VII
THE SIGNATURE OF HUMAN EVOLUTION THE ADVANCING INDIVIDUALITY
THE DAWN OF THE NEW POWER OF THE SPIRIT-SELF IN MAN
THE last lecture dealt with the subject of how the Christ Impulse will
unfold in future times, and also, of course, in our own epoch. We
heard that sheaths will weave themselves as it were around the Christ
Impulse: Wonder into an Astral Body; feelings of love or Compassion
into an Ether-Body; the power of Conscience into what corresponds to a
Physical Body. Thereby that Ideal Being Whose I
the Christ Impulse Itself passed into the Earth through the
Mystery of Golgotha, will reach completion in the course of the time
still remaining to Earth-evolution. The fundamental character of the
future Ideal of humanity was described in one of its aspects and the
present lecture will endeavour to add yet another, different picture.
The Christ Impulse came, so to say, in the middle of the epoch
following upon the great Atlantean catastrophe. This epoch may be said
to extend from the time of the Atlantean catastrophe to the next
great catastrophe of which you may read in the lectures on the
Apocalypse. (Nuremburg, 1908.) In the middle of this period, the most
important of all events in Earth-evolution takes place the
coming of the Christ Impulse. As the last lecture indicated, it is not
necessary to turn our eyes to Palestine in order to realise that
something of the highest importance was taking place at that time in
Earth-evolution. We have only to study the Graeco-Latin epoch of
culture, lying as it does in the middle of the Post-Atlantean period,
and recall one of its characteristic features; this again can be
compared with a similar feature in the preceding Third epoch and in
our own epoch.
The essential and fundamental character of a Greek Temple has often
been described. Its form stands there as a complete, self-contained,
independant whole, even when it is not actually before our eyes, even
when we conceive of no human being anywhere near it. Inside a Greek
Temple, human beings always seem to be a disturbing element; they do
not really belong to it, they do not belong inside it. For what, in
reality, is a Greek Temple? We can only understand it in its whole
form and structure, if we think of it as the dwelling-place of a
living, invisible God who has come down to the physical plane. That is
the reason why every Temple is dedicated to one particular God. And
when we picture the God in the Temple with no human beings
present the God for whom a dwelling-place has been built on Earth
... then we have grasped the idea embodied in the Greek
Temple. Human beings really have no place there. This was the idea
underlying the whole architecture of a Greek Temple. Such architecture
could only arise in an epoch when the Divine Spiritual was known to
pervade all existence on the physical plane. Men whose paths appeared
to be everywhere steeped in the Divine could feel all the depth of
meaning contained in words uttered by one of themselves: Better
it is to be a beggar in the Upper World than a king in the realm of
the Shades! ... that is to say, in the world lying on the
other side of the Gate of Death. It was the period when human beings
experienced, in greatest intensity, their union with the physical
plane and with the Spiritual pervading the physical plane.
Let us compare a Greek Temple with a building of the same character in
the preceding epoch and with buildings which, in our own epoch,
indicate its fundamental attitude and trend. Think of an Egyptian
Temple, even of the Pyramids: they become intelligible only when we
see them as expressions of man's aspiration to the Divine to
the Divine Godhead who has not yet descended to the physical plane. In
the architecture of the Egyptian time, every line, every form,
expresses the striving of man towards the Divine-Spiritual. But these
mysterious and deeply symbolical buildings indicate in themselves that
men must have undergone preparation before the architectural forms
could help them to find the way to the Divine-Spiritual. They needed
preparation: they must have reached the first stage of Initiation. The
same applies to the architecture of Asia Minor. In our own epoch,
Gothic architecture gives the keynote. This is an occult fact. It is
impossible to have the same conception of a Gothic Cathedral as of a
Greek Temple; for a Gothic Cathedral is incomplete without the
congregation of believers. It is simply not complete without the human
beings within it! All its forms seem to convey that they are there to
receive the prayers of the believers the believers,
in contrast to the Initiates in ancient Egypt. Anyone who
can discern what these things mean, realises from the course taken by
the evolution of Form from the Egyptian Temple, through the Greek
Temple, to the Gothic Cathedral, that the impulse leading to the
unfolding of the human I entered at a certain point into
the process of earthly existence. Wherever we look we can perceive how
the Christ Impulse lays hold of man, leaves its stamp and signature
upon all happenings, all development, and it seems grotesque when
philosophical or theological thought declares that acceptance of such
an Impulse rests upon the basis of historical records. It does not
rest upon any historical record whatever, but simply and solely upon a
discerning, clear-sighted observation of human evolution; for no
matter where we look, we see that development follows the same course
as that revealed in Architecture. The Initiate who alone was capable
of understanding the architectural forms of the Egypto-Chaldean epoch
the Third Post-Atlantean epoch knew that he must raise
himself above the level of ordinary manhood: then and only then could
he ascend into the region of Divine Spiritual life. The Initiate of
the Fourth Post-Atlantean epoch knew that in the physical world he was
living together with the Divine, but he had very little connection
with what the Greeks called the World of Shades, because by that time
man had descended more deeply into physical existence. And when the
Gods did not mingle with men in the Temples, the Greeks felt no
connection with that other world.
Since the Fourth Post-Atlantean epoch these conditions have changed
changed in the sense that it is possible now for every single soul to
find the path to the Divine-Spiritual. It is extremely important to
realise this for it is the most concrete expression of the fact that
in ancient times men were much nearer to the Spiritual in their
consciousness, in their knowledge and in their life of soul. Then came
the descent to the physical plane and now there must be a gradual
re-ascent. We are living in the age when the re-ascent must be
undertaken consciously whereas, to begin with, the Christ
Impulse worked unconsciously in men.
Our own epoch is a kind of recapitulation of the Egypto-Chaldean
period. Of the Graeco-Latin epoch there is no recapitulation, for it
lies in the middle of the seven consecutive periods. The Third epoch
is being recapitulated, in a certain form, in our own age; the Second
epoch, that of ancient Persian culture, will be recapitulated in the
Sixth epoch by which our own will be followed; and in the far distant
Seventh epoch, before a stupendous catastrophe, the First epoch, that
of ancient Indian culture, will be recapitulated not, of
course, in the same form, for the recapitulation will everywhere bear
the imprint of the Christ Impulse.
A certain consciousness existed, especially in olden times, of what
has come to pass in the evolution of mankind. Olden times, of course,
were paramountly conscious of the descent of humanity, the descent to
the physical plane from the heights of Divine-Spiritual existence. But
for every process there must be preparation. There had been
preparation, too, for the Impulse given by the Mystery of Golgotha in
the Fourth epoch the Impulse for the re-ascent. This Impulse had its
forerunners in Elijah, John the Baptist and others.
But consciousness of the fact that mankind has descended from
Divine-Spiritual existence and in the future must re-ascend into the
worlds of Divine Spirit, was present not only in the culture which
eventually made its way into the West; evidences of such consciousness
are to be found in every civilisation.
A very widespread and characteristic idea finds expression in the
traditions of practically all the peoples an idea which may, it
is true, have very ramified applications, but can finally be
associated with a definite and specific tradition. It is a tradition
upon which there has been much reflection and upon which occult
knowledge alone can shed light, namely, the tradition of the
Flood. Much that is connected with this tradition refers,
of course, to far earlier times, but the following is brought clearly
to light by occult investigation. Nearly all the peoples who have left
reliable historical records or legends refer to the Flood as having
taken place about three thousand years before the Mystery of Golgotha;
that is the period indicated by the legends. There is not enough time
today to explain why this last Flood which was supposed to have
occurred three thousand years before our era, cannot be taken to
indicate a great physical catastrophe or deluge. Obviously it does not
refer to the Atlantean catastrophe, for that took place very much
earlier. The Flood, therefore, must mean something
entirely different. Yet the fact should not be lost sight of that the
traditions of all the peoples in question place the Flood in the
fourth millennium before our era. Although the dates vary a little,
they tally in the main essentials.
At this point I will ask you to remember that in the First
Post-Atlantean epoch, when the Holy Rishis were the great teachers of
men, culture was inspired, paramountly, by the human ether-body;
during the ancient Persian epoch, culture was inspired by the astral
body, the sentient body; in the Egypto-Chaldean epoch by the sentient
soul; in the Graeco-Latin epoch by the mind or intellectual soul; in
our present epoch by the consciousness soul (or spiritual
soul). And now the time is approaching when the powers of the
Spirit-Self will gradually be imbued into culture. In that development
proceeded in this way, the experiences arising in man's life of soul
underwent deep and far-reaching change. Just think of it. The picture
of the world presented to a man of the earliest Indian epoch, of which
even the Vedas have no knowledge, received its essential character and
stamp from the working of the ether-body. Through the ether-body man
cannot direct his gaze to the outer world in the way that is customary
in our time. His perception, his picture of the world cannot be as
they are today; where the forces of the ether-body are in operation,
everything arises from within. A man of today can only have an idea
dim and lifeless at that of perception which derives
from the ether-body, when he recalls the character of his dreams. But
the dreams and visions through which, during the ancient Indian epoch,
one human being became known to another, were living and real in the
very highest degree. To imagine that when one human being met another,
the outer perception of him was the same as it is today, would be
quite erroneous. The man of ancient India saw pictures but in
those times the other human being physically before him was enveloped
in an auric cloud, shrouded in a kind of mist. The character of
perception was altogether different compared with perception as it is
at the present day, these pictures, although full of the greatest
spiritual import, were blurred and hazy. The forces streaming down
from Cosmic Space, from the world of the stars it was these
forces that were seen in such clarity and brilliance in those ancient
times. In the Second Post-Atlantean epoch the power to look outwards
gradually unfolded but, strangely enough, the faculty for gazing into
the great Cosmic Spaces remained. Whereas perceptions of the world
below were still hazy and without definition, the ancient Persian
gazed with lucid clarity into the world of the stars. It is therefore
intelligible that Zarathustrianism should point directly to Cosmic
Space, to the light of the Sun, to Ahura Mazdao or Ormuzd.
This was because the astral body was paramountly active. By the end of
the ancient Persian epoch, the faculty of looking outwards into the
physical world was already in its preparatory stage. The impulses
leading to perception as it is in our day have been developing for
long, long ages. Thus the impulse to look out into the physical world
was gradually instilled into man, leading him to the entirely new
mode of perception which began to light up by slow degrees.
When the ancient Persian epoch was drawing to its close and the next
period was glimmering like a dawn of the future, men felt: We
shall no longer be able to experience with such intensity the Divine
heritage that has come to us from the olden days of Atlantis, when
with their power of inner, clairvoyant vision, men lived in communion
with the worlds of Divine Spirit ... The gaze was turned back
to the past. What mattered most for these men were their remembrances
in which living pictures arose like dreams dreams of how the
Gods had fashioned the world through the ages of Lemuria and Atlantis.
They felt that these remembrances were withdrawing, were fading away
from humanity and that conditions were approaching when man must work
with a faculty which tells him of the outer world, clouds the bright
light of the inner world of the Spirit, and compels him to look from
within-outwards, if he is to master the external world. This age was
drawing nearer and nearer. Those who had the deepest, clearest
perception of the dawn of the new epoch were men who at that time were
the knowers and sages in ancient India. They felt it in the form, as
it were, of a Divine Impulse, compelling the human being to think for
himself, through inner activity, about what confronts him in the
physical world to which he was descending. Picturing this Impulse as a
Divine Being, the successors of the first, very ancient Indian
culture those who were living now during the Second Post-Atlantean
epoch called this Being Pramathesis. These men
felt: The God Pramathesis is drawing near, snatching human
beings away from the guidance given by the ancient Gods; God
Pramathesis is causing the disappearance of all that ancient
clairvoyance revealed concerning the world and is forcing man to look
outwards into the physical plane. Darkness is creeping over the world
of the ancient Gods. A time is approaching when in their life of soul
men will no longer be able to gaze into the world of the Gods, but
when their eyes will be turned to the outer world. Kaliyuga, the
‘Black Age’ is approaching; the bright age of ancient Divinity is
giving place to the age when the Gods of old withdraw. It is the age
inaugurated by the God Pramathesis!
Kaliyuga was said to begin at a time which lies 3,101 years before our
own era; this is the time of the Flood according to Indian
tradition. For it was said that the Flood coincides with the coming of
Kaliyuga, and Kaliyuga was conceived to be the offspring of the God
Pramathesis.
Kaliyuga broke in upon the world, reaching its close in our own age.
Now that the ascent to the spiritual world must begin, a spiritual
science has come to mankind. Kaliyuga began 3,101 years before our
era, and ended in the year 1899 A.D. That is why 1899 is a year of
such importance. The re-ascent to the spiritual worlds this must
be the ideal of the future.
The age preceding the onset of Kaliyuga was, however, an age
characteristic of the ancient Persian epoch when the old remembrances
rose up within man via the astral body. Now he was to turn to the
world outside. This was a great and epoch-making transition. In the
case of many human beings it came about in such a way that for a time
all vision departed from them and darkness spread over their souls.
This condition of darkness did not last for long periods, actually
only for weeks. But men passed into this condition of sleep, and many
never came out of it. Many of them perished and only relatively few
were left in widely scattered regions. There is not enough time today
to describe the conditions actually prevailing at that time. It can
only be said briefly that owing to so large a number of human beings
having succumbed, conditions were dark and sinister in the extreme and
at only a few scattered places did men awaken from the great spiritual
deluge that spread over their souls like a sleep. This condition of
sleep was felt by most souls as a kind of drowning and by
only a few as a re-awakening. And then came the Black Age,
the age devoid of the Gods.
Were these things known to other human beings on the Earth? They were
indeed. To our astonishment we find widespread evidence of knowledge
among the peoples that a deluge had submerged the consciousness of men
and that in the Third Post-Atlantean epoch, through the development of
the sentient soul in other words, outward-turned vision
an entirely new power must have been inaugurated. The Indians divined
this when they said: Kaliyuga is the offspring of Pramathesis. And
what did the Greeks say? In Greece, Pramathesis becomes,
Prometheus which is exactly the same. Prometheus is
the brother of Epimetheus. The latter represents one who still
looks back into ancient times. Epimetheus is the one whose
thoughts turn backward; Prometheus sends his thoughts forward, to the
world outside, to what takes place there. Just as Pramathesis has his
offspring in Kaliyuga, so, too, Prometheus has his offspring. The
Greek form of Kaliyuga is Kalion. And because
the Greeks felt it to be the age of Darkness, the d is
prefixed and the word becomes Deukalion which is
really the same word as Kaliyuga. This is not ingenious
fancy, but an occult fact. It is clear, therefore, that the Greeks
possessed the same knowledge as the Indian sages. This is quoted
merely as an example, indicating that in their conditions of old
clairvoyance, knowledge of these truths came to men and they were able
to express them in majestic pictures. The Greek legend tells how, on
the advice of his father Prometheus, Deukalion builds a wooden chest;
in this he and his wife Pyrrha alone are saved from destruction, when
Zeus proposes to exterminate the human race by a deluge. Deukalion and
Pyrrha land on Parnassus, and from them issues the new human race.
Deukalion is the son of Prometheus and in the intervening
period comes the flood, denoting among manifold peoples, a condition
of consciousness.
These wonderful pictures which have been preserved in the traditions
of so many of the peoples, show us how truths concerning the evolution
of mankind have survived among them.
As men lived on gradually into the age of Kaliyuga, into the Third
Post-Atlantean epoch, the ancient clairvoyant knowledge faded away. We
who have to recapitulate the Third epoch, must bring this kind of
knowledge to life once again, but in an entirely new form. The lecture
given a fortnight ago (The Idea of Reincarnation and its Introduction
into Western Culture) dealt with this subject. Western culture, the
beginnings of which were mingled with the ancient Hebrew culture, has
to concentrate primary attention on the single personality living on
the physical plane between birth and death; Western culture cannot
focus its main attention on the Individuality who passes through the
different epochs, but concentrates upon the existence of the one
personality, whose life between birth and death runs its course on the
physical plane, not in the higher worlds. Now that Kaliyuga has come
to an end, consciousness must be imbued with the forces necessary for
the further evolution of the human race; what was lost during Kaliyuga
must be raised again from the depths. Our eyes must be directed more
and more to the onflowing life of the Individuality. I have spoken of
a series of lives in the West Elijah, John the Baptist,
Raphael, Novalis and have shown how by the addition of
knowledge derived from the spiritual worlds, we can perceive the
continuous thread of the soul, the onflowing life of the one
Individuality in Elijah, John the Baptist, Raphael, Novalis.
In our Movement, development of this insight must be a conscious
aspiration, for it is a necessity in the evolution and culture of the
Earth. No progress would be possible by the mere continuation of the
old experiences, the old knowledge. I have emphasised often enough all
that it means for the minds of men to enrich and make fruitful the
heritage of ancient times by means of the new knowledge now available.
It must, however, be realised that just as the transition from life
inspired by the astral body to a spiritual life of soul, primarily in
the sentient soul, was fraught with deep significance, so, now, we
must work our way from life in the consciousness soul to life in the
Spirit-Self. I have intimated how this will take place by saying that
during the next three thousand years, an increasing number of human
beings will experience the Appearance of the Christ Impulse, will be
able to experience the Christ Impulse in the spiritual worlds. But
actual realisation of the influences streaming in from the spiritual
world will have to unfold in greater intensity in the times lying
ahead of us. It will not suffice to know, in theory, that
generally speaking the human being lives on after death;
man's whole picture of life must carry the sure conviction that when
the human being passes through the Gate of Death, he lives on still,
death being merely a transition. We must realise, not as a theory, but
as actual knowledge, that while a human being is alive, he works upon
us physically, through his body; after his death he works spiritually,
out of the spiritual world, upon our physical world. He is present in
very truth. We must learn to see life in the light of such a fact and
to reckon with what it involves.
Suppose it is our task to educate children. Anyone acquainted with
these things is well aware that to educate children who up to their
twentieth year still have parents living, is a very different matter
from having to educate children whose fathers died when they were
four or five years old. When education is taken in deep earnestness,
and the individuality of the child really studied (it is not a matter
of speculation!) especially in the case of a child whose father
is dead, we shall often discern that there is something unusual at
work here, something we cannot, at first, quite get hold of. Moreover
we shall not succeed in getting to the root of it, if we adopt the
modes of thought drawn from materialism. But here and there the
thought may occur: Here is a strange current of the times. Most
people regard those who belong to it as fools; but it may be worth
while to find out what these Theosophists have to say about the
destiny of human beings after death. The Theosophists tell us that
although human beings discard their physical bodies at death, the
content of their life of soul, their hopes, aspirations and so forth,
live on, and are not inactive. Indeed they are often more active after
death than when the human being was living on the physical plane,
enclosed in his body ... Those who speak like this, have paid
attention to the results of spiritual research and will realise that
the father is working upon the child from the spiritual world;
moreover that he has definite hopes and longings which make their way
into the life of the child! With this knowledge, success may come
where it was not possible before, and we know how to deal with
sympathies and antipathies which may express themselves in the child.
To succeed with children we need to know more than that the air
affects them, and that when the air is chilly they may catch cold. We
must have knowledge of the influences playing from the spiritual world
into the physical, and of the form they take.
These things are still regarded as nonsense, but the time is not far
distant when the very facts of life will compel people to take account
of them and to reckon with what endures in the form of live and potent
impulses after human beings have passed through death. Not until then
will the concrete reality contained in the spiritual conception of
the world be grasped.
Naturally, these influences from the spiritual world are not at work
in the case of children only; influences also come from
individualities in the spiritual world who were connected with human
beings at a later age of life. To begin with, a man may be quite
unaware of these influences. (Again I am not inventing but telling
you of actual observations, confirmed by spiritual investigation.)
After a time a man may say to himself: I do not know why I am
impelled to this or that action, why I have this impulse; something is
urging me to think quite differently now, about certain things.
Subsequently he may have a very striking dream. Little heed is paid to
things of the kind nowadays, but men will gradually become aware that
it is not the form but the content of the dream that is of
importance. From this you may conclude that if Edison had made his
discoveries in a dream, they would have been just as effective!
Suppose a man dreams that some unknown person comes to him, someone he
cannot even think of as an acquaintance, indeed cannot place at all.
This person comes into his life of dream and various things happen
... Finally he realises that this person whom he cannot recall, who died
perhaps fifteen years before, is working into and influencing his
life. Whereas previously he felt that certain impulses were urging him
on, he is now fully aware that these impulses, in the form of a
dream-picture, are working into his night-consciousness. This is often
characteristic of the connection between impulses within us and
influences working upon us in the shape of dreams. Such experiences
will become increasingly familiar.
And now, in conclusion, let us see how they will become familiar.
Suppose someone today reads one of the many biographies of Raphael. He
will get the impression that in a certain respect Raphael stands there
as a phenomenon, complete in himself, giving forth the highest and
best that was in him, but so enclosed within his particular sphere of
work that it is difficult to imagine him rising still higher or
transcending the level he had actually reached. And again: Raphael's
creative genius seems to have been alive in him from the the very
beginning ... On the subject of its phenomenal manifestation in
Raphael's early boyhood the biographies have nothing to say. And why?
The biographies give the information that Raphael's father was
Giovanni Santi who, among other activities, was also a writer; he died
when Raphael was eleven years old, but before his death he had placed
the boy under the tuition of a painter. It is also known that Giovanni
Santi was himself a talented painter but that there was something in
him which he could not bring to expression. We feel that there was
something in the soul of Giovanni Santi which did not make itself
manifest because his outer nature frustrated it. He died when the boy
Raphael was eleven years old. From the very way in which Raphael
develops we can discern the source of the powers which enabled him to
reach maturity and perfection so rapidly they are the influences
playing into him from his father, forces coming from the spiritual
worlds. Anyone who tries to write a true biography of Raphael in the
future will have to emphasise the point that Giovanni Santi, the
father of Raphael, died in 1494, when the boy was only eleven years
old. Giovanni Santi was a distinguished man, who during his life on
Earth aspired to great things. And his aspirations continued when,
living on without frustration in the spiritual world, he was sending
down to his beloved son in the form of delicate and intimate
spiritual influences forces which his own constitution had
prevented him from bringing to expression in the physical world.
To say this is no disparagement of Raphael's genius, for the ground
must naturally have been there. We know that he was the reincarnation
of John the Baptist and had only to receive into himself those forces
which it was his particular mission to bring into manifestation at
that time. Thinking of this, we can perceive the interplay between the
spiritual world and the physical plane. Future study of the life of
Raphael will have, at every turn, to concern itself with the
influences which poured from the Spiritual into the Physical. Then we
shall have a picture of wholeness of forces working
around us, through us, in us. Thus will spirituality again be
instilled into culture. But it must not surprise us if those who are
unwilling today to listen to any suggestion of the introduction of
spirituality into culture, are contemptuous of this spiritual
conception of the world; for it is something completely new. It is a
dawning of the new power of the Spirit-Self. And a time will come
I ask you to write this deeply into your souls when men
will think of the materialistic culture which is now on the way to its
close, as they once thought about the age preceding the Flood,
yearning and longing for the future culture which, when it came, was
something wholly and essentially new. Theosophists, however, should
not merely strive for this ideal in theory, but receive it into their
very souls; they should regard it as their good Karma to know
about the course of human evolution and therewith of human culture.
These things will have to be pondered over for a time, because I am
not yet in a position to say exactly when the next lecture can take
place.
(Note 1)
But we know well that time is required to make Spiritual
Science an integral force and impulse in our hearts and minds; and we
know, too, that it is part of spiritual development not only to
understand the truths but actually to unfold all that the great ideas
born from a spiritual conception of the world can say to our hearts.
- Note 1:
- Between the date of this lecture and the next of the series (18th
June, 1912), Dr. Steiner had given two lectures in Copenhagen:
On the Meaning of Life, 23rd and 24th May, 1912; three
lectures in Norrköping: Anthroposophical Ethics, 28th
and 29th May, 1912; and two lectures in Christiania:
Man in the Light of Occultism, Theosophy and Philosophy,
2nd June
to 12th June, 1912.
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