I
DURING the next
few days we are to occupy ourselves with a very profound
theosophical subject. Before beginning our studies let
me express my great satisfaction that we are able to
place before friends from so many parts of Germany,
and indeed of Europe, this deep and important subject.
Especially do I express it to our friends in Nuremberg,
who for their part are certainly not less happy
than the speaker to cultivate for a short period of time
anthroposophical life in this city in common with our foreign
friends. There has always been in this city a very earnest
search for the knowledge of great spiritual truths, and a
deep understanding of anthroposophical life, of the true
anthroposophical attitude towards life, has always been
manifest.
This
kind of life which is only understood when our
anthroposophical doctrines are not merely a theoretical
interest, but something which spiritualizes, kindles and
uplifts our inmost life, links us in closer bonds with our
fellow-men and with the whole world. It means much to man to
feel that everything he sees in the outer world in his
objective sense-existence can be recognized as the external
physiognomy of an invisible super-sensible existence lying at
its foundation. The world and all it contains will at length
become to one who applies Anthroposophy to life more and more
a physical expression of divine spiritual realities; and when
he observes the visible world around him it will be to him as
if he penetrated from the mere features of a person's
face to his heart and soul. All that he sees externally, the
mountains and rocks, the vegetation of the earth, the animals
and human beings, human activities — everything in the
world surrounding him — will be to hint the
physiognomical expression, or the countenance, as it were, of
a divine existence lying behind it. From this mode of
observation new life rises up within him and permeates him;
and a different, a noble enthusiasm fires all that he wishes
to undertake.
Let me give
you a small symptomatic example from my experience on one of
my latest lecture tours, showing how significant world
history is when looked upon as the expression of the divine
spiritual, and how it can speak to us in a new language. A
few weeks ago in Scandinavia I noticed that in the entire
life of Northern Europe there is still an echo of that
ancient period of the Norse world when all spiritual life was
permeated by the consciousness of the beings who were to be
found as the gods of northern Mythology. One might say that
in those countries one may hear the echoes everywhere of what
the Initiates of the Druidic and Trotten Mysteries imparted
to their pupils and which constituted the old Norse spiritual
life. One becomes aware of the magic breath of that spirit
life pervading the North; one sees something like the
expression of beautiful karmic connections. One feels oneself
placed — as it was my privilege in Upsala — in
the midst of all this, when one contemplates the first German
translation of the Bible, the Silver
Codex of Ulfilas ...
It came to Upsala through karmic
complications of a peculiar kind. It had previously been in
Prague. In the Swedish war it was taken as booty and brought
to Upsala, and there it now lies; a token of something which
can be penetrated by one who is able to look a little more
deeply into the nature of the ancient Mysteries. The
Mysteries within the ancient European civilizations in which
pupils were taught how to penetrate into the spiritual world
were all pervaded and permeated by a remarkable
characteristic, which could be observed more deeply by those
who received initiation in those ancient tines. Their hearts
were filled with a feeling of tragedy when it was made clear
to them that although they were indeed able to glimpse the
secrets of existence, nevertheless, something would appear in
the time to come which would give the most complete solution
of the riddle. They were shown again and again that a higher
light was to ray into that knowledge which could be given in
the ancient Mysteries. One might say that in all these
Mysteries it was prophetically indicated what was to come
about in the future, namely, the appearance of Christ Jesus.
The undertone, the attitude of expectation, this mood of
prophecy lay in the nature of the Northern Mysteries.
The statement
I am now about to make must not be pressed too far or too
sharply outlined in thought. It is only intended to express
symptomatically the deeper truth which lies behind in the
legend of Siegfried, which has remained like a last page out
of the traditions of the old German Mysteries, there is
something like an echo of that mood. When we are shown that
Siegfried is really the representative of the ancient nordic
initiation, that on the place where he is vulnerable there
lies a leaf, that this place is on his back, then one who is
able to feel such a thing symptomatically feels: That is the
spot on the human being where something different will rest,
when such injury as the initiates of the ancient Northern
Mysteries experienced can no longer touch him. This spot the
Cross shall cover, there the Cross of Christ Jesus shall
rest. It did not yet rest there in the case of the initiates
of the ancient Northern Mysteries. In the old Mysteries of
the German peoples, this is indicated in the legend of
Siegfried. Thus even here is symptomatically indicated how
the ancient initiations of the Druids and Trotten should be
thought of as harmonizing with the Christian Mysteries. The
placing of the first German translation of the Bible in the
northern world reminds one of this like a physiognomic
gesture. And the fact that it is like a karmic chain may also
appear symbolically to you by the circumstance that eleven
leaves were once stolen from this Silver Codex and that the
one who possessed them later on felt such qualms of
conscience that he would not keep these eleven leaves and so
returned them. As already said, these things ought not to be
pressed too far, but they may be taken as a pictorial
representation of those karmic developments which come to
physiognomical expression in the placing of the first German
translation of the Bible in the northern world. And just as
in the case of this historical event, so will everything
which meets us in life, great or small, also be deepened and
irradiated with a new light through the anthroposophical
outlook, which sees everything physically perceptible as the
physiognomical expression of super-sensible spirit. May we,
during this course of lectures, be filled with the conviction
that this is the case, and may the spirit and feelings which
are to fill our hearts and minds during this series of twelve
lectures proceed from this conviction.
In this frame
of mind let us approach these lectures which will deal with
the most profound document of Christianity, the Apocalypse of
John. The deepest truths of Christianity can be considered in
connection with this document, for it contains nothing less
than a great part of the Mysteries of Christianity, the
profoundest part of what may be described as esoteric
Christianity. It is therefore not to be wondered at that of
all Christian documents this one has been most misunderstood.
Almost from the beginning of the spiritual movement of
Christianity it has been misunderstood by all who were not
really Christian initiates. And it has always been
misunderstood at various times according to the prevailing
thought and disposition of those times. It has been
misunderstood by the ages which, one might say, have thought
in a spiritually materialistic way; by the ages which have
forced great religious movements into one-sided fanatical
party affairs; and it has been misunderstood in modern times
by those who, its the grossest and most sense-bound
materialism, believed themselves able to solve the riddle of
the universe. The high spiritual truths announced in the
early days of Christianity, and witnessed by those who were
able to understand them, are disclosed as far as is possible
in writing in the Apocalypse of John, the so-called canonical
Apocalypse. But even in the first ages of Christianity
exotericists were little inclined to understand the deep
spiritual truths contained in esoteric Christianity. Thus in
the very first ages of Christianity the idea came into
exotericism that things which in the world's evolution
first take place in the spiritual, and are recognizable by
those who can see into the spiritual worlds — that such
purely spiritual proceedings were to take place externally in
material life. And so it came about that while the writer of
the Apocalypse expressed in his work the results of his
Christian initiation, others only understood it exoterically;
and their opinion was that what the great seer saw —
and of which the Initiate knows that spiritually in it takes
place over thousands of years — must happen in the very
far future in external life and be visible to the senses.
They imagined that the writer indicated something like a
speedy return of Christ Jesus, a descent from the physical
clouds. As this did not happen, they simply lengthened the
period and said, “With the advent of Christ Jesus a new
period has begun for the earth as regards the old religious
teachings, but” — this again was understood
materialistically — “after a thousand years the
earliest events represented in the Apocalypse will take place
in the physical world.” Thus it came about that when
the year A.D. 1000 actually drew near, many people waited for
the coming of some power hostile to Christianity, for an
Antichrist who should appear in the sense world. As this
again did not occur, the period was further extended, but at
the same time the whole prediction of the Apocalypse was
elevated to a kind of symbolism — whereas the crass
exotericists represented this prediction more literally. With
the advent of a materialistic world-conception these things
were enveloped in a certain symbolism; external events were
invested with a symbolic significance. Thus in the twelfth
century Joachim of Floris, who died at the beginning of the
thirteenth century, gave a notable exploration of this
mysterious record of Christianity. It was his opinion that
Christianity contained a deep spiritual power, that this
power would have to expand more and more, but that historical
Christianity had always given this esoteric Christianity an
external interpretation. Thus many people came to this point
of view, which was that the Romish Church with the Pope at
its head, this externalization of the spirituality of
Christianity, was something hostile and anti-Christian. And
this was particularly fostered in the following centuries
through certain Orders attaching higher value to the fervent
spiritual aspect of Christianity. Thus Joachim of Floris
found followers among the Franciscans, and these looked upon
the Pope as being the symbol of Antichrist. Then in the age
of Protestantism this conception passed over to those who
looked upon the Romish Church as an apostate of Christianity
and Protestantism as its salvation. They considered the Pope
as Symbol of Antichrist, and the Pope retaliated by calling
Luther the Antichrist. Thus the Apocalypse was understood in
such a way that each party drew it into the service of its
own view, its own opinion. Each regarded the other party
always as Antichrist and their own party as having the true
Christianity. This continued into modern times when modern
materialists developed, with which, for grossness, the
materialism I have described as belonging to the early
centuries of Christianity cannot be compared. For at that
time spiritual faith and a certain spiritual comprehension
still existed. Men could not understand, only because they
had no initiates among them. A certain spiritual sense was
there; for although it was crudely imagined that a Being
would descend in a cloud, there still belonged to it a
spiritual faith. A spiritual life such as this was no longer
possible with the crass materialism of the nineteenth
century. The thoughts of a genuine materialist of the
nineteenth century regarding the Apocalypse may be described
somewhat as follows: “No man can see into the future,
for I myself cannot. No one can see anything more than I can
see. To say that there are initiates is an old superstition.
Such persons do not exist. What I know is the standard. I can
scarcely see what will happen in the next ten years,
therefore no man can say anything about what is to happen in
thousands of years. Consequently he who wrote the Apocalypse,
if he is to be taken as an honest man, must have been
describing something which he had already seen — for I
only know what has already taken place and what I can
discover from documents. Therefore the writer of the
Apocalypse could see nothing more either. What, therefore,
according to this, can he relate? Only what has happened to
him. Consequently it is obvious that the events of the
Apocalypse, the conflicts between the good, wise and
beautiful world and the ugly, foolish and evil world, this
dramatic contrast is only intended to represent what the
author had himself experienced, what had already taken
place.” The modern materialist speaks in this way, it
is his opinion that the writer of the Apocalypse describes
things as he himself does.
What, then,
was the most dreadful thing to a Christian of the first
century? It was the beast which made war against the
spiritual power of Christianity, against the true
Christianity. Unfortunately only a few people perceived that
there was something behind this, but they did not know how to
interpret it correctly.
In certain
esoteric schools there was a kind of writing in numbers.
Certain words which it was not wished to impart in ordinary
writing were expressed by figures. And, like much else, some
of the deep secrets of the Apocalypse were hidden in numbers,
particularly that dramatic event in the number 666. It was
known that numbers were to be dealt with in a particular way,
especially when such a distinct indication is given as in the
words, “Here is wisdom.” “The number of the
beast is 666.” When such an indication was given it was
known that the figures must be replaced by certain letters,
in order to ascertain what was intended. Now those who had
heard something, and yet really knew nothing, came to the
conclusion in their materialistic conception that when
letters were substituted for the number 666, the word
“Nero” or “Caesar Nero” resulted. And
nowadays in a large part of the literature dealing with the
deciphering of the Apocalypse you may read: Formerly people
were so foolish that they imagined all sorts of things in
connection with this passage, but the problem is now solved.
We now know that nothing else is intended than the Emperor
Nero. Therefore the Apocalypse must have been written after
Nero's death, and the writer wished to say by all this
that the Antichrist had appeared in Nero, and that what is
contained in this dramatic element is an enhancement upon
what had preceded it. We need now only investigate what
happened immediately before and we shall discover what the
writer of the Apocalypse really wished to describe. It is
reported that earthquakes took place in Asia Minor when the
struggle between Nero and Christianity was raging. Therefore
it was to these earthquakes that the writer was referring in
the opening of the seals and the sounding of the trumpets. He
also mentions plagues of locusts. Quite correct! We know from
history that at the time of the persecution of the Christians
by Nero there were plagues of locusts. He was, therefore,
speaking of these. Thus the nineteenth century has come to
materialize the profoundest document of Christianity so far
as to see nothing in it but the description of what may be
found by a mere materialistic observation of the world.
I have only
mentioned this in order to point out how fundamentally this
deepest and most important document of esoteric Christianity
has been misunderstood. I shall postpone to the last lectures
what is to be said about the historical part of the
Apocalypse until we have understood what is contained in the
Apocalypse. To those who have studied Anthroposophy but
little, there can be no doubt that even the introductory
words of the Apocalypse show us what it is intended to be. We
need only remember that it says that he from whom the
contents of the Apocalypse proceeded was placed in an island
solitude, which had always been surrounded by a kind of
sacred atmosphere, in one of the ancient places of the
Mysteries. And when we are told that the author was in the
spirit, and that in the spirit he perceives what he gives us,
it may indicate to us that the contents of the Apocalypse
originate from the higher state of consciousness, to which a
person may attain through the evolution of the inner creative
capacity of the soul, through initiation. In the Secret
Revelation of the so-called John is contained that which
cannot be seen and heard in the sense world, and cannot be
perceived with external senses; and it is given in the way in
which it can be imparted to the world through Christianity.
In the Apocalypse of John we have therefore the description
of an initiation, a Christian initiation. For the present we
need only briefly recall what initiation is. We shall,
indeed, go more and more deeply into the question as to what
takes place in initiation, and how initiation is related to
the contents of the Apocalypse, but to begin with we will
only draw something like a rough sketch and paint in the
details later.
Initiation is
the development of the powers and capacities slumbering in
every soul. If we wish to have an idea of the manner in which
it really takes place we must clearly bear in mind what the
consciousness of the present normal man is; we shall then
also recognize in what way the consciousness of the initiate
differs from that of the ordinary man of the present day.
What is, then, the consciousness of the normal human being?
It is a changing one; two entirely different states of
consciousness alternate, that of the day, and that during
sleep at night. The waking day-consciousness consists in our
perceiving sense objects around us and connecting them by
means of concepts which can only be formed with the aid of a
sense organ, namely, the brain. Then, each night, the astral
body and the Ego withdraw from the lower principles of the
human being, the physical and etheric bodies, and therewith
the sense objects around man sink into the darkness; and not
only this, for until re-awakening unconsciousness prevails.
Darkness spreads around man. For the human astral body to-day
under normal conditions is so organized that it is unable of
itself to perceive what surrounds it. It must have organs.
These organs are the physical senses. Therefore in the
morning it must plunge into the physical body and make use of
the sense organs. Why does the astral body see nothing when
during sleep at night it is in the spirit-world? For the same
reason that a physical body without eyes or ears could
experience neither physical colours nor physical sounds. The
astral body has no organs with which to perceive in the
astral world. In primeval times the physical body was in the
same position. It too did not yet possess what later was
plastically worked into it as ears and eyes. The external
elements and forces moulded the physical body, formed the
eyes and ears, and thus the world was revealed to man, a
world which previously was hidden from him. Let us imagine
that the astral body, which is now in the position in which
the physical body was formerly, could be so treated that
organs could be built into it in the same way that the
sunlight plastically moulded the physical eyes, and the world
of sound the physical ears in the soft substance of the
physical human body. Let us imagine that we could mould
organs in the plastic mass of the astral body; then the
astral body would be in the same condition as the present
physical body. It is a question of moulding the organs of
perception for the super-sensible world into this astral body,
as a sculptor moulds his clay. This is the first thing. If a
man wishes to become a seer, his astral body must be treated
as a piece of clay by the sculptor; organs must be worked
into it. This was, in fact, always done in the schools of
initiation and the Mysteries. The organs were plastically
formed in the astral body.
In what does
the activity consist by means of which it is possible for the
astral body to have organs plastically moulded into it? It
might be thought that a person must first have the body in
front of him before he can work the organs into it. He might
say: “If I could take out the astral body and have it
in front of me, I could then mould the organs into it.”
That would not be the right way, and above all, it is not the
way for modern initiation. Certainly an initiate who is able
to live in the spiritual worlds could mould the organs like a
sculptor, when during the night the astral body is outside.
But that would entail doing something with a person of which
he is not conscious; it would mean interfering in his sphere
of freedom, with the exclusion of his consciousness. We shall
see why this has not been allowed to happen for a long time
past, and particularly not at the present time. For this
reason, even in esoteric schools such as the Pythagorean or
old Egyptian, everything had to be avoided whereby the
initiates would have to work from outside upon the astral
body which was taken out of the physical and etheric bodies
of the neophyte. This had to be avoided from the very outset.
The first step towards initiation had to be undertaken with
man in the ordinary physical world, in the same world where
man perceives with the physical senses. But how can this be
done? For it is exactly through physical perception coming
into earthly evolution that a veil has been drawn over the
spiritual world formerly perceived by man, although but
dimly. How can one work from the physical world upon the
astral body? Here it is necessary that we should consider
what happens with regard to our ordinary everyday sense
perceptions. What happens in these cases? What happens while
man is perceiving all day long? Think of your daily life,
follow it step by step! At every step the impressions of the
outer world press in upon you, you perceive them; you see,
hear, smell, etc. When you are doing your work impressions
storm upon you all day long and you work upon these
impressions with your intellect. The poet who is not an
inspired poet permeates them with his fantasy. All this is
true! But all this cannot, to begin with, lead man to the
consciousness of the super-sensible spiritual which lies
behind the sensible and material. Why does it not come to his
consciousness? Because all this activity which man exercises
with respect to the surrounding world does not correspond
with the essential nature of the human astral body as it
exists to-day. When in the primeval past the astral body
proper to man saw the pictures of the astral perception rise
up — those pictures of joy and sorrow, of sympathy and
antipathy — inner spiritual impulses were present,
causing something to rise in man which formed organs. These
were killed when man had to allow all the influences from
outside to stream in upon him, and at the present time it is
impossible for anything to remain in the astral body from all
the impressions received during the day which could mould it
plastically.
The process
of perception is as follows: All day long we are subjected to
the impressions of the external world. These work through the
physical senses upon the etheric and astral bodies, until the
ego becomes conscious of them. The result of what affects the
physical body is expressed in the astral body. When the eyes
receive impressions of light, these influence the etheric and
astral bodies and the ego becomes conscious of them. So, too,
with the impressions made upon the ears and other senses.
Thus the whole of one's daily life affects the astral
body through-out the day. The astral body is continually
active under the influence of the outer world. Then in the
evening it withdraws from the physical body. It now has no
power in itself to become conscious of the impressions in its
present environment. The ancient forces of the distant past
were killed with the first perception of the present sense
world. During the night it has no power because the entire
life of the day is incapable of leaving anything in the
astral body which could work formatively upon it. All the
things you see around you produce effects as far as into the
astral body, but that which then takes place is unable to
create forms capable of becoming astral organs. It must be
the first step of initiation to allow a person to do
something during the life of the day, to allow something to
play into his soul, which continues during the night when the
astral body is withdrawn from the physical and etheric
bodies. Imagine that — pictorially expressed —
something were given to a person while he is fully conscious,
which he has to do, which he has to allow to happen, and
which is so chosen, so constructed that it does not cease
working when the day is over. Imagine this activity as a
sound, which continues when the astral body is withdrawn;
this resounding would then constitute the force which worked
plastically on the astral body, as at one time external
forces have worked upon the physical body. This was always
the first step of initiation — to give a person
something to do during the life of the day, which has an
after-effect in the life of the night. What is called
meditation, concentration, and other practices which a person
undertakes during his daily life, are nothing but exercises
of the soul, the effects of which do not die away when the
astral body withdraws, but reverberate, and then in the night
become constructive forces in the astral body.
This is
called the purification of the astral body, the purification
from all that is unnatural to it. This was the first step,
which was also called catharsis, purification. It did not yet
constitute activity in super-sensible worlds; it consisted in
exercises of the soul which the pupil performed during the
day as a training of the soul. It consisted in adopting
certain forms of life, certain feelings, a certain way of
treating life, so that it could reverberate; and this worked
upon the astral body until it had been transformed, until
organs had developed in it. When the pupil had progressed so
far that these organs had developed in the astral body, the
next thing was that everything which had been formed there
should be imprinted in the etheric body. Just as the
characters on a seal are imprinted in sealing-wax, so must
everything which has been formed in the astral body be
imprinted in the etheric body. This imprinting is the next
stage of initiation; it was called illumination. For it
brought with it an important stage in initiation. A spiritual
world then appeared around the pupil, just as formerly the
sense world was around him. This stage is also characterized
by the fact that the events of the outer spiritual world do
not express themselves as physical objects do, but in
pictures. At this stage of illumination the spiritual world
first expresses itself in pictures. The pupil sees pictures.
Think of the ancient initiate I referred to yesterday who saw
the group-soul of a people. When he had progressed to this
stage, he at first saw this group-soul in pictures. Imagine
an initiate such as Ezekiel, who, when his illumination
began, became aware of spiritual beings as folk-souls,
group-souls; he felt himself in their midst; he saw
group-souls in the form of four symbolical beasts.
To begin
with, the spiritual world appeared to the pupil in
significant pictures — that was the first stage. Then
followed a further penetration into the etheric body. What at
first was present as the impression of a seal, continued as a
further penetration into the etheric body. Then there began
to be added to the pictures what was known as the music of
the spheres. The higher spiritual world is perceived as
sound. The higher initiate having, through illumination,
perceived the spiritual world in pictures, begins spiritually
to listen to those sounds which are perceptible to the
spiritual ear. Then he comes to the later transformation of
the etheric body, and afterwards in a still higher sphere
something else approaches him. If, for example, there is a
screen here and behind it a man is speaking whom you cannot
see, yet you may hear sounds. It is somewhat similar with the
spiritual world. At first it appears in pictures, then sounds
are heard, and then the last veil falls away, so to speak
— as if we were to take away the screen behind which
the man is standing and speaking. We see the man himself; we
see the spiritual world itself, the beings of the spiritual
world. First we perceive the pictures, then the sounds, then
the beings, and lastly the life of these beings. It is indeed
only possible to give a hint of what exists as pictures in
the so-called Imaginative world by making use, as symbols, of
pictures from the sense world. One can only give an idea of
the harmony of the spheres by comparing it with ordinary
music. Now what may be compared with the impressions of the
beings at the third stage? It is comparable alone with that
which to-day constitutes the inmost being of man, his acting
in accordance with the divine will. If the pupil works
according to the will of the spiritual beings who are helping
the world onwards, the being within him will then become
similar to these beings and he will perceive in this sphere.
He perceives that the element within him which opposes the
evolution of the world, which retards its progress, is
something which must be thrown off in this world, something
which must fall away like a last covering.
Thus the
pupil first perceives a world of pictures as a symbolic
expression of the spiritual world, then a world of
sphere-harmony as a symbolic expression of a higher spiritual
sphere, then a world of spiritual beings of whom he can
to-day only form an idea by comparing them with the depths of
his own being, with that which works within him in accordance
with the good powers or even in accordance with the evil
spiritual forces.
The neophyte
passes through these stages, and they are faithfully
portrayed in the Apocalypse of John. The start is made from
the physical world. That which is first to be said by means
of the physical world is said in the seven letters. What we
wish to do in outer civilization, what we wish to say to
those working in the physical world, we say in letters. For
the word expressed in the letter can produce its effect in
the sense world. The first stage provides symbols which must
be brought into relation with what they express in the
spiritual world. After the seven letters comes the world of
the seven seals, the world of pictures of the first stage of
initiation. Then comes the world of the sphere-harmonies, the
world as it is perceived by those who can hear spiritually.
It is represented in the seven trumpets. The next world,
where the initiate perceives beings, is represented by those
who appear at this stage and who strip off the shells of the
forces opposed to the good. The opposite of the divine love
is the divine wrath. The true form of the divine love which
carries the world forward is perceived in this third sphere
by those who for the physical world have stripped off the
seven shells or husks of wrath.
Thus the
neophyte is led step by step upward into the spheres of
initiation. In the seven letters of the Apocalypse of John we
have that which belongs to the seven categories of the
physical world, in the seven seals that which belongs to the
astral imaginative world, in the seven trumpets that which
belongs to the higher world of Devachan, and in the seven
husks of wrath that which must be cast aside if the pupil
wishes to rise into what is spiritually the highest to be
attained in our world, because this spiritually highest is
still connected with our world.
To-day we
wished to give merely a sketch of the outer structure of the
Apocalypse of John, which serves to show that this is a book
of initiation. In our next lecture we shall begin to fill in
this brief sketch.
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