LECTURE
II.
Ancient Occult Magic. The Ahasver Mystery.
Dornach, 1st November 1915.
I spoke yesterday of the great Polish drama “The
Undivine Comedy” by Krasinski and of its very special
significance. One can truly say that it was consciously brought into
the world as the outcome of a dialogue with the Spirits working in
the evolution of humanity, who in the middle of the 19th century
spoke to those who were willing to listen to them.
Let us for a moment hold in our minds the thoughts that
came to us from the realisation that what was astir in the inmost
depths of the evolutionary process made its way into the external
literary culture of the time. From Gutzkow's novel “The
Mahaguru” as well as from “The Undivine Comedy” —
I chose only two particularly striking examples from many that might
be quoted — we see that as it were behind the scenes of
external happenings, significant impulses are at work in the cultural
life of mankind. From many sources we have gained knowledge that
directs our minds and hearts to the great moment of world-evolution
in which we are living, the moment when it is essential to be mindful
of the new element that must be received into the evolution of
humanity — but with the co-operation of human souls who are
able to understand it. There are different ways of characterising the
importance of the present time, but perhaps one thing only need be
said and this will be sufficient to bring home the significance of
the point of time at which we are standing.
In ages of antiquity men received a heritage consisting
of wisdom yielded by atavistic clairvoyance and of knowledge gained
atavistically. But this heritage petered away and the tide of
materialism arose — particularly since the last three or four
centuries and reaching a peak in the 19th century. This tide of
materialism veiled all possibilities of vision into the spiritual
world — and a new path, a new method, is now appearing in
spiritual science. As I have often said, this development ultimately
becomes a natural process in the souls of men. The situation today
still is that the vast majority of souls have yet to learn that there
are many earthly lives. But when the souls now living are
re-incarnated, for the most part they will know, not merely as a
theory, that there are many earthly lives; they will live on into an
age when it will be known quite as a natural matter of course: there
are many earthly lives. Just as human souls now remember back to
a certain point in childhood, and thoughts from childhood constantly
arise, so it will be natural one day for the living impression to
well up from within: “We have been here many times.”
Human souls will evolve to this stage just as they have evolved from
primitive stages of life. This development will come about of itself
but the following is inevitable. —
The souls who have learnt nothing from spiritual science
today will die and return in new incarnations. Then, having learnt
nothing from spiritual science, they will not know what to make of
the impression that will rise up from within them of the truth of
repeated earthly lives, and they may well be driven to despair. For
this inner impression that will arise quite naturally in the soul
must be grasped through thoughts, and the thoughts that are necessary
before it can be understood are those yielded by spiritual science.
These thoughts should make the whole history of the Ego and the fact
of its existence in man intelligible to us; and he alone who has
within him the force of these thoughts will be able to understand
the impression that will come of itself, as a kind of remembrance.
But the foundation for understanding this
remembrance will from now onwards have to be laid through spiritual
science; knowledge of the continued existence of the Ego will have to
be acquired. And those who have not acquired it will have to admit,
when these remembrances well up in them: “I do not understand
my own self.” This will be a terrible cry of despair in future
times. It must be realised that only through knowledge and
understanding of what will inevitably come in the future can human
souls be kept from falling into despair. When the Ego which passes
from incarnation to incarnation asserts itself in the future —
and this means in our future incarnations — men must be
able to understand this Ego. And they will do so if they have worked
on their souls through the thoughts of spiritual science.
The Mystery of Golgotha was fulfilled in order that the
Ego might be fully understood, and this can never happen if —
as in the case of the Polish Count described yesterday — men
preserve in their souls nothing but feelings of the Past —
sacred though these feelings may be and connected with the events
centred in the Mystery of Golgotha. Such feelings will enable these
events to be grasped as matters of history, but that cannot lead to
any true understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha. True understanding
of the Mystery of Golgotha depends upon the fulfilment of the words;
“Not I but Christ in me.” It will then be possible for
Christ in His living activity within earth-evolution not to remain
inaudible to men. He must be made audible through that which, under
his inspiration, spiritual science has to say, no sentiments or
feelings tied to remembrances, can lead mankind to future well-being.
But neither can the interests of the future be furthered by one who
lives only in and for the Present — the tyrant described in the
lecture yesterday. The tyrant does indeed, assert the Ego, but not
Christ within the Ego. A deep riddle is presented to us in this
Polish drama: two personalities stand in contrast to one
another, one of whom has the Christ of tradition, of history, but
runs the risk of falling away from Him. And what comes to expression
in the wife and in the child of the Count relapses into a purely
atavistic connection with the spiritual world.
A great danger for our time is indicated here. It is
that those who are not willing to assimilate in a new way the
knowledge of mankind's connection with the spiritual worlds, although
they feel that such connection exists, will cause part of their being
to lose the requisite link with the spiritual world. Mankind would
fall asunder into those who — like the old Count — must
necessarily despair and die because they cling exclusively to the
Past, and those who rise into the spiritual worlds in an atavistic
way — like the Count's wife and child. Because they have not
received the Christ into their inmost being in full reality, they
pass into the spiritual world without finding in themselves a point
of anchorage.
What is it that the members of the Count's family
have not fully developed? They have not fully developed the Ego: they
are remains from the age which in the regular course of the evolution
of humanity has been at an end since the Mystery of Golgotha, but
markedly so since the last few centuries. They are remains from an
age of antiquity when the Ego had not yet completely taken root in
man; they are Ego-less human beings who, because they cannot take the
Christ into the Ego which has not developed into the necessary
intensity, lose the Christ. And standing in contrast to them is the
tyrant, who has developed the Ego and bears it in himself with all
strength; without taking the Christ into the Ego, he desires to bring
happiness to the world but is incapable of doing so. At the point of
death — out of the vision which the tyrant understands as
little as he understands how to resign himself to death — there
breaks from his lips the cry: “Thou hast conquered, O
Galilean!” — This is an indication of the fact that for
those human beings who have, it is true, acquired the Ego but have
not taken Christ into this Ego, there is one moment only when it is
possible for them to come into relationship with Christ: it is
the moment when they pass from this world into the other world. But
because Christ came from that other world into this world in order
there to find the way to human hearts, men must inevitably lose Him
when, after the moment of death, they arrive in that other world. All
the deeper impulses at work in our time belong to a sphere where
momentous issues are at stake — I can say no more than that
they “are at stake.”
But now we must go rather more deeply into things that
are already known to us but must be studied in a certain setting if
we are to understand them in the light of the conditions
prevailing in our time. We know that, properly speaking, the
evolution of the earth must be divided into an epoch preceding the
Mystery of Golgotha and an epoch following the Mystery of Golgotha.
We know, too, that in the epoch before the Mystery of Golgotha,
Luciferic and Ahrimanic spirits also worked into the souls of men.
Particularly in considering the ages before the Mystery of Golgotha
it must be realised that foolish chatter about avoiding Ahriman and
Lucifer at all costs will get us nowhere. For Ahriman and Lucifer
were allowed by the normal, progressive spiritual Beings to work in
the earthly evolution of men.
Now we know that there are spiritual Beings actually
ranking higher than men but who during the Old Moon period of
evolution did not reach the height that would have been possible for
them; they did not reach it, but for all that they rank higher than
men. So that bearing in mind the intervention of the Ahrimanic
and Luciferic beings, we can now understand better what is called the
ancient, primeval wisdom in earth-evolution. For example, the ancient
wisdom that was misused in the Lemurian epoch and perished with the
Lemurians; the wisdom that was then misused in the Atlantean epoch
and brought about the destruction of Atlantis. What was it that was
then among men? What was it, in reality? To say that the great wisdom
then existing was misused, applied in practices of black magic
and so forth, is a very abstract way of speaking and leads to no very
definite idea. Let us think, for example, of the character of this
wisdom in the last periods of the Lemurian epoch. Whence had it come?
Spiritual Beings who had not completed their full development during
the Old Moon epoch but who were nevertheless at a higher level than
men, had mingled with the earthly evolution of humanity. Man was
already there — but, as you can well imagine, in his most
primitive state. What was subsequently developed by human beings
during the Atlantean and Post-Atlantean epochs did not yet exist. In
those Lemurian times, man was a being wholly devoid of intelligence,
for intelligence was to develop only gradually during the course of
earth-evolution. Man was primitive in his will, in his actions, in
his soul-development — altogether like a child. Now had there
existed only bodies of men with the higher members of those bodies
that had been developed for them by the progressive spiritual Beings
of the higher Hierarchies, men would not have been capable at that
time of evolving any outstanding wisdom. But in that Lemurian age a
very lofty altogether extraordinary wisdom existed. For example,
among those primitive men there was widespread knowledge of how to
handle a child during the period between birth and the seventh year
so that as the result of a certain transformation of his etheric body
which then worked back upon the brain, he could be made extremely
clever. Radical educational methods have to be applied today if this
result is desired — and everyone is aware how very often these
efforts are unsuccessful. But in any case the art of affecting the
brain itself by exercising a certain influence on the etheric body of
the brain, so that the child in question becomes extremely clever, is
entirely lost today. Furthermore — and I hasten to emphasise it
— this art is in no circumstances whatever legitimate in our
time, for if it became at all general, even in its most elementary
form, it would lead to terrible abuses.
How is the existence of such an art in Lemurian times to
be explained? It is explained by the fact that Beings who had not
completed their development on the Old Moon, but had evolved only
the first six of their seven members, incorporated in men who
otherwise would have been utterly primitive. The spiritual Beings who
on the Old Moon were at a higher level than men but had not attained
the apex of their development, took on these primitive human bodies
and went to work with arts which far transcended all earthly
knowledge. You can imagine what such Beings in human bodies were
capable of accomplishing, — Beings who at a level higher than
the human had developed the sixth member — the Life-Spirit —
entered into these primitive, flexible, pliant bodies. And they
became terrible magicians, dread magicians!
And again, what kind of arts were general in the
Atlantean epoch? First and foremost there was the wisdom which must
be applied in order to cause talents in ancestors to be transmitted,
purely through heredity, to their descendants and actually to be
enhanced in these descendants. The Beings whose development had not
been completed on the Moon but who for all that were of a higher rank
than earthly man, were deeply versed in this art — with most
significant effect. Let me put it like this: it was as if by methods
connected with star-constellations and the like, one were to lead
over the qualities of a genius to his descendants, but in such a way
that these spiritual qualities were not merely inherited, but
intensified, enhanced. These higher Beings working in human bodies
were capable of mighty achievements. All this was swept out of
existence. Very many things were connected with these particular
arts. For example, it was possible by their means to observe the
course of spiritual evolution and to guide the spiritual forces into
the stream of heredity.
| Diagram 1 Click image for large view | |
In that epoch of Atlantis there were communities led by
such Beings in human form, who, if they wished some individuality
to come again to the earth, helped him to find a human incarnation by
enhancing certain qualities through heredity; and then they looked
for suitable descendants. It was like this. — Suppose such a
Being had guided some individuality into a human body on the earth;
when this body died, the individuality would meanwhile be in the
spiritual world. It was then a matter of manipulating the stream of
heredity in such a way as to produce a human body in which this
individuality could again be incarnated. This body had to be
created for the same individuality who was thus kept continuously on
the earth. All these arts have been lost, and necessarily lost,
because human evolution was to take the course that has so often been
described. But it is greatly to Ahriman's interest to hold firmly
fixed in the world that which ought properly to evolve in order to
make room for something different.
And so even superficial observation will show that there
is a very great deal in world-evolution which in an earlier age had
its justification but which in the form it now bears is no more than
a relic that has been preserved. Both in unimportant and important
domains it is so. In his novel “The Mahaguru” Gutzkow
wanted to indicate something of the kind in an important domain. He
wanted to give emphasis to the question: In what form does something
that had great significance in ancient times — in the Atlantean
epoch, when it was still possible for men to regulate the stream of
heredity — in what form does it appear when it is carried over
into an age and into a community where the traditions of it had
indeed been preserved but where nothing more was known of the earlier
art than an inferior form of it called in occultism “Occult
Chemistry?” Gutzkow showed that something of the kind existed
in Tibet. Naturally, the priesthood in Tibet had no knowledge of how
through forces of heredity they could produce a body for the
individuality whom they believed should pass from one body into
another — but they preserved the old customs. So there we
have an example of the external reality presenting an aspect utterly
different from what it had been in conditions once prevailing in the
evolution of humanity. Reading “The Mahaguru” makes one
want to cry out: Oh, how reality itself can become a maya in face of
the prevailing conditions!
And now think of something else. — You can well
imagine that the men of Lemurian and Atlantean times did not resemble
the men of today, for what developed, inwardly in the soul at that
time also gave configuration to the outer form; the whole outer form
of man was different — it was pliant and flexible. The human
form in the times of Lemuria and Atlantis was not ape-like; the
bodies of the actual ancestors of men were not ape-like. — It
would seem, therefore, that world-evolution must have made an
exception in the case of certain people who have written of
themselves that they can remember having descended from apes!
[Statements to this effect are made in the book “Man:
How, Whence and Whither” by Annie Besant and C. W. Leadbeater.
(Theosophical Publishing Company)] — But we will
not go into that now. — Men did not resemble apes, but if you
picture our children presenting a much, much more infantile
appearance, with an elemental quality of being extending over the
whole body, you may be able to get an idea of the character of the
human body in those times. As you can read in the book “From
the Akasha Chronicle,” because Beings surviving from the Old
Moon evolution had incarnated in these pliant, flexible bodies,
these bodies became animal-like rather than human. Distorted forms
arose, with strangely contorted limbs. — And there you have the
origin of the figures of gods to be found among certain peoples.
These curious figures with non-human faces and huge limbs, originate
from the knowledge that the incarnating Moon-Beings were united with
human bodies.
If in the Atlantean epoch there had been painters and
sculptors, they would have been able to portray or model these
figures of Moon-Beings incarnated in human bodies. But in Tibet this
was no longer possible. Hence the canon must be strictly obeyed, for
the artists would otherwise have made figures with whatever terms
they liked. If a man did not obey the canon but created something out
of his own play of fancy, he incurred the death-penalty. Naturally,
one may ask: Is there any justification for condemning to death
someone who makes only one tiny change in the figure of a god? Is
there really any justification for it? In Tibet, of course, there is
no longer any justification, but once upon a time there was, for as
you have heard, these Beings were actually present in bodies, and if
they were not faithfully portrayed, any deviation amounted to a lie.
In those ancient times a lie had infinitely greater power than it has
nowadays. If at the present time everyone who tells a lie were to
suffocate as the result — well, I prefer to leave it at that,
for I think that the fear of suffocation would be too great to allow
people to risk telling lies! I assume that nowadays people will not
suffocate — but at that time a lie would have caused actual
suffocation. For the thought expressed in the word contained a power
to give form to the air in the larynx, and then suffocated the man —
and anyone who had incorrectly portrayed on earth a Being who had not
fully completed his development on the Old Moon would have
suffocated, in other words, a process of nature would have caused his
death.
The evolution of humanity is an exceedingly complicated
matter and to understand it one must go deeply into spiritual
science. To find the right approach to world-evolution it is
essential to study what it is the mission of spiritual science to
make known from spiritual worlds. For spiritual science is, as it
were, a first impulse to which other impulses must increasingly be
added, in order that humanity in the future may advance along the
right path. You will have realised from what I have been saying
recently [See “The Occult Movement In the 19th
Century” — notably Lectures IX and X.] that a course
must be steered between a Scylla and a Charybdis, that a very definite
path must be laid down in spiritual science. — This must be
taken with the deepest earnestness. Our modern natural science is
developed by materialistic methods. During these last weeks I have
tried to describe its characteristics to you. I have said that a
materialistic method in natural science is fully justified. It can be
characterized by saying that it is adapted to cloak the spiritual
reality lying behind. Why, then, must this materialistic method be
there in our present time?
In our present time an earlier knowledge of nature must
be superseded by a new knowledge of nature. I have told you something
about this earlier knowledge of nature. Just think what kind of
knowledge it was! To be able to mould a human head into an instrument
editable for genius, through specific measures applied scientifically
in the old sense of the word — this signified colossal
knowledge! — or again, so to regulate heredity that qualities
of genius were transmitted to descendants — the knowledge
required for this was even more penetrating and comprehensive, far,
far surpassing all the theories of evolution, the physics, chemistry
and so on, of today. But that ancient knowledge was to be veiled and
obscured by the materialistic method employed in natural science
today — which is fully justified in the purely physical domain.
It must be remembered that at the time when that lofty knowledge of
nature existed, man was not a free being; he was only at the
beginning of the gradual evolution of freedom. He was led and
guided and what came to pass in the process of his guidance was
for the most part brought about by the higher Hierarchies. And it was
single individuals who deviated from the regular course, who advanced
too far along the path to freedom, who were responsible for the fall
into the abyss and the inevitable destruction of Atlantis. But with
the constantly increasing freedom of will, man would have been unfit
for knowledge of this kind. To possess knowledge such as once existed
on the earth is unthinkable today because man's will has
attained freedom to an extent that would enable him still to misuse
this knowledge. How, then, is this free will guided into the right
channel?
| Diagram 2 Click image for large view | |
From indications I have given recently you will have
gathered that by adopting the method employed in natural science,
with all its scrupulous exactitude, the free will is directed into
the right channel; moreover, this method is a wonderfully effective
pedagogical means for the development of the free will. We have
therefore no cause whatever to quarrel with the method employed in
natural science, the justification of which for our present time we
fully acknowledge. You will find that what is contained in our
lecture-courses and books completely refutes the allegations of
individual opponents — to the effect, for example, that we
repudiate natural science. It is sometimes necessary to take
exception to the pretensions of certain investigators and so-called
scientific authorities; but nothing derogatory to the achievements of
natural science will ever be found in our literature. To say that
anything in our literature is a repudiation of natural science would
be sheer calumny, for among us there can be no question of such
repudiation. But at the same time it must be realised that attacks
upon us may well be made from the side of so-called natural science —
and if necessary, we must then repel the attack. But true adherents
of spiritual science must become more and more conscious of the
necessity to understand the natural-scientific method and to protect
this method from being tainted by all kinds of non-scientific
concepts — for example concepts of the atom and movement of the
atom, of which I have recently spoken. These are fantasies of natural
science, and the difference must be clearly seen.
Efforts must be made to distinguish between genuine
natural science and scientific fantasy. How often do we not hear it
said today that one thing or another is scientifically established —
whereas it is nothing of the kind, because words are simply accepted
as facts. Never was blind belief in authority greater than it is at
the present time in the domain of science, for everyone allows things
to be determined entirely by those in whom they happen to believe.
The purpose of the Mystery of Golgotha was that what came into the
world through Lucifer might gradually be corrected in a certain way —
it is indicated symbolically in the Bible: “Your eyes shall be
opened and ye shall know good and evil” — that is to say,
ye shall know good and evil from outside. But when in the sphere of
perceptions one perceives from outside, it is impossible to
receive from that world anything other than perceptions. As soon as
one begins to reflect about the perceptions, to speculate about them
and derive all kinds of ideas from them, one is on the way to finding
what has been imbued into them by Ahriman and Lucifer. The ideas
must come out of the spiritual world and be united with the
perceptions: then these ideas are in the real sense divine! In human
life there must be a marriage between the ideas which are given to
men from out of the Spiritual and what he perceives in the outer
world through his senses. But this union must first be achieved. How
this principle applies in the scientific domain you can gather from
my essay “Truth and Science.” The belief that in the
scientific sense, ideas, thoughts, could also be found from outside,
from the perceptions, is based on illusion, on illusion caused by
Ahriman and Lucifer. But as long as the Powers associated with the
words “Your eyes shall be opened and ye shall know good and
evil” (which means to search for the ideas in the outer world)
were sanctioned, that is to say, until the Mystery of Golgotha —
as long as Lucifer and Ahriman were allowed to work in this sphere,
there was no objection to be made. But that state of things is now
over. Now, in the matter of the permeation of perceptions from
outside, they are all the more unjustified.
This too was brought into evidence in the middle of the
19th century through a crisis of a particular kind. This crisis
announced itself in great and outstanding achievements:
spectral-analysis, for example, came on the scene, swept away the
conception that when one looks upwards to the stars one has to do
with spiritual Beings — and showed that substances to be found
everywhere in the universe also exist on the earth. The old union
between ideas and perceptions is no longer possible, for such
discoveries make it essential that the ideas shall again find the
spiritual path into our souls. The same applies to Darwinism.
To reason entirely on the basis of what is found by outer perception
— that is to say, to seek for the ideas in the outer world —
can only lead to a purely materialistic conception and interpretation
of the world. In short, the crisis is in evidence everywhere and
there is also widespread rebellion against the fact that the ideas
must flow out of the spirit-realm into the souls of men if humanity
is to make progress. In other words: we must understand the nature of
Ahriman and Lucifer and be on the alert when they try to make us
continue the principle indicated in the words; “Your eyes shall
be opened and ye shall know good and evil.” We must learn to
observe both Ahriman and Lucifer. And we shall be able to do this if
we permeate the Ego, as it has now unfolded, with Christ.
But something else too resounded through the world in
primeval times, resounded from a different side, after man had
acquired the power to distinguish good and evil, to direct his gaze
outwards, that is to say, to use his senses and through them to
acquire ideas based on sense-perceptions. The decree went forth: Man
must be driven out of the spirit-realm in which he has hitherto been
living, in order that he may not also eat “of the Tree of
Life.” But Christ will forever give men to eat of the Tree of
Life, and the ideas which stream directly out of the spirit-realm
into human souls must be inwardly experienced. But they can be
experienced in the real sense only when the human soul takes Christ
into itself. Then we have something quite different from the concept
of Knowledge; then we have the concept of Life. Just as a strict eye
must be kept on Lucifer and Ahriman in order that when they allow
knowledge derived from the outer world to penetrate into us we may
perceive that this knowledge is coming from them, so we must
realise that through the impulse given by the Mystery of Golgotha,
ideas were to flow into men to be the substance of life — the
substance not of knowledge alone, but of life. And when from this
standpoint of life we study the different religions of the
world, it will be far, far from our minds to investigate these
religions with the object of discovering whether they are or are not
in keeping with our own view of the world. To apply only the concept
of knowledge to these religions is not our task; we must apply the
concept of life.
There are definite forms of religion in the world. We
should not set out to discover whether we can consider these forms to
be true, but whether through their ritual and ceremonies they are
able to give nourishment and life to the souls of men, and — as
the souls of men differ — it follows that their life can be
sustained by different forms of nourishment. If we grasp this truth
we shall realise that we can never lend ourselves to quarreling with
any form of religion but that we must endeavour to understand it in
so far as it is life-nourishment for human souls to whom it is
given as life not as knowledge only, but as very life. Then we shall
see that the standpoint from which a religion begins to quarrel with
some branch of science is entirely misplaced. We shall also realise
that religion will inevitably adopt a hostile attitude towards
progress in natural science and spiritual science alike. For the
religions are still unwilling to get away from the old Tempter, they
still want to invoke only that God Who said to man that He will give
them life, that they themselves are not to eat of the Tree of Life.
The representatives of religions do not want to invoke God alone but
also the Luciferic Spirit and the Ahrimanic Spirit; they want the
eyes for distinguishing good and evil to be opened through religion.
Religion wants to be “knowledge.” But it cannot be
“knowledge” because it is life-substance. And
under the sway of this temptation which still whispers in their ears,
the representatives of the different religions believe they possess
facts of knowledge in their religions, whereas the question of
knowledge cannot, in reality, come into consideration between
religion and science. We have no cause whatever to combat religious
bodies, because we ask them about the sustenance they provide for
life, not about what knowledge they possess. Religious communities
will always be tempted to ask whether science as it advances is in
keeping with what they regard as knowledge. But because life is in
process of constant evolution, advancing science can never be in
keeping with religions which invariably tend towards conservatism.
And now you can picture the whole conflict which in the
nature of things will ever and again be urged. I should like you to
think rightly about this conflict and to realize that as a matter of
course the representatives of religious bodies, because they are
under the sway of temptation, will always, from their standpoint,
combat spiritual science, just as they combat natural science. But
you must also realise that these opponents fight because they lack
understanding. This does not excuse them at all, but it must none the
less be realised that they fight because of lack of understanding;
they cannot take the right standpoint. As a sign and symptom,
let me bring to your notice words written by a man who
perceived the inevitable approach of the natural-scientific age and
the natural-scientific way of thinking, and who was told by a friend
that one should not be concerned with knowledge that is not contained
in the Bible or preserved in the traditions of the Church. Since the
14th century, of course, things have changed in this connection. —
Dante's “Divine Comedy” is a great, world-embracing
poem. But Dante lived at the time when the epoch during which men
confined themselves to purely historical Christianity was passing
away. For Dante, Virgil was simply the exile banished to hell. Dante
did not know much about anything that differed from the Christianity
confronting him as a great system and régime. But in the
case of Petrarch it was different, 1 century later, in the 14th
century, Petrarch read Virgil with far greater credence. He turned
not only to Greek but also to Roman spiritual culture. When one of
his friends wrote to Petrarch saying that there had appeared to him
in a dream a spiritual Being who exhorted him to avoid all
non-Christian literature, he (Petrarch) gave a very significant
answer. I stress the importance of this incident because it shows how
the friend — and through him, Petrarch — was enjoined
from the spiritual world to concern himself only with what the
Christianity of that time regarded as truly Christian. Petrarch wrote
the following beautiful words which held good at that time for the
approaching epoch and still hold good today. Petrarch replied to his
friend Boccaccio in momentous words, affirming his standpoint, why he
read this non-Christian literature, and what it meant to him
(Petrarch: Letter to Boccaccio (“Epistolae seniles” I.
5):
“Why then should we shun the pagan poets and
writers who do not use the name of Christ simply because they have
never heard it? Surely there is greater danger in the books of
sceptics who speak of Christ and at the same time dispute Him —
but those who claim to be the defenders of the true faith read these
writings with the greatest eagerness. Believe me: much that is simply
the product of sloth and timidity is attributed to thoughtful
deliberation. Men often cast scorn on what is out of their reach; it
is characteristic of ignorance to condemn what it cannot comprehend
and nobody will concede to it strivings of which it is incapable.
“Here lies the root of the misguided judgments of
what is unknown; it is not so much the blindness of those who pass
judgment as their laziness that is in evidence. We, however, should
not allow ourselves to be frightened away from the sciences by any
pious admonitions, or by indications of the near approach to death.
If the sciences are imbibed with inner sincerity they quicken the
love of morality and take from us, or at least diminish, the fear of
death; if we abandon them, this will excite the suspicion that
disbelief lays claim to be knowledge. The sciences are not a
hindrance to one who has the right mastery of them, but they are a
help to him; they level his path of life and do not thwart him.
“For a diseased or weak stomach, many a food may
be unwholesome which a healthy, hungry man digests at once; so
too, that which would ruin a feebler nature may be rich in blessing
for a sound and vigorous mind. ...
“I know well that many have achieved great
sanctity without culture, but I know too that nobody has been kept
from sanctity by culture. ... If I am to tell you my own opinion, it
is this: The path to holiness via ignorance may possibly be smooth,
but it is faint-hearted. All good things have a single goal but many
paths lead thither and fellow-travelers along these paths differ
greatly; the one moves more slowly, the other more quickly, the one
in obscurity, the other visibly, the one bowed with humility, the
other buoyant with exultation. All journeying is blessed; but the
noblest is that which proceeds freely and openly before the world.
The knowledge that has wrestled through to belief is far superior to
naive simplicity, be it never so pious; and not one of the fools who
have ever entered the kingdom of heaven has as high a place as a man
of knowledge who has won the crown of blessedness.”
The same could be said about our spiritual science! And
not only to X [A newspaper article had been written by a
priest living in the vicinity of the Goetheanum.] but to
all the others who fight against us, one could rejoin with the words
written by Petrarch to his friend; “For a diseased or weak
stomach, many a food may be unwholesome which a healthy, hungry man
digests at once; so too, that which would ruin a feebler nature may
be rich in blessing for a sound and vigorous mind.”
And when people harp on the “contradiction in the
first and third Gospels” and refuse to admit that the
contradiction disappears as soon as the existence of two Jesus boys
is taken into account; when they insist upon “simplicity”
and say that the fantastic statements of “the one up there”
(on the Goetheanum hill) can well be ignored; when they will not
admit that all the forms of life are incorporated in our Building,
but talk about “distorted, fantastic forms,” one must
quote the words of Petrarch: “The knowledge that has wrestled
through to belief is far superior to naive simplicity; be it never so
pious, and not one of the fools who have ever entered the kingdom of
heaven has as high a place as a man of knowledge who has won the
crown of blessedness.”
Such thoughts make us realise that it can never be our
principle to combat any religious body and that it is sheer calumny
when anyone accuses us of being an enemy of religious Movements. The
very fact of such an accusation proves that there is no willingness
even to try to understand us. This at least we must know; and we must
resist every tendency to adopt an aggressive attitude to any
religious community just as we must keep ourselves free from the same
kind of attitude to natural science because that will soon disclose
its attitude to spiritual science! There is no reason whatever
for us to combat any religious body. Combat cannot be begun by us
because it does not lie in our nature to attack. And it must be taken
as an axiom that if peace is denied us, it is because the hostile
neighbour is not inclined for peace. Let the principle of leaving us
in peace be put to the test and then see whether peace is maintained!
Let it be put to the test! But naturally, we ourselves must be
permeated with the right feeling and attitude. For example, much
wrong is also done when from our side, too, dogmas or rites of one
kind or another are attacked, often without having been understood;
but if we rightly understand them, the principle referred to holds
good. I would therefore enjoin you to understand the principle of
peace. Just as I was obliged to enjoin you to have forbearance with
conditions prevailing at the present time, so must I enjoin you to be
alert and watchful, in order that we may do what is necessary to
guard the holy treasure entrusted to us. For more and more we shall
have to wend our way through the world with an unwavering inner
strength if we are to stand firmly on the ground where spiritual
science would have us stand.
The Mystery of Golgotha and the Christ Principle are
intimately connected with the need to see spiritual reality in the
world. Mere looking will never suffice even to understand the Mystery
of Golgotha purely as an historical event. The Mystery of Golgotha
must be comprehended spiritually; and those who devote
themselves to knowledge where everything is derived from outside and
will not open their eyes to the new revelations of the Mystery of
Golgotha which can ever and again flow to us, will not grasp the
import of a poem sung by yet another voice in the middle of the 19th
century concerning that which — ever changing yet ever present
— holds good in earthly humanity since the Mystery of Golgotha.
Let me read you a section of this poem which describes how one
who cannot grasp the meaning of the Mystery of Golgotha confronts
this Mystery:
Dr. Steiner now read part of the epic poem on Ahasver,
or Ahasueris, the Wandering Jew, by Julius Mosen. The Wandering Jew
is the legendary figure of a Jerusalem shoemaker who, taunting Christ
on the way to the Crucifixion, was told by Him to “go on
forever till I return.”
The poem itself is very long and does not lend itself to
translation.
Another reference to the figure of Ahasueris, from a
lecture given by Dr. Steiner in Berlin, 16th May, 1908, will be found
at the
end of this lecture.
Note by Translator.
Here is another example of how a human soul feels
impelled to give expression to what has come to pass. And now that we
have let these pictures pass through our souls, let me remind you of
something that I have already said here: that we must change our mode
of perception if we are to look with true vision into the spiritual
world. We must not believe that the spiritual world can be seen as we
see the material world of sense. We must even accustom ourselves to
different modes of expression, — In the physical world we see
trees, rivers, mountains. But of spiritual being we must say:
they see us, they perceive us. To understand the Mystery of
Golgotha truly, it is necessary to know this, because the Mystery of
Golgotha can be understood only in the Spiritual. But that is how we
aspire to understand it.
The time must come when through a true understanding of
the words “Not I, but Christ in me,” it will be possible
to rise into the spiritual worlds with the right knowledge. This epic
poem “Ahasver” by Julius Mosen was published in the year
1838, and the fact that he was able to put the legend into such a
form also indicates that the tragic destiny by which Mosen was
overtaken profoundly affected him. He was bedridden nearly all his
life, for his physical body was almost totally paralysed; this was
precisely what enabled him to grasp such lofty ideas. We are reminded
of the sinner in the novel “The Mahaguru” who, when he
was already out of his mind, discovered the true nature of his art;
and we are reminded, too, of the Count's wife in the Polish
drama, who had to fall into a pathological state in order to find the
connection with the spiritual world. It is the task of spiritual
science today to help human beings to rise into the spiritual world
in the healthy, normal state of consciousness. — All these
things are signs of the task and of the value to be attached to the
task of the spiritual-scientific Movement. Compressed into a few
brief words, this is the truth that can inspire us as a source of
strength: “The Mystery of Golgotha itself reveals that it must
be understood spiritually, that we must seek for Christ as Spirit.”
And then we must also say: “Christ is seeing us, Christ is
perceiving us.”
We will inscribe this deeply in our hearts, keep it
constantly in our minds, and our conscience must be satisfied when,
in presenting our spiritual-scientific knowledge, we are saying with
inner sincerity: May Christ be a witness of what we promulgate as
Spiritual Science. We believe that this may indeed be so — and
it can inspire us as men were once inspired by the cry of Bernard of
Clairvaux: “It is God's Will!” These words became
deeds. May it be the same among us — for we may believe that we
understand Christ truly when we live under the inspiration of the
words: Christ knows us. — And if you understand it aright, to a
soul that sees our spiritual science in the true light, to a heart
that feels it in its true light, I can impart no more esoteric saying
than this: Christ is seeing us.
May these words live in our souls: “Christ is
seeing us” — for so we may believe if we rightly
understand spiritual science. — Christ is seeing us.
Note by Translator
See other note.
In a lecture entitled. “Elemental Beings” (Berlin, 16th
May, 1908), Dr. Steiner speaks as follows of the legend of Ahasueris,
the Wandering Jew: “An important legend sets before us what a
man must experience who descends too deeply into the temporary,
transitory nature of the one incarnation. If we think of an extreme
case, we can imagine it like this: ‘What is it to me that I
should carry over something to later incarnations? I live in this
incarnation, I like it, it suits me very well. I am not concerned
with what I am supposed to make of it.’ Where does this thought
lead? It leads to a man who sits at the wayside when a great Leader
of humanity passes by. He, however, rejects the ideas of the Leader
of humanity; he repulses him and thinks: ‘I will know nothing
of thee, who wouldst guide the kernel of my being into future
incarnations where mankind will be outwardly more perfect. I wish to
remain united with my present form.’ — A man who thrusts
from him such a Leader of mankind will appear again in the same form.
And if this attitude hardens, then he shall also thrust from him the
Leader in the next incarnation. He will appear again and again as the
same figure. ... Those who listen to the great Leader of humanity
will preserve the soul with its eternal life-kernel. Mankind will
have gone forward but they too will appear in an ever-progressive
form. He, however, who thrusts the Leader of humanity from him must
reappear again and again in the same form. This is the legend of
Ahasueris who has thrust from himself the Christ, the Leader of
humanity. ...”
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