
Latini, then, a man was spared what we shall call here the metamorphosis
of life, after which one enters the region of the senses. If we presented
the matter in outline, we might say: in Brunetto Latini's time a man
could still enter directly into the eye (let us take the eye as representative),
and feel this to be the first region. Today, we have first to concern
ourselves with what envelops man. The metamorphoses of life are expressed
in the sheath that covers the region of the senses externally. It lies
in front of the senses and we must consciously pass through it.
Also today, the human being
passes through the regions of the senses, the temperaments, the elements,
and the planets. Then, however, before he goes through the Pillars of
Hercules into the open ocean of spirituality, he confronts a barrier.
Here, (see tabulation below) something stands in the way, something
is introduced that in Brunetto Latini's time did not need to be experienced.
Metamorphosis of life
Senses
Temperaments
Elements
Planets
+ Instrument for orientation (Compass)
Ocean
This is not easy to describe because, of course, these
things belong to intimate and subtle realms of human experience. Yet
perhaps it may be done by referring again to Brunetto Latini. Latini
experienced, as the first sign of his guidance by a spiritual being,
the information that his native city was ruined. That was, to be sure,
an event that affected Latini's inner being; nevertheless, it was external
as to the facts involved. It invaded him from the outer world. It shocked
him so greatly that his soul-and-spirit being left his physical body.
Later he described the event as something that entered his life, something
that happened in his life. We may say that he described it, though not
consciously, as an event of destiny that came to him.
Such an event, or a similar
one, must be experienced today in full consciousness by anyone undergoing
initiation. (You will find reference to this at the proper place in
my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds.)
But it must be an
inner experience for him: not one in connection with the external world,
as in the case of Brunetto Latini, but an experience he goes through
inwardly, something that has a deeply transforming effect upon him.
There are, of course, such events in the lives of the majority of people,
but they get scant attention. Someone who truly observes his life will
be able to see that there are events in it of the utmost significance,
and especially one such event. Just try to look back upon such a happening
in your life, not for its outer significance but for the inner change
it produced. There is one thing to which attention should really be
given: that is, that such events in people's lives are not taken seriously
enough. They could be felt much more profoundly; they could have a far
deeper and more noticeable effect in life than they do have today. A
human being can reach a deeper understanding of many things in his life,
simply through a kind of general thoughtfulness. If he maintains the
usual human attitude, he will not get beyond a certain superficiality
in his experiencing of events of the very greatest importance. For their
full import cannot really be recognized by the ordinary consciousness.
The human being must first go through the other stages; after he has
experienced the metamorphosis of life, the regions of the senses, the
temperaments, the elements, and the planets, then — having become
a radically changed human being — he penetrates to his real depths.
For now he has recognized that he belongs not only to the earth but
to the heavenly worlds, to the planetary regions. Only now will he rightly
recognize the significance of certain experiences he has had, which
were of the very first importance. Only now will he understand what
such an experience signifies for himself and for the world. When he
has gone through all this, he will inevitably discover the most important
event of his life.
When he arrives at this
place, before going out into the wide ocean of spirituality, unless
he is a marked egotist and knows nothing else in the world but himself,
he cannot fail to consider seriously this earlier happening. Before
he goes out into the ocean of spirituality, this event appears before
his soul in full force — it simply thrusts itself upon him. And
at this point in his inner experience it has extraordinarily great significance.
It means that only now can he go out into the immeasurable ocean of
spirituality. It means that through this experience he can attain a
certain center of gravity. I mean to say: After he has recognized himself
as a citizen of the planetary world, if — in present spiritual
conditions — he should simply launch out into the ocean of spirituality,
he would find himself in a sea of surging waves, would nowhere feel
sure of himself, would be tossed about in all kinds of spiritual experiences,
would have no inner center of gravity. He must find this inner center
of gravity by really experiencing with inner intensity the most important
event of all, and in it inwardly experiencing himself. This will not
as a rule take place in a realm of mere egotism, but will be of general
human significance. It can be said today, if we express the facts quite
exactly: the most momentous event in a man's life, the one that while
it is being experienced affects the profoundest depths of his being,
must come before him at the Pillars of Hercules before he passes through
them. At this point in his life he feels a very special deepening of
his being. Something comes over him of which we may say that it brings
the objective world into his inner being. Something comes to him that
can be described as follows: Even though, in spite of this experience,
he may naturally fall back occasionally into an acceptance of life in
the light of his ordinary consciousness, even though he may not be able
to maintain at every step in his life this newly created soul-mood,
yet, once it has been experienced, there will be moments again and again
connected with it. For it would not be at all good for the human being
to lose this soul-mood entirely after having once experienced it. What
is meant by this mood may be characterized in somewhat the following
way.
In this matter, dear friends,
we should be honest and admit that for our ordinary consciousness it
does hold good that, however selfless a man may be, still the most important
things for him, at least relatively, are those that occur inside his
skin. What occurs inside one's skin is more important for our ordinary
consciousness, as a rule, than what occurs outside of it. But the soul-mood
that is to be created at one's entrance to the ocean of spirituality,
so that it may be retained at least for the important moments of life,
is the realization that there may be external things which do not concern
the person subjectively at all, but in which he participates just as
intensely as in the things that do concern him subjectively. Today an
individual has abundant opportunity to prepare himself well, if he will,
for the soul-mood indicated. For if he enters into a true understanding
of nature — not a subjective study or anything of the kind —
if he tries to start from this true understanding, then much of the
mood is already created. But it must be produced at this stage in the
way I have described. Then if the individual can have this mood, if
he can experience deeply the most important event of his life just as
it happened, then at least for many moments in his life he can have
this mood of objectivity that I have described, in which something external
can be as important to him as something within himself, in which it
is true that something outside can be as important as something within.
(Many persons make this assertion but they are deceiving themselves.)
In attaining this, however, the individual has at the same time acquired
a center of gravity, a direction — perhaps I could better say,
a compass, that will enable him really to push out on the ocean of spiritual
life. That is to say, at this point ( + in the tabulation) there must
occur what may be called becoming equipped with the instrument for
direction. Thus a man enters the Pillars of Hercules equipped with
the instrument for orientation, the compass. Only then — that
is, after he has had more experience — can present-day man start
out toward spirituality.
You can see from the instances
I have described — the initiation of Brunetto Latini, and the
changes in initiation up to our time, changes which will prevail for
a long period — you can see that if we want to present the nature
of man in the light of initiation science, it is even possible to present
it as it is undergoing the process of transformation during short periods.
But all that is so described is really happening within man.
This is the important fact characterizing the change that the human
soul-mood has been undergoing in the course of these centuries. But
people fail to notice this and only a reflection of it is to be seen
in external life. In the age of Brunetto Latini, whose pupil was Dante,
people were the same kind of Christians as Dante: the whole heavenly
world passed through their souls when they felt themselves to be true
Christians. In our age there is no such forward jump; we hardly move.
We must therefore have the experience of a region before that of the
senses, before we go out again — so that we may enter the region
we had formerly known from outside, but now enter it in a different
way: before detaching ourselves further from the body, enter the region
changed in our being, and taking our direction from a new instrument.
The outer reflection of this process has been so altered in our time
that the most thoughtful people, the very ones who are equipped with
the scientific consciousness of our time — which, however, lacks
this compass, really does not have it — these people have lost
the Christ Jesus. He can no longer be "proved" by the means
that are today called scientific. And religion itself, the Christian
religion, has sunk into materialism. One of the most telling examples
of the tendency toward materialism in Roman Catholicism has been the
establishment of the dogma of infallibility, a purely materialistic
measure. I spoke of this some time ago.
Now you might say: In spite
of all that, if one looks into the inner being of man, the jump forward
can be seen! Man is indeed in his essential being somewhat outside the
region of the senses; but on the other hand he has a sort of cavity
in which the most important event of his life unconsciously exerts an
influence upon his whole organism, so that his experience can then be
such as I have described. For although a man may be totally unaware
of it, it does have an influence upon him, and it can come to expression
in the most varied ways. Perhaps one person, seven years after experiencing
this event, will become an intolerable fellow, or commit all sorts of
infamous deeds; another may fall in love — he need not do so immediately;
or the falling in love may itself be the most important event; a third
may suddenly have gall stones; and so on. When the event remains in
the unconscious, the fact can come to expression in everyday life in
the most diverse ways. What enters into the consciousness in the way
I have described appears thus in the inner being of man; in outer life
it appears in such a way that besides much else (I mention only one
result) he loses the Christ Jesus.
You may say: Then what appears
in the inner man to a certain extent as something flowing inward from
his body, has outwardly anything but a gratifying result! This, however,
is only apparent. Everything in the world has two sides. From about
the middle and during the last third of the nineteenth century there
was theoretical materialism: the big fellow Vogt of Geneva, Moleschott,
Ludwig Büchner — these were all theoretical materialists.
Clifford was the first to express the opinion that the brain exudes
thoughts just as the liver exudes bile. That is, Clifford saw in the
formation of thoughts a purely material process: as bile comes from
the liver, so thoughts come from the brain. That materialistic age saw
only matter, but at least they thought about matter. They thought
about matter, and we can look at this in two ways. In our time we can
read the books of Clifford, of Ludwig Buchner, or if you like, August
Comte, Vogt of Geneva, and so on. If we develop likes or dislikes from
such reading, we may be fearfully angry that people see in the creation
of thoughts only an excretion of the brain, and we may take it very
much to heart. Very well, if we are not materialists, we may feel that
way. But we may also look at it differently. We may say to ourselves:
Nonsense! what Clifford and Comte and Vogt of Geneva, what they've all
said about the world is tommyrot; I am not interested in it. But I will
look into what goes on in the thinking process itself of Vogt and Clifford
and Comte. What they tell of their thoughts — for instance, that
thoughts are merely exuded from the brain as bile is from the liver
— that is plain tommyrot! I shall not concern myself with what
Vogt says, but with the way he thinks. If we can do that, something
remarkable comes to light. We see that the kind of thinking those persons
have developed is the germ of a very far-reaching spirituality. The
thoughts are so terribly thin in substance because they are only reflected
images, as I explained day before yesterday. They are thinner than thin
because they are only images. They are so tenuous that the man must
exert a tremendous spirituality to think at all, and to prevent his
thoughts from sinking down and being laid hold of by the merely material
element of existence. As a matter of fact, thinking is very frequently
laid hold of by this material element nowadays; it does sink down. I
am even convinced that the majority of today's materially-minded people,
if they had not been drilled in school, and had not crammed at the universities
to pass exams, and had not swallowed materialism because their professors
required it as the correct world conception — I am convinced that
the majority of these people would then have been spared the thinking
that must be employed for the materialistic world-view. They would much
rather not think! Most of them would rather go to the duelling-grounds
or to fraternity jamborees than use their minds. And they simply repeat
what they have heard. If you would once make the attempt to study all
of the genuine, recognized “wisdom” relating just to matter
written by the Monists — as the materialists now call themselves
rather elegantly, who as members of monistic societies go about the
world making long speeches — if you would study what they have
actually thought, you would find it is precious little! For the most
part they merely repeat what others have said. Actually only a few authorities
have established materialism; the rest only repeat — for the simple
reason that a vigorous effort of the spirit is necessary to sustain
modern scientific thinking. The effort is a spiritual one, and is truly
not exuded from the brain as bile is from the liver. It is a spiritual
effort, and a good preparation for rising to spiritual things. To have
thought honestly in a materialistic way, but to have done this thinking
oneself, is good preparation for entrance into the spiritual world.
I expressed this once in
a lecture in Berlin, by saying that someone who only reads Haeckel's
books — unless he notices much that can easily be read between
the lines — quickly recognizes in him, of course, a materialist
of the first water. But if he talks with Haeckel, he notices that all
his thinking, so far as it is materialistic, only assumes this form
really on account of the prejudices of the times; that even as Haeckel
is now, his thinking already tends toward the spiritual. I
said in that lecture: We understand Haeckel correctly, therefore, when
we know that theoretically, as it were, he has that materialistic soul,
but that he has another soul, one that tends toward the spiritual. Here
among ourselves I can say that in the next incarnation that soul will
quite certainly be reborn with a strong spirituality. The stenographer
who was officially employed by us for that lecture, a typical professional
stenographer, wrote that I had said Haeckel had a spiritistic soul in
spite of materialism!
You see, what I want to
point out is that we may certainly combat what appears as a materialistic
mode of thought; indeed, it cannot be combated strongly enough, for
in the very combat lies a further development toward the spiritual.
But this mode of thought does contain the essence of spirituality. And
with souls who today, merely under the influence of external theology,
have come to a Christ concept that is totally external, or one that
is utterly untrue, there are faculties developing in a spiritual direction,
faculties that will impel these souls to seek a Christ concept in the
future. This is not to be taken as an invitation to ease! We are not
to say: Oh, well, then it will come in time, the spiritual view will
come all right, for the big Vogt fellow and Clifford and the others
have made good preparation. Those who know the darkness that materialism
signifies must work together to combat it. For the strength used in
this fight is necessary to build up the disposition to spirituality
in the theoretical materialists.
You see how complicated
things are, what different sides they have. Only when we try through
initiation science to penetrate into the depths of the world, do we
acquire a profound knowledge of the human being. Only then do we penetrate
to what is working in the depths of human nature.
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