II
THE INNER ASPECT OF THE
SUN-EMBODIMENT OF THE EARTH
You will have
gathered from our last lecture how extremely difficult it is to
describe the early condition of our evolution before our own Earth
came into being. For we have seen that we must first of all build up
concepts and ideas through which we may reach those strange and
distant conditions of the evolution of our world. I have already
called attention to the fact that the description in my
Occult Science
of the period of ancient Saturn, as well as that of the
following embodiments of our Earth is not only not exhaustive, but
that, in a sense, we had to be satisfied (in order not to startle the
public, to whom the book is accessible) with clothing the subject in
pictures taken from what is near at hand and familiar. The
description given there is naturally in no respect incorrect, but it
is very deeply immersed in Maya and Illusion; and we must first work
our way through the illusion in order to penetrate further into the
truth of the matter. For instance, the old Saturn period is described
(and this is quite correct within certain limits) as a heavenly body
whose essential parts did not consist of what we know as earth, water
and air, but of “heat.” So, too, in first speaking of
“space,” that also is merely a pictorial description;
for, as we saw in the last lecture, “time” itself did not
even exist. When we speak of “space” we are speaking
pictorially. Of space there was none in our sense on ancient Saturn.
And time first came into being there. When we carry our thought back
to ancient Saturn we are absolutely in the realm of spaceless
eternity. When, therefore, something is said to call up a picture
before our minds, we must be clear that it is only a picture. If we
could have observed the space of ancient Saturn we should have found
no substance dense enough to be called gas, nothing but heat and cold.
In reality we
could not speak of coming from one part of space into another, but only the
sensation of passing through warmer and colder conditions; so that
even the clairvoyant, when he transports himself back to the time of
Saturn, receives the impression of being in spaceless ebb and flow of
warmth. That is only the outer veil of the Saturn condition. For this
“heat” or “fire” as it is called in
occultism, is concealed from us in the fundamental depths of its
being; and we have seen that spiritual achievements formed in truth
the very existence of ancient Saturn; and we have formed a picture of
the spiritual deeds then existing. We have said that the Spirits of
Will or Thrones achieved sacrificial acts; so that when we look back
to the concrete occurrences on Saturn, we have the Cherubim and the
sacrifice flowing forth from the Thrones. Sacrifice streams from the
Thrones to the Cherubim. And it is these sacrificial deeds seen from
without, as it were, which appear as “heat.” Conditions
of heat are the external expression — speaking in a general
sense — the external physical expression of sacrifice, and
throughout the world, wherever heat is perceptible it is the outer
expression of what lies behind it. Conditions of heat are the
sacrificial acts of beings. Thus in describing heat we must say
“Cosmic heat is the manifestation of Cosmic sacrifice, or of
Cosmic sacrificial deeds.”
Then we have seen
that from this sacrificial deed offered by the Thrones to the
Cherubim is brought to birth that which we call time: though I have
already called attention to the fact that “time” is a
modern term and does not quite apply. For time was not then that
abstraction man now accepts as time, but a totality of beings, the
Spirits of Personality, whom we have therefore come to recognise as
“Time-Spirits.” The Time-Spirits are the true ancient
time — and they are the children of the Thrones and the
Cherubim. The condition by means of which the Beings of Time
originated on ancient Saturn was sacrifice. Thus, in order to obtain
an actual comprehension of what lies behind, when it is said: Ancient
Saturn consists of “heat,” we do not merely require
external, physical concepts (for “heat” is a physical
concept), but we must acquire concepts which can only be derived from
the soul-life itself, from the ethical wisdom-laden life of the soul.
No man can know what warmth is who is not able to form a conception
of what it means to be ready to sacrifice what he has, everything he
possesses, indeed, not only everything he possesses, but also what he
himself is. The sacrifice of the individual being, the soul's
determination to renounce individual being, so regarding it as to be
ready to devote its best to the welfare of the world, wishing to keep
back nothing of the best for itself; but gladly to offer it in
sacrifice on the altar of the universe; if this becomes a living idea
permeating our soul, it will gradually lead to the understanding of
what lies behind the phenomenon of heat. Try to picture what in our
modern life — even to-day — is bound up with the
conception of sacrifice; one can hardly think that anyone sacrificing
himself with understanding ever does so against his will. A sacrifice
offered against the will argues some compelling motive; there must be
compulsion. But this would not apply to what we are now discussing.
The sacrifice that flows forth from a being as a matter of course is
what is meant here. And if a man should make a sacrifice, not because
he is forced to do so by any external motive, nor because he hopes to
gain something by so doing, but because he feels within him the
impulse to sacrifice, it is then unthinkable that he should feel
anything but inner warmth of bliss. If we feel ourselves glowing with
this inner warmth of bliss, it is an expression of what can be
described in no other way than by saying that the one making the
sacrifice feels himself warmed through and through, glowing with
bliss. In this way it is possible for us to feel how the glow of
sacrifice can come to meet us in the outer cosmic heat. He alone
understands what warmth really is who can grasp the thought:
Whenever warmth appears in the world there is always in some way
underlying it something of a soul-spiritual nature which is behind
the warmth and brings about the warmth through the special bliss. He
who can feel all this about warmth will gradually arrive at the
reality of what is concealed behind the illusion of warmth, behind
the phenomenon of heat.
Now if we wish to
penetrate further, from the existence of ancient Saturn to that of
the Sun, we must again first form an idea by which we can imagine the
substance of the ancient Sun — not our present Sun. For when we
read in
Occult Science
that ancient Sun reorganised heat by adding to
it air and light, that again is depicted merely by an external
phenomenon. Just as behind the heat we must seek for the glow of
sacrifice of the Spirits of Will, so must we look behind “air
and “light” for something moral if we wish to understand
the air and the light which are added to the heat on ancient Sun. Now
we can only obtain a feeling of this substance of the ancient Sun
through something of a spiritual psychic nature which we may
experience in our souls.
We can describe it in
the following way as a soul-experience. Let us imagine that a man
were to see a real, genuine act of sacrifice, or that he were to
picture to himself what we described in the last lecture as the
sacrificial act of the Thrones, the Thrones offering up their
sacrifice to the Cherubim — so that he is moved by the picture
of the beatific sacrifice which he contemplates and which awakens the
life in the soul. What would our souls feel through either the vision
of the sacrificing Beings themselves, or by the picture we make truly
living in our souls. If the feelings of this man are vivid, if the
beatific sacrifice does not leave him unaffected, he will feel a
profound feeling of bliss at the vision of the sacrifice; he will
feel in his soul that it is the most beautiful deed, the most
beautiful experience that can be called forth in our souls, the
vision of the beatitude of sacrifice! We should be soulless lumps if
this experience did not arouse in the soul a passionate desire to
understand inwardly with intensest reverence, what the beatitude of
sacrifice is — if we did not learn from it the spirit of utter
devotion. Sacrifice is devotion transformed into activity. The
contemplation of active practical devotion may call forth the
attuning of the soul's being to self-surrender, to the casting
off of self, to self-effacement. Imagine this spirit of
disinterested casting off of self wholly flooding the soul
through the vision; then we have with this spirit that which can come
nearer to us for our understanding, inasmuch as without such a spirit
— without at least a hint, a foretaste of such a spirit —
never could we really attain to what the higher knowledge gives. He
who is unable to feel this spirit of self-surrender can never
attain to higher knowledge. For what would be the opposite of this
spirit? It would be self-will, assertion of individual will. These
are, as it were, the two opposite cosmic poles; devoted absorption in
that which is contemplated, and self-willed assertion of
individuality. These are two great opposites. Personal will fatally
opposes the permeation of the higher Self with wisdom. In ordinary
life we only know self-will in the form of prejudice, and prejudices
always destroy the higher insight. But we must imagine what is here
called self-surrender as intensified; for this can only be conceived
when a man works his way up to higher worlds. There he must be able
to experience this casting off of self — at least as a frame of
mind. Therefore it must always be emphasised that we can never attain
higher knowledge so long as we work after the fashion of ordinary
science and trivial thought. Let us be clear; ordinary science and
everyday thought work from whatever self-will has created by means of
the ordinary will of man, through the inherited or educated
sensations and feelings. We can deceive ourselves greatly as to this.
For instance, people may say: “Suppose one takes up any
science, such as that set forth in Spiritual Science; I will not
accept anything that does not agree with my thought, I will accept
nothing unproved.” Certainly we should not accept anything
unproved. But neither do we advance a single step further if we only
accept what is proved. And a man who wishes to be clairvoyant will
never say that he can only accept what he has first proved. He must
be completely free of all self-seeking and must await what comes to
him from the Cosmos, and which can only be designated by the word
“grace.” From the grace which illuminates he expects
everything. For how do we acquire clairvoyant knowledge Only by
eliminating everything we have ever learnt. As a rule a man says: I
have my own opinion. But what he ought to say is: This only comes
because I have revived what my ancestors have thought, or what my
desires have aroused in me, etc. For there can never be any question
of these being his own opinions; and those who attach most value to
their own opinions are not in the least aware that they are being led
by the leading-strings of their prejudices. All this must be done
away with when we wish to attain to higher knowledge. The soul must
be empty and able to wait quietly for what may enter into it from the
concealed secret world free from space and time, free from things and
deeds. And we must never believe that we can acquire any conception
of clairvoyant knowledge except by creating a suitable frame of mind
through which we may receive what may be offered to us as revelation
or illumination, so that we can never expect anything to come
to us except from the grace which approaches and brings gifts.
How then does such
knowledge reveal itself? How is that which comes to us revealed when
we have prepared ourselves sufficiently? It reveals itself as the
feeling of being endowed with grace through the gifts that come to
meet us from the spiritual world. If we wish to describe what thus
approaches us in order to bring us grace and pour knowledge into us,
we can only make use of the expression: that which comes to meet us
is an active inspiring with grace; a bestowing, a giving. Let
us grasp the nature of a being chiefly characterised by what I have
just described, so as to say of him: he is a bestower, a giver, an
offerer of gifts, such a being whose chief characteristic is the
showering of grace around him, the shedding forth of grace from
himself. Let our conception of this being show us that in order to
attain this possibility of giving forth grace there must be the
vision of the sacrifice made by the Thrones to the Cherubim; let us
imagine: he would draw near to what happened when the sacrifice was
being offered by the Thrones to the Cherubim. Let us clearly imagine
a being such as this, who, through having had this vision, is
stimulated to shower the gifts of his grace around him. Suppose we
were to see a rose and were charmed by it, experiencing the feeling
of one enraptured by what we call “beautiful.” Suppose
another being through the vision of what we have described as the
sacrifice by the Thrones to the Cherubim, were inspired to pour forth
into the world, to offer to the world as a gift, everything he
possessed — we should thus be describing those beings spoken of in
Occult Science
as Spirits of Wisdom who on the Sun were added to
the beings with whom we become acquainted on ancient Saturn. If now
we were to put the question, what is the character of these Spirits
who appeared on the Sun in addition to the Saturn Spirits? We must
reply: The principal characteristic of these spirits is the virtue of
giving, of pouring forth grace. If we wish to find a title for them,
we must say: These are the Spirits of Wisdom, the great Bestowers,
the great Givers of the Universe. Just as we have called the
Thrones” The great Sacrificers,” so we must say of the
Spirits of Wisdom, they are “the great Givers” who so
devote their gift that it weaves and lives in the universe, flowing
out into it and first bringing about its order.
That is the
activity of the Spirits of Wisdom on the Sun, they endow their environment
with their own being. And what is presented to the external view when
we look up and wish to have a higher sense-perception of what takes
place on the Sun?
When we look
at it, it is as described in
Occult Science.
Besides heat, the Sun consists
of air and of light. But when we say this, it is as though someone
were to say: “In the distance I see a grey cloud.” And if
we were a painter he would paint the impression; but if he were
to come nearer he might perhaps see, instead of the grey cloud, a
swarm of midges. Thus in reality, what he took for a grey cloud is
nothing but a number of living beings. In like manner do we confront
the ancient Sun-existence. Seen from afar it appears as the illusion
of a body consisting of light and air; but if we approach nearer, we
have no longer a body of light and air but it appears as the great
bestowing virtue of the Spirits of Wisdom. And no one learns the real
nature of air who only describes it according to its external
physical properties. That is only maya and illusion, only outer
manifestation. For wherever there is air in the world, the deeds of
the Spirits of Wisdom lie behind it. Weaving, active air means the
manifestation of the bestowing virtue of the macrocosm, and
only he looks rightly upon air who says: “Here I perceive
‘air.’ But in reality within it something is bestowed by
the Spirits of Wisdom, something streams out into their
environment.”
And now we know
what was actually meant by describing ancient Sun as consisting of air.
We now know that what appears outwardly as air is a gift which the
Spirits of Wisdom allow to flow forth from their own being. But now
something wonderful is seen by the clairvoyant. We must clearly
understand how we can obtain from our own soul-life a still more
accurate idea of this virtue of giving. Let us bring home to our mind
the feeling we may ourselves have if through the above-described
mode of devotion we are able to permeate ourselves with a perception,
with an idea. Such an idea will always produce in us a distinct
feeling. One has the best impression of such an idea if one thinks of
Art, where the idea has an urge to master colour or form in some way
or other, to send it forth into the world, thus to give to the world
something having an independent existence. We may describe the nature
of such a capacity of giving by saying that productivity and creative
activity is connected with it; for this giving is self-creative.
Anyone who has an idea and feels that he can give it forth for the
good of the world, and can represent it in a work of art, has the
right conception of this productivity of the virtue of giving. This
it is which as air weaves through the Sun. When we think of this
creative idea in the mind of the artist, and how it imprints itself
into matter (besides everything else), this is the spiritual being of
air. Wherever there is air we are concerned with something of this
sort. But from the living productivity having been on the Sun,
proceeds the following.
Let us hold
firmly in mind that on ancient Saturn the Spirits of Time had been born,
therefore “time” could be present on the Sun; for it came
over from Saturn. Thus on ancient Sun there was the possibility of
giving, which could not have been found on ancient Saturn. For just
imagine — how could there have been any giving if there had
been no time It would not have been possible, for giving must include
acceptance, the one is not to be thought of without the other. This
giving must consist of two actions, giving and accepting, otherwise
giving has no object. On the Sun, however, giving and accepting
occupied a peculiar relation to one another, for — as time was
already there — the gift offered to the environment on ancient
Sun had been, as it were, stored up in time: as it were, guarded in
time so that the Spirits of Wisdom pour forth their gift — and
it endures. But now something must enter to accept this. This
occurs comparatively speaking at a later time than the gift of
the Spirits of Wisdom. They give at an earlier moment, and that which
is necessarily connected with it as receiving appears later. We can
only obtain a correct conception of this if here too we use our own
soul-experience as a foundation.
Suppose you are
trying very hard to understand something, or to form some sort of
thought. Suppose you have formed the thought. The next day you will
make your mind as clear as possible so that the thought you formed
yesterday may come back into it. What you formed yesterday is
received by you today. Thus it was on ancient Sun; what was given at
an earlier time was guarded till a later moment and was then
received. What then was this acceptance? It was a deed, an occurrence
only distinguished from the other occurrence in that it occurred
later. The giving comes from the Spirits of Wisdom. Who then accepts?
If there is to be an acceptance there must be someone to accept! In
the same way as the Spirits of Time arose from the sacrifice of the
Thrones to the Cherubim on ancient Saturn — through an act of
nativity — so through “an act of giving” to the
world by the Spirits of Wisdom on the Sun, the Spirits we call
Archangels or Archangeloi, came into being. They are these who accept
on ancient Sun. But they receive in a very special way, for they do
not retain for themselves the gift received from the Spirits of
Wisdom, but reflect it, just as a mirror reflects an image Thus the
task of the Archangels on the Sun was to collect at a later epoch
what had been given earlier, what was still there and could be
reflected by the Archangels. Thus we have on the Sun an earlier act
of giving and a subsequent accepting, but this accepting is a
reflection back of an earlier time. Just suppose that the earth were
not as it is now, but that what occurred at an earlier age could be
reflected again at the present time. We actually know that something
of the sort does take place. We are now living in the fifth
post-Atlantean age of civilisation, when the events of the third, the
ancient Egyptian-Chaldean age are being reflected. What formerly was
there is now reflected. Everything that formerly existed is
recapitulated. So that we have to think of the Archangels on the one
side as the recipients, on the other the Spirits of Wisdom who in the
earlier Sun-periods were the bestowers. From this something quite
special arises, which can only be properly conceived by thinking of a
globe complete in itself and radiating forth from its centre that
which is given. It radiates out to the periphery — whence it is
radiated back to the centre. Thus we have to think of what comes from
the Spirits of Wisdom as proceeding from the centre; this radiates
forth in all directions, is collected by the Archangels and reflected
back. What is thus reflected back into space is the gift from the
Spirits of Wisdom. It is light that leads back the radiations of the
Spirits of Wisdom, and the Archangels are at the same time creators
of light. “Light” is not in the least the external
illusion presented to us; but wherever light appears we have the
gifts of the Spirits of Wisdom radiated back to us. And the beings
whose existence must be presumed behind all light are the Archangels.
Hence we must say: Wherever light appears to us, behind it are the
Archangels; but they are only able to ray forth light to us because
they reflect back what has streamed out to them — namely, the
bestowing virtue of the Spirits of Wisdom.
In this way
we obtain a picture of ancient Sun: We think of a centre in which is focused
what came over from ancient Saturn; the sacrificial acts of the
Thrones to the Cherubim. Absorbed in contemplation of these acts of
sacrifice are the Spirits of Wisdom. This vision causes them to
radiate forth from themselves that which is their real being:
streaming, flowing wisdom as bestowing virtue. However, as this
is radiated through by “time” it is sent forth and sent
back again, so that we have a globe, inwardly illuminated by the
virtue returning to it; for we must not think of the ancient Sun as
outwardly but as inwardly luminous, because the Spirits of Wisdom
radiate outwards. Thus something new is created which we may describe
as follows: Let us imagine the Spirits of Wisdom situated at the
centre of the Sun absorbed in contemplation of the vision of the
sacrificing Thrones; and by reason of this vision, radiating forth
their own being; and receiving back their radiating being which they
sent forth, receiving it reflected back from the surface, so that
they receive it back as light. Everything is illuminated. What then
do they receive back? Their own being surrendered by them became a
gift to the Macrocosm, it was their inner being. Now it rays back to
them; their own being meets them coming back from outside. They
see their own inner being outspread in the Cosmos — and
reflected back as light, as the reflection of their own being.
The inner and the
outer are the two opposites which we now meet. The earlier and the
later are transformed into the inner and the outer; and
“Space” is born! Space comes into existence through the
bestowing virtue of the Spirits of Wisdom on ancient Sun. Before
that, space could only have an allegorical significance. Now we have
space — but consisting at first of only two dimensions. There
was as yet no above and below, no right or left, nothing but an outer
and an inner. — In reality these opposites appear at the end of
ancient Saturn; but they repeat themselves as space-creative on
ancient Sun. And if we wish to obtain a conception of all these
occurrences, as we did of the last when the picture appeared before
our soul of the sacrificing Thrones, giving birth to the Spirits of
Time, we must not even picture a body consisting of light, for the
light within it is only an inner reflection. We must think of it as a
globe of inner space, in the centre of which the picture of Saturn is
recapitulated: the Thrones as Spirits as though kneeling before the
Cherubim, those winged beings, sacrificing their own being, and, in
addition to these, the Spirits of Wisdom, absorbed in the vision of
the sacrifice. And now it is also possible to have the vision of the
heat of the sacrifice being so transmuted that we may think of it
objectively as the incense of sacrifice, as air ascending from the
sacrifice as incense. We obtain a complete picture if we imagine: the
sacrificing Thrones kneeling before the Cherubim, and as though
participating, the Spirits of Wisdom, absorbed in the
contemplation of what they perceive in the centre of the Sun as the
sacrifice of the Thrones, and thereby ascending in their mood to the
picture of the sacrificial incense pouring forth and spreading out on
all sides, and finally condensing, while from its clouds proceed the
figures of the Archangels — who reflect back the incense from
the periphery as light, illuminating the interior of the Sun,
returning the gift of the Spirits of Wisdom, and in this way creating
the sphere of the Sun. This sphere consists of the outpoured gift of
glowing heat and sacrificial incense. At the outer periphery are the
Archangels, the creators of the light, who later depict what was
first on the Sun; it then returns as light. What then, do these
Archangels preserve? They guard the beginnings, what was formerly
there, the earlier. The gifts they receive they reflect. That which
was there in the beginning they radiate forth at a later time, and
inasmuch as they do this, they are the Angels of the Beginning,
because they bring into activity in later times what was previously
there. “Archangeloi” “Messengers of the
Beginning”!
It is very
wonderful when such a word arises from the depths of true occult knowledge
and we remember that this word comes across to us from primeval
traditions, along the path of the School of Dionysius the Areopagite,
who was the pupil of Paul. It is wonderful to see that this word is
so deeply stamped that when we evolve it again, independently of what
is written, what stands there arises before us. And we then feel
ourselves united with the ancient holy schools of Initiation-Wisdom,
of the science of Initiation, so that we feel as though this ancient
time were streaming into us, we picture it with understanding after
having ourselves created the possibility of accepting it
independently of what we have heard. Anyone feeling even a little of
the spirit of these old expressions which have descended to us
without our having paid attention to them, will feel himself within
the current of the mighty power of the Spirits of Time passing
through humanity. What is thus felt in contemplation of these things
is in marvellous connection with the whole human evolution, it makes
us feel one with it. The Archangels preserve the memorial of the
primordial beginnings; but whatever takes place on any one planet is
always recapitulated later, only when it occurs later there is always
something added to it. So that we meet with the being of the Sun
again in what we find on our own earth.
The whole
conception, the whole feeling that we are thus able to acquire —
which gives us a picture of the sacrifice of the Thrones, of the Cherubim
receiving the sacrifice, of the glow given forth by the sacrifice, of
the sacrificial incense spreading out as air, of the light radiated
back by the Archangels who preserve for later ages what took
place at the beginning — this feeling is something that can
call up in us a true understanding of everything connected with
the creation of such a feeling, with sacrifices which proceed from
such a feeling.
We have now
conceived in a more spiritual sense, what we have previously considered
from a more physical aspect. And we shall now see that out of this milieu
was born the Being who appeared on earth as the Christ-Being. And we
shall only understand what was brought to earth through the
Christ-Being when we grasp the idea of the bestowing virtue, the
grace-bestowing virtue in its reflection in the light of the universe
in the inner substance of the Sun-body, which was permeated and
illuminated through and through by this light. If we can exalt our
conception of what has just been described and transform that into an
imagination, bearing in mind that something of all that was brought
to the earth by the Christ-Being is on the earth, fulfils its life on
the earth, we can then go still more deeply into the actual spiritual
nature of the Christ-impulse. We are then able to understand
the dim idea that can stir in a human soul on hearing such an
account, when it dawns on the soul that what has been described may
in a certain sense again come to life on earth. Just imagine all that
has been described of the Sun as absolutely concentrated in the soul
of one Being, suppose all this gathered up and taken away to reappear
at a later period and so to reappear and work, that He would bring
with Him an extract of what came into existence through the ancient
primordial sacrificial deed and the smoke of sacrifice through the
light-creating time and the bestowing Virtue and would reflect it out
of the universe of radiant light. Imagine all this concentrated in
one soul, think of that soul as giving all this to the
Earth-existence; around Him are assembled those who now as
earth-beings are destined to radiate this back again and preserve it
for the remainder of the earth-existence. In the centre is the One
Who bestows out of sacrifice and through sacrifice, and around Him
are gathered those who are to receive it — on the one side all
that the sacrifice is and everything belonging to it, as it were
translated into earthly life; on the other hand the possibility of
destroying the sacrifice, for everything that can be given to the
human being in the way of Divine grace may be either accepted or
rejected. If we think of all this as embodied in an intuition, we
can, on looking at the “The Last Supper” by Leonardo da
Vinci, have somewhat the following feeling. The entire Sun with the
sacrificial Beings, the Beings of Bestowing Virtue, the Beings of
warmth-giving bliss, of the radiant light, spiritually grasped,
radiated back by those selected to preserve into later ages what
belongs to the earlier, and so ordained for the earth that it may
also be rejected by the traitor. We may feel that this is the
Earth-Being, inasmuch as the Sun-Being reappears on the Earth. If
this is felt — not in an external intellectual manner, but in
true artistic way; then something of the actual driving-force of such
a great work of art can be felt, a work which reflects, as it were,
the extract of the Earth existence. When we see this picture again,
and see how the Christ grows forth from the Sun-Sphere, we shall
better understand what I have often said: If a spirit were to come
down to the Earth from Mars, while he would not be able to understand
everything that he saw here, he would understand the actual mission
of the Earth if he allowed the “Last Supper” of Leonardo
da Vinci to work upon him. The inhabitant of Mars would then see that
the Sun-existence must lie concealed within that of the Earth; and
thereby everything he might be told concerning the meaning of the
Earth would become clear to him. He would understand that the Earth
had a meaning, and he would know what was involved. He would say to
himself: “Something may take place on the Earth of which only a
part is important for the Earth: but could the deed really be
represented which radiates to me from the colouring of this picture?
When I concentrate on the central Figure with those other around Him,
I feel what the Spirits of Wisdom felt on the Sun, and what is
re-echoed here in the words: ‘This do in remembrance of
me.’” — The earlier preserved in the later: this
saying will only be comprehensible to us when we grasp it in its
whole cosmic connection, as we have just learnt to do.
In the next
lecture it will be our task to study the Christ-Being in the spiritual
nature of the Sun, in order to pass on from that to the spiritual nature
of the Moon.
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