AT THE CENTRE OF MAN'S
BEING: II
The Seeds of Future
Worlds
R u d o l f S t
e i n e r
The second of two
Lectures given at Dornach on September 23-4, 1921
-
From a shorthand
report, unrevised by the lecturer. Published by permission of the
Rudolf Steiner-Nachlassverwaltung, Dornach,
Switzerland.
ESTERDAY
I spoke of how we find
within man a kind of centre of destruction. I showed how as long as
we remain within the limits of ordinary consciousness, we retain
memories of the impressions made upon us by the world, but that this
is as far as we can go. We receive our impressions from the world; we
turn them into experience through our senses and through our
understanding, through all the manifold effects they have upon our
soul; and later we are able to call up again pictures of what we have
experienced. We bear these pictures within us; they are for us
our inner life.
It is indeed
as though we had within us a mirror; but one that works differently from
the ordinary spatial mirror. For the ordinary mirror reflects what is in
front of it in space, whereas the living mirror we carry within us
reflects in quite another way. It reflects the sense-impressions we
receive, and reflects them in the course of time. Something or other
— at some later moment — causes this or that impression
to be reflected back again into consciousness, and so we have a
memory of a past experience.
If we break
a mirror that is in space, then we can see behind it; we can look into a
realm we cannot see when the mirror is intact. Correspondingly, if we carry
out inner exercises of the soul, we come, as I have often suggested,
to something like a breaking of the inner mirror. The memories can as
it were cease for a time — for how long a time depends upon
ourselves — and we can look more deeply into our inner being.
As we do this, as we look within behind the memory-mirror, then what I
described as a kind of centre and heart of destruction meets our gaze.
There must
needs be such a centre within us, for only in such a centre can the Ego
of man establish itself. It is a centre for the strengthening and
hardening of the Ego. But, as I said, if this hardening of the Ego,
if this egoism is carried out into social life, then evil ensues,
evil in the life and actions of men.
You may
see from this how complicated is the life into which man is placed.
Here you have something which has its good use and purpose within
man, for otherwise he would not be able to develop his ego, but
something which must never be allowed outside. The bad man carries in
into the outer world; the good man keeps it inside him. If it is
carried outside, it becomes evil and wrong. If it is kept within, it
is the very thing we need to give the Ego its right and proper strength.
After all,
there is really nothing in the world that would not bring blessing to man,
were it only in its right place! We should be thoughtless and
unreflecting, if we lacked this centre within us. For this centre
enables us to experience in it something we would never be able to
experience in the external world. In the external world we see
objects in a material sense, and following the custom of present day
science we speak of the conservation of matter, the indestructibility
of matter. But in this centre of destruction it really happens that
matter is destroyed. Matter is thrown back into nothingness, and we
have the power within this nothingness to cause the good to arise. We
do so, if instead of instincts and impulses, which are bound to work
in the direction of egoism, we pour moral and ethical ideals into the
centre of destruction. Then, in this very centre of destruction, the
seeds of future worlds arise. Then we, as men, take part there in the
coming into being of worlds.
When we speak,
as you may read in my Outline of Occult Science, of how our Earth
will one day suffer dissolution, and of how out of all manner of
intermediate states of transformation the Jupiter existence will
eventually be evolved, then we have to see it in this way. The
Jupiter existence will contain nothing but the new creation that is
being formed to-day in man within this centre of destruction. It is
being formed out of man's moral ideals, but also out of his
anti-moral impulses, out of what works as evil from his egoism. Hence
the Jupiter existence will be a battle between the good which man,
already here and now, is bringing to birth by carrying his moral
ideals into his inner chaos, and the unmoral and anti-moral which is
due to the presence of egoism.
Thus, when we
look into our deepest selves, we are gazing upon a region where matter is
thrown back into nothingness.
*
I went on to
indicate how it is with the other side of human existence, where we are
surrounded with sense-phenomena. We behold these phenomena spread
around us like a carpet or tapestry, and we apply our intellect to
combine and relate them and discover within them laws, which we then
call the laws of nature. But with ordinary consciousness we never get
beyond this tapestry of the senses. We penetrate it just as little as
we penetrate the memory-mirror within. With a developed
consciousness, however, we do come through it. Then men of ancient
Oriental wisdom penetrated it with a consciousness informed by
instinctive vision. And then they looked upon a world where egohood
cannot hold its own in consciousness.
We enter this
world every time we go to sleep. When we fall asleep, the Ego is dulled,
and the reason is that beyond the tapestry of the senses lies that
world where, to begin with, the ego-power, as it develops for human
existence, has no place at all. Hence it is that the ancient Oriental,
who had a peculiar longing to live behind the phenomena of the senses,
used to speak of Nirvana, of the end and disappearance of egohood.
This brings us
to the great contradiction between East and West. In times past the Oriental
developed a longing to see behind the sense-phenomena, and in so
doing acquired a power of vision into a spiritual world which is not
composed of atoms and molecules but of spiritual Beings. This world
was there in visible actuality for the perception of the ancient
Oriental. In our days the Oriental, particularly in Asia but
also in other parts of the world, is living in the decadent stages of
this yearning to reach the world behind the sense phenomena; while
the man of the West has developed his Ego, has allowed that hardening
and strengthening to take place within the centre of destruction
which we have described.
In saying this
we are already on the way to seeing what it is that must enter into man's
consciousness, now and in the early future. For if the pure
intellectualism that has been developing ever since the middle of the
15th century were to continue, mankind would fall into decline; for
intellectualism will never help us to pass either behind the
memory-mirror or behind the tapestry of the world of the senses. And
it is essential that man should acquire once more a consciousness of
these worlds. He must do so, if Christianity is again to become a
truth for him; it is not a truth for him to-day. We can see this
clearly when we look at the modern conception of Christ — if
indeed modern times may be said to have any idea of Christ at all.
The truth is that we are living in a stage of evolution when man
cannot possibly come to an idea of Christ as long as he makes use
only of the concepts which he has been developing since the 15th
century. In the 19th and 20th centuries he has become incapable
of forming a true idea of Christ.
Man looks
round about him on the world, and uses the combining faculty of his
intellect to build up natural laws. Following a line of thought that
is perfectly possible for the consciousness of the present day, he
comes to the point when he could say: “The world is permeated
with thought, for the laws of nature can be apprehended in
thoughts; they are in reality the thoughts of the world. If I follow
up the laws of nature I am bound eventually to apply them to the
coming into existence of man himself as a physical being, and then I
have to admit that within the world I survey with my ordinary
consciousness, beginning with sense-perception and going on as far as
the memory-mirror, a spiritual element lives.” One must needs
be ill, pathologically ill, if like the atheistic materialist one is
not willing to recognise this spiritual element. We live in this
world that is given for ordinary consciousness; we come forth into it
as physical man through physical conception and physical birth. But
what is observable within the physical world must be inadequately
contemplated if one fails to see behind the physical world a
universal spiritual element.
When we are
born as little babies, we are really for external perception not unlike
some creature of nature. Then out of this being of nature, that is
virtually in a kind of sleep condition, spiritual inner faculties
gradually develop. If we learn to trace back these emerging spiritual
faculties in the same way that we trace the gradual growth of the
limbs, we find that we must look for their source beyond birth and
conception. Thus we come to the point of thinking in a living and
spiritual way about the world, where before, in our consideration of
external nature, we only built up abstract laws. We come, in other
words, to an affirmation of what we may call the Father God.
Scholasticism
held — you will remember — that knowledge obtainable by
ordinary rational observation of the world includes knowledge
of the Father God. It is indeed true that if anyone sets out to
analyse the world as it is given for ordinary consciousness, and does
not end by gathering up all the natural laws in what is called the
Father God, he must be in some way ill. To be an atheist is to be
ill; that is how I put it here once before.
With the
ordinary consciousness, this is as far as we can go. With the ordinary
consciousness we can come to the Father God, but no further. It is
symptomatic of our times when a theologian of such standing as Adolf
Harnack says that Christ the Son does not really belong in the
Gospels; that the Gospels are the message of the Father, and that
Christ Jesus has place in the Gospels only in so far as He brought
the message of the Father God. Here you may see quite clearly how
with a certain inevitability this modern thinking leads men to
recognise even in theology only the Father God, and to understand the
Gospels themselves as containing no more than the message and tidings
of the Father God. Thus in the sense of this theology Christ is of
account only as having appeared in the world and brought to men the
true teaching concerning the Father God.
Two things are
implied in this. First, the belief that the message of the Father God cannot
be read by a study of the world in the ordinary way. The Scholastics
still held that it could. They did not imagine that the Gospels were
there to speak of the Father God; they assumed that the Gospels were
there to speak of God the Son. That men can come forward with the
opinion that the Gospels speak only of the Father God is proof that
theology, too, has fallen into that way of thinking which has
developed as the peculiarly Western method.
For in early
Christian times, up to about the third or fourth century, when there was
still a good deal of the Oriental wisdom in Christianity, men were
occupying themselves intently with the question of the difference
between the Father God and God the Son. These fine differences that
engaged attention in the early Christian centuries have long ceased
to have meaning for modern man, who has been occupied in developing
egohood as a result of the influences I have described.
A kind of
untruth has thus found its way into modern religious consciousness.
Through inner experience, through his analysis and synthesis of the
world, man comes to the Father God. From tradition, he has God the Son.
The Gospels speak of Him, tradition speaks of Him. Man has the
Christ, he wants to acknowledge Him — but through inner
experience he has Him no longer. Therefore he takes what he
should apply only to the Father God and transfers it to the
Christ God. Modern theology has not the Christ at all; it has only
the Father — but it calls the Father “Christ,”
because it has received the tradition of the Christ Being in history
and, quite naturally, wants to be Christian. If we were honest, we
should simply be unable to call ourselves Christians in modern times.
*
All this is
quite changed when we go further East. Even in the East of Europe it is
different. Take the Russian philosopher of whom I have frequently
spoken — Soloviev. You find in him an attitude of soul that
becomes a philosophy and speaks with full justification of a
difference between Father and Son. Soloviev is inwardly justified in
so speaking because for him both the Father and the Christ are
experiences. The man of the West makes no distinction between God the
Father and Christ. If you are inwardly honest with yourselves, you
will feel that the moment you want to make a distinction between the
Father God and the Christ, the two ideas become confused and
involved. For Soloviev that would have been impossible. He
experiences each separately, and so he has still an understanding for
the spiritual conflict that was fought out during the earliest
Christian centuries, in the endeavour to realise in consciousness the
distinction between the Father God and God the Son.
This, however,
is the very thing that modern man needs to learn. There must again be truth
in calling ourselves Christians. It must not be that we make a
pretence of worshipping the Christ and attribute to Him only the
qualities of the Father. But to avoid this we must bring forward
truths such as I have been indicating to-day. That is the only way we
can come to the twofold experience, the experience of the Father and
the experience of the Son.
It will be
necessary to change the whole form of our consciousness. The abstract
form of consciousness in which modern man is born and bred, and which
does not permit of more than the recognition of the Father God,
will have to be replaced by a much more concrete life of
consciousness. Needless to say, one cannot set things before the
world at large to-day in the way I have described them to you here,
for people have not yet been sufficiently prepared by Spiritual
Science and Anthroposophy. Yet there are ways in which one can point
out even to modern men how they carry in them a centre of
destruction, and how in the world outside there is something wherein
the Ego of man is as it were submerged, where it cannot hold itself
fast — as in earlier times men were told about the Fall and
other doctrines of that kind. We in our time have only to find the
right form for these truths — a form which would enable
them to find their way into ordinary consciousness; they must become
part of ordinary consciousness, even as the doctrine of the Fall of
man used to give instruction concerning a spiritual foundation of the
world, in ways that were different in their effect from our teaching
of the Father God.
Our
modern science will have to become permeated with conceptions
such as those we have expounded here. At present it is ready to
recognise in man only the laws of nature. But in this centre of
destruction of which I have been speaking the laws of nature are
united with the moral laws; there, natural law and moral law are one.
Within man matter is annihilated, and so are all the laws of nature.
Material life, together with all the laws of nature, is thrown back
into chaos; and out of the chaos a new nature is able to arise,
filled through and through with the moral impulses we ourselves lay
into it. As we have said, this centre of destruction is below our
memory-mirror. So that when we let our gaze penetrate deep down below
this memory-mirror, there at last we observe it, though it is always
within us. A man is not changed by knowledge: he merely comes to know
what he is like, what his normal condition is. And he must learn to
meditate upon these facts.
*
When we are
able to penetrate into this inner core of evil in man, and are able also
to become conscious of how into this evil, where matter is destroyed and
thrown back into chaos, moral impulses can find their way, then we
have really found in ourselves the beginning of spiritual existence.
Then we perceive the spirit within us in the act of creating. For
when we behold moral laws working upon matter which has been thrown
back into chaos, we are beholding a real activity of the spirit
taking place within us in a natural way. We become aware of the
spirit concretely active within us, the spirit that is the seed of
future worlds.
With what can
we compare this finding? We cannot compare it with what our senses tell
us of external nature. We can compare it only with a communication
made to us by another human being through speech. It is indeed more
than a comparison when we say of that which takes place in us, when
moral and anti-moral impulses unite with the chaos inside us, that it
speaks to us. There we have something that is no mere allegory
or symbol, but actual fact. What we can hear externally with our ear
is a speech toned down for the earth-world, but within us a speech is
spoken that goes out beyond the earth, for it speaks out of that
which contains the seeds of future worlds. There we penetrate into
what we must call the “inner word.” In the words that we
speak or hear in intercourse with other people, hearing and speaking
are separate and distinct, but in our inner selves, when we dive down
below the memory-mirror into the inner chaos, we are in a region of
being where speaking and hearing go on at the same time.
Hearing and speaking are once more united. The “inner
word” speaks to us, and is heard in us.
We have, in
fact, entered a realm where it is meaningless to speak of subjective and
objective. When you listen to your fellow man, when he speaks words
to you that you perceive with your sense of hearing, then you know
that his being is outside you, but that you have to give yourself up,
to surrender yourself, in order that you may perceive his being in
what you hear him saying. On the other hand, you know that the actual
word, the audible word, is not merely subjective, but is something
placed into the world. Hence we find that even with the toned-down
words that we hear and speak in our intercourse with other men, the
distinction between subjective and objective loses meaning. We stand
with our subjectivity in objectivity; and objectivity works in
us when we perceive. It is the same when we dive down to the inner
word. It is not only an inner word; it is at the same time something
objective. It is not our inner being that speaks: our being is merely
the stage whereon speaks the world.
It is similar
for one who has insight to see behind the tapestry of the senses a spiritual
world, a world wherein spiritual Beings of higher Hierarchies work
and weave. To begin with, he perceives these Beings by means of
Imagination; but for his vision they become permeated with inward
life when he hears the “word”, apparently sounding to him
through himself, but in reality from out of the world.
By means of
love and devotion and surrender, accordingly, man presses his way through
the tapestry of the senses and sees beyond; and the Beings who reveal
themselves to him when he thus offers up his own being in full
surrender — these Beings he comes to perceive with the help of
what he recognises as “inner word.” The world without
begins powerfully to resound when the inner word is awakened.
*
What I have
been describing exists to-day in every human being. Only, he has no
knowledge of it and so he gives no thought to it. He must grow into
this knowledge; must learn to have it in thought and remembrance.
When we learn to know the world with the ordinary consciousness that
provides us with our intellectual concepts, we really come to
know only the passing and the past. What our intellect gives us, if
we are able to look at it in the right light, is really a survey of a
world in process of passing away. But we know that with the intellect
— as I have said — we can find the Father God. What sort
of consciousness, then, relates us to the Father God? The consciousness
that the Father God is at the foundation of a world which reveals itself
to our intellectuality is in course of wearing away.
Yes, it is
indeed so — since the middle of the 15th century man has developed
through his intellect a special faculty for studying and observing
all that is dying in the world. We analyse and test the world-corpse
with our intellectual scientific knowledge. And theologians such as
Adolph Harnack, who hold by the Father God alone, are really expounders
of that part of the world which is going down and will pass away with
the earth and disappear. They are backward-pointing men.
How is it then,
in the last resort, with a man who has completely absorbed the modern
natural science way of thinking? How is it for him, when this way of
thinking has been grafted on to him from early childhood? He learns
that out there in the world are phenomena which arise and pass away,
but that matter persists, matter is the indestructible thing. The
earth may come to an end, but matter will never be destroyed.
Certainly (he is told) a time will come when the earth will be one
vast cemetery, but the cemetery will be composed of the very same
atoms as are already there to-day. A man thus trained in thought
centres all his attention on what is passing away, and even when he
studies that which is coming into life, he really only studies
how the dying plays into it.
An Oriental
could never do this; we can see this even in the East of Europe, in the
subdued philosophical feeling of Solovieff. He does not bring it to
expression as clearly as it will have to be expressed in the
future, but he shows unmistakably that he has still enough of the
Oriental in him to see everywhere, within what is passing away and
crumbling into chaos, the springing up of the new, the birth of what
shall be in the future.
If we would
understand how this really is, we must envisage it in the following way.
All that we see of our fellow men with our senses will one day no longer
exist; whatever makes itself known to eye, ear, and so on, will at
some time in the future cease to be. Heaven and earth will pass away.
For what we see of the stars by means of our senses — that too
belongs to the things that are transient. But the “inner
word” that is formed in the inner chaos of man, in the centre
of destruction — that will live on after heaven and earth are
no longer there; it will live on even as the seed of this year's
plant will live on the plant of next year. Within man are the seeds
of world-futures. And if into these seeds men receive the Christ,
then heaven and earth may pass away, but the Logos, the Christ,
cannot pass away. Man bears within him that which will one day be,
when all he sees around him will have ceased to be.
We must put
it to ourselves in this way. I look up to the Father God. The Father God
is at the foundation of the world I can see with my senses. The world of
the senses is a revelation of Him; but it is none the less a dying,
sinking world, and it will drag man down with it if he is completely
absorbed in it, if he is able to develop only a consciousness of the
Father God. Man would then go back to the Father God; he would not be
able to evolve any further. But there is also a new world arising,
and it takes its beginning from man himself. When man ennobles his
moral ideals through coming to a Christ-consciousness and receiving
the Christ Impulse, when he forms and fashions them as they should be
formed and fashioned through the fact that the Christ has come to
earth, then something comes to life in the chaos within him, seed is
sown for the future, a new world dawns within him.
We need to
develop a keen and sensitive perception for these two worlds — the
setting and the rising world. We must feel how there is in nature a
perpetual dying. Nature wears, so to speak, a deathlike hue. But over
against this there is also in nature a continual glow of new
life, a continual coming to birth. This does not reveal itself in any
hue visible to the senses; yet if we open our hearts to nature, it
can be perceived.
We look out
into nature and see the colours, all the colours of the spectrum, from
the red at one end to the violet at the other, with all the shades
between. But if we were now to mix these colours in a certain way
— make them “colour” one another — they would
receive life. They would together become the so-called flesh colour,
Inkarnat, the colour that speaks out of man. When we look at
nature, we are looking in a certain sense at the spread-out colours
of the rainbow, the sign and symbol of the Father God. But if we look
at man, it is the Inkarnat that speaks out of the inner being
of man, for in man all the colours interpenetrate, and in such a way
as to become alive. But when we turn to a corpse, this power to take
on life is entirely absent. There, that which is man is thrown back
again into the rainbow, into the creation of the Father God. But for
the source of that which makes the rainbow into the Inkarnat,
makes it into a living unity, we must look within ourselves.
*
I have tried
to lead you, by what may have been at times a rather difficult path, to
an understanding of this inner centre of man in its true significance.
I have shown you how external matter is thrown back into nothingness,
into chaos, so that the spirit may be able to create anew. Let us
look at the whole process. The Father God works in matter, bringing
it to completion. Matter confronts us in the external world in a
great variety of ways, manifesting itself visibly to our senses. But
within ourselves this matter is thrown back into nothingness and then
permeated with pure spiritual being, filled through and through with
our moral or anti-moral ideals. There is the upspringing of new life.
We have
to see the world in this double aspect. We see first the Father God,
creating what is outwardly visible; we see how
this outwardly visible comes to an end
inside man, and is thrown back into chaos. We need to feel quite
intensely how this world, the world of the Father God comes to its
end; only then we shall be able to reach an inner understanding of
the Mystery of Golgotha. It will become clear to us how the very
thing that comes to an end, in the sense of the creation of the
Father God, is endowed with life once more by God the Son; a new
beginning is made.
Everywhere in
the Western world we can see how since the 15th century there has been a
tendency to study and investigate only the corpse-like part of
nature, only what is “setting” and passing away. In
truth, this is all that is accessible to the pure intellect on its
own account. All our so-called education and culture has been
developed under the influence of a science that concerns itself only
with what is dead. This kind of culture is directly opposed to real
Christianity. Real Christianity must have a perceptive feeling for
what is living, and for the distinction between everything that is
springing into life and everything that is on the way down. Hence the
idea most important for us to connect with the Mystery of Golgotha is
the idea of the Risen Christ, the Christ who has vanquished
death. Much depends on this. Christianity is not merely a religion of
salvation; the Oriental religions were also that. Christianity is a
religion of resurrection, a religion that awakens again to life that
which would otherwise be nothing but matter crumbling away into
nothingness.
Out in the
cosmos we have the crumbling away of matter in the moon, and in the sun
we have a perpetual coming into being, forever new and fresh. When we
get beyond ordinary sense-perception and reach the point where
Imagination is active, then we can see in the moon something that is
for ever splitting up and scattering itself abroad. There, where the
moon is situated, its matter splits up and disperses like dust into
the world. The matter of the moon is perpetually being collected from
its environment and then split up and scattered. If you look at the
moon in the consciousness of Imagination, you have a perpetual
convergence of matter to the place where the moon is; it collects
there, and then it splits up and is scattered like dust into the
cosmos. You see the moon like this: first a circle, then a smaller,
closer circle, until the circle becomes the moon itself. Then it
falls to pieces; it is strewn out over the cosmos. In the moon,
matter cannot endure a centre. It concentrates towards the
centre of the moon, but cannot endure it; it stops short there and
disperses like cosmic dust. It is only to ordinary sense-perception
that the moon appears quiet. It is not quiet. It is for ever
compressing matter together and scattering it.
When we come
to the sun, there we find it is all quite different. Through Imagination
we are able to see how matter does not collect in this way at all; true,
it does approach the centre, but then it begins to receive life in
the rays of the sun that stream out from the centre. It does not
split up and disperse; it becomes living, and spreads out life from
the centre in every direction. And together with this life it
develops astrality. In the moon there is no astrality; there is
nothing; the astrality is destroyed. But in the sun astrality unites
itself with all that streams out. The sun is in reality
permeated through and through with inner life. The centre-point
is not tolerated, any more than in the moon, but it has a fructifying
influence. In the centre of the sun lives the fructifying activity of
our cosmos. Thus in the contrast between sun and moon we can see a
cosmic manifestation of the two opposite processes: in the moon
matter is thrown back into chaos, while in the sun it is
perpetually springing and welling up with life renewed.
When we dive
down into our selves, then we look first into our own inner chaos, into
our “moon.” That is the inner moon. Matter is destroyed
there, as in the external world it is destroyed at one spot alone
— where the moon is. But then comes the influence of the sun,
entering through our senses; the sun penetrates into our inner
“moon.” The matter which is dissolving there into dust is
renewed by the sun. Here, within us, matter is constantly
falling under the moon influence, and as constantly absorbing the
activity of the sun. Such is the relationship in which we stand to
the cosmos. We must become aware of these two opposite activities in
the cosmos: the moon-nature directed towards pulverising and
scattering, and the quickening, life-giving nature of the sun.
In this way
we come to behold in that which is dispersing and crumbling to dust the
world of the Father God, which had to be there until such times as the
world changed into the world of God the Son. The world of God the Son has
its physical source in the Sun-nature of the cosmos. Moon-nature and
Sun-nature are related to one another as Father Godhead is to Son
Godhead.
During the early
Christian centuries these things were instinctively perceived.
Now they must be known again with full consciousness and
clarity of thought, if man wants to say of himself in all truth and
honesty: I am a Christian.
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