III
The
Pre-Michaelite Way, and the Way of Michael
We
shall fail to find the right light upon the new Michael-impulse
now making its way into human evolution, if we form that
conception of the relation between the modern world of Ideas
and the world of Nature, which is common at the present
day.
The usual notion is this: Outside, is the natural world with
its things and processes; inside, are the Ideas. The ideas
represent concepts of the things of Nature, or else of the
so-called laws of Nature. The primary concern of thinkers is
then to shew how to construct those particular ideas which bear
the requisite relation to the things of Nature, or from which
the true laws of Nature may be deduced.
In
all this, they attach very little importance to the connection
between these ideas and the man who has them. And yet the real
gist of the matter remains unrecognized, unless the question
first be raised: What is Man going through with the
natural-science ideas of modern times?
An
answer may be arrived at as follows:
Man's feeling to-day is that ideas are evolved within him by
the special activity of his soul. He has the feeling that he
himself is the evolver of his ideas, whereas his perceptions
intrude upon him from without.
This feeling is not one which Man always had. In older times,
the contents of his ideas seemed to him not something
manufactured by himself, but received by way of suggestion from
the supersensible world.
It
is a feeling that has passed through different stages; and the
stages depended upon the particular part of his being, with
which Man realized what he to-day calls his ‘ideas.’ To-day is
the age of the Spiritual Soul's evolution, when the statement
holds good without reservation, which was made in the recent
Leading Thoughts
{Anthroposophical Leading Thoughts, XXXIV,
page 80}:
“The Thoughts of man have their true seat in the etheric
body. There, however, they are forces of real life and being.
They imprint themselves upon the physical body, and as such
‘imprinted thoughts’ they have the shadowy character
in which the every-day consciousness knows them.”
One may go back into times when thoughts were realized directly
with the I. Then however they were not, as now, shadowy; they
were not even merely living; they were endowed with soul
and permeated with spirit. Which means, that Man did not
think thoughts; he realized a direct perception of concrete
spiritual Beings.
A
form of consciousness such as this, which looks above to a
world of spiritual Beings, is everywhere to be found amongst
the different peoples in their early ages. What remains of it,
preserved in history, is termed to-day the ‘myth-creating’
consciousness. Man is in the midst of his own true world, the
world of his origin. Whereas, with the present-day
consciousness, he withdraws himself from his own world.
Man is Spirit; and Man's world is the world of spiritual
Beings.
Then there comes a next stage, where Thought is no longer
realized by the I, but by the astral body. There, the
direct spirituality is lost to the soul's perception. Thought
appears as living and endowed with soul.
In
the first stage — the vision of concrete forms of spiritual
being — Man feels no impellent need to bring what his
vision shows him into any nearer relation with the world
perceived by his senses. The world's sensible phenomena reveal
themselves, it is true, as being the deeds of that which is
beheld by supersensible vision; but to construct a special
science of what is directly, spiritually visible to the ‘mind's
eye,’ is not a matter of urgent necessity. Moreover the world
of Spirit-Beings, shewn by vision, presents such a wealth that
the attention is arrested by this above everything else.
A
change comes with the second stage of consciousness. The
concrete Spirit-Beings conceal themselves. Their reflected
glory becomes apparent as ensouled life. Men begin to bring the
‘life of Nature’ into relation with this ‘life of
Souls.’ They search the things of Nature and the processes of
Nature for the Spirit-Beings at work there, and for their spiritual
deeds. In what later appeared as Alchemy and the pursuits of the
alchemists, can be seen historically the residue of this stage
of consciousness.
And as, when ‘thinking’ Spirit-Beings in the first stage of
consciousness, Man was living completely in his own
world of being, so even at this second stage, he is still quite
close to himself and to his own first source.
This however means that at both stages all possibility is
excluded of Man's coming in the true sense to any inner,
personal impulse for his actions.
Spiritual being, of a kind akin to himself, acts in him. What
he seems to be doing, is the open manifestation of
events enacted between Spirit-Beings. What Man does, is the
sensibily physical appearance of an actual divine-spiritual
process taking place behind it.
A
third epoch in the evolution of consciousness brings thoughts
to consciousness in the etheric body, but still as living
thoughts.
The Greek of civilization, in the days of its greatness, lived
in this form of consciousness. The ancient Greek, when
thinking, did not construct a thought, with which he viewed the
world as through a construction of his own; but he felt aroused
within himself the stir of that same life, which, outside too,
pulsed through the things and processes around him.
Then for the first time, there arose the longing for Freedom of
personal action — not as yet actual Freedom, but the
longing for it.
In
the human being who felt the stir of Nature stirring within
himself, there grew up a longing to separate his own life-stir
from the life-stir that he saw going on in the outer world,
foreign to himself. But, nevertheless, this life-stir in the
outer world was still felt as a last outcome of that real and
active Spirit-world which is of the same kind with Man.
Not until Thoughts took their print in the physical body, and
consciousness extended only to this physical imprint, did the
possibility of Freedom first begin. This is the state of
things, as it was in the fifteenth century after Christ.
In
the world's evolution, the bearing which the Ideas of the
modern conception of Nature may have upon nature herself, is a
matter of no moment; for these Ideas did not assume their
present form in order to supply a particular picture of the
natural world, but in order to bring Man to a particular stage
of his evolution.
When thoughts laid hold on the physical body, they lost from
their immediate contents Spirit, Soul and Life. These were
blotted out; and the abstract Shadow, that haunts the physical
body, alone remains. Physical, material things alone can be the
objects of knowledge for such thoughts as these; for such
thoughts themselves are only actual in Man's physical,
material body.
The reason why Materialism arose, is not that only material
things and processes are to be seen in the outer world of
Nature; it is because Man, in his evolution, had to go through
a stage which brought him to a form of consciousness that is at
first only capable of seeing material revelations. The
one-sided development of this requirement in human evolution
has resulted in the modern view of the natural world.
Michael's mission is to convey to men's ether-bodies those
forces by which the Thought-Shadows may again acquire life. To
these new-enlivened Shadows, souls and Spirits from the
supersensible worlds above will incline themselves. And with
these, Man, unbounded and free, will be able to dwell with them
of old, when he was merely the physical image of their
workings.
Leading Thoughts
-
In
the evolution of mankind,
Consciousness comes down, step by step, along the ladder of
Thought-development. There is a first stage of
consciousness: here Man realizes thoughts in his I,
as Being imbued with Spirit, Soul and Life. Then comes a
second stage, where Man realizes Thoughts in his astral
body. Here they appear rather as living and soul-endowed
Images of the spirit-Beings. At a third stage, the Thoughts
are realized in Man's ether-body; here they are only an
inner life-stir, like the after-echo of a life of soul. At
the fourth stage, the present one, Thoughts are realized by
Man in his physical body, and represent dead Shadows of the
Spirit.
-
In proportion as Spirit, Soul and
Life recede from human Thinking. Man's own Will comes to
life. Freedom grows possible.
-
It is Michael's task to lead Man
back by the paths of Will, thither whence first he came,
when on the paths of Thought he descended from the
realization of the supersensible world to the realization
of the sensible world in his earthly consciousness.
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