III
Prague,
31th March, 1924
In the
lecture yesterday I spoke of certain aspects of karma operating
through the earthly lives of men, and of the forming of destiny, and
I shall try to-day to give you an idea of how destiny actually takes
shape.
When a
man passes through the gate of death he comes into a spiritual world
that is not, so to speak, more devoid of happenings and beings than
our physical world, but infinitely richer. Understandable as it may
be that it is never possible to do more than describe one phenomenon
or another from the wide orbit of this spiritual world, the different
descriptions given will have conveyed some idea of the infinite
richness and manifoldness of man's life between death and a new
birth. Here on the Earth, where our life between birth and death runs
its course, we are surrounded by the several kingdoms of nature: by
minerals, plants and animals, and by the physical human kingdom.
Apart from the human kingdom, we rightly consider that the beings
comprised in these other kingdoms belong to a rank below that of man.
During his earthly existence, therefore, man feels himself —
and rightly so — as the highest being within these kingdoms of
nature. In the realm into which he enters after death, exactly the
opposite is the case: man feels himself there to be the lowest among
orders of Beings ranking above him. In Anthroposophical literature I
have, as you know, adopted for these Beings the names used in olden
times to designate the higher Hierarchies. The first is the Hierarchy
immediately above man, linked with him from above as the animal
kingdom on Earth is linked with him from below. This is the Hierarchy
of the Angeloi, Archangeloi and Archai. Then, above this Hierarchy,
comes that of the Exusiai, Dynamis, Kyriotetes, and then the highest
Hierarchy of all — the Thrones, Cherubim and Seraphim. There
are nine ranks, three times three ranks of Beings higher than man.
Between each group of three higher ranks (ranging from below upwards)
there is a parallelism with the three lower stages (ranking from
above downwards) of animal, plant, mineral. — Only by
including all these ranks have we a complete picture of the world to which
man belongs.
Human
existence may also be characterised by saying that at physical birth
or conception man passes from a purely spiritual existence into the
realm of the natural orders of animal, plant, mineral; when he passes
through the gate of death he enters the realm of Beings ranking above
him. Between birth and death he lives in a physical body which
connects him with the kingdoms of nature; between death and a new
birth he lives in a ‘spirit body' which connects him with
the Beings of the higher Hierarchies. Here on Earth our attention is
directed, first and foremost, to our environment; we feel on a level
with this world and from the Earth we look upwards to the Heavens, to
the realm of spirit — whatever may be the designation used in
the different religions. From the Earth man looks upwards with his
longings, with his piety, with his highest aspirations in earthly
existence. And in trying to envisage the spiritual realm above him,
he uses imagery borrowed from the earthly world, he pictures what is
above him in forms derived from earthly existence. In the life
between death and a new birth it is the opposite: his gaze then is
directed downwards from above. You may say, “But this means
that his gaze is directed to an inferior world.” That is not
the case, for the earthly world presents a quite different aspect
when seen from above. And precisely in the study of karma it will
become clear to us how different happenings on the Earth appear when
seen from above.
Having
entered the spiritual world through the gate of death, we come, first
of all, into the realm of the lowest Hierarchy: Angeloi, Archangeloi,
Archai. We feel linked with this next higher Hierarchy and we are
aware that just as in the earthly realm everything around us means
something to our senses, what the spiritual realm contains means
something to the innermost core of our soul. We speak of minerals, of
plants, of animals, inasmuch as we see them with our eyes and touch
them with our hands, inasmuch as they are perceptible in a material
sense. Between death and a new birth we speak of Angeloi,
Archangeloi, Archai, inasmuch as these Beings have a connection with
the innermost core of the soul. And passing on through the long
existence spent between death and a new birth, we learn gradually to
become part of the life of the Beings of the next higher Hierarchy
who are concerned with us and with one another. These Beings are as
it were the link connecting us with the spiritual outer world. During
the first period of life between death and a new birth we are also
very deeply occupied with ourselves, for the Third Hierarchy has to
do with our own inner life and being. But then, after a certain time,
our gaze widens: we come to know the spiritual world outside us, the
objective spiritual world. Our leaders here are the Exusiai, the
Dynamis, the Kyriotetes. They bring us into connection with the
spiritual outer world. Just as here on Earth we speak of what is
around us — mountains, rivers, forests, fields, whatever it may
be — so do we speak in yonder world of that to which the Beings
of the Second Hierarchy lead us. That is now our environment. But
this environment is not a world of objects like the Earth; everything
lives and has being, lives as spiritual reality. Nor in this life
between death and a new birth do we come to know Beings only; we come
to know their deeds as well, we feel that we ourselves are
participating in these deeds.
But then
a time comes when we feel how the Beings of the Third Hierarchy
— Angeloi, Archangeloi, Archai — and the Beings of the
Second Hierarchy — Exusiai, Dynamis, Kyriotetes — are
working together with us at what we ourselves are to become in the
next earthly life. A mighty, awe inspiring vista opens before us. We
behold the activities of the Angeloi, Archangeloi and Archai and we
perceive how these Beings act in relation to one another. Pictures
come to us of what is proceeding among these Beings of the Third
Hierarchy; but all these pictures are related to ourselves. And
gazing at these pictures of the deeds of the Third Hierarchy, it
dawns upon us that they represent the counterpart, the counter image
of the attitude of soul, of the inner quality of mind and heart that
characterised us in the last earthly life. We now no longer say in
terms of an abstract idea of conscience, “You were a man who
acted unjustly to this person or that, whose thoughts were
unjust.” No, in the majestic pictures of the deeds of the
Angeloi, Archangeloi and Archai, we behold the fruits of our attitude
of mind and heart, of our life of soul, of our mode of thinking, in
the last earthly life; we perceive images of this in what the Beings
of the Third Hierarchy are doing. Our attitude, our feelings towards
other individuals, towards other earthly things, are now outspread in
the spiritual sphere of the Universe. And we become aware of what our
thinking and our feeling signify. Here on the Earth this inner
activity manifests in Maya, as if it were enclosed within our skin.
Not so in the life between death and a new birth. The manner of its
appearance then is such that we know that whatever thoughts, feelings
or sentiments we unfold are part of the whole world, work into and
affect the whole world.
Echoing
the East, many people speak of Maya, of the illusion of the external
world; but it remains an abstract thought. Studies like those we have
been pursuing make us aware of the deep import of the words:
“The world surrounding us is Maya, the great illusion.”
We realise, too, what an illusory view prevails of the life of soul.
We think that this is our affair and ours alone, for the truth is
revealed only during our existence between death and a new birth. We
perceive then that what seemed to be enclosed within us forms the
content of a vast and majestic spiritual world. As our life after
death continues, we observe how the Beings of the Second Hierarchy,
the Exusiai, Dynamis and Kyriotetes, are connected with the faculties
we have acquired in earthly life as the fruits of diligence,
activity, interest in the things and happenings of the Earth. For
having cast into mighty pictures our interest and diligence during
the last earthly life, the Exusiai, Dynamis and Kyriotetes then
proceed to shape images of the talents and faculties we shall possess
in our next earthly life. In the images and pictures fashioned by the
Beings of the Second Hierarchy we behold what talents and faculties
will be ours in the next incarnation.
The
course of this life continues and when the middle point of time
between death and a new birth is about to be reached, something of
particular importance takes place. From our habitations here on Earth
— especially in those moments when as we look upwards to the
firmament of heaven the stars send down their shimmering radiance
— we feel the sublimity of the heavens above us. But something
of far greater splendour is experienced as we gaze downwards now
— from the realms of spirit. For then we behold the deeds of
the Beings of the First Hierarchy, of the Seraphim, Cherubim and
Thrones working in mutual interrelationship. Mighty pictures of
spiritual happenings are revealed to us as we gaze downwards —
for our heaven now lies below. Just as in physical existence on Earth
we gaze at the starry script above us, so when we look downwards from
the realm of spirit we behold the deeds of the Seraphim, Cherubim and
Thrones. And in this spiritual existence we are aware that what is
proceeding among these Beings, revealed in sublime, majestic
pictures, has something to do with what we ourselves are and shall
become. For now we feel that what is taking place there among the
Seraphim, Cherubim and Thrones reveals the consequences which our
deeds of the previous earthly life will have in the earthly life to
come. We perceive how in earthly life we behaved in this way to one
individual, in that way to another individual, how we were
compassionate or pitiless, whether our deeds were good or evil. Our
attitude and disposition are the concern of the Third Hierarchy, our
deeds of the First Hierarchy, the Seraphim, Cherubim and Thrones.
Then, in the cosmic memory now alive in us, there arises a
shattering, awe inspiring realisation of our deeds and actions
between birth and death in the last earthly life. Down below we
behold the deeds of spiritual Beings, of Seraphim, Cherubim, Thrones.
What are they doing? They show us, in pictures, what our experiences
with individuals with whom we had some relationship in the previous
incarnation will have to become in the new relationship that will be
established in order that mutual compensation may be made for what
happened between us in the previous life. And from the way in which
the Seraphim, Cherubim and Thrones work in cooperation, we realise
that the great problem is there being solved. When I have dealings
with an individual in some earthly life, I myself prepare the
compensatory adjustment; the work performed by the Seraphim, Cherubim
and Thrones merely ensures that the compensation will be made, that
it will become reality. And it is these Beings who also ensure that
the other individual with whom I shall again make contact is led to
me in the same way as I am led to him. It is the majestic experiences
arising from the pictures of the deeds of the higher Hierarchies
which are recorded by the Moon Beings and subsequently inscribed by
them in our astral body when the time comes for the descent to
another earthly existence. Together with us in the life between death
and a new birth, these Moon Beings witness what is happening in order
that the adjustment of the previous earthly life may take place in a
subsequent life.
This, my dear friends, will
give you an inkling of the majesty and grandeur of what is here
revealed, as compared with the sense world. But you will realise,
too, that the things of the sense world conceal far, far more than
they actually make manifest.
Having lived through the
region of the Seraphim, Cherubim and Thrones, man passes to still
other realms of existence. More and more the longing arises in him
for a new incarnation in which compensation can be made for what he
did and experienced in his previous earthly life.
Anthroposophy has failed in its purpose when it remains a
mere collection of ideas and conceptions, when people speak
abstractly of the existence of karma, of the way in which one
incarnation works over into another. Anthroposophy is only fulfilling
its real purpose when it speaks not only to the head but awakens in
the heart a feeling, a discernment, of the impressions that can be
received in the super-sensible world through the Beings of that world.
It seems to me that nobody with an unprejudiced, receptive mind can
listen to such communications about the super-sensible world as I am
now giving, without being inwardly stirred. We ought to be able to
realise that although here on Earth we live through the whole gamut
of human experiences, from deepest suffering to supreme happiness,
what we are able to experience of the spiritual world should affect
us far more potently than the most intense suffering or the highest
happiness. We can only have the right relationship to the spiritual
world when we admit, “In comparison with earthly sufferings or
earthly happiness, what we are able to experience of the truths and
beings of the spiritual world remains shadowy” — as
indeed it does to those who merely listen to information about
Initiation science. But to Initiates themselves it is far from
shadowy. We should also be able to say, “I can feel how deeply
what is here imparted about the spiritual world would affect the
soul, if the soul had only sufficient strength and energy.” A
man should ascribe it to earthly weakness if he is incapable of
experiencing every degree of feeling, from fiery enthusiasm to
deepest suffering, when he hears about the spiritual world and the
Beings of that world. If he ascribes to his own weakness the fact
that he is unable to feel these things with due intensity, then the
soul has gone some way towards establishing the true and right
relationship to the spiritual world.
When all
is said and done, what value is there in spiritual knowledge if it
cannot penetrate to the concrete facts or indicate what is really
taking place in the spiritual world! We do not expect our fellow men
on Earth to talk about a meadow in the way that pantheists or monists
or would-be philosophers talk about the Godhead; we expect a detailed
description of the meadow. And the same applies to the spiritual
world. It must be possible to describe the concrete details. People
to-day are still unaccustomed to this. Many who are not out and out
materialists will accept generalities about the existence of a
spiritual world and so forth. But when this spiritual world is
described in detail they often become indignant because they will not
admit that it is possible to speak in this way of the Beings and
happenings of the spiritual world. If human civilisation is not to
fall into chaos, more and more will have to be said about the
realities of the spiritual world. For earthly happenings too remain
obscure when people have no understanding of what lies behind
them.
In this
connection, my dear friends, there is something in the destiny of the
Anthroposophical Society that strikes a note of tragedy. But if the
necessary understanding for these things becomes more widespread, at
any rate among Anthroposophists themselves, there is justification
for hoping that good may develop out of the tragedy, that from the
Anthroposophical Society there may go forth a quickening of the
civilisation that is so obviously heading for the chaos of
materialism. But if that quickening is to be a reality, something
must be understood which at the beginning was not understood —
which can more easily be understood to-day because more than two
decades of effort have passed since the founding of Anthroposophical
work.
At the
beginning, as you know, the Anthroposophical Movement was within the
Theosophical Movement. When we founded in Berlin the Section from
which the Anthroposophical Society eventually developed, I wanted at
our first gathering to strike a kind of keynote for what ought really
to have followed. And now that we have tried through the Christmas
Meeting at the Goetheanum to reorganise the Anthroposophical
Society, I am able to speak about a certain fact to which probably
very little attention has been paid hitherto. Nor could it have been
otherwise here, because as far as is known to me none of our friends
from Bohemia was present at the time. I gave a first lecture which
was similar in character to the lectures given later on to the
Groups. This first lecture had an unusual title, one which might at
the time have been considered rather daring. The title was:
“Studies of the practical working of karma.”
(Praktische Karmaübungen.)
My intention was to speak quite openly about the way in which karma
works.
Now the
leading lights of the Theosophical Movement who at that time regarded
me as something of an intruder, were present at the meeting and they
were convinced at the outset that I was not qualified to speak of
inner, spiritual matters. At that period the leading lights of the
old Theosophical Movement were always reiterating: “Science
must be upheld, account must be taken of modern science. ...”
Well and good — but nothing much came of it. Things have now
been set on the right path but only the very first steps have been
taken; nor will anything essential have been achieved until we have
advanced beyond these first steps. And so what was intended in those
early days all became rather theoretical. “Studies of the
practical working of karma” were announced but nobody at that
time would have understood their import, least of all the leading
lights of the Theosophical Society. It therefore remained a task
which had to be pursued under the surface as it were of the
Anthroposophical stream, performed as an obligation to the spiritual
world. But to-day — and how often it has been so during the
development of the Anthroposophical Movement — I am reminded of
the title of what was to have been the first Anthroposophical Group
lecture: “Studies of the practical working of karma.” I
can also remember how shocked the leading lights of the Theosophical
Society were by such a presumptuous title.
But time
marches on and more than two decades have elapsed since then —
much has been prepared, but this preparatory work must also have its
results. And so to-day these results must become reality.
“Studies of the practical working of karma” which one
desired — rather boldly — to begin at that time, must be
actually undertaken. Such indeed was the aim of our Christmas
Meeting: to bring real and living esotericism into the
Anthroposophical Movement. This must be taken in all earnestness. By
formalism alone the Anthroposophical Movement will have no
regenerating effect upon our civilisation. In the future we must not
shrink from speaking quite openly about the things of the spiritual
world.
I want
to begin to-day to speak of spiritual realities underlying earthly
happenings and the life of humanity on Earth. Within the whole
process of earthly evolution stands the Mystery of Golgotha —
the Event which imbued this evolution with meaning. To deeper
observation, everything that preceded this Event was in the nature of
preparation. And although on account of the shortcomings of men and
the influence of the Luciferic and Ahrimanic Powers from the
spiritual side, the impediments to progress are more in evidence than
the progress itself, it is nevertheless true that since the Mystery
of Golgotha everything proceeding from the physical and spiritual
worlds alike has come to pass for the sake of bringing man further
along the path of world evolution as a whole. The gifts of
Christianity to humanity will — if men prove worthy to receive
them in their deeper, spiritual significance — be revealed only
in times to come. But the essential impulse — and this applies,
as well, to everything that Anthroposophy can achieve — lies in
the Mystery of Golgotha.
We know
that the influence of the Mystery of Golgotha made its way, to begin
with, across the South of Europe and on into Middle Europe. But I do
not want to speak of that to-day. I want you to think of how
Christianity spread across the North of Africa into European
civilisation. You know that some six hundred years after the founding
of Christianity through the Mystery of Golgotha, a different
religious stream — the stream of Mohammedanism — spread
across from Asia. In contrast to Christianity, the spiritual life
that is connected with the name of Mohammed expresses itself more in
abstractions. In Christianity there are many more direct descriptions
of the spiritual world than there are in Mohammedanism. But it has
been the destiny of Mohammedanism to absorb much ancient science,
much ancient culture. We see how Mohammedanism comes over from Asia
and spreads in the wake of Christianity. It is an interesting
spectacle. We see the stream of Christianity flowing towards the
North, reaching Middle Europe; we see, too, how Mohammedanism twines
as it were around this Christian stream — across North Africa,
Spain and on into France.
Now it
is quite easy to realise that had Christianity alone been at work,
European culture would have taken a quite different form. In an
outer, political sense it is of course true that Europe repulsed the
waves of Mohammedanism — or better said, of Arabism. But anyone
who observes the spiritual life of Europe will realise, for example,
that our modern way of thinking — the materialistic spirit on
the one side and science with its clear cut, arabesque like logic on
the other — would not have developed had Arabism not worked on,
despite its setbacks. From Spain, from France, from Sicily, from
North Africa, mighty and potent influences have had their effect upon
European thinking, have moulded it into forms it would not have
assumed had Christianity alone been at work. In our modern science
there is verily more Arabism than Christianity!
Later
on, as a result of the Crusades, much Eastern culture — by
then, of course, in the throes of decadence — came directly to
the ken of the European peoples. Many of the secrets of Eastern
culture found their way to Europe through this channel. In Western
civilisation, above the stratum of Christianity, lie those elements
of oriental spiritual life which were absorbed into Arabism. But you
see, none of this is really understandable when perceived only from
the outside; it must all be perceived from within. And from within,
the spectacle presented to us is that although wars and victories
brought about the suppression of Arabism and the bearers of
Mohammedanism, the Moors and so forth, nevertheless the souls of
these people were born again and continued to work. Nothing whatever
can be gained from abstract accounts of how Arabism made its way to
Europe from Spain; insight can only arise from a knowledge of the
inner, concrete facts.
We will
consider one such fact. At the time of Charles the Great in European
history — it was at the end of the 8th and beginning of the 9th
centuries — Haroun al Raschid
[]
was living over in Asia, in Baghdad, in an entourage of brilliant
oriental scholarship. Everything then existing in the way of Western
Asiatic learning, indeed of Asiatic learning in general, had been
brought together at the Court of Haroun al Raschid. True, it was all
steeped in Mohammedanism, but everything in the way of culture
— mathematics, philosophy, architecture, commerce, industry,
geography, medicine, astronomy — was fostered at this Court by
the most enlightened men in Asia. People to-day have little
conception of the grandeur and magnificence of what was achieved at
the Court of Haroun al Raschid. First and foremost there was Haroun
al Raschid himself — not by any means a ruler of mediocre
intelligence or one who merely for the sake of self glorification
called to his Court the greatest sages of Western Asia, but a
personality who in spite of unwavering adherence to Mohammedanism was
open and receptive to everything that oriental civilisation had to
offer. At the time when Charles the Great was struggling with
difficulty to master the rudiments of reading and writing, much
brilliant learning flourished at the Court of Baghdad. The conditions
in which Charles the Great lived are not comparable in any way with
those brought into being by Haroun al Raschid.
This was
at a time when many regions of Western Asia and wide territories in
Africa had already adopted Mohammedanism, and the brilliant learning
cultivated at the Court of Haroun al Raschid had spread far and wide.
But among the wise men at that Court — men deeply versed in
geography, in nature lore, in medicine and so forth — was many
a one who in still earlier incarnations had belonged to ancient
Mystery Schools. For men who were Initiates in an earlier life do not
always give direct evidence of this in another incarnation. In spite
of having been an Initiate in earlier Mysteries, it is only possible
for a man in any given epoch to absorb the spirituality and develop
the constitution of soul which the body of that particular epoch
allows. Seen in its essential nature, the life of the soul does not
tally with the intellectual ideas of the psyche in man prevailing at
the present time. The soul lies at a far deeper level than is usually
imagined.
Let me
give you an example. Think of a personality like Ernst Haeckel
[].
The first impression one gets of him is that his view of the world is
coloured by materialism, that he expounds a kind of mechanism by
which the life of nature and also the life of soul is determined,
that in his invectives against Catholicism he is sometimes
fascinating, sometimes fanatic, and sometimes, too, lacking in taste.
One who is cognisant of the threads connecting the different earthly
lives of a human being will pay little attention to these traits; he
will look at the deeper qualities of soul. Nobody who in trying to
observe the actual manifestations of karma allows himself to be
blinded by Haeckel's most striking external characteristics will be
able to discover his previous incarnation. In order to find Haeckel's
previous incarnation attention must be paid to the way and manner in
which he expounded his views. The fact that Haeckel's erudition bore
the stamp of materialism is due to the age in which he lived; that,
however, is unimportant; what is important is the inner constitution
and attitude of soul. If this is perceived by occult sight, then in
the case of Haeckel the gaze is led back to Pope Gregory VII
[],
the former Abbot Hildebrand — actually one of the most
impassioned advocates of Catholicism. If one compares the two
personages, knowing that both come into the picture here, one will
perceive that they are the same and also learn to recognise the
unessentials and the essentials in respect of the great affairs of
humanity as a whole. The theoretical ideas themselves are by no means
the prime essential; they are only essential in this abstract,
materialistic age of ours. Behind the scenes of world history it is
the quality, the modus
operandi, of the soul that is all
important. And when this is grasped it will certainly be possible to
perceive the similarity between Gregory VII and his reincarnation as
Haeckel.
Insight
of this kind has to be acquired in studying the concrete realities of
karma, and if it is to mean anything to us to be told that at the
Court of Haroun al Raschid, for example, there were men who, although
their physical bodies and education make them appear outwardly to be
typical products of the 8th and 9th centuries, were nevertheless the
reincarnations of Initiates in ancient Mysteries. When the eye of
spirit is directed to this Court, a certain personality stands out in
bold relief — one who was a deeply discerning, influential
counsellor of Haroun al Raschid, and for that epoch a man of great
universality. A remarkable destiny lay behind him. In a much earlier
incarnation, and in the same region afterwards ruled over by Haroun
al Raschid, but inhabited, then, by quite different peoples, he had
participated in all the Initiations which had there taken place, and
in a later incarnation, as a different personality, he had striven
for Initiation with deep and intense longing, but was unable to
achieve it because at that time destiny prevented it. Such a
personality lived at the Court of Haroun al Raschid but was for this
reason obliged to conceal deep down in his inner life what lay within
him as the fruits of the earlier incarnation as an Initiate. The
inability to achieve Initiation occurred in a later incarnation and
after that came the incarnation at the Court of Haroun al Raschid.
And at this Court, for the reason that in those times Initiations in
the old sense were no longer possible — this personality was
one who out of a strong inner impulse and with powerful and sound
imagination, organised and vitalised everything that was cultivated
at this Court. Scholars, artists, a whole host of poets,
representatives of all the sciences, were to be found there; moreover
Baghdad itself at that time was the centre of the very widespread
scientific and artistic activity prevailing in the empire of the
Caliphs. The organisation of it all was the work of this personality
— a personality endowed with great powers of initiative. Such
individuals invariably play a significant role in the onward march of
civilisation.
Let us
think of Haroun al Raschid himself. If with occult sight one discerns
the qualities of soul he possessed and then tries to discover whether
he has since reincarnated, one finds that Haroun al Raschid continued
to be associated with and to carry further what he had instituted on
Earth; having passed through the gate of death he participated,
spiritually, in the earthly evolution of mankind; from the spiritual
world his influence was considerable but he himself assimilated a
great deal. And then, in the form appropriate to the epoch, this
personality came again as Lord Bacon of Verulam
[],
the founder of modern science. From England, Bacon of Verulam. gave a
strong impetus to European thinking. You may say: but what a
different personality from Haroun al Raschid! ... Nevertheless it is
the same individuality. The outward differences are a matter of the
external world only. We see the soul of Haroun al Raschid after death
moving across from Asia and then, from the West, influencing the
later civilisation of Europe, doing much to lay the foundations of
modern materialism.
The
other personality — he who had been not only the right hand but
the very soul of Haroun al Raschid's Court and had had that strange
spiritual destiny — this personality took a different path. Far
from seeking a life of outward brilliance, the urge in this soul
after death was to unfold a rich inner life, a life of deep
inwardness. Because this was so, there could be no question of taking
a path leading to the West. Think again of Haroun al Raschid and his
Court — outward brilliance and magnificence, inner
consolidation of the fruits of civilisation, but at the same time the
impulse to externalise everything contained in Mohammedanism. This
was bound to come to expression in a subsequent incarnation. The wide
and all embracing application of scientific method had to come to the
fore — and so indeed it did. The outward brilliance that had
characterised the Court of Haroun al Raschid came to clear expression
in Bacon himself.
The
other personality who had been the very soul of the Court in Baghdad
was of a deeply inward nature, closely related to what had been
cultivated in the ancient Mysteries. This could not come to
expression — not at any rate until our own time when, since
Kali Yuga is over and the Michael Age has begun, it is possible once
again to speak openly of the spiritual. Nevertheless it was found
possible to pour what had been received from the Mysteries in such
volume and with such vital power into civilisation that its influence
was profound. Something of the kind may be said in connection with
the other personality whose development in the spiritual world after
death was such that finally, when the time arrived for a new
incarnation, he could not land, so to speak, in the Western world
where materialism had its rise; he was led, inevitably, to Middle
Europe and was able there to give expression to the impulse deriving
from the ancient Mysteries but conforming with the altered conditions
of the times. This personality lived as Amos Comenius
[].
And so in the later course of world history these two souls who had
lived together at the Court of Baghdad took different paths: the one
as it were circling the South of Europe in order, from the West, as
Bacon of Verulam, to become the organising genius in modern
literature, philosophy and the sciences; the other taking the
overland path — as did the Crusades — towards Middle
Europe. He too was a great and gifted organiser but the effects of
what he achieved were of an entirely different character. It is a
wonderful and deeply impressive spectacle — there they were,
Amos Comenius and Bacon of Verulam, having taken different paths. The
fact that the period of their lives did not exactly coincide is
connected with world karma, but ultimately — if I may express
it in a trivial way — they met in Middle Europe. And a great
deal that is needed in civilisation would become reality if the
esoteric influences contained in the work of Amos Comenius were to
unite with the power achieved by the technical sciences founded
through Bacon of Verulam. This outcome of the paths taken by two
souls who in the 8th and 9th centuries worked at the Court of Haroun
al Raschid is one of the most wonderful illustrations of how world
history runs its course. Haroun al Raschid makes his way across
Africa and Southern Europe to England, whence his influence works
over into Middle Europe; Amos Comenius takes the path which brings
him to Middle Europe, and in what develops from his achievements
there he meets the other soul.
Only
when history is studied in this way does it become reality. What
passes over from one epoch of world history so into another does not
consist of abstract concepts; it is human souls themselves who carry
onward the fruits of each epoch. We can only understand how what
makes its appearance in a later epoch has come over from an earlier
one, when we perceive how the souls themselves develop onwards from
one epoch to the next. The distinction between what is called
‘Maya' and inner reality must everywhere be taken
earnestly. Perceived in its outward aspect only, history is itself
Maya; it can only be rightly understood by getting away from the Maya
and penetrating to the truth.
We will
continue these studies in the next lecture to Members. May the right
kind of understanding be forthcoming as we now pursue the task
inaugurated by the Christmas Foundation Meeting: to make into a
reality what was announced at the very beginning, perhaps rather
naively, as ‘Studies of the practical working of karma.'
After preparation that has been going on for decades now, a genuine
study of karma and of its manifestations will certainly be possible
in the Anthroposophical Society without causing misunderstanding and
apprehension.
Notes:
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