How many people are there to-day who, as they walk through the streets
at this season and see all the preparations made for the Christmas
Festival, have any clear or profound idea of what it means? How seldom
do we find evidence of any clear ideas of this Festival, and even when
they exist, how far removed they are from the intentions of those who
once inaugurated the great Festivals as tokens of what is eternal and
imperishable in the world! A glance at the Christmas Reflections as
they are called, in the newspapers, is quite sufficient proof of this.
Surely there can be nothing more dreary and at the same time more
estranged from the subject than the thoughts sent out into the world
on printed pages in this way.
To-day we shall try to bring before our minds a kind of summary of the
knowledge revealed to us by Spiritual Science. I do not, of course,
mean any kind of pedantic summary; I mean a gathering-together of all
that the Christmas Festival can bring home to our hearts if we regard
Spiritual Science not as a dull, grey theory, not as an outer
confession, not as a philosophy, but as a real and vital stream of
life pulsating through and through us.
The man of to-day confronts Nature around him as a stranger. He is far
more of a stranger to Nature than he thinks, far more even than he was
in the time of Goethe. Is there anyone who still feels the depth of
words spoken by Goethe at the beginning of the Weimar period of his
life? He addressed a Hymn, a kind of prayer to Nature with all her
mysterious powers:
Nature! we are surrounded and embraced by her; we cannot draw back
from her, nor can we penetrate more deeply into her being. She lifts
us unasked and unwarned into the gyrations of her dance and whirls us
away until we fall exhausted from her arms ... All men are within
her and she in all men ... We are obedient to her laws even when we
would fain oppose them ... She (Nature) is all in all. She alone
praises and she alone punishes herself, Let her do with me what she
will; she will not cherish hatred for her created work. It was not I
who spoke of her, Nay, it was she who spoke it all, true and false.
Hers is the blame for all things, hers is the credit ...
Verily, we are all Nature's children. And when we think we are least
of all obedient to her, it may be that just then we are acting most
strictly in accordance with the great laws which pervade the realm of
Nature and stream into our own being. Again, there are so few who
really feel the depth of other pregnant words of Goethe in which he
tries to express the feeling of communion with the hidden forces
common to Nature and to the human being. I refer to that passage in
Faust where Goethe addresses Nature, not as the dead, lifeless being
conceived of by materialistic thinkers of to-day, but as a living
Spirit:
Spirit sublime, Thou gav'st me, gav'st me all
For which I prayed. Not unto me in vain
Hast thou thy countenance revealed in fire.
Thou gav'st me Nature as a kingdom grand,
With power to feel and to endure it. Thou
Not only cold, amazed acquaintance yield'st,
But grantest, that in her profoundest breast
I gaze, as in the bosom of a friend.
The ranks of living creatures thou dost lead
Before me, teaching me to know my brothers
In air and water and the silent wood.
And when the storm in forests roars and grinds,
The giant firs, in falling, neighbour bough
And neighbour trunks with crushing weight bear down,
And falling, fill the hills with hollow thunders,
Then to the cave secure thou leadest me,
Then show'st me mine own self, and in my breast
The deep, mysterious miracles unfold.
(Translation by BAYARD TAYLOR)
This was the mood of soul which Goethe's knowledge and feeling for
Nature awakened in him and these words were an attempt to bring to
life again a mood which filled men's hearts in an age when wisdom
itself was still organically united by living ties to Nature. And it
was as tokens of this feeling at one with Nature and the universe
that the great Festivals were inaugurated.
The Festivals have become abstractions, matters of indifference to
modern people. The word as a medium of strife and blasphemy often
means more than the Word conceived as the power by which the world
itself was created. Yet the alphabetical word ought to be the
representative, the symbol of the Word Creative in Nature around us,
in the great universe and within us too when self-knowledge awakens,
and of which all mankind can be made conscious by those who truly
understand the course of Nature. It was for this that the Festivals
were instituted and with the knowledge we have gleaned from Spiritual
Science we will try to understand what it was that the wise men of old
set out to express in the Christmas Festival.
Christmas is not a Festival of Christendom only. In ancient Egypt, in
the regions we ourselves inhabit, and in Asia thousands and thousands
of years before the Christian era we find that a Festival was
celebrated on the days now dedicated to the celebration of the birth
of Christ.
Now what was the character of this Festival which since time
immemorial has been celebrated all over the world on the same days of
the year? Wonderful Fire Festivals in the northern and central regions
of Europe in ancient times were celebrated among the Celts in
Scandinavia, Scotland and England by their priests, the Druids. What
were they celebrating? They were celebrating the time when winter
draws to its close and spring begins. It is quite true that Christmas
falls while it is still winter, but Nature is already heralding a
victory which can be a token of hope in anticipation of the victory
that will come in spring a token of confidence, of hope, of faith
to use words which are connected in nearly every language with the
Festival of Christmas. There is confidence that the Sun, again in the
ascendant, will be victorious over the opposing powers of Nature. The
days draw in and draw in, and this shortening of the days seems to us
to be an expression of the dying, or rather of the falling asleep of
the Nature-forces. The days grow shorter and shorter up to the time
when we celebrate the Christmas Festival and when our forefathers also
celebrated it, in another form. Then the days begin to draw out again
and the light of the Sun celebrates its victory over the darkness. In
our age of materialistic thinking this is an event to which we no
longer give much consideration.
In olden times it seemed to men in whom living feeling was united with
wisdom, to be an expression of an experience of the Godhead Himself,
the Godhead by Whom their lives were guided. The solstice was a
personal experience of a higher being as personal an experience as
when some momentous event forces a man to come to a vital decision.
And it was even more than this. The waxing and waning of the days was
not only an expression of an event in the life of a higher Being, but
a token of something greater still, of something momentous and unique.
This brings us to the true meaning of Christmas as a Festival of the
very highest order in cosmic and human life. In the days when genuine
occult teaching was not disowned as it is today by materialistic
thought but was the very wellspring of the life of the peoples, the
Christmas Festival was a kind of memorial, a token of remembrance of a
great happening on the Earth. At the hour of midnight the priests
gathered around them their truest disciples, those who were the
teachers of the people, and spoke to them of a great Mystery. (I am
not telling you anything that has been cleverly thought out or
discovered by a process of abstract deduction but was actually
experienced in the Mysteries, in the secret Sanctuaries of those
remote times). This Mystery was connected with the victory of the Sun
over the darkness. There was a time on the Earth when the light
triumphed over the darkness. And it happened thus: in that epoch, all
physical, all bodily life on Earth had reached the stage of animality
only. The highest kingdom upon the Earth had only reached a stage at
which it was preparing to receive something higher. And then there
came that great moment in evolution when the immortal, imperishable
soul of man descended. Life had so far developed that the human body
was able to receive into itself the imperishable soul. These ancestors
of the human race stood higher in the scale of evolution than modern
scientists believe, but the higher part of their being, the divine
spark was not yet within them. The divine spark descended from a
higher planetary sphere to our Earth which was now to become the scene
of its activity, the dwelling-place of the soul which henceforward can
never be lost to us.
We call these remote ancestors of humanity the Lemurian race. Then
came the Atlantean race and the Atlantean race was followed by our own
the Aryan race. Into the bodies of the Lemurian race the human soul
descended. This descent of the divine Sons of the Spirit, this great
moment in the evolution of mankind was celebrated by the sages of all
times as the victory of the light over the darkness. Since then the
human soul has been working in the body and bringing it to higher
stages of development but not at all in the way that materialistic
science imagines. At the time when the human soul was quickened by the
Spirit, something happened in the universe, something that is one of
the most decisive events in the evolution of mankind.
In those remote ages and this is contrary to what modern science
teaches certain constellation of Earth, Moon and Sun was in
existence. It was not until then that the Sun assumed the significance
it now has in the process of man's growth and life upon the Earth and
of the other creatures belonging to the Earth the plants and
animals. Before that time, the beings on Earth were adapted to the
conditions then obtaining upon the planetary body. Only those who are
able to form a clear idea of the process of the development of the
Earth and of mankind will understand the connection of Sun, Moon and
Earth with the human being as he lives upon the Earth. There was a
time when the Earth was still united with Sun and Moon, when Sun, Moon
and Earth were still one body, The beings who dwelt upon this planet
were different in appearance from those who inhabit the Earth to-day;
they lived in forms which were suited to the conditions of existence
as they were on the planetary body consisting of Sun, Moon and Earth.
The form and essential being of everything that lives upon our Earth
is determined by the fact that first the Sun and then, later, the Moon
separated from the Earth. The forces and influences of these two
heavenly bodies henceforward played down upon the Earth from outside.
This is the basis of the mysterious connection of the Spirit of man
with the Spirit of the universe, with the Logos in Whom Sun, Moon and
Earth are all contained. In this Logos we live and move and have our
being. Just as the Earth was born from a planetary body in which the
Sun and Moon were also contained, so is man born of a Spirit, of a
Soul which belongs alike to Sun, Moon and Earth. And so when a man
looks up to the Sun, or to the Moon, he should not only see external
bodies in the heavens, but in Sun, Moon and Earth he should see the
bodies of Spiritual Beings.
This truth is utterly lost to the materialism of the age. Those who do
not see in Sun and Moon the bodies of Spiritual Beings cannot
recognise the human body as the body of the Spirit. Just as truly as
the heavenly bodies are the bodies of Spiritual Beings, so is the
human body the bearer of the Spirit. And man is connected with these
Spiritual Beings. Just as his body is separate from the forces of the
Sun and Moon and yet contains forces which are active in the Sun and
Moon, so the same spirituality which reigns in Sun and Moon is
contained within his soul. Man has evolved on Earth into the being he
is, and he is dependent upon the Sun as the heavenly body from which
the Earth receives her light.
And so in days of old, our forefathers felt themselves to be spiritual
children of the great universe and they said: We have become men
through the Sun Spirit, through the Sun Spirit from Whom the Spirit
within us proceeded. The victory of the Sun over the darkness
commemorates the victory of the Sun when it shone down upon the Earth
for the first time. The immortal soul has been victorious over the
forces of the animal nature. It was verily a victory of the Sun when,
long, long ago, the immortal soul entered into the physical body and
penetrated into the dark world of desires, impulses and passions.
Darkness preceded the victory of the Sun and this darkness had
followed a previous Sun Age. So it is with the human soul. The soul
proceeds from the Divine but it must sink for a time into the
darkness, in order, out of this darkness, to build up the vehicle for
the human soul. By slow degrees the human soul itself built up the
lower nature of man in order then to take up its abode in the
dwelling-place of its own construction. You have a correct simile for
the entry of the immortal soul of man into the human body if you
imagine an architect devoting all his powers to the building of a
house in which he then lives. But in those remote ages the soul could
only work unconsciously on its dwelling-place. The descent is
expressed by the darkness; the awakening to consciousness, the
lighting-up of the conscious human soul is expressed in this simile as
a victory of the Sun. And so to those who were still aware of man's
living connection with the universe, the victory of the Sun signified
the great moment when they had received the impulse which was
all-essential for their earthly existence. And this great moment was
perpetuated in the Christmas Festival.
And now try to think of the course of human life in connection with
the harmony of the universe. Man seems to become more and more akin to
the great rhythms of Nature. If we think of all that encompasses the
life of the soul, of the course of the Sun and everything that is
connected with it, we are struck by something that closely concerns
us, namely, the rhythm and the marvellous harmony in contrast to the
chaos and lack of harmony in the human soul. We all know how
rhythmically and with what regularity the Sun appears and disappears.
And we can picture what a stupendous upheaval there would be in the
universe if for a fraction of a second only the Sun were to be
diverted from its course. It is only because of this inviolable
harmony in the course of the Sun that our universe can exist at all,
and it is upon this harmony that the rhythmic life-process of all
beings depends. Think of the annual course of the Sun. Picture to
yourselves that it is the Sun which charms forth the plants in spring
time and then think how difficult it is to make the violet or some
other plant flower out of due season. Seed-time and harvest,
everything, even the very life of animals is dependent upon the
rhythmic course of the Sun. And in the being of man himself everything
that is not connected with his feelings, his desires and his passions,
or with his ordinary thinking, is rhythmic and harmonious. Think of
the pulse, of the process of digestion and you will feel the mighty
rhythm and marvel at the wisdom implicit in the whole of Nature.
Compare with this the irregularity, the chaos of man's passions and
desires, especially of his ideas and thoughts. Think of the regularity
of your pulse, your breathing, and then of the irregularity, the
erratic nature of your thinking, feeling and willing. With what wisdom
the powers of life are governed where the prevailing rhythmic forces
meet the challenge of the chaotic! And how greatly the rhythms of the
human body are outraged by man's passions and cravings! Those who have
studied anatomy know how marvellously the heart is constructed and
regulated and how wonderfully it is able to stand the strain put upon
it by the drinking of tea, coffee and spirits.
There is wisdom in every part of the divine, rhythmic Nature to which
our forefathers looked up with such veneration and the very soul of
which is the Sun with its regular, rhythmic course. And as the wise
men of old looked upwards to the Sun, they said to their disciples:
Thou art the image of what the soul born within thee has yet to
become and what it will become. The divine cosmic Order was revealed
in all its glory to the sages of old. And again, in the Christian
religion we have the Gloria in excelsis. The meaning of gloria
is revelation, not glory in the sense of honour. Therefore we should
not say: Glory (honour) to God in the highest, but rather: To-day
is the revelation of the Divine in the heavens! The birth of the
Redeemer makes us aware of the Glory streaming through the wide
universe.
In earlier times this cosmic harmony was placed as a great Ideal
before those who were to be leaders among their fellow-men. Therefore
in all ages and wherever there was consciousness of these things, men
spoke of Sun Heroes. In the temples and sanctuaries of the Mysteries
there were seven degrees of Initiation. I will speak of them as they
were known in ancient Persia.
The first stage is attained when a man's ordinary feeling and thinking
is raised to a higher level, where knowledge of the Spirit is
attained. Such a man received the name of Raven. It is the Ravens
who inform the Initiates in the temples what is happening in the world
outside. When medieval poetic wisdom desired to depict in the person
of a great Ruler an Initiate who amid the treasures of wisdom
contained in the Earth must await the great moment when newly revealed
depths of Christianity rejuvenate mankind when this poetic wisdom
of the Middle Ages created the figure of Barbarossa, ravens were his
heralds. The Old Testament, too, speaks of the ravens in the story of
Elijah.
Those who had reached the second stage of Initiation were known as
Occultists; at the third stage they were Warriors, at the fourth,
Lions. At the fifth stage of Initiation a man was called by the name
of his own people: he was a Persian, Indian, or whatever it might
be. For that man alone who had reached the fifth degree of Initiation
was regarded as a true representative of his people. At the sixth
stage a man was a Sun Hero or one who runs in the paths of the
Sun. And at the seventh stage he was a Father.
Why was an Initiate of the sixth degree known as a Sun Hero? To reach
this level on the ladder of spiritual knowledge a man must have
developed an inner life in harmony with the divine rhythms pulsating
through the cosmos. His life of feeling and of thinking must have rid
itself of chaos, of all disharmony, and his inner life of soul must
beat in perfect accord with the rhythm of the Sun in the heavens. Such
was the demand made upon men at the sixth degree of Initiation. They
were looked upon as holy men, as Ideals, and it was said that if a Sun
Hero were to deviate from the divine path of this spiritual harmony,
it would be as great a calamity as if the Sun were to deviate from its
course. A man whose spiritual life had found a path as sure as that of
the Sun in the heavens was called a Sun Hero, and there were Sun
Heroes among all the peoples.
Our scholars know remarkably little about these things. They are aware
that Sun myths are connected with the lives of all the great Founders
of religions, but what they do not know is that at the Initiation
Ceremony it was the custom for the leading figures to be made into Sun
Heroes. It is not really so surprising that materialistic research
should rediscover these things. Sun myths have been sought for and
found in connection with Buddha and with the Christ.
The Sun-Soul was the great example for the way in which a man's life
must be ordered. How did the ancients conceive of the soul of a Sun
Hero who had reached this inner harmony? They pictured to themselves
that no longer did a single individual human soul live within him, but
that forces of the cosmic Soul were streaming into him. This cosmic
Soul was known in Greece as Chrestos, in the sublime wisdom of the
East as Budhi. When a man no longer feels himself a single being, as
the bearer of an individual soul, but experiences something of the
universal Soul, he has created within himself an image of the union of
the Sun-Soul with the human body and he has attained something of the
very greatest significance in the evolution of mankind.
If we think of these men with all their nobility of soul, we shall be
able to some extent to visualise the future of the human race and the
relation of the future to the ideal of mankind generally. As humanity
is to-day, decisions are arrived at by individuals who amid
quarrelling and strife finally reach a measure of unity in
majority-resolutions. When such resolutions are still regarded as the
ideal, this is evidence that men have not realised what truth really
is. Where in us does truth exist? Truth lives in that realm of our
being where we think logically. It would be nonsense to decide by a
majority vote that 2 x 2 = 4 , or that 3 x 4 = 12 .
When man has once realised what is true, millions may come and tell him
it is not so, that it is this or it is that, but he will still have his
own inner certainty.
We have reached this point in the realm of scientific thinking, of
thinking upon which human passions, impulses and instincts no longer
impinge. Wherever passions and instincts mingle with thinking, men
still find themselves involved in strife and dispute, in wild
confusion, for the life of instincts and impulses is itself a seething
chaos. When, however, impulses, instincts and passions have been
purged and transmuted into what is known as Budhi or Chrestos,
when they have developed to the level at which logical, dispassionate
thinking stands to-day, then the ideal of the ancient wisdom, the
ideal of Christianity, the ideal of Anthroposophy will be realised. It
will then be as unnecessary to vote about what is held to be good,
ideal and right as it is to vote about what has been recognised as
logically right or logically wrong.
This ideal can stand before the soul of every human being and then he
has before him the ideal of the Sun Hero, the ideal to which every
aspirant at the sixth stage of Initiation has attained. The German
Mystics of the Middle Ages felt this and expressed it in the word
Vergöttung deification. This word existed in all the
wisdom-religions, What does it signify? Let me try to express it in
the following way. There was a time when those whom we look upon
to-day as the ruling Spirits of the universe also passed through a
stage at which mankind as a whole now stands -the stage of chaos.
These ruling Spirits have wrestled through to the divine heights from
which their forces stream through the harmonies of the universe. The
regularity with which the Sun moves through the seasons, the
regularity manifested in the growth of plants and in the life of
animals — this regularity was once chaos. Harmony has been attained at
the cost of great travail. Humanity stands to-day within the same kind
of chaos but out of the chaos there will arise a harmony modelled in
the likeness of the harmony in the universe.
When this thought takes root in our souls, not as a theory, not as a
doctrine, but as living insight, then we shall understand what
Christmas signifies in the light of anthroposophical teaching. If the
glory, the revelation of the divine harmony in the heavenly heights is
a real experience within us, and if we know that this harmony will one
day resound from our own souls, then we can also feel what will be
brought about in humanity itself by this harmony: peace among men of
good-will. These are the two thoughts or, better, the two feelings
which arise at Christmastide. When with this great vista of the divine
ordering of the world, of the revelation, the glory of the heavens, we
think of the future lying before mankind, we have a premonition even
now of that harmony which in the future will reign in those who know
that the more abundantly the harmony of the Cosmos fills the soul, the
more peace and concord there will be upon the Earth. The great ideal
of Peace stands there before us when at Christmas we contemplate the
course of the Sun. And when we think about the victory of the Sun over
the darkness during these days of Festival there is born in us an
unshakable conviction which makes our own evolving soul akin to the
harmony of the cosmos light over the darkness had always been
commemorated.
(Note 1)
And so Christianity is in harmony with all the great
world-religions. When the Christmas bells ring out, they are a
reminder to us that this Festival was celebrated all over the world,
wherever human beings knew what it signified, wherever they understood
the great truth that the soul of man is involved in a process of
development and progress on this Earth, wherever in the truest sense
man strove to reach self-knowledge.
We have been speaking to-day, not of an undefined, abstract feeling
for Nature but of a feeling that is full of life and spirituality. And
if we think of what has been said in connection with Goethe's words:
Nature! we are surrounded and embraced by thee ... it is quite
obvious that we are not speaking here in any materialistic sense, but
that we see in Nature the outward expression, the countenance of the
Divine Spirit of the Cosmos. Just as the physical is born out of the
physical, so are the soul and the Spirit born out of the Divine Soul
and the Divine Spirit. The body is connected with purely material
forces and the soul and Spirit with forces akin to their own nature.
The great Festivals exist as tokens that these things must be
understood in their connection with the whole universe; our powers of
thinking must be used in such a way that we realise our oneness with
the whole universe. When this insight lives within us, the Festivals
will change their present character and become living realities in our
hearts and souls. They will be points of focus in the year uniting us
with the all-pervading Spirit of the universe.
Throughout the year we fulfil the common tasks and duties of daily
life, and at these times of Festival we turn our attention to the
links which bind us with eternity. And although daily life is fraught
with many a struggle, at these times a feeling awakens within us that
above all the strife and turmoil there is peace and harmony.
Festivals are the commemoration of great Ideals, and Christmas is the
birth feast of the very greatest Ideal before mankind, of that Ideal
which man must strain every nerve to attain if he is to fulfil his
mission. The birth festival of all that man can feel, perceive and
will such is Christmas when it is truly understood.
The aim of Spiritual Science is to stimulate a true and deep
understanding of the Christmas Festival. We do not want to promulgate
a dogma or a doctrine, or a philosophy. Our aim is that everything we
say and teach, everything that is contained in our writings, in our
science, shall pass over into life itself.
When in all that pertains to his daily life man applies spiritual
wisdom, life will be filled with it and from all pulpits, far and
wide, godlike wisdom, the living wisdom of the Spirit will resound in
the words that are spoken to the faithful. It will then be
unnecessary to utter the actual words Spiritual Science at all. When
in Courts of Law the deeds of human beings are viewed with the eyes of
spiritual perception, when at the bed of sickness the doctor
spiritually perceives and spiritually heals, when in the schools the
teacher brings spiritual knowledge to the growing child, when in the
very streets men think and feel and act spiritually, then we shall
have reached our Ideal, for Spiritual Science will have become common
knowledge. Then too there will be a spiritual understanding of the
great turning-points of the year and the everyday experiences of man
will be truly linked with the spiritual world. The Immortal and the
Eternal, the spiritual Sun will flood the soul with light at the great
Festivals which will remind man of the divine Self within him. The
divine Self, in essence like the Sun, and radiant with light, will
prevail over darkness and chaos and will give to his soul a peace by
which all the strife, all the war and all the discord in the world
will be quelled.
- Note 1:
- We cannot here enter into the details of the wisdom-teachings of
Christianity itself which will form the subject of a later lecture.
But this much shall be said to-day: that nothing could be more
correct than to place at this time the Birth Festival of that divine
Individuality Who is to the Christian a guarantee and an assurance
that his divine soul will ultimately prevail over the darkness in the
outer world.
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