Let us begin to-day by considering certain questions connected with
this time of festival, with this season which yearly renews the memory
of the Mystery of Golgotha, renews also a direct experience of it in
our feeling.
We really have three such times of festival in Christian tradition:
the Christmas, the Easter and the Whitsuntide festivals. And we may
say that, each in a different way, these three festivals bring man
into connection, into relationship, with that in which the Christian
tradition sees the meaning of all earth-evolution. These three
festivals also differ as regards the human soul-forces. Christmas
appeals more to the feeling and in a certain sense is the most popular
festival, because to understand it requires a deepening of the
feeling-life, and because it is the most readily approachable for the
large masses of humanity. The Easter festival, which requires that we
raise ourselves to an understanding of the real Mystery of Golgotha,
of the entrance of a super-sensible Being into human evolution, is the
most challenging to the human powers of understanding. It is a
festival which lifts human understanding to the highest level, and
which, although it is also generally celebrated, cannot however be
popular in the same sense as the Christmas festival.
The third, the Whitsun festival, establishes a relationship
particularly between the human will and the super-sensible world, the
world to which the Christ-Being as such belongs. The carrying over of
will-impulses into execution in the world is brought to human
consciousness through a right understanding of the Whitsun festival.
Thus what we may call the secret of Christianity is given form in
these yearly celebrations. The way in which the Christmas mystery
touches man can be brought before our consciousness in the most
manifold ways; and with the recurrence of the Christmas festival
during the course of the years, we have considered the
Christmas-Thought from the most varied standpoints. This time let us
call to mind something which can become clear to any one who considers
the Christmas mystery in the light of the Gospels.
In the Gospels we find a twofold announcement of the birth of Christ
Jesus. One annunciation is made to the poor shepherds out in the
fields. An Angel announces the birth of Christ Jesus to them
— in a dream, or however one may wish to call it. Here we have to
do with the perception of this event through inner soul-forces,
soul-forces which, in the case of these shepherds in the vicinity
where Christ Jesus was born, were in a special condition. And a second
annunciation is set forth in the Gospels, the annunciation to the
Three Kings, the Three Wisemen from the Orient. We are told that
they followed a star which announced to them the advent of Christ
Jesus on the earth.
Thus we are shown two ways by which this earlier humanity reached what
we may call its higher knowledge. This is another example of something
which is never properly grasped in the present age. To-day we usually
conceive of human beings as possessing thought and perception, and we
imagine this thinking and perceiving, in fact, all use of the inner
soul-forces, to have been in all past centuries and millenia
essentially the same — only more primitive — as it is
to-day. We know from anthroposophical spiritual science how the
soul-constitution of man has changed with the passage of time; how
differently in ancient times — for instance, seven or eight
thousand years after the beginning of the post-Atlantean period, or
even earlier — humanity regarded its own life and the nature of
the surrounding universe. Moreover we know how this soul-constitution
underwent many changes before it became that reasoning analytical
faculty existing to-day, which in its approach to the outer world
knows only the purely sense-perceptible aspect of things. This
evolution takes its starting-point from a certain ancient instinctive
clairvoyance and proceeds through the state found in our modern
soul-condition, to return again in future to a clairvoyant perception
of the world which will be permeated by full human consciousness.
At the time when the Mystery of Golgotha took place on earth the
ancient instinctive clairvoyance was already greatly dimmed. Men's
souls were indeed differently constituted than they are to-day,
although they no longer had the old clairvoyance; gone also were their
old wise ways of fathoming the universe. The ancient wisdom-teachings
as well as the old instinctive clairvoyance had grown very dim as the
Mystery of Golgotha approached humanity. But remnants of both still
existed, and we are clearly shown in the Gospels, if we rightly
understand them, that this was the case. Such remnants were still
present among single favoured individuals. We may recognise as such
the poor shepherds out in the fields, who in the piety of their hearts
possessed a certain clairvoyant capacity of a dreamlike nature. And we
also recognise as such the Three Magi from the East, who are pictured
as standing on the topmost rung of human society, and had retained
from ancient times a capacity gained from a certain stream of wisdom,
giving them insight into the course of world-events. Thus, on the one
hand, the poor shepherds could be approached in a kind of
dream-experience, in inward perception, by the event of Christ Jesus'
birth, while, on the other, the Three Magi from the East developed a
science which enabled them, by the study of world-phenomena, the
appearances in the heavens, to be aware of significant events taking
place open the earth quite beyond ordinary human ken.
Thus there are pointed out to us two quite definite, but widely
differing, modes of knowledge. Let us turn our attention for the
moment to what was present as the last remnant of an ancient stream of
wisdom in the Three Wisemen from the Orient. We are shown clearly that
these Wisemen were able to read the riddles in the movements of the
stars. In the existing descriptions we are made aware of an ancient
knowledge of the stars whereby access was gained to the mysteries of
the starry worlds and wherein the secrets of human events were also
revealed. This ancient knowledge of the stars was something quite
different from that of to-day. Our astronomy is in a certain sense
also prophetic; it can prophesy eclipses of the sun and moon and so
on, but it is merely mathematical and mechanical. It only speaks of
space and time-relationships in so far as these may be represented
mathematically, whereas the ancient wisdom of, the stars perceived in
these movements something of higher significance, remote from space
and time, taking place in the inner life of man. If we examine the
science of humanity in olden times, we find its content essentially
one of this wisdom of the stars. Men sought in the stars for a deeper
understanding of earthly happenings. For to them the starry world was
not the abstract mechanical thing it has become for modern humanity.
For them the starry world was something full of life. They felt the
presence of an essential Being in the universe, in the case of every
planet. By means of an inner soul-language, in a certain sense, they
even spoke with the individual planets, as we to-day speak merely from
man to man in external words. People were conscious of inward
soul-experience which was a reflection of what was going on out in
universal space in the movement of the stars. This was a living,
spiritualized way of looking at the universe. And man felt himself
connected as a soul and spirit with this universe. This wisdom of the
world was fostered in schools, in what may be described as Mystery
schools, where the pupils were prepared in a careful, intimate and
inner way to gain an understanding of the movements of the stars such
as might illuminate human life upon the earth.
Of what nature were these preparations? These preparations for a
knowledge of the starry heavens and their influences were of such a
character that, even then, in the age of instinctive clairvoyance, the
pupil was led to develop a more wide-awake life than normally. The
large mass of mankind had a kind of instinctive clairvoyance,
corresponding to a state of soul which was less wide awake than the
one normal for us to-day. In ancient periods of human evolution people
were not able to think as clearly as we can now. Geometry and
mathematics as we know them could not then exist. The whole of life
between birth and death had more of a dreaming character; but just
because it was dreamlike it had a far more lively way of perceiving
the surrounding universe than does our waking life to-day. And the
strange thing was that the pupils of those ancient Mysteries existing
2000 years, or even 1000 years, before the Mystery of Golgotha (such
men as the Magi may be counted among the last remaining disciples of
this training), were trained in a knowledge which was very similar to
our geometry and mathematics. Euclid was the first to give geometry to
humanity; but he merely communicated it to humanity in general. What
Euclid gave in the way of geometry had already lived in the Mysteries
for thousands of years as something communicated only to the most
carefully selected Mystery-pupils. It had a different effect then than
in later times. It may seem strange and paradoxical, but it is
nevertheless true, that what our children learn as arithmetic and
geometry was taught in the Mystery-schools to selected individuals who
were considered specially endowed and so accepted in the Mysteries.
To-day we often hear reference made to the mysterious matters
supposedly taught in the Mysteries. Actually, in their purely abstract
content, these mysterious matters are none other than those taught to
children to-day. They are nothing else; and their Mystery-character
lies not in the fact of their being unknown to us, but in the
different way in which at that time they were taught. It is quite a
different matter to call upon the reasoning of children through the
content of geometry in an age in which, from the moment of awaking
until falling asleep again man lives in a wide-awake consciousness,
than it was to present these matters to specially selected human
beings, whose consciousness was more mature, during the age of ancient
instinctive clairvoyance and dreaming consciousness.
Our modern conceptions of these things are by no means always
accurate. For example, there is a poem to Varuna in Oriental
literature describing Varuna as appearing in the air, as wafting like
the wind through the woods; Varuna appears in the lightning flashing
out of the dripping clouds; in the human heart when the will is roused
to action; in the heavens when the sun moves across them. Varuna is to
be found on the mountains in the juice of the Soma.
What the juice of the Soma is, modern books profess not to know.
To-day in our great learning we agree that we do not know what the
juice of the Soma is, although there are people who drink it by the
quart, and certainly know it very well from a certain standpoint. But
it is a different matter to know these things — from the
standpoint of the Mysteries than from the standpoint of waking
consciousness in profane feeling.
You can read to-day of the Philosopher's Stone, which was accounted
precious in an age when the nature of substance was somewhat
differently regarded than it is to-day. Again the historians of
alchemy will tell you that the Philosopher's Stone is quite unknown.
Here and there in my lectures I have indicated that the Philosopher's
Stone is quite familiar to most human beings; they simply do not know
its qualities, or why it is so named. But since it is used by the ton,
it is very familiar to most human beings.
The facts are simply upon occasion quite different from the concepts
we hold of them with our present-day abstract, theoretical grasp of
things, so remote from life and reality. There is not even a true
grasp of what it might mean to take in the sciences of arithmetic and
geometry with quite another soul-constitution than we have to-day,
with a mature soul-condition. I have referred to this particular type
of Mystery-schooling in my book “Christianity as a Mystical
Fact”; but just such important things as these are usually not
properly understood, they are not ordinarily understood in their real
significance. The fact that the way in which people were
approached with things constituted the very kernel of the Mysteries in
ancient times is something which should be grasped. And it was thus
also in the case of such purely mathematical considerations, the
content of feeling and the human fullness of which Novalis still
sensed when he felt mathematics to be like great poetry —
something which most people now-a-days will not agree with. And it is
to such grasping of the world, permeated as it was with feeling, but
poured into mathematical mould, that the pupil of the ancient
Mysteries was led. And when the pupil of the ancient Mysteries was
thus brought to a mathematical understanding of the universe, he
developed just such a world-outlook as that possessed by the Wisemen
from the East, as they are described to us.
The mathematics of the universe, which have become so thoroughly
abstract to us, revealed at that time something really living, because
the revelation found completion in what was brought to understand it.
Thus what sprang as science from an ancient culture, and was still
preserved in its last fragments to the Magi, made possible the one
annunciation, through the channel of the teachers of wisdom, through
external science, the annunciation experienced by the Magi.
On the other hand, it was possible for the inner experience of the
secrets of humanity to develop in human beings who, like the shepherds
in the fields, had a special predisposition in this direction. In such
cases the inner forces of man had to reach certain heights; then what
took place in the world of men became direct imaginative perception,
an instinctive, imaginative picture-perception. Thus, through inner
vision, the poor shepherds in the fields partook in the annunciation:
“God makes revelation of His Being in the heavenly heights, and
His peace shall be with all men of good will.” Thus did the
secrets of the universe speak to the innermost being of the poor
shepherds in the fields, as well as to the utmost heights attainable
to human wisdom at that time, to the Wisemen of the East. Thus the
great mystery of earthly life was imparted from two different sides.
What did these Wisemen of the East experience? What was the special
development brought about in the souls of these pupils through the
introduction of mathematics into their soul-condition, when this was
found especially mature and ready? Kant speaks of mathematics as being
“a priori” truth. With “a priori” he means a truth
which is present within us before our external, empirical knowledge,
before our experience of it existed. This is mere word-wisdom;
nothing at all is said with this “a priori”! A meaning
attaches to it only when it can be shown by spiritual science that
mathematics is something that rises up within us, that rises to
consciousness out of man's inner being.
Whence does it come? It proceeds from the experiences we went through
in the spiritual world before birth, or conception. There we lived in
the great wide universe. There we experienced what could be
experienced before we had bodily eyes and ears. There we had “a
priori” experience, when considered in relation to our life on
earth. These “a priori” experiences rise in an unconscious
way out of our inner being into the sphere of consciousness. Unless
modern man has a premonition of this, as had Novalis, he does not know
that when he does mathematics, experiences of the time before
conception and birth are rising up within him. But for a person with
true insight into these matter the mathematical capacity is in itself
a proof of man's life in the spiritual world before conception. As far
as those are concerned for whom this is not a proof of pre-natal
existence, the fact remains that they do not think thoroughly enough
about life's phenomena and have no idea what the true origin of
mathematics is.
The pupils of the ancient Mysteries who possessed that wise outlook,
still extant in its last fragments in the Wisemen of the East, had the
clear impression: “When we study the stars and apply our
mathematical forms and reckoning to them, we are spreading out again
over the outer reaches of universal space what we actually lived in
before our birth.” And it seemed to such a pupil of the ancient
Mysteries as though he must say: “Now I am living on earth; my
eyes look out into universal space and see my spatial surroundings. In
these same phenomena of the spatial universe I lived before my birth;
there I myself counted from star to star what I now merely copy and
symbolize in mathematics. With my innermost forces I moved from star
to star, living in what I now merely draw.”
Thus they experienced again all they had gone through before birth,
or conception, and consequently it was holy to them. They realized
that they had lived in a spiritual world before they walked on earth.
This knowledge of the world in which man lives before he descends to
the earth was present in its last remnants in the Wisemen of the East,
and by its means they knew of the advent of the Christ-Being.
Whence came this Christ-Being? He came out of that time which we live
through between death and rebirth, and He united Himself with the life
we live through between birth and death. For this reason the science
that concerns itself with the world we live in between death and
rebirth can unveil such a mystery as the Mystery of Golgotha. And out
of this science announcement was made to the Magi of the Mystery of
Golgotha, the Christmas Mystery.
As man lives here on the earth and concerns himself with gaining
knowledge of his surroundings, with developing impulses for his
actions, for his social life, he has still another unconscious
experience. He knows nothing of it; but just as he experiences the
after-effects of his pre-natal life, so does he also experience what
passes through the gates of death and becomes the content of life
after death, namely, the forces already present like a seed between
birth and death, which only come to their full blossoming in the life
after death. These forces worked with great intensity in the ancient
instinctive clairvoyance. And they worked in their last remnants in
the poor shepherds in the fields because of their special piety.
Moreover, it is in these forces especially that we live between
falling asleep and awaking, when our souls are outside of our bodies
in outer space. The soul then lives as it will live consciously in
future when it has laid aside the physical body after death. These
forces, which under special conditions can penetrate from the world of
sleep and dream into waking life, were once very active in the
ancient instinctive clairvoyance. And these the poor shepherds
experienced, receiving through them a revelation of the Mystery of
Golgotha from a different quarter than that from which the
annunciation came to the three Magi.
What does one experience by means of the forces peculiar to man
between death and rebirth when, as in the case of the Wisemen from the
Orient, they are kindled in the life between birth and death? One
experiences what takes place beyond what is earthly. One is borne away
from the earth out into the world of the stars where we live between
death and rebirth. This was the world into which the Wisemen of the
East were led away from the earth out into cosmic space.
And what does one experience by means of the forces which rise up from
the inner being of man, especially in the world of dreams? One
experiences what goes on within the earth. Here the Tellurian forces,
the forces of which we partake because we live in our bodies, are at
work. These forces work particularly in what we live through between
falling asleep and awaking. Here, too, we are in the outer world, but
essentially in that outer world belonging to the earth.
You will say that this is a contradiction of the truth that we are
outside of our bodies. But it is not a contradiction. We always
perceive only what is external to ourselves; that wherein we live is
never perceived. Only people who are especially ignorant about certain
subjects, and who are bent on establishing a knowledge consisting
solely of phrases, are capable of skipping lightly over such matters
with their phrases and of saying, for example, that the point is not
to found a science of the spirit upon knowledge gained outside man,
but to add to natural science a science derived from man's inner
being.
With such a torrent of phrases Darmstadt wisdom-schools may indeed be
founded, but one may still remain a mere phrase-maker even when
founding schools of wisdom. For rightly understood, the matter is as
follows. We may indeed say that, to arrive at the super-sensible, the
world must be described from within; but we must first get into the
inner being and then look at what is external from outside the body,
by looking back upon the body. Keyserling's talks concerning
observation from the standpoint of the soul do not attempt to enter
man's inner being, they merely use phrases.
The fact really is such that when we are in the condition experienced
between falling asleep and awaking, we look back, we feel our way
back, as it were, into our bodies. We feel what is of the earth in our
bodies; for they are of the earth. The poor shepherds in the fields
really, felt the revelation of the earth through their bodies when in
a dreamlike condition, they perceived what was happening in the form
of the perception of an angel's voice.
These are the two absolute contrasts: the Magi with their knowledge of
the heavens, and the shepherds with their earth-revelation. And it
corresponds completely to the Mystery of Golgotha that the revelation
came from two such different quarters. For a heavenly Being, as yet
untouched by earth, was descending to it, and this descent had to make
itself known by means of the wisdom of the heavens, which knew that
something heavenly was descending.
In the shepherds' wisdom we learn to know the earth by feeling our way
into its weaving life as it perceived the descent of the heavenly
Being. It is the same annunciation, only from another side.
Wonderfully unified, we thus see what, although it was one and the
same event, was announced in a twofold way to men.
And when we see how humanity received the event of Golgotha, we must
say that, in regard to this and other matters, there were only the
merest remnants of the ancient wisdom left to man. I have already
shown how the Mystery of Golgotha was grasped in the first centuries
of Christianity with the help of the fragments of an ancient wisdom
known as Gnosis. From then on it became more and more a matter of
trying to penetrate into the nature of the event of Golgotha with
analytical reasoning powers alone. And in the 19th century naturalism
gradually made its appearance in the confessional sphere. The
super-sensible content of the event of Golgotha was no longer grasped
at all, Christ became merely the “wise man of Nazareth”,
naturalistically conceived. A new, spiritual grasp of the Mystery of
Golgotha became necessary. The fact of the Mystery of Golgotha must
not be confused with the way in which human understanding has dealt
with this fact.
Now a soul-constitution such as the shepherds in the fields and the
Wisemen of the East possessed still existed in its last fragmentary
form at the time when the Mystery of Golgotha occurred. But all this
changed in the course of human evolution. Everything changes and
undergoes metamorphosis. What then became of the wisdom of the Eastern
Magi? It has become our mathematics, with its knowledge of the
heavens! The Magi possessed a super-earthly science based on sublime
recollections of pre-natal life. All this has been shrunken and
cramped into our mathematical, mechanical grasp of the heavens, so
that we apply nothing but the laws of mathematics and mechanics to
their phenomena. What we have in the way of mathematical astronomy is
all that still rises up out of our inner being as the modern
metamorphosis of what the Magi once possessed.
And looking at our external sense-knowledge, which is merely a
perceiving with eyes and ears, we find it to be the externalized inner
knowledge of the shepherds in the fields. What could once convey to
the shepherds in the fields the inner secrets of earthly existence now
permits only of that cold, natural-scientific observation of the outer
world which is the offspring of the shepherds' wisdom. The child bears
but slight resemblance to its mother. And our mathematics, our
astronomy, are the offspring of the wisdom of the Magi.
Humanity had to go through this development. Our scientific
researchers, sitting in their laboratories and clinics, have very
little in common with the shepherds but theirs is a direct
metamorphosis of the shepherds' wisdom. And our mathematicians
likewise are in direct line of descent from the Eastern Wisemen. The
outer has become the inner, and the inner, outer. And so we have
indeed grown remote from the Mystery of Golgotha. We must become aware
of this fact. We have become far removed indeed from such
understanding. Perhaps many of those who call themselves preachers and
ministers of Christianity in the official sense are the most remote
from it of all.
The forces of knowledge, faith and feeling that live in man to-day can
never penetrate through to the true being of the Mystery of Golgotha.
It must be found entirely anew.
The wisdom of the Magi too has become dry mathematics, perceiving the
heavens only in designs. It has become an inner thing. But inwardness
must take on life once more. What was once outer must be built up
again from within.
And now let us try to understand the content of a book such as my
“Occult Science”
from this standpoint. — The Magi had a
real penetration into the starry heavens; they saw what was spiritual
there because they had insight into human pre-natal experience. This
has become abstract in our mathematics. But the very same forces out
of which we develop mathematics can be brought back to life, and
intensified as imaginative vision. Then there is born from out our
inner being a world which, although we create it within us, we see as
the outer world, as though: containing Saturn, Sun, Moon, Earth,
Jupiter, Venus, Vulcan. We see the heavens in inner vision just as the
Eastern Wisemen externally perceived the secrets of the Mystery of
Golgotha. The external has become an inner thing, has become
mathematical abstraction; and in like manner the inner must be widened
out until it becomes a universe around us, until inner vision leads us
to a new astronomy experienced within.
Only by thus reaching out for a new understanding of the Christ can we
fill the festival of Christmas with a certain meaning. Has the
Christmas festival any meaning for most human beings nowadays? It is a
very beautiful custom, scarcely 150 years old, to have the Christmas
Tree as a symbol of the Christmas festival. The custom of having a
Christmas Tree came into being only in the 19th century. What is this
Christmas Tree really? It is not so easy to find its meaning. In
making the effort to find it, and by discovering how the Christmas
Tree gradually came into use, how it grew from being the little
branch, carried on St. Nicholas' arm on the 6th of December, into
being our Christmas Tree, we come to realize that this Christmas Tree
is also directly connected with the Tree of Paradise.
Human consciousness thus looks back here to the Tree of Paradise, to
Adam and Eve. What does this signify? This is one aspect of the way we
make the Mystery of Golgotha known to-day. We turn back from the
Mystery of Golgotha to the creation of the world, to the beginning of
the world. We fail to grasp the meaning of the world's redemption, and
instead turn back to the God who created the universe. This is
expressed in the gradual disappearance of the real Christmas symbol,
of the manger — so sublime a part of the Christmas plays of
earlier centuries — and in the appearance of the Christmas Tree
which is really the Tree of Paradise.
Thus the old Jehovah-religion again took the place of the
Christ-religion; the Christmas Tree is the symbol of the reappearance
of the religion of Jehovah. This Jehovah-religion makes its appearance
in many shapes and forms to-day. For Jahve was once rightly worshipped
as the one and only God in an age when his people felt themselves to
be a unified folk, content within their limits, and living in the
expectation of some day filling the entire earth. In our age people
talk of Christ Jesus, but really worship only Jehovah. For, as we saw
during the war, the people of the various nations talked of Christ,
but were really concerned with the original God, Jehovah, who lives in
the forces of nature and heredity.
On the one hand, the Christmas Tree, on the other, the national gods
so remote from Christianity — with these humanity has turned back
from grasping the Mystery of Golgotha to lay hold again on something
belonging to a much earlier period. There has been a retrogression
into the ancient Jehovah religion in the adherence to the nationalistic
principle, in the announcement that the various peoples would follow
their national gods.
You see, what must be taken into consideration is that in the
annunciation, to the shepherds, and in the annunciation that came to
the Magi, there is a human element common to all men. For the earth is
the common property of all. The earth-annunciation received by the
shepherds was one which could make no national distinctions and
differentiations. And the Magi, who received a sun-annunciation, an
annunciation from the heavens, also received a purely human element.
For after the sun shines upon the lands of one folk, it shines on the
lands of others also. Heaven and earth belong to all in common. With
Christianity, a common human element is roused in all humanity.
This fact is pointed to in the twofold annunciation of the Christmas
story. Such matters which were fully understood when man's
soul-constitution was an entirely different one, will only be
comprehensible to-day with the help of spiritual science.
We should inscribe this into our hearts to-day when we think of the
Christmas festival. To-day, in thinking of the Christmas Mystery, we
have need to look for a birth. We should not merely busy ourselves
with idle talk about the Christmas festival and our own feelings, but
should look for what must be born anew in this our age. For truly,
real Christianity must be born anew. We need a cosmic Christmas
festival for humanity.
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