XIII
Before the Door of the Spiritual Soul
Third Contemplation: Michael's sorrow over the evolution of
mankind, before the time of his earthly regency.
With the further progress of the Age of Consciousness, the
possibility more and more ceases of direct connection between
Michael and the generality of human kind. Into Man's being
enters in triumph the new, humanized power of Intellectuality
and out of it vanish those imaginative conceptions of the mind,
which shew Man the living forms of the Cosmic Intelligence. For
Michael, any possibility of approaching Man does not begin
until the last third of the nineteenth century. Before then,
approach can only be attempted by such roads as were those of
the genuine Rosicrucians.
Man looks with his fresh opening intellect at Nature; and what
he sees is a physical world, an ether-world, in which he
himself is not. Through the great ideas of Copernicus and
Galileo he gains a picture of the external, non-human world;
but he loses the picture of himself. He looks at himself, and
he has no possibility of arriving at any insight as to what
he is.
In
the depths of his being is awakened that which is ordained to
be the bearer of his human intelligence. With this, his
I combines. Man bears accordingly within him now a
threefold being. First, in his spirit-soul, he bears within
him, manifested in physical-etheric form, that being which at
the very first — in the Saturn and Sun times, and
repeatedly ever since — has given him a place in the realm
of divine spirit. This is where Man's being and Michael's being
can join company. Secondly, Man bears within him his later
physical and etheric being — namely that which became his
during the Moon and Earth times. All this is the work
and workings of divine spirit; but divine spirit no
longer lives in it with present being. It first becomes present
again in living being when the Christ passes through the
Mystery of Golgotha. In that which works spiritually in Man's
physical and etheric body, may be found the Christ. Thirdly,
Man has in him that part of his spirit and soul which during
the Moon and Earth times has acquired a new form of being. In
this part, Michael has remained active; whereas in the part
turned to the Moon and Earth, he has grown ever more inactive.
In the former, it is he who has preserved to Man Man's
divine images.
This Michael could do until the dawn of the Age of
Consciousness. And then the entire spirit-and-soul element in
Man sank, so to speak, down into the physical and etheric, in
order to fetch forth the Spiritual Soul.
Luminously there arose in Man's consciousness all that his
physical body and his ether-body could tell him about the
physical and etheric in Nature. There sank from before his
vision what astral body and I could tell him about
himself.
A
time arises, when amongst mankind there begins to stir a
feeling that their insight no longer brings them to themselves.
There begins a search after the Knowledge of the Human
Being. Men fail to satisfy their seeking by anything which the
Present can supply. They go back in history to earlier times.
‘Humanism’ makes its appearance in the evolution of the human
mind. Humanism becomes men's ideal object, not because they
possess the human being but because they have lost him. So long
as they still possessed him, their soul which animated the work
of Erasmus of Rotterdam and others would have worn a very
different colour from anything that their Humanism could give
it.
In
Faust, later on, as re-discovered by Goethe, is the
figure of a man who has utterly lost the human being. Ever
intenser becomes this search after Man. For men have only two
alternatives: either completely to blunt themselves to the
awakening inner sense of their own being; or else to pursue
this longing search for Man, so that this search becomes an
inherent element of their soul.
Until the nineteenth century, in the spiritual life of Europe
the best men in every field are engaged in the pursuit of every
variety of idea — historic, scientific, philosophic,
mystic — all representing the endeavour in the
intellectualized aspect of the World to discover Man.
Renaissance, spiritual New Birth, Humanism — all are
rushing, storming indeed, after spirituality in a direction
where spirituality is not to be found. In the direction where
it is to be sought, impotence, illusion, bemazement. And
everywhere, through it all, the Michael Forces breaking
through, in art, in learning, into the life of man, only not as
yet into the young, rising forces of the Spiritual Soul. A
tottering of all spiritual life; Michael, with all his forces
reaching back in cosmic evolution, in order to find strength to
keep in balance the Dragon under his feet. Under these powerful
exertions of Michael there arise the great works of the
Renaissance. Yet these are still a revival, by Michael's power,
of the old life of the Intellectual or Mind-Soul — not yet
a working of the new soul-forces.
One can see Michael, full of anxiety as to whether, after all,
he will be in a position to keep the Dragon permanently in
check, when he perceives how men are engaged in the one field
only, trying to obtain from the picture they have just obtained
of Nature a similar picture of Man. Michael sees the way in
which men are observing nature and trying, out of what they
call Natural Law, to construct an image of Man. He sees how
they depict it in their minds: This peculiarity in some animal
becomes perfects; that combination of organic functions becomes
more nicely adjusted; and so, there ‘arises’ Man. But before
the spirit-eye of Michael, what arise is not Man at all. What
they think of as growing ever more perfected and more nicely
adjusted, is just a thought thing; no one can see it
actually growing into fact because the actual facts are
otherwise.
And thus men live with such thoughts of Man in unsubstantial
pictures, in illusions that have no being. They pursue an image
of Man; they think they possess it; but in truth there is
nothing within their range of sight. ‘The power of the
Spirit-Sun shines upon their souls; Christ is at work; but as
yet they cannot heed Him. The power of the spiritual Soul is
strong in their bodies, but into their souls it still will not
enter.’ So may one hear the Inspiration which Michael utters in
his dire anxiety. May not this force of Illusion in men give
the Dragon so much power after all, that it will be an
impossibility for him — for Michael himself — to
maintain the balance?
Other individuals again endeavour with more inwardly artistic
power to find the union between Nature and Man. Grandly ring
the words of Goethe, when describing in a noble book the work
of Winkelmann: “When the powers of Man's nature are at
work in whole and healthful unison; when he feels himself in
the World as in one grand, fair, worshipful and worthy
whole; when the well-being of harmonious attunement
fills him with a pure and free delight — then would the
Universe, were it conscious of itself, shout with joy at the
attainment of its goal, and marvellingly acclaim the crown of
its own life and being.” The same impulse which inspired
the mind of Lessing with flame of fire, which ensouled the
world-wide vision of Herder, rings through these words of
Goethe. And the whole of Goethe's own creative work is like a
universal demonstration on all sides of this saying of his.
Schiller in his “letters on Aesthetics' has drawn the
picture of an Ideal Man — one (as it rings in the words of
Goethe) who bears the whole Universe within himself, and
realizes it actually in social co-operation with other men. But
where is this Picture of a Man drawn from? It shines like the
morning sun over the Spring earth. But it has entered into
men's feelings from contemplation of ancient Greek Man. Men
cherished the picture with all the strong inner impulse of
Michael; but they could find no form to give to this impulse,
except by turning their soul's gaze back towards a bygone age.
Goethe went, as we know, through the severest conflicts with
the Spiritual Soul when he tried inwardly to realize Man. He
thought that for the first time he really had a glimpse of him,
when on his Italian tour he had his first sight into Greek life
and being. He hastened away from the Spiritual Soul, striving
forward in Spinoza, to what, in the end, was but the dying
embers of the Intellectual or Mind-Soul; only that Goethe
succeeds in bringing an endless amount of this latter into the
Spiritual Soul, in his all-embracing view of Nature.
Gravely Michael watches these endeavours too to find Man. He
sees something, it is true, that is to his own mind, entering
here into the evolution of the human spirit. It is that same
Man, who once beheld the life-forms of Intelligent Being, in
the times when Michael ruled from the Cosmos without. Yet
eventually, if it be not grasped by the spiritualized power of
the Spiritual Soul, this too must end by falling from Michael's
range of action into the dominion of Lucifer. That Lucifer
might gain the ascendancy in the rocking of the cosmic
balance — this is the other dire anxiety in Michael's
life.
The preparation for Michael's mission at the end of the
nineteenth century roll on in cosmic tragedy. Beneath upon
earth, there often reigns the profoundest satisfaction over
Man's picture of Nature and its effective working; whilst in
the region where Michael is at work there is nothing but
tragedy over the obstacles which prevent the true picture of
Man from finding its way into life.
There was a time when in the beams of the sun, in the flush of
morning skies, in the sparkling of the stars, there lived the
keen, clear spirit-love of Michael. The dominant note this love
had now taken, was one of sorrow, aroused on gazing on
mankind.
Michael's position in the Cosmos became one of tragic
difficulty, but one that was also urging towards a solution,
just at the period preceding his mission upon earth. Men could
maintain their power of intellect only in the domain of the
body, and there only in the domain of the senses. They
accordingly admitted nothing into their range of mental vision,
except what their senses told them. Nature became a field of
sense-revelation — a revelation quite materially conceived.
In Nature and all her forms, men no longer saw the work of
divine spirit, but something which has come into existence
without spirit, and of which they nevertheless assert that the
spiritual life which Man leads is born of it. Of the
spirit-world, on the other hand, men would only accept so much
as was still told of in the historic records. Any real seeing
of the creative spirit in the past was as severely taboo'd, as
was the seeing of the spirit in the present.
All that now remained living in men's souls came from that
region of the external present world into which Michael does
not enter. Man was glad to be standing upon ‘secure’ ground. He
fancied the ground secure because he abstained from looking for
any Thoughts in Nature, in which he would at once have
suspected the unreliability of a spontaneous fancy. But Michael
was not glad. He was obliged to remain on the far side, aloof
from men, and carry on the war in his own region against
Lucifer and Ahriman. Hence came the great and tragic
difficulty; for Lucifer can approach Man all the more easily,
the more Michael — who is also the preserver of his
past — is obliged to keep away from him. And so a stormy
contest was being waged on Man's behalf, in the spiritual world
next to earth, by Michael against Lucifer and Ahriman: whilst
Man himself on earthly territory was busying his soul in
opposition to the healing forces of his own evolution.
All this applies of course to the spiritual life of Europe and
America. For Asia it would be necessary to speak
differently.
Leading Thoughts
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In the very first period of the
spiritual Soul's evolution Man began to feel that the
picture of Mankind, of his own Human Being, which had
hitherto come of itself, imaginatively, was now lost to
him. Powerless to find it as yet in his Spiritual Soul, he
seeks for it along the paths of Natural Science of History.
He would like to revive once more within him the old
picture of Humanity.
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By this road, men do not come to the
real fullness of the human being; they come only to empty
illusions. But they do not see this; they look on these as
things that give mankind substantiation and support.
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And so Michael, in the time
preceding his earthly regency, can only look with anxiety
and sorrow upon mankind's evolution. For men condemn
spiritual contemplation in any direction, and thereby cut
themselves off from everything that makes a bond with
Michael.
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