THIRD STUDY: MICHAEL IS SUFFERING OVER HUMAN
EVOLUTION BEFORE THE TIME OF HIS EARTHLY
ACTIVITY
As the new Age of Consciousness proceeds, it grows less and less
possible for Michael to connect himself with the existence of mankind
in general. Intellectuality has become human and is now entering
humanity. From it the Imaginative conceptions, which could reveal to
man the Divine Being and Intelligence in the Cosmos, are vanishing.
The possibility for Michael himself to approach man begins only with
the last third of the nineteenth century. Before that time it was only
possible by those paths which were sought for in the true Rosicrucian
sense.
With his own budding intellectuality, man looks out into Nature. He
sees there a physical and etheric world, in which he himself is not
contained. Through the great ideas of men such as Copernicus and
Galileo, he attains a picture of the world external to man. But he
loses the picture of himself. When he gazes on himself he has no
possibility of reaching any insight as to what he truly is.
In the depths of his being, that which is destined to bear and sustain
his intelligence is being awakened in him. With this, his Ego becomes
united. Thus man now bears a threefold nature within him: first, in
his spirit-and-soul being, manifesting as physical-etheric, that which
originated once upon a time, in the old Saturn and Sun epochs, and
then ever and again placed him within the kingdom of the
Divine-Spiritual. It is here that the Human Being and the Michael
Being go together. Secondly, man bears within him his later physical
and etheric nature, that which evolved in him during the Moon and
Earth epochs. All this is the work and active working of the
Divine-Spiritual. But the Divine-Spiritual itself is no longer living
and present within it. It only becomes fully living and present once
more when Christ passes through the Mystery of Golgotha. In that which
is at work spiritually in the physical and etheric body of man, Christ
can indeed be found.
Thirdly, man has within him that part of his soul and spirit which
received new being in the Moon and Earth epochs. Here Michael has
remained active (whereas in the part of man that is inclined towards
the Moon and Earth, he has become more and more inactive.) In the
former Michael has preserved, for man, his picture of Man and
the Gods together.
He was able to do this until the dawn of the new age of Consciousness
the age of the Spiritual Soul. Then the spirit and soul of man
sank down, as it were, entirely in the physical-etheric nature, in
order to draw forth from there the Spiritual Soul.
Radiantly there arose in the consciousness of man what his physical
and his etheric body could tell him about the physical and etheric in
the world of Nature. And what his astral body and Ego had been able to
tell him about himself vanished away from his vision.
In the age which now began, there arose in man the feeling that with
his own insight he could no longer reach himself. Thus there
began a search for knowledge of the human being. Man could no
longer find satisfaction for this quest in what the present was able
to provide. He went back to earlier ages of history. Humanism arose in
the evolution of the spiritual life. Humanism became the object of
men's striving, not because they had grasped Man in his essential
nature, but because they had lost him. As long as they possessed this
knowledge, Erasmus of Rotterdam and others would have worked from a
trend of soul quite different from anything that Humanism could give
them.
In Faust, Goethe discovered at a later time a figure
representative of the man who had completely lost hold of his
essential being.
This quest of the human being grows more and more intense as time goes
on. For man has now no other alternative: he must either make himself
blunt and insensitive as regards his own being, or else the longing
for it must come forth as an essential element in his soul's life.
Right into the nineteenth century, the best minds in the spiritual
life of Europe evolve ideas in the most varied fields and in the most
different ways ideas historical, scientific, philosophical,
mystical, all of which represent the striving to find, in what has now
become an intellectualistic world-conception, the human being
himself.
Renaissance, spiritual re-birth, humanism, are striving restlessly
even tempestuously for a spiritual element in a
direction in which it is not to be found. And, in the direction
in which it should be sought, there is impotence, illusion,
bewilderment of consciousness. And yet everywhere in Art, in
Knowledge the Michael-forces are breaking through into the
human being, though not as yet into the newly-growing forces of the
Spiritual Soul. It is a critical time for the spiritual life. Michael
turns all his forces towards the past in cosmic evolution so that he
may gain the power to hold the Dragon balanced and
constrained beneath his feet. It is under these mighty exertions of
Michael that the great creations of the Renaissance are born. Yet they
still only represent a renewal by Michael of Intellectual or Mind-Soul
forces. They are not yet a working of the new soul-forces.
We can behold Michael filled with anxiety. Will he really be able to
master the Dragon in the long run? He perceives human
beings in one region trying to gain a picture of Man out of the
newly-acquired picture of Nature. He sees how they observe Nature and
then seek to form a picture of Man from what they call the Laws
of Nature. He sees them forming their conceptions:
This animal quality becomes more perfect, that system of organs
more harmonious, and man arises! But before the
spirit-gaze of Michael man does not arise. For in effect, what is thus
thought of as being harmonised, perfected, is there only in thought.
No one can see it evolving in reality, for nowhere does this happen in
actual fact.
And so, with these their conceptions about Man, men live in empty
pictures, in illusions. They are forever running after a picture of
Man which they only imagine that they have, while in real truth there
is nothing in their field of vision. The power of the spiritual
Sun shines upon their souls. Christ Himself is working; but they are
not yet able to perceive His presence. The power of the Spiritual Soul
holds sway in the body; but it still will not enter into their
souls. That is approximately the inspiration one can hear of
what Michael says in great anxiety. Is it possible that the forces of
illusion in man will give the Dragon so much power that it
will be impossible for Michael to maintain the balance?
Other persons try with more inward artistic power to feel Nature at
one with man. Mighty are the words in which Goethe described
Winkelmann's work in a beautiful book: When the healthy nature
of man acts as a whole, when he feels himself in the world as in a
great, beautiful, majestic and worthy whole, when harmonious case
gives him pure, free delight; then would the Universe, if it were
conscious of itself, shout aloud for joy, as having reached its goal,
and marvel at the climax of its own development and being. That
which stimulated Lessing with fiery spirit and ensouled Herder's wide
outlook on the world, rings out in these words of Goethe. And the
whole of Goethe's own work is like a many-sided revelation of these
his own words. In his Aesthetic Letters, Schiller has
described an ideal human being who, in the sense described in the
above words, bears the Universe within himself and realises it in
social intercourse with other human beings. But whence comes
this picture of Man? It shines like the morning sun over the
Earth in spring. But it has entered into human feeling from study of
the ancient Greeks. It arose in men with a strong inward
Michael-impulse; but they could give form to this impulse only by
turning the mind's eye to days of yore. When Goethe wished to
experience Man, he felt himself in the greatest conflict
with the Spiritual Soul. He sought for Man in Spinoza's philosophy;
but only during his tour in Italy, when he studied the nature of Greek
art, did he feel that he had a glimpse of him. He went away finally
from the Spiritual Soul, which is striving upwards in Spinoza, to the
Intellectual Soul or Mind-Soul which was gradually dying out. However,
with his far-reaching conception of Nature he was able to carry over
an infinite amount from the Intellectual Soul into the Spiritual Soul.
Michael also looks with earnestness upon this search for Man. What is
in accordance with his idea is indeed entering here into the spiritual
evolution of man: it is that human being who once beheld
the Divine Being and Intelligence when Michael still ruled it from the
Cosmos. But if this were not laid hold of by the spiritualised force
of the Spiritual Soul it would in the end inevitably slip away from
Michael's control and come under the sway of Lucifer. The other great
anxiety in Michael's life is, lest in the oscillation of the cosmic
spiritual state of balance Lucifer might gain the upper hand.
Michael's preparation of his Mission for the end of the nineteenth
century flows on in cosmic tragedy. Below, on the Earth, there is
often the greatest satisfaction in the working out of the new picture
of Nature; whereas in the region where Michael works there is a tragic
feeling regarding the hindrances to the coming of the picture of Man.
Formerly Michael's austere, spiritualised love lived in the sun's
rays, in the shimmering dawn, in the sparkling of the stars; this love
had now acquired most strongly the note of looking down at humanity
with awakening sorrow.
Michael's situation in the Cosmos became tragically difficult, but it
also pressed for a solution just at the period of time which preceded
his earthly mission. Men were able to keep intellectuality only in the
sphere of the body and there only in the sphere of the senses. On one
hand, therefore, they received into their views nothing that the
senses did not tell them; Nature became the field of the revelations
of the senses, considered quite materially. The forms of Nature were
no longer perceived as the work of the Divine-Spiritual but as
something devoid of spirit, and yet something of which it is affirmed
that it brings forth that spiritual element in which man lives. On the
other hand, as regards a Spirit-world, men would now accept only what
the historical accounts narrated. Direct vision of the Spirit working
in the past was discredited, as was the vision of the Spirit in the
present.
In the soul of man there now lived only that which came from the
sphere of the present, which Michael does not enter. Man was glad to
stand on sure ground. He believed he possessed this
because in Nature he sought no thoughts, in which he might
have had to fear the presence of arbitrary fancies. But Michael was
not glad. In his own sphere, beyond man, he had to wage war with
Lucifer and Ahriman. This resulted in tragic difficulty, because
Lucifer is able to approach man the more easily, the more Michael
who indeed also preserves the past is obliged to keep
himself away from man. And thus a severe battle for man took
place between Michael and Ahriman and Lucifer in the spiritual world
immediately bordering upon the Earth, while on the Earth itself man
kept his soul in action against what was beneficial to his evolution.
All this applies of course to the spiritual life of Europe and
America. We should have to speak differently with respect to that of
Asia.
Further Leading Thoughts issued from the Goetheanum for the Anthroposophical Society (in connection with the above Third Study: Michael's suffering over Human Evolution before the Time of his earthly Activity)
134. In the very earliest time of the evolution of the Spiritual Soul,
man began to feel that he had lost the picture of Humanity the
picture of his own Being which had formerly been given to him
in Imagination. Powerless as yet to find it in the Spiritual Soul, he
sought for it by way of Natural Science or of History. He wanted the
ancient picture of Humanity to arise in him again.
135. Man reaches no fulfilment in this way. Far from becoming filled
with the true being of Humanity, he is only led into illusions. But he
is unaware that they are so; he thinks they have real power to sustain
Humanity.
136. Thus, in the time that went before his working upon Earth,
Michael had to witness with anxiety and suffering the evolution of
mankind. For in this time men eschewed any real contemplation of the
Spirit, and thus they severed all the links that connected them with
Michael.
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