VI
THE MISSION OF THE EARTH
WONDER, COMPASSION AND CONSCIENCE. THE CHRIST IMPULSE
THE question as to the meaning and purpose of existence frequently
arises in life and in the sphere of philosophy. Study of Spiritual
Science will certainly produce a kind of humility in regard to this
question, for although we know that investigation of the spiritual
worlds leads thought and perception beyond the material world of
sense, we also realise that it is not possible to speak forthwith
about the primal origins or the ultimate and highest meaning of life.
The retort of superficial thinking here will certainly be:
What, then, do we know, if knowledge of the meaning and purpose
of life is beyond our reach?
An analogy that is entirely in line with the attitude of Spiritual
Science and indicates what is permissible or not permissible in regard
to this question, can be put in the following way: Suppose a man wants
to journey somewhere In his home town he can only get
information as to how to reach a much less distant place, but he is
sent off with the assurance that once there, further help will be
available. Although he makes inquiries here and there as he goes
along, he cannot know the exact path which will bring him to his final
destination; nevertheless he is sure of arriving eventually because he
is always able to find his way from place to place.
As students of Spiritual Science, we do not ask about the
ultimate goal but about the one lying immediately ahead,
in other words, about the goal of the Earth. We realise that it would
be senseless to inquire about the ultimate goal for we
have recognised that evolution is a reality in the life of
man. It must therefore never be forgotten that at the present stage of
our existence it is not possible to understand the goals of much later
phases of evolution and that a higher vantage-point must be
reached if we are to understand the meaning of a far distant goal. And
so we ask about the goal lying immediately ahead, realising that by
keeping it before us as an ideal and striving with the right means, we
shall eventually attain it, thereby reaching a further stage in
development. At that stage it will be legitimate to ask about the
next goal, and so on. Thus if it were ever suggested that Spiritual
Science might tend to make a man arrogant because his outlook extends
beyond the ordinary world into a spiritual world, in reality his
attitude will be one of humility towards these sublime matters about
which superficial questions are so often asked.
We inquire, to begin with, about the goal of the Earth. In other
words: What is it that man adds, essentially, to the fruits of the
preceding periods of Saturn-, Sun-, and Moon-evolution, by developing
on the Earth through repeated physical incarnations? We will here
recall certain matters which will help us to associate concrete and
definite ideas with what may be called the meaning and purpose
of Earth-evolution. Let me speak, to begin with of the
following.
When intellectual thinking, based upon reason, came to birth during
the Graeco-Latin epoch it would actually be true to say, in the
sixth century B.C. a certain thought found frequent utterance,
namely, that all philosophy, all deeper contemplation upon the secrets
of existence, proceeds from Wonder, Amazement. In other words: As long
as the human being can feel no wonder at the phenomena of life around
him, so long is his life vapid and thoughtless, and he asks without
intelligence about the why and wherefore of existence. All
philosophy begins with wonder was a much quoted saying during
the ancient Graeco-Latin epoch. What, in reality, does it signify in
man's life of soul?
It would be difficult today to find anyone in civilised Europe who has
never set eyes on a locomotive in motion; not so very long ago,
however, there were such persons although nowadays they would,
of course, only be found in very remote districts. If such a person
sees a train moving along, he will feel wonder and amazement at the
sight of an object going forward without any of the means with which
he is acquainted. It is a known fact that many such people, in their
astonishment at seeing a locomotive in movement, asked if the horses
pulling it along were inside! Why were the people cast into amazement
and wonder by what they saw here? It was because they were looking at
something which in a certain sense was known, and at the same time
unknown to them. They knew that things move forward, but whatever they
had seen had always been provided with quite a different means of
movement. Now they were looking at something on which they had never
set eyes before. And this gave rise to wonder.
If during the Graeco-Latin epoch, men could only become philosophers
when they were capable of wonder, they must have been persons who
perceived, in everything taking place in the world, something at once
known and unknown, in so far as the happenings and phenomena seemed to
contain more than appeared on the surface something unknown to them.
Why had the attitude of the philosophers to be that the primary causes
and certain attributes of things in the world lay in a sphere unknown
to them? As it will be admitted that philosophers are at least as
clever as people who give no thought at all to what goes on around
them, it cannot be supposed that philosophers are capable of accepting
only what is to be perceived by means of the ordinary senses.
Therefore they must find something lacking or rather, they must
surmise the presence of something which sets them wondering
something that is not present in the world of sense. And so, before
the days of materialism, the philosophers always sought for the
Supersensible in the phenomena presented to the senses. The wonder
felt by the philosophers, therefore, is associated with the fact that
certain things are not to be comprehended through what presents itself
to the eyes of sense. They said to themselves: What I there
perceive does not tally with what I picture it to be; I must therefore
conceive that super-sensible forces are present within it. But in
the world of sense the philosophers perceived no super-sensible forces.
That alone is enough to make a thinking man realise that a
subconscious memory, not reaching into consciousness, has persisted in
the human being since times when the soul perceived something more
than the actual phenomena of the sense-world. In other words:
Remembrance arises of experiences undergone before the descent into
sense-existence. It is as though the soul were to say: I discern
things and their effects which can only call forth wonder in me,
because they are different from what I have seen before; enlightenment
on them can only be found by means of forces which must be drawn from
the super-sensible world. And so all philosophising begins with
wonder, because in reality man approaches the phenomena of existence
as a being who comes into the world of the senses from a super-sensible
world and finds that the things of the sense-world do not tally with
what he perceived in the super-sensible world. Wonder arises in him
when the form in which the things of sense are made manifest, can only
be explained by knowledge he once possessed in a super-sensible world.
And so wonder points to the connection of man with the super-sensible
world, to something belonging to a sphere he can only enter when he
transcends the world in which his physical body encloses him. This is
one indication of the fact that here, in this physical world, there is
a continual urge within the human being to reach out beyond himself. A
man who can only remain shut up in himself, who is not driven by
wonder beyond the field of the I, of the ordinary Ego,
remains one who cannot reach beyond himself, who sees the sun rise and
set without a thought and with complete unconcern. This is the kind of
existence led by uncivilised peoples.
A second power which releases the human being from the ordinary world,
leading him at once away from material perception into super-sensible
insight, is Compassion, Fellow-feeling (Of this, too, I have spoken).
Those who go heedlessly through the world do not regard compassion as
having any great mystery about it; but to the thoughtful, compassion
is a great and mysterious secret. When we look at a being only from
outside, impressions come from him to our senses and intellect; with
the awakening of compassion we pass beyond the sphere of these
impressions. We share in what is taking place in his innermost nature,
and transcending the sphere of our own I, we pass over
into his world. In other words: we are set free from ourselves, we
break through the barriers of ordinary existence in the physical body
and reach over into the other being. Here, already, is the
Supersensible for neither the operations of the senses nor of
the reasoning mind can carry us into the sphere of another's soul. The
fact that compassion exists in the world bears witness that even in
the world of sense we can be set free from, can pass out beyond
ourselves and enter into the world of another being. If a man is
incapable of compassion, there is a moral defect, a moral lack in him.
If at the moment when he should get free from himself and pass over
into the other being, feeling, not his own pain or joy but the pain or
joy of that other if at that moment his feelings fade and die
away, then something is lacking in his moral life. The human being on
Earth, if he is to reach the stature of full and complete manhood,
must be able to pass out beyond his own earthly life, he must be able
to live in another, not only in himself.
Conscience is a third power whereby the human being transcends what he
is in the physical body. In ordinary life he will desire this or that;
according to his impulses or needs he will pursue what is pleasing and
thrust aside what is displeasing to him. But in many such actions he
will be his own critic, in that his conscience, the voice of his
conscience sounds a note of correction. Final satisfaction or
dissatisfaction with what he has done also depends upon how the voice
of conscience has spoken. This in itself is a proof that
conscience is a power whereby the human being is led out
beyond the sphere of his impulses, his likes and dislikes.
Wonder and Amazement, Compassion or Fellow-feeling, Conscience
these are the three powers by means of which the human being, even
while in the physical body, transcends his own limitations, for
through these powers, influences which cannot find entrance into the
human soul by way of the intellect and the senses, ray into physical
life.
It is easy to understand that these three powers can only unfold
through incarnations in a body of flesh. Man must, as it were, be kept
separate by a body of flesh from what pours into his life of soul from
another sphere. If a body of flesh did not separate him from the
spiritual world and present the outer world to him as a sense-world,
he would be incapable of wonder. It is the material body which enables
wonder at the things of the world of sense to arise in man, compelling
him to seek for the Spirit. Compassion could not unfold if the one
human being were not separated from the other, if men were to live an
undivided existence in which a single flow of spiritual life pervaded
the consciousness of them all, if each soul were not separated from
other souls by the impenetrable sheath provided by the physical body.
And conscience could not be experienced as a spiritual force sending
its voice into man's world of natural urges, passions and desires, if
the material body did not hanker after things against which warning
must be given by another power. And so the human being must be
incarnated in a physical body in order that he may be able to
experience wonder, compassion and conscience.
In our time, people concern themselves little with such secrets,
although they are profoundly enlightening. But in a past by no means
very remote, a great deal of attention was paid to these things:
Think only of the world of the Greek Gods, the Gods of Homer; think of
their actions and activities; try to understand the nature of the
impulses working in Achilles, a being who stands there like a last
survivor of an earlier generation on Earth. He, too, was born of a
divine mother. Read through the Iliad and the Odyssey and ask
yourselves whether this being, standing halfway between Gods and men,
was ever stirred by anything like conscience or
compassion? Homer builds the whole of the Iliad around the
fury of the wrath of Achilles and wrath is a
passion. Everything in the Greek legend centres around this; the Iliad
tells of what came about as the result of a passion the wrath
of Achilles. Consider all the deeds of Achilles described in the Iliad
and see if you can say of a single one that Achilles is here moved by
anything like compassion or conscience. Neither is there a single
example of the stirring of wonder. The very greatness of Homer lies in
his power to depict these things with such sublimity. When Achilles is
told of some terrible happening, his behaviour is far from that of a
man filled with wonder. And then turn to the Greek Gods themselves:
they give vent to all kinds of impulses which are certainly of the
nature of egotism when they manifest in a human being enclosed in a
physical body. In the Gods they are spiritual impulses. But among the
Greek Gods there is no compassion, no suggestion of conscience, nor
anything like wonder. Why not? Because Homer and the Greeks knew that
these Gods were Beings belonging to a period of evolution preceding
that of the Earth a period when the Beings who were then
passing through their human stage under the conditions
prevailing in existence, had not yet received into the life of soul
the powers of wonder, compassion and conscience. It must be constantly
remembered that the earlier planetary conditions through which the
Earth has passed and in which such Beings as the Greek Gods underwent
their human stage, were not there for the purpose of implanting
Wonder, Compassion, and Conscience
in the life of soul. That is precisely the mission of Earth-evolution!
The purpose of Earth-evolution is that there may be implanted into the
evolutionary process as a whole, powers which could otherwise never
have come into existence: Wonder, Compassion and Conscience.
I have told you how the birth of conscience can clearly be traced to a
certain period of Greek culture. In the works of Aeschylus, what we
call conscience played no part; there were only
remembrances of the avenging Furies, and not until we come to the
works of Euripedes is there any clear expression of
conscience as we know it now. The concept of conscience
arose only very gradually during the Graeco-Latin epoch. I have told
you that the concept of wonder arises for the first time when men
begin to philosophise in the world of Graeco-Latin culture. And a
remarkable fact in the spiritual evolution of Earth-existence throws
far-reaching light upon what we know as compassion, and also, in the
true sense, love. In the age of materialism it is exceedingly
difficult to maintain in true and right perspective, this concept of
compassion or love. Many of you will realise that in our materialistic
times this concept is distorted, in that materialism associates the
concept of love so closely with that of
sexuality with which, fundamentally, it has nothing
whatever to do. That is a point where the culture of our day abandons
both intelligence and sound, healthy reason. Through its materialism,
evolution in our time is veering not only towards the unintelligent
and illogical but even towards the scandalous, when love
is dragged into such close association with what is covered by the
term sexuality. The fact that under certain circumstances
the element of sexuality may be associated with love between man and
woman is no argument for bringing so closely together the
all-embracing nature of love or compassion, and the entirely specific
character of sexuality. So far as logic is concerned, to associate the
concept of, say, a railway engine with that of a man being
run over, because engines do sometimes run over people,
would be just about as intelligent as it is to connect the concept of
love so closely with that of sexuality simply because under
certain circumstances there is an outward association. That this
happens today is not the outcome of any scientific hypothesis but of
the irrational and, to some extent, unhealthy mode of thinking
prevailing in our time.
On the other hand, another telling fact points to the significance
inherent in the concept of love and compassion. At a certain point in
the evolution of humanity, and among all the peoples, something is
made manifest which, while differing in many essentials, is identical
in one respect all over the Earth, namely in the adoption of the
concept of love, of compassion. It is very remarkable that six or
seven centuries before the inpouring of the Christ-Impulse into
humanity, founders of religion and systems of thought appeared all
over the Earth, among all the peoples. It is of the highest
significance that, six centuries before our era, Lao-tse and Confucius
should have been living in China, the Buddha in India, the last
Zarathustra (not the original Zarathustra) in Persia, and Pythagoras
in Greece. How great the difference is between these founders of
religion! Only a mind abstracted from reality and incapable of
discerning the differences can suggest, as is often mischievously done
today, that the teachings of Lao-tse or Confucius do not differ from
those of other founders of religions. Yet in one respect there is
similarity among them all; they all teach that compassion and love
must reign between soul and soul! The point of significance is this:
six centuries before our era, consciousness begins to stir that love
and compassion are to be received into the stream of human evolution.
Thus whether we are thinking of the birth of wonder, of conscience or
of love and compassion in the stream of evolution ... all the signs
point to the fact that in the Fourth Post-Atlantean epoch of culture,
something was imbued into mankind which we may recognise as the
meaning and purpose of Earth-evolution.
It is so superficial and foolish when people say: Why was it
necessary for man to come down from the worlds of Divine Spirit into
the physical world, only to have to reattain them? Why could he not
have remained in the higher worlds? Man could not remain in
those worlds because only by coming down into the physical world of
Earth-evolution could he receive into himself the forces of wonder,
love or compassion, and conscience or moral obligation.
We look at the Fourth Post-Atlantean epoch of culture and perceive,
during its course, the dawn of impulses which in reality only from
that time onwards spread more and more widely among mankind. It
is very easy today to emphasise how seldom humanity is ruled by
compassion and love, how seldom by conscience. But in pointing to
these things, we must also be mindful of the fact that in the
Graeco-Latin age, slavery was still an accepted custom, and that even
a philosopher as great as Aristotle still regarded the existence of
slaves as a necessary principle of human life; we must also remember
that since those days, love has so far gained ground that even if
today inequalities still persist among men, there is already present
in their souls something like a feeling of shame that certain
conditions exist. This in itself indicates that the forces which
entered at that time into evolution are unfolding within the souls of
men. Nobody would dare nowadays if he is to avoid the tragic
fate of Nietzsche (the followers of Nietzsche can
be ignored altogether, for in his right mind Nietzsche would have
repudiated them) to stand openly for the introduction of
slavery as it was in Greece. Nobody will deny that the greatest of all
forces in the human soul is that of love and compassion, and that it
must be man's task to make the voice that sounds out of another world
into the soul, more and more articulate.
Holding firmly in our minds that the unfolding of the three powers
described constitutes the meaning and purpose of Earth-evolution, we
turn to the greatest of all Impulses the Christ-Impulse which
poured into evolution during the Fourth Post-Atlantean epoch. Even
outer circumstances indicate that this Impulse is given at the very
time when the Earth is ready for the development of the three powers
of wonder, compassion or love, and conscience, or moral obligation, as
intrinsically human qualities. Many studies have given us a picture of
how the Christ-Impulse made its way into the evolution of humanity.
I want here to refer to one aspect of the Christ-Impulse. I have told
you that certain spiritual, superhuman forces were held back in the
spiritual worlds at the beginning of the evolutionary process on the
Earth. This Impulse streamed into the Earth at the time of which an
indication is given in the Bible, namely, at the time of the Baptism
in the Jordan. It was an Impulse, therefore, untouched by the
Luciferic forces as it had been kept back until the Fourth
Post-Atlantean epoch; in that epoch it streamed into humanity. And now
think of this in connection with certain things we have ourselves
experienced. If people are incapable of giving any concrete
explanation of how the spiritual world plays into the physical world,
it is really out of place for them to come out with crude and unreal
ideas like that, for example, of the Three Logoi. I have
said many times that the word Logoi can convey to the
ordinary intelligence nothing more than its five letters. When it is
alleged in certain quarters outside that here we speak of Christ as
the second Logos, we do well to realise that
misrepresentation and distortion are the order of the day. We
ourselves are quoted as the source of statements which have actually
originated somewhere else! Our constant endeavour is to deepen, to
widen and to gather from every side, knowledge that can shed light on
the Christ Idea. Yet outside our field of work, by talking round an
abstract concept, people allege that we speak of the Christ as the
Second Logos. In the Theosophical Society, conscience
ought to be too sharp to permit such allegations. So long as sheer
misrepresentation of other people's views is possible, the
Theosophical Movement cannot be said to have reached any particularly
high level, and while this sort of thing goes on, it is futile to
boast about freedom of opinion in the Society. This is an empty phrase
as long as people allow themselves to spread false ideas of the views
held by others. Certainly there must be freedom to spread every shade
of opinion but not freedom to misrepresent the views of others!
Spiritual conscience must be sharpened in this respect; otherwise all
feeling for truth would in the end be driven out of the Theosophical
Movement and then it would not be possible to cultivate the true
spiritual Movement within the framework of the Theosophical
Movement. These things must not be glossed over but taken really
seriously. Certainly, there may be fewer publications, if the aim is
to print only those things which are founded upon genuine, reliable
knowledge. But after all, what harm will be done if there is less
printing? What does it matter if less is said, so long as what is said
is true and in accordance with reality? It was recently stated in
periodicals abroad that the Christ is spoken of by us as the
Second Logos and that we are said to be cultivating a
narrow Theosophy, suitable for Germany, but not for any
other country; we are said to be cultivating a narrow
Theosophy, whereas a really broad Theosophical Movement is
being conducted from a certain centre in Leipzig of which you have
heard. When things of this kind are to be read, it can only be
concluded that there does not exist in the Theosophical Movement the
sharpness of conscience that is the pre-requisite of a spiritual
movement. And if we lack this sharpness of conscience, if we do not
feel, the most intense responsibility to the holiest truth, we shall
make no progress on any other path. These things have had to be said.
And within the Theosophical Movement it will above all be necessary to
have eyes for the quality of love and compassion.
If we conceive the Christ Impulse to be the down-pouring of that
spiritual power which was kept back in the ancient Lemurian time in
order to flow into evolution during the Fourth Post-Atlantean epoch at
the point marked by the Baptism in the Jordan, reaching its
culmination in the Mystery of Golgotha then it is clear that He
Who is known as the Christ was not, even at that time,
incarnated in the ordinary sense, in a physical human being. We know
what complicated processes were connected with the man Jesus of
Nazareth in order that for three years of his life the Christ
Impulse might live within him. We are therefore able to understand
that for three years the Christ Impulse lived on the Earth in the
three sheaths of a human being, but we realise, too, that even at that
time, the Christ Impulse was not incarnated on the Earth
in the ordinary sense but that He pervaded the body of the
Being Jesus of Nazareth. This must be understood when it
is said that it is not possible to speak of a return of
Christ, but only of an Impulse which was present once, during the time
of the events in Palestine beginning with the Baptism in the Jordan,
when there remained only the physical body, the ether-body and the
astral body of Jesus of Nazareth; within these sheaths the Christ was
then present on the very soil of the Earth. From that time Christ has
been united with the spiritual atmosphere of the Earth and can there
be found by souls who are willing to receive Him. From that time
onwards and only from that time onwards He has been
present in the spiritual atmosphere of the Earth. The great turn given
to Earth-evolution lies in the fact that from that time forward there
was a power in the Earth which it did not previously contain.
We know that what we actually see in the kingdoms of Nature around us
is not reality, but Maya, the Great Illusion.
In the kingdom of the animals we see the individual forms coming into
being and passing away; the Group-Soul alone endures. In the plant
kingdom, the individual plants appear and disappear, but behind them
there is the Earth-Spirit which does not pass away. So it is, too, in
the kingdom of the minerals. The Spiritual endures, but the Physical,
whether in the animal, plant or mineral kingdom, is transient,
impermanent. Even the outer senses discern that the planet Earth is
involved in a process of pulverisation and will at some future time
disintegrate into dust. We have spoken of how the Earth-body will be
cast off by the Spirit of the Earth, as the human body is cast off by
the individual human Spirit. What will remain as the highest substance
of the Earth when its goal has been reached? The Christ Impulse was
present on the Earth, so to say as spiritual Substance.
That Impulse endures and will be received into men during the course
of Earth-evolution. But how does It live on? When the Christ Impulse
was upon the Earth for three years, It had no physical body, no
ether-body, no astral body of Its own, but was enveloped in the three
sheaths of Jesus of Nazareth. When the goal has been reached, the
Earth, like man, will be a fully developed being, a meet and fitting
vehicle for the Christ Impulse.
But from whence are the three sheaths of the Christ Impulse derived?
From forces that can be unfolded only on the Earth. Beginning with the
Mystery of Golgotha, whatever has unfolded on the Earth since the
Fourth Post-Atlantean period as the power of wonder, whatever comes to
life in us as wonder passes, finally, to the Christ, weaving
the Astral Body of the Christ Impulse. Love or Compassion in the souls
of men weaves the Ether-Body of the Christ Impulse; and the power of
conscience which from the time of the Mystery of Golgotha until the
goal of the Earth is attained, lives in and inspires the souls of men,
weaves the Physical Body or what corresponds with the physical
body for the Christ Impulse.
(Note 1)
The true meaning of words from the Gospel can only now be discerned:
Whatsoever ye have done to one of the least of these My
Brethren, ye have done it unto Me.
(Matt. 25. 40).
The forces streaming from man to man are the units integrating the Ether-Body
of Christ: love, or compassion, weaves the Ether-Body of Christ. Thus
when the goal of Earth-evolution is attained, He will be enveloped in
the threefold vesture woven from the powers that have lived in men
and which, when the limitations of the I, have
been transcended, become the sheaths of Christ.
And now think of how men live in communion with Christ. From the time
of the Mystery of Golgotha to the attainment of the goal of
Earth-evolution, man grows more perfect in that he develops to the
stature that is within his reach as a being endowed with the power of
the I. But men are united with the Christ Who has come
among them, in that they transcend their own I
and through wonder, build the Astral Body of Christ. Christ does not
build His own Astral Body, but in the wonder that arises in their
souls, men share in the forming of the Astral Body of Christ. His
Ether-Body will be fashioned through the compassion and love flowing
from man to man; and His physical body through the power
of conscience unfolding in human beings. Whatever wrongs are committed
in these three realms deprive the Christ of the possibility of full
development on the Earth that is to say, Earth-evolution is
left imperfect. Those who go about the Earth with indifference and
unconcern, who have no urge to understand what the Earth can reveal to
them, deprive the Astral Body of Christ of the possibility of full
development; those who live without unfolding compassion and love,
hinder the Ether-Body of Christ from full development; and those who
lack conscience hinder the development of what corresponds with the
Physical Body of Christ ... but this means that the Earth cannot
reach the goal of its evolution.
The principle of Egotism has to be overcome in Earth-evolution. The
Christ Impulse penetrates more and more deeply into the life and
culture of humanity and the conviction that this Impulse has lived its
way into mankind, free from every trace of denominationalism
as, for example, in the paintings of Raphael, this conviction will
bear its fruit. How Christ may truly be portrayed is a problem still
to be solved. Men on Earth will have to be greatly enriched in their
life of feeling if, after the many attempts made through the
centuries, another is to succeed to some slight extent in expressing
what the Christ is as the super-sensible Impulse living on through
Earth-evolution. The attempts made hitherto do not even suggest what
form such a portrayal of Christ should take. For it would have to
express how the enveloping sheaths woven of the forces of wonder,
compassion and conscience are gradually made manifest. The countenance
of Christ must be so vital and living that it is an expression of the
victory won over the sensory, desire-nature in men of
Earth victory achieved through the very forces which have
spiritualised the countenance. There must be sublime power in this
countenance. The painter or sculptor will have to express in the
unusual form of the chin and mouth, the power of conscience unfolded
to its highest degree. The mouth must convey the impression that it is
not there for the purpose of taking food but to give utterance to
whatever moral strength and power of conscience has been cultivated by
men through the ages; the very structure of the bones around the teeth
in the lower jaw will seem to form themselves into a mouth. All this
will have to be expressed in the countenance. The form of the lower
part of the face will have to express a power whose outstreaming rays
seem to shatter the rest of the way that certain other forces are
vanquished. With a mouth like this, it will be impossible to give the
Christ Figure a bodily form similar to that possessed by the physical
human being today. On the other hand, all the power of compassion will
flow out of His eyes the power that eyes alone can contain
not in order to receive impressions but to bear the very soul
into the joys and sufferings of others. His brow will give no
suggestion of thought based upon earthly sense-impressions. It
will be a brow conspicuously prominent above the eyes, arching over
that part of the brain; it will not be a thinker's brow
which merely works upon material already there. Wonder will be made
manifest in this projecting brow which curves gently backwards over
the head, expressing wonder and marvel at the mysteries of the world.
It will be a head such as is nowhere to be found in physical humanity.
Every true representation of the Christ must be a portrayal of the
Ideal embodied in Him. When man reaches out towards this highest Ideal
and strives through Spiritual Science to represent it in Art, this
feeling will arise in greater and greater strength: If you
would portray the Christ, you must not look at what is actually there
in the world, but you must let your whole being be quickened and
pervaded by all that flows from contemplation of the spiritual
evolution of the world, inspired by the three great impulses of
Wonder, Compassion and Conscience.
- Note 1:
- See also: Christ and the Twentieth Century (25.1.12).
Published in the volume entitled: Turning Points of Spiritual
History.
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