Fundamental Impulses in the Mysteries of Ancient and Modern
Times
Lecture held by Rudolf Steiner at Dornach on the 23rd
of September 1921.
Were
an Oriental sage of ancient times, initiated in the Mysteries
of the East (we must go back to very ancient times of Oriental
civilisation, in order to contemplate what I wish to say), to
turn his gaze on present-day Western civilisation, he would
perhaps say to those belonging to this Western civilisation: To
say the truth, you live entirely immersed in fear, fear rules
your whole soul-constitution. In the most important moments of
life fear permeates all you do — all you feel, too, and
its results; as fear is closely related with hatred, hatred
plays an important part in your whole civilisation.
Do not
misunderstand me. I mean: were a wise man of the ancient
civilisation of the East to stand amongst Western people with
the same degree of culture and the same soul-constitution he
used to possess in his time, then he would speak in this way
and would perhaps give people to understand that indeed in his
time and in his country, civilisation was built up on
completely different foundations. Probably he would say: In my
days, fear really played no part in the life of
civilisation. In my days, when a world-conception had to
be brought into the world, so that deeds and social life may
spring out of it, the chief part was played by a joyful kind of
pleasure, able to transform itself into devoted surrender to
the world, into love.
This
is what he would feel, and from his point of view he would show
us the most important component parts, the most important
impulses of present-day civilisation. And were we able to
listen to him in the right way, then we would acquire thereby a
great deal of what we really need in order to find the point
from which we must start.
After
all, a reminiscence of the ancient civilisation is still to be
found in Asia, although strong European influences have entered
its religious, aesthetic, scientific and social life. This old
civilisation is decadent and when the wise man of the ancient
East declares that love was the fundamental force of the
ancient civilisation of the East, we must indeed say: In the
present time, little of it can be seen directly. But he who is
able to see, can positively discern this influence of an
original element of pleasure, joy, love of the world and
towards the world, even in the manifestations of decadence to
be found in Asiatic culture.
In
ancient times, the East contained little of what was demanded
of man later on, when the word resounded, appearing in its most
radical form in the Greek saying: Know thyself. This “Know
thyself” entered man's historical life only with the
appearance of the earlier stage of Greek culture. This kind of
human knowledge did not as yet pervade the encompassing,
enlightened world-conception of the ancient East, for it really
did not turn its eye towards man's inner being. In this
connection man is dependent on the circumstances ruling
in the world around him. The ancient Oriental culture was
founded under another influence of the Sun's light on the
earth, under another influence of the earth's condition, than
those appearing in the later civilisation of by what surrounded
him as world, and he felt particularly induced to devote
himself to the world with all his inner being. What weaved in
this old Oriental wisdom and in the conception of the world
arising out of this old Oriental wisdom, was knowledge of
the world. Even the Mysteries — you can gather it from
all that has been said to you in this connection for quite a
number of years — and that which lived in the Mysteries
of the ancient East, did not contain a real following of the
demand: “Know thyself!” “Turn your gaze into
the world, try to approach what lies hidden in the depths of
the world's manifestations,” this could be taken as a
demand of the ancient Eastern civilisation. But when Asiatic
culture began to spread more toward the West, and Mystery
colonies were founded in Egypt and Northern Africa, the
teachers and disciples of the Mysteries were compelled to turn
their gaze toward man s inner being. Particularly when the
colonies of the Mysteries extended still farther West —
there was a special site in ancient Ireland — the
teachers and disciples of the Mysteries who came over from the
East had to face the necessity of man's knowledge of self, of a
real inner contemplation of man, because of the geographical
conditions of the West, and consequently, the completely
different elementary formation of the Western world. What these
disciples of the Mysteries had already acquired in Asia in the
shape of outer knowledge of the world, and knowledge concerning
spiritual facts and beings lying at the foundation of the outer
world, this enabled them now to penetrate deeply into what is
really contained within man.
It
would have been impossible to observe it over there, in Asia.
The gaze turned toward man s interior would have become, so to
say, lifeless. But what was brought into the Mystery colonies
of the West as an acquisition gained by contemplating the world
outside, now made it possible to look into man's interior.
Indeed, one might say that at first only the strongest souls
could bear what could be seen in man's inner being. Man's inner
being rose into the consciousness of mankind in these Mystery
colonies of Eastern origin founded in Western countries. A word
addressed to the disciples by teachers of the Mysteries who
already possessed this look into man's interior can really show
what an impression this self-knowledge of manmade on these
Mystery teachers; the word I mean is often quoted. But only in
the earlier Mystery-colonies of Egypt, North-Africa and Ireland
it was uttered for the disciple's preparation, and the
initiate's attention in general, in respect of the experiences
of man s inner being. The word which was then uttered was this
one: No one who is not initiated in the holy Mysteries should
gam knowledge of the secrets of man's inner being; it is not
allowed to speak of such secrets before a non-initiate; for
sinful are the lips that utter these secrets and sinful the ear
that hears these secrets.
This
word has often been uttered from out [of] an inner experience, from
out that which a human being, prepared by the wisdom of the
East, could experience when he advanced to a knowledge of man
through the earthly conditions prevailing in the West. This
word has been preserved traditionally; to-day, however, it is
in constant use, but misunderstood, in its innermost essence,
in secret orders and in secret societies of the West, that have
really quite an influence in the world outside. But it is no
longer spoken with the required earnestness, because people no
longer know what they are saying when they utter these words.
But even at present it does indeed happen that this word is
taken as a motto in the secret orders of the West: Secrets exist
concerning man's inner being; they must only be revealed in
secret societies, for sinful are the lips that utter them and
sinful the ear that hears them.
It
must be said that in the course of time, many people (not those
of Central Europe, but those of Western countries) learnt a
great deal within their secret societies of what had been
preserved traditionally from the investigations of an ancient
wisdom. This knowledge is taken up without being understood at
all, and to a great extent, enters into human actions as an
impulse. It is indeed so, that during the last centuries,
already since the middle of the 15th century, man's
constitution rendered it impossible for him to see these things
in their original form; he could only conceive them
intellectually. It was possible to have an idea of them, but
not to experience them. Single individuals only had
premonitions. But these premonitions led many a human
being into the sphere of the experiences that count most of
all. Such people have at times taken up the strangest attitude
towards life, for instance,
Lord Bulwer,
the author of “Zanoni.” We can understand him in his
later years only if we know that he first acquired a traditional
self-knowledge of man, but owing to his particular individual
constitution, he was already able to penetrate into certain
mysteries. This made him go further away from what is natural
in life. In his case it is possible to see what an attitude
toward life is assumed by a man who assimilates this
differently-organised spiritual world, not only in thoughts,
but in the whole attitude of his soul, in his inner experience.
Then, many a thing must be judged differently, but not in the
usual narrow-minded way. Of course, it is awful that Bulwer
went about speaking with a certain emphasis of his inner
experiences, accompanied by a younger female being, with a
harp-like instrument on which she played in the intervals
between his sentences. He appeared here and there at parties
where he had often appeared quite formally and properly, sat
down in his somewhat strange attire and before him sat the
“harp-girl.” He said a few sentences, then the girl
played, he continued talking and then the girl played again.
Thus, in a higher sense, he brought something frivolous into
this narrow-minded world, this narrowmindedness into
which people sank more and more, especially since the middle of
the 15th century.
People
do not realize the degree of narrow-mindedness they have
reached, and will know less and less about it, because it is
becoming natural. Only ones “behaviour is looked upon as
sensible. But there is a connection in the things in life, and
modern dryness and sleepiness, the attitude of people toward
each other, these belong to the intellectual evolution that
arose in the last centuries. There is a connection in such
things. A man like Bulwer does not fit into this evolution; it
is quite possible of course to imagine elderly people going
about the world, accompanied by younger people playing pleasant
music. But the difference between the two soul-constitutions
must only be seen in the right light, then also this will
appear in its right light. In Bulwer something shone forth that
he could not have acquired directly in our modern intellectual
age, but only traditionally. We must, however, learn again what
man's knowledge of self used to be in the Mystery-colonies I
have mentioned.
The
every-day man of the present age sees the world around him
through the outer physical sense-impressions. He combines what
he perceives, with his understanding. He also sees into his own
self. This is really the world looked over by man, out of which
his actions proceed. The sense-impressions he receives from
outside, what he evolves out of these sense-impressions in the
shape of representations, and that part of the representations
transformed by impulses of feeling and impulses of will and
directed towards man's inner being, then ray back again into
consciousness as memories. This is what constitutes the soul s
contents, the contents of the life in which man lives in the
present time and out of which his actions proceed. Present-day
man will at the most ask with a false kind of mysticism what is
really contained in his inner being and what self-knowledge
reveals. In bringing forward such a question he wants to find
an answer through his usual consciousness. But out of this
usual consciousness nothing else except outer
sense-impressions, transformed by feeling and will, can arise.
Only reflections, mirrored images of outer life, can be found
by looking into man's inner being with the usual consciousness,
and even when the impressions from outside have been
transformed by feeling and will, man nevertheless does not know
how feeling and will really work. Because the outer impressions
have been transformed, man often takes what he sees within him
as a special message from a divine world, an eternal world and
not as the mirrored image of the outer world. But it is not so.
What appears to a normal consciousness as self-knowledge, is
only the transformed world outside reflecting itself into
his consciousness from his inner being. If man really wants to
look within himself, then — I have often used this image
before — he would have to break this inner mirror. We
look at the world outside. We have the outer sense impressions
and connect them with thoughts. These thoughts then get
reflected from within. By looking inside us, we only come as
far as this inner mirror. We see what this mirror reflects in
the form of memory. Just as we cannot look behind a mirror
without breaking it, so we cannot look into man s inner being.
The preparation given be the old wisdom of the East to the
teachers and disciples of the Mystery-colonies that came over
to the West, enabled them to see clearly behind memory into
man's inner being. What they saw there, caused them to speak
the words that were really meant to explain how well prepared
one had to be, especially in those ancient times, before
looking into man's inner being. What can be seen within
man?
There
we can see how something pertaining to the force of thought and
perception which develops in front of the memory-mirror,
penetrates under this memory-mirror. Thoughts penetrate below
this memory-mirror and exercise an action on man's etheric
body, in that part of man's etheric body which lies at the
foundation of growth, and also at the foundation of the
origin of will-forces'. When we look out into the sunlit space
and survey all that comes to us through sense-impressions,
something shines in our inner being, changing, it is true, into
memory-thoughts on the one hand, but nevertheless oozes
through the memory-mirror which pervades us just as the
processes of nutrition, growth, etc. pervade us. The
thought-forces first permeate the etheric body, this now
exercises quite a particular action on the physical body. A
complete change of the material being existing in man's
physical body takes place in the physical body. Matter nowhere
undergoes a complete destruction in the world outside. For this
reason, the newer philosophy and natural sciences speak of the
conservation of matter. But this law of the conservation
of matter only applies to the outer world. Within man, matter
is completely changed back into nothingness. Matter is
completely destroyed in its essence. Our human, nature is based
on this very fact: that we are able to throw back matter into
chaos, destroying it completely deeper down than where I memory
is mirrored.
This
is what the disciple of the Mysteries who was led from the East
into the Mystery-colonies of Ireland, and of the West in
general, had to learn: within you, beneath your capacity of
memory, you have something in you as man, that aims at
destruction; if it would not be there, then you would not have
been able to evolve your thinking. For your thoughts must
develop through the forces of thought which permeate the
etheric body. But an etheric body permeated with the forces of
thought, has such an action on the physical body that matter is
thrown back into chaos and destroyed.
When
man therefore sets out in this frame of mind to investigate
man's inner being, he will first come as far as memory, then he
will enter a region where the human being wants to destroy, to
annihilate what is there. Beneath our memory-mirror each one of
use possesses the mama of destruction, of dissolution as
far as matter is concerned, in order that man may develop his
thoughtful Ego. There is no human self-knowledge that does not
point out most earnestly this human fact.
Therefore, he that is to see this centre of destruction in man
must take an interest in spiritual development. He must be able
to say with the greatest earnestness: the spirit must subsist
and for the sake of the spirit's existence, it is permissible
that matter should be annihilated. Only when mankind will have
heard for years about the things pertaining to spiritual-scientific
investigations, it will be possible to show what is
to be found in man. But it must be pointed out already to-day,
for without this knowledge man will have illusions concerning
himself, and concerning what he really is within the
civilisation of the West. Within the world's evolution,
man is the enveloping frame of a centre of destruction, and the
downward forces can only be changed into ascending forces if
man will realize that he envelops a destructive centre.
What
would happen if man were not led to this state of consciousness
through spiritual science? Well, already in the evolution of
the present times we can see what would happen. What is to be
found, as it were, isolated and separated from man, and should
only exercise its action in man, play only this one part in man
of throwing matter back into chaos, this instead comes out of
the isolation and enters man's outer instincts. This will take
place in genera! in the civilisation of the West and of the
earth. It can be seen in everything appearing to-day as
destructive forces, for instance in Eastern Europe. This is
destructiveness thrown out from within and man will only be
able to face the future in the right way, in connection with
what goes on in him instinctively, if a real knowledge of man
will again be there, if man will again be shown this centre of
destruction inside him, which must however be there for the
sake of the development of human thought. This very force of
thinking man must possess in order to acquire the
world-conception needed in the present age, this force of
thinking which must exist in front of the memory-mirror,
effects the continuation of thinking into the etheric body. The
etheric body permeated with thought works destructively on the
physical body. This centre of destruction exists in the modern
man of the West; knowledge points it out. It is far worse,
however, when this centre exists and man is unable to reach it
with his consciousness, than when man acquires a fully
conscious knowledge of this destructive centre and proceeds
from this point of view into the modern evolution of
civilisation.
Fear
was the first thing that befell the disciples when they heard
of these secrets in the Mystery-colonies. They learnt to know
it thoroughly. They thoroughly learnt to know the feeling that
fear arises when they looked into man's inner being, not
dishonestly, in a hazy kind of mysticism, but honestly. The
disciples of the Mysteries of the West were only able to
overcome this fear because they were shown the full weight of
the facts. Then they were able to conquer consciously what had
to arise in the shape of fear.
Then,
when the intellectual age appeared, this fear became an
unconscious feeling and continues working as an unconscious
fear. It exercises an action on life outside, hidden under all
kinds of aspects. But it is in conformity with the present age
to look into man's inner being. “Know thyself”,
becomes a justified demand. Through the fear that was conjured
up, and then through the overcoming of this fear, the disciples
of the Mysteries were led to self-knowledge in the right
way. The intellectual age dimmed the look for what was
contained in man's inner being, but it was unable to drive away
fear. Thus it came about that man stood and stands under the
influence of this unconscious fear and reached the point of
saying: There is nothing in man beyond birth and death. Man is
afraid to look below the life of memories, the usual life
of thoughts, which legitimately exists only between birth and
death. He is afraid to look into what is really eternal in the
human soul and on this fear, he establishes the teaching that
there is nothing beyond this life between birth and death.
Modern materialism has sprung out of fear and has not the
slightest idea that it is so. This modern material
world-conception is a product of fear.
Thus
fear lives in the outer actions of human beings, in the social
configuration and in the historical process ever since the
middle of the 15th century; it lives especially in the
materialistic world-conception of the 19th century. Why did
human beings become materialistic, i.e. why did they only take
into consideration the outer aspect in material existence?
Because they were afraid to descend into the depths of man.
This
is what the ancient sage of the East wished to express in the
words: You modern people of the West live entirely in fear. You
found your social organisations on fear, follow your artistic
pursuits out of fear, and your materialistic world-conception
is born out of fear. You and the successors of those who
founded the old Oriental world-conception during my time,
though they have fallen into decadence — you and these
people of Asia will never understand each other, for in the
people of Asia everything is born out of love, whereas in your
case everything springs out of fear which is related with
hatred.
Of
course, this may sound drastic, but I am trying to bring it
before you by making an old Oriental sage say it. Perhaps it
will not appear too incredible if he were to speak like that
supposing he were to arise again, whereas a present-day man
would be looked upon as a fool were he to bring forward such
things so drastically. But the drastic character of these
things can show us what we have to learn to day for the sake of
civilisation's healthy progress. Mankind must get to know again
that, what constitutes the highest achievement of more recent
times, namely intellectual thought, could not be there at all,
unless the life of thought rises from within, out of a
destructive centre which must be recognised in order to keep it
in its place, inside, and prevent it extending to the outer
instinct, and entering social impulses.
By
looking over such things, it is possible to look deeply into
the connections of life during more recent times. The world
appearing as such a destructive centre, is to be found within
us, beneath the mirror of memory. But the life of present-day
man takes its course between that which the memory-mirror
offers and the outer sense-perception. He adds to it a material
atomistic world, which is a phantastic world because he cannot
break through the representations gained through the
senses.
But
man is no stranger to the world lying beyond the outer
representations gained through the senses. Every night, between
falling asleep and waking up, he penetrates into this world.
When you sleep, you are within this world. What you experience
then, lies beyond the representations gained through the senses
and is not the atomistic world set up by the dreamers of
natural sciences. What the old Oriental sage experienced in his
Mysteries, was the world lying beyond the sphere of the senses.
It is only possible to experience it through devoted surrender
to the world, when we are seized by the impulse of giving
ourselves up completely to the world. Love must be active in
knowledge if we wish to penetrate behind the sense-impressions.
Especially the old civilisation of the East possessed this love
in their knowledge.
Why
must this resignation be acquired? Because, if we wish to get
beyond the sense-world with our usual human Ego, we would
suffer damage. We must give up our usual Ego if we want to
enter this world beyond the senses. How does the Ego arise?
Through the human being diving down into a chaos of
destruction, — this is how the Ego is formed. This Ego
must be steeled and hardened in that world existing within man
as the world of a destructive centre. With this Ego it is not
possible to live beyond the sphere of the outer
sense-world.
Let
us imagine the centre of destruction in man. It spreads over
the whole human organism. What I am describing, is to be
understood intensively, not extensively; but I will draw it
schematically [The schematic drawing can
unfortunately not be reproduced.]. Here is the centre of
destruction and here is the human frame. If that which is
inside, were to spread over the whole world, what would then
live in the world through man? Evil! Evil is nothing but the
necessary chaos existing inside man, which has been thrown out.
The human Self, the human Ego, must be hardened in this chaos,
in what must exist in man and must remain in him as a centre of
evil. This human Ego cannot live beyond the human sense-sphere
in the outer world. Hence Ego-consciousness disappears in sleep
and when it appears in dreams, its appearance is often a
strange and a weak one towards its own self. The Ego which
really undergoes a hardening process in the centre of Evil
existing within man, cannot go beyond the sphere of the sense
manifestations. Hence, the old sages of the East were of the
opinion that only through resignation, only through love, it
was possible to enter the supersensible sphere, only by giving
up the Ego — and that on entering this world completely,
one does not live in a world of Vana, one does not live in the
woof of what is habitual, but in a world where this usual
existence has been blown away, where there is
Nirvana.
This conception of Nirvana, the utmost resignation of the Ego, as in
sleep, which existed as a fully-conscious knowledge in the
disciples of the ancient civilisation of the East, this is what
an old Oriental sage would point out, such a sage as I have
placed hypothetically before your souls. He would say: With
you, everything is grounded in fear, because you had to evolve
the Ego. With us, everything was grounded in love, because we
had to suppress the Ego. With you, an Ego desirous of asserting
itself, speaks. With us, Nirvana spoke in the Ego's loving
outpouring into the whole world.
These
things can be grasped in thought and remain to a certain extent
preserved there, but in the world of mankind they live as
sensations, as fluctuating feelings and permeate human life. In
such feelings and sentiments, they constitute what lives to-day
on the one hand in the East, and on the other hand in the West.
In the West, people have a kind of blood, a kind of lymph-fluid
which is saturated with the Ego, hardened in the inner centre
of Evil. In the East the human beings have a kind of blood, a
lymph, containing the echo of the Nirvana-longing. In the
present-day such things do not enter into the consciousness of
the people of the East and of the West, owing to the uncouth
way in which people think, for intellectual thought has
something very uncouth. Intellectual thought somehow tries to
bleed the human organism, to convert it into a microscopic
slide and observe it under the microscope in order to form
thoughts about it. The thoughts thus obtained, are terribly
uncouth, even from an everyday aspect of experiencing things.
This is what can at all be said in this connection: Do you
think that it is able to grasp the finely-shaded differences to
be found in the human beings that are for instance seated here
next to each other? The microscope of course only gives
unpolished, uncouth concepts of the blood and lymph. But
finely-shaded differences even exist in people who come out of
the same surroundings and conditions. But these shadings exist
most intensively in human beings of the East and of the West;
the intellect of course, can only grasp them quite bluntly and
coarsely.
This
is what takes place in the bodies of the Asiatic, European and
American people and rules their reciprocal attitude in social
life outside. The coarse, uncouth understanding employed
in the last century for acquiring knowledge on nature outside,
will not suffice to tackle the demands of a more recent social
life and especially the adjustment between East and West will
not be found. But this adjustment must be found.
Towards the end of the autumn people will be streaming to the
Washington Conference where the statement made from out an
instinctive genius by General Smuts, England's Minister for
Africa will be discussed. He said that mankind's modern
evolution is characterised by the fact that the starting point
of civilisation's interests, which used to be in the Northern
Sea up to now, will be transferred to the Pacific Ocean. A
world culture is arising out of the civilisation of the
countries lying around the Northern Sea, but the centre of
gravity of this world-culture will be transferred from the
North-Sea to the Pacific Ocean.
Mankind is facing this change. But people still talk to-day in
such a way that what they say proceeds from the old coarse kind
of thinking, so that nothing real and essential is reached; yet
it must be reached, if we want to proceed. The signs of the
times stand menacingly and significantly before us and tell us:
So far, a limited trust and confidence sufficed in the
intercourse of human beings that were really all of them afraid
of each other in secret. Except, that this fear hid under the
cloak of all kinds of other feelings. But now we require a
soul-attitude able to encompass a world-culture. We need faith
and trust of such a kind, that through them East and West will
be balanced. Important points of view open out, which are just
those we need. People to-day think that it is only meet and
right to deal with economic questions — which position
Japan will have in the Pacific Ocean, ways and means of
organizing China in order that all the other nations on earth
engaged in trade may find an open doorway, etc.
But
these questions will not be settled in any world conference
until man will have acquired consciousness of the fact that
faith from one man to the other is a part and being of
economics. This faith and trust will in future be gained only in
a spiritual way. The civilisation in the world outside will
need a spiritual deepening. To-day I only wished to show you
from another side what I have often tried to assert here in
this direction.
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