VI
THE WHITSUNTIDE FESTIVAL
Its place in the study of Karma
[From February until
September, 1924, with intervals of visits to other towns and
countries, Rudolf Steiner was giving at Dornach the great series of
49 lectures on Karma, subsequently produced in four volumes now
available in English translation. The present lecture was given very
shortly before the Whitsun Festival and deals with its specific
significance for the problem of human destiny with which the Karma
lectures deal.
Lecturing as he was to Anthroposophists, Dr. Steiner begins at once
with the fundamental fact of the three ‘bodies’ at work
in the human organism. A full exposition of this is to be found in
the book
Theosophy, chapter I.]
WHEN we consider how
Karma works, we always have to bear in mind that the human Ego, which is
the essential being, the inmost being, of man, has as it were three
instruments through which it is able to live and express itself in the
world. These are the physical body, the etheric body and the astral
body. Man really carries the physical, etheric and astral bodies with
him through the world, but he himself is not in any one of these bodies.
In the truest sense he is the Ego; and it is the Ego which both suffers
and creates Karma.
Now the point is to gain
an understanding of the relationship between man as the Ego-being and
these three instrumental forms — if I may call them so — the
physical, etheric and astral bodies. This will give us the foundation
for an understanding of the essence of Karma. We shall gain a fruitful
point of view for the study of the physical, the etheric and the astral
in man in relation to Karma, if we consider the following.
The physical as we behold
it in the mineral kingdom, the etheric as we find it working in the
plant kingdom, and the astral as we find it working in the animal
kingdom — all these are to be found in the environment of man here
on Earth. In the Cosmos surrounding the Earth we have that Universe into
which, if I may so describe it, the Earth extends on all sides. Man can
feel a certain relationship between what takes place on the Earth and
what takes place in the cosmic environment. But when we come to
Spiritual Science we have to ask: Is this relationship really so
commonplace as the present-day scientific conception of the world
imagines? This modern scientific conception of the world examines the
physical qualities of everything on the Earth, living and lifeless. It
also investigates the stars, the sun, the moon, etc.; and it discovers
— indeed it is particularly proud of the discovery — that
these heavenly bodies are fundamentally of the same nature as the
Earth.
Such a conception can
only result from a form of knowledge which at no point comes to a real
grasp of man himself — a knowledge which takes hold only of what
is external to man. The moment, however, we really take hold of Man as
he stands within the Universe, we become able to discover the
relationships between the several instrumental members of man's nature,
the physical body, the etheric body, and the astral body and the
corresponding entities, the corresponding realities of Being, in the
Cosmos.
In regard to the etheric
body of man, we find spread out in the Cosmos the universal Ether. The
etheric body of man has a definite human shape, definite forms of
movement within it, and so on. These, it is true, are different in the
cosmic Ether. Nevertheless the cosmic Ether is fundamentally of like
nature with what we find in the human etheric body. In the same way we
can speak of a similarity between what is found in the human astral body
and a certain astral principle that works through all things and all
beings out in the far-spread Universe.
Here we come to something
of extraordinary importance, something which in its true nature is quite
foreign to the human being of to-day. Let us take our start from this.
(A drawing is made on the blackboard). We have, first, the Earth;
and on the Earth we have Man, with his etheric body. Then in the Earth's
environment we have the cosmic Ether — the cosmic Ether which is
of the same nature as the etheric in man. In man we also have the astral
body. In the cosmic environment too there is Astrality. Where are we to
find this cosmic Astrality? Where is it? It is indeed to be found, but
we must first discover — what it is in the Cosmos that betrays the
presence of cosmic Astrality; what it is that reveals it. Somewhere or
other is the Astrality. Is this Astrality in the Cosmos quite invisible
and imperceptible, or is it, after all, in some way perceptible to
us?
In itself, of course, the
Ether too is imperceptible for our physical senses. If I may put it so,
when you are looking at a small fragment of Ether, you see nothing with
your physical senses, you simply see through it. The Ether is like an
empty nothingness to you. But when you regard the etheric environment as
a totality, you behold the blue sky, of which we also say that it is not
really there but that you are gazing into empty space. Now the reason
why you see the blue of the sky is that you are actually perceiving the
end of the Ether. Thus you behold the Ether as the blue of the heavens.
The perception of the blue sky is really and truly a perception of the
Ether. We may therefore say: In that we perceive the blue of the sky we
are perceiving the universal Ether that surrounds us.
At first contact, we see
through the Ether. It allows us to do so; and yet, it makes itself
perceptible in the blue heavens. Hence the existence for human
perception of the blue of the sky is expressed in that we say: The Ether
itself, though imperceptible, yet rises to the level of perceptibility
by reason of the great majesty with which it stands there in the
Universe, revealing its presence, making itself known in the blue of the
vast expanse.
Physical science
theorises materialistically about the blue of the sky; and for physical
science it is indeed very difficult to reach any intelligent conclusion
on this point, for the simple reason that it is bound to admit that
where we see the blue of the sky there is nothing physical. Nevertheless
men spin out the most elaborate theories to explain how the rays of
light are reflected and refracted in a peculiar way so as to call forth
this blue of the sky. In reality, it is here that the super-sensible
world begins already to hold sway. In the Cosmos the Supersensible does
indeed become visible to us. We have only to discover where and how it
becomes visible. The Ether becomes perceptible to us through the blue of
the sky.
But now, somewhere there
is also present the astral element of the Cosmos. In the blue sky the
Ether peers through, as it were, into the realms of sense. Where then
does the Astrality in the Cosmos peer through into the realms of
perceptibility? The answer, my dear friends, is this.
Every star that we see
glittering in the heavens is in reality a gate of entry for the Astral.
Wherever the stars are twinkling and glittering in towards us, there
glitters and shines the Astral. Look at the starry heavens in their
manifold variety; in one part the stars are gathered into heaps and
clusters, or in another they are scattered far apart. In all this
wonderful configuration of radiant light, the invisible and
super-sensible astral body of the Cosmos makes itself visible to us.
For this reason we must
not consider the world of stars unspiritually. To look up to the world
of stars and speak of worlds of burning gases is just as though —
forgive the apparent absurdity of the comparison, but it is precisely
true — it is just as though someone who loves you were gently
stroking you, holding the fingers a little apart, and you were then to
say that it feels like so many little ribbons being drawn across your
cheek. It is no more untrue that little ribbons are laid across your
cheek when someone strokes you, than that there exist up there in the
heavens those material entities of which modern physics tells. It is the
astral body of the Universe which is perpetually wielding its influences
— like the gently stroking fingers — on the etheric organism
of the Cosmos. The etheric Cosmos is organised for very long duration;
it is for this reason that a star has its quality of fixity,
representing a perpetual influence on the cosmic Ether by the astral
Universe. It lasts far longer than the stroking of your cheek. But in
the Cosmos things do last longer, for there we are dealing with gigantic
measures. Thus in the starry heavens that we perceive, we actually
behold an expression of the soul-life of the cosmic astral world.
In this way, an immense,
unfathomable life, yet, at the same time, a soul-life, a real and actual
life of the soul, is brought into the Cosmos. Think how dead the Cosmos
appears to us when we look into the far spaces and see nothing but
burning gaseous bodies. Think how living it all becomes when we know
that the stars are an expression of the love with which the astral
Cosmos works upon the etheric Cosmos — for this is to express it
with perfect truth. Think then of those mysterious processes when
certain stars suddenly light up at certain times, — processes
which have only been explained to us by means of physical hypotheses
that do not lead to any real understanding. Stars that were not there
before, light up for a time, and disappear again. Thus in the Cosmos too
there is a “stroking” of shorter duration. For it is true
indeed that in epochs when divine Beings desire to work in an especial
way from the astral world into the etheric, we behold new stars light up
and fade away again.
We ourselves in our own
astral body have feelings of delight and comfort in the most varied
ways. In like manner in the Cosmos, through the cosmic astral body, we
have the varied configuration of the starry heavens. No wonder that an
ancient science, instinctively clairvoyant, describes this third member
of our human organism as the “astral” or
“starry” body, seeing that it is of like nature with that
which reveals itself to us in the stars.
It is only the Ego that
we do not find revealed in the cosmic environment. Why is this? We shall
find the reason if we consider how this human Ego manifests here on the
Earth, in a world that is in reality threefold, — physical,
etheric and astral. The Ego of man, as it appears within the Universe,
is ever and again a repetition of former lives on Earth; and again and
again it finds itself in the life between death and a new birth. But
when we observe the Ego in its life between death and a new birth, we
perceive that the Etheric which we have here in the cosmic environment
of the Earth has no significance for the human Ego. The etheric body is
laid aside soon after death. It is only the astral world, that shines in
towards us through the stars that has significance for the Ego in the
life between death and a new birth. And in that world which glistens in
towards us through the stars, in that world there live the Beings of the
Higher Hierarchies with whom man forms his Karma between death and a new
birth.
Indeed, when we follow
this Ego in its successive evolutions through lives between birth and
death and between death and a new birth, we cannot remain within the
world of Space at all. For two successive earthly lives cannot be within
the same space. They cannot be within that Universe which is dependent
on spatial co-existence. Here therefore we go right out of Space and
enter into Time. This is actually so. We go out of Space and come into
the pure flow of Time when we contemplate the Ego in its successive
lives on Earth.
Now consider this, my
dear friends. In Space, Time is still present, of course, but within
this world of Space we have no means of experiencing Time in itself. We
always have to experience Time through Space and spatial processes. For
example, if you wish to experience Time, you look at the clock, or, if
you will, at the course of the sun. What do you see? You see the various
positions of the hands of the clock or of the sun. You see something
that is spatial. Through the fact that the positions of the hand or of
the sun are changed, through the fact that spatial things are present to
you as changing, you gain some idea of Time. But of Time itself there is
really nothing in this spatial perception. There are only varied spatial
configurations, varied positions of the hands of the clock, varied
positions of the sun. You only experience Time itself when you come into
the sphere of the soul's experience. There you do really
experience Time, but there you also go out of Space. There, Time is a
reality, but within the earthly world of Space, Time is no reality.
What, then, must happen to us, if we would go out of the Space in which
we live between birth and death and enter into the spacelessness in
which we live between death and a new birth? What must we do? The answer
is this: We must die!
We must take these words
in their exact and deep meaning. On Earth we experience Time only
through Space — through points in Space, through the positions of
spatial things. On Earth we do not experience Time in its reality at
all. Once you grasp this, you will say: “Really to enter into Time
we must go out of Space, we must put away all things spatial.” You
can also express it in other words, for it is really nothing else than
— to die. It means, in very deed and truth: to
die.
Let us now turn our eyes
to this cosmic world that encircles the Earth — this cosmic world
to which we are akin both through our etheric body, and also through our
astral body — and let us look at the spiritual in this cosmic
world. There have indeed been nations and human societies who have had
regard only to the spiritual that is to be found within our earthly
world of Space. Such peoples were unable to have any thoughts about
repeated lives on Earth. Thoughts about repeated lives on Earth were
possessed only by those human beings and groups that were able to
conceive Time in its pure essence, Time in its spaceless character. But
if we consider this earthly world together with its cosmic environment,
or, to put it briefly, all that we speak of as the Cosmos, the Universe;
and if we behold the spiritual manifest in it, we are then apprehending
something of which it can be said that it had to be present in order
that we might enter into our existence as earthly human beings; it had
to be there.
Unfathomable depths are
really contained in this simple conception, — that all that to
which I have just referred, had to exist in order that we as earthly
human beings might enter this earthly life. Infinite depths are revealed
when we really grasp the spiritual aspect of all that is thus put before
us. If we conceive this Spiritual in its completeness as a
self-contained whole, if we consider it in its own purity and essence,
then we have a conception of what was called “God” by those
peoples who limited their outlook to the world of space alone.
These peoples — at
any rate in their Wisdom-teachings — had come to feel: The Cosmos
is woven through and through by a Divine element that is at work in it,
and we can distinguish from this Divine element in the Cosmos that which
is present, on the Earth in our immediate environment, as the physical
world. We can also distinguish that which, in this cosmic,
divine-spiritual world reveals itself as the Etheric, namely that which
gazes down upon us in the blue of the sky. We can distinguish as the
Astral in this divine world, that which gazes down upon us in the
configuration of the starry heavens.
If we enter as fully as
possible into the situation as we stand here, within the Universe, as
human beings on this Earth, we shall say to ourselves: “We as
human beings have a physical body: where, then, is the Physical in the
Universe?” Here I am returning to something which I have already
pointed out. The physical science of to-day expects to find everything
which is on the Earth existing also in the Universe. But the physical
organisation itself is not to be found in the Universe at all. Man has
in the first place his physical organisation: then in addition he has
the etheric and the astral. The Universe on the other hand begins
with the Etheric. Out there in the Cosmos the Physical is nowhere to be
found. The Physical exists only on the Earth, and it is but empty
fancy and imagination to speak of anything physical in the far Universe.
In the Universe there is the Etheric and the Astral. There is also a
third element within the Universe which we have yet to speak about in
this present lecture, for the Cosmos too is threefold. But the
threefoldness of the Cosmos, apart from the Earth, is different from the
threefoldness of the Cosmos in which we include the Earth.
Let these feelings enter
into our earthly consciousness, the perceiving of the Physical in our
immediate earthly dwelling-place; the feeling of the Etheric, which is
both on the Earth and in the Universe; the beholding of the Astral,
glistening down to the Earth from the stars, and most intensely of all
from the Sun-star. Then, when we consider all these things and place
before our souls the majesty of this world-conception, we can well
understand how in ancient times, when with the old instinctive
clairvoyance men did not think so abstractly, but were still able to
feel the majesty of a great conception, they were led to realise:
“A thought so majestic as this cannot be conceived perpetually in
all its fullness. We must take hold of it at one special time, allowing
it to work on the soul in its full, unfathomable glory. It will then
work on in the inner depths of our human being, without being spoilt and
corrupted by our surface consciousness.” — If we consider by
what means the old instinctive clairvoyance gave expression to such a
feeling, then out of all that combined to give truth to this thought in
mankind in olden time, there remains to us to-day the institution of the
Christmas Festival.
On Christmas Night, man,
as he stands here upon the Earth with his physical, his etheric and his
astral bodies, feels himself to be related to the threefold Cosmos,
which appears to him in its Etheric nature, shining so majestically, and
with the magic wonder of the night in the blue of the heavens; while
face to face with him is the Astral of the Universe, in the stars that
glitter in towards the Earth. As he realises how the holiness of this
cosmic environment is related to that which is on the Earth itself, he
feels that he himself with his own Ego has been transplanted from the
Cosmos into this world of Space. And now he may gaze upon the Christmas
Mystery — the new-born Child, the Representative of Humanity on
Earth, who, inasmuch as he is entering into childhood, is born into this
world of Space. In the fullness and majesty of this Christmas thought,
as he gazes on the Child that is born on Christmas Night, he exclaims:
“Ex Deo Nascimur — I am born out of the Divine, the
Divine that weaves and surges through the world of Space.”
When a man has felt this,
when he has permeated himself through and through with it, then he may
also recall what Anthroposophy has revealed to us about the meaning of
the Earth. The Child on whom we are gazing is the outer sheath of That
which is now born into Space. But whence is He born, that He might be
brought to birth in the world of Space? According to what we have
explained to-day, it can only be from Time. From out of Time the Child
is born.
If we then follow out the
life of this Child and His permeation by the Spirit of the Christ-Being,
we come to realise that this Being, this Christ-Being, comes from the
Sun. Then we shall look up to the Sun, and say to ourselves: “As I
look up to the Sun, I must behold in the sunshine that Time, which in
the world of Space is hidden. Within the Sun is Time, and from out of
the Time that weaves and works within the Sun, Christ came forth, came
out into Space, on to the Earth.”
What have we then in
Christ on Earth? In Christ on Earth we have That, which coming from
beyond Space, from outside of Space, unites with the Earth.
I want you to realise how
our conception of the Universe changes, in comparison with the ordinary
present-day conception, when we really enter into all that has come
before our souls this evening. There in the Universe we have the Sun,
with all that there appears to us to be immediately connected with it
— all that is contained in the blue of the heavens, in the world
of the stars. At another point in the Universe we have the Earth with
humanity. When we look up from the Earth to the Sun, we are at the same
time looking into the flow of Time.
Now from this there
follows something of great significance. Man only looks up to the Sun in
the right way (even if it be but in his mind) when, as he gazes upwards,
he forgets Space and considers Time alone. For in truth, the Sun does
not only radiate light, it radiates Space itself, and when we are
looking into the Sun we are looking out of Space into the world of Time.
The Sun is the unique star that it is because when we gaze into the Sun
we are looking out of Space. And from that world, outside of
Space, Christ came to men. At the time when Christianity was founded by
Christ on Earth, man had been all too long restricted to the mere Ex
Deo Nascimur, he had become altogether bound up in it, he had become
a Space-being pure and simple. The reason why it is so hard for us to
understand the traditions of primeval epochs, when we go back to them
with the consciousness of present-day civilisation, is that they always
had in mind Time, and not the world of Space. They regarded the world of
Space only as an appendage of the world of Time.
[This is a
fascinating passage, but the translator (or editor) mixed up the words
‘Space’ and ‘Time’ at the end of this paragraph,
so as to render the passage completely contradictory! The last two
sentences of the first paragraph should read as follows (changed words
marked in bold):
The
reason why it is so hard for us to understand the traditions of
primeval epochs, when we go back to them with the consciousness of
present-day civilisation, is that they always had in mind Space,
and not the world of Time. They regarded the world of Time
only as an appendage of the world of Space.
Here's
the original German:
“Wir
verstehen so schwer mit dem heutigen zivilisatorischen Bewußtsein
die alten Überlieferungen, weil diese eigentlich überall mit dem
Raum rechnen und nicht mit dem Zeitlichen, mit dem Zeitlichen nur wie
mit einem Anhängsel des Räumlichen.”
Thanks
to Lucas Dreier — e.Ed.]
Christ came to bring the
element of Time again to men, and when the human heart, the human soul,
the human spirit, unite themselves with Christ, then man receives once
more the stream of Time that flows from Eternity to Eternity. What else
can we human beings do when we die, i.e. when we go out of the world of
Space, than hold fast to Him who gives Time back to us again? At the
Mystery of Golgotha man had become to so great an extent a being of
Space that Time was lost to him. Christ brought Time back again to
men.
If, then, in going forth
from the world of Space, men would not die in their souls as well as in
their bodies, they must die in Christ, We can still be human beings of
Space, and say: Ex Deo Nascimur, and we can look to the Child who
comes forth from Time into Space, that he may unite Christ with
humanity. But since the Mystery of Golgotha we cannot conceive of death,
the bound of our earthly life, without this thought: “We must die
in Christ.” Otherwise we shall pay for our loss of Time with the
loss of Christ Himself, and, banished from Him, remain held spell-bound.
We must fill ourselves with the Mystery of Golgotha. In addition to the
Ex Deo Nascimur, we must find the In Christo Morimur. We
must bring forth the Easter thought in addition to the Christmas
thought. Thus the Ex Deo Nascimur lets the Christmas thought
appear before our souls, and in the In Christo Morimur the Easter
thought.
We can now say: On the
Earth man has his three bodies, the physical, the etheric and the
astral. The Etheric and Astral are also out there in the Cosmos, but the
Physical is only to be found on the Earth. Out in the Cosmos there is no
Physical. Thus we must say: On the Earth — physical,
etheric, astral. In the Cosmos — no physical, but only the
etheric and the astral.
Yet the Cosmos too is
threefold, for what the Cosmos lacks at the lowest level, it adds above.
In the Cosmos the Etheric is the lowest: on the Earth the Physical is
the lowest. On Earth the Astral is the highest; in the Cosmos the
highest is that of which man has to-day only the beginnings — that
out of which his Spirit-Self will one day be woven. We may therefore
say: In the Cosmos there is, as the third, the highest element, the
Spirit-Selfhood.
Now we see the stars as
expressions of something real. I compared their action to a gentle
stroking. The Spirit-Selfhood that is behind them is indeed the Being
that lovingly strokes, — only in this case it is not a single
Being but the whole world of the Hierarchies. I gaze upon a man and see
his form; I look at his eyes and see them shining towards me; I hear his
voice; it is the utterance of the human being. In the same way I gaze up
into the far Spaces of the world, I look upon the stars. They are the
utterance of the Hierarchies, — the living utterance of the
Hierarchies, kindling astral feeling. I gaze into the blue depths of the
firmament and, perceive in it the outward revelation of the etheric body
which is the lowest member of the whole world of the Hierarchies.
Now we may draw near to a
still further realisation. We look out into the far Cosmos which goes
out beyond earthly reality, even as the Earth with its physical
substance and forces goes down beneath cosmic reality. As in the
Physical the Earth has a sub-cosmic element, so in Spirit-Selfhood the
Cosmos has a super-earthly element.
Physical science speaks
of a movement of the Sun; and it can do so, for within the spatial
picture of the Cosmos which surrounds us, we perceive by certain
phenomena that the Sun is in movement. But that is only an image of the
true Sun-movement — an image cast into Space. If we are speaking
of the real Sun it is nonsense to say that the Sun moves in Space; for
Space itself is being radiated out by the Sun. The Sun not only radiates
the light; the Sun creates the Space itself. And the movement of
the Sun is only a spatial movement within this created Space. Outside of
Space it is a movement in Time. What seems apparent to us —
namely, that the Sun is speeding on towards the constellation of
Hercules — is only a spatial image of the Time-evolution of the
Sun-Being.
To His intimate disciples
Christ spoke these words: “Behold the life of the Earth; it is
related to the life of the Cosmos. When you look out on the Earth and
the surrounding Cosmos, it is the Father whose life permeates this
Universe.
[See Note 1]
The Father-God is the God of Space. But I
make known to you that I have come to you from the Sun, from Time
— Time that receives man only when he dies. I have brought you
myself from out of Time.
[See Note 2]
If you receive me, you receive
Time, and you will not be held spell-bound in Space. But you find the
transition from the one trinity — Physical, Etheric and Astral
— to the other trinity, which leads from the Etheric and Astral to
Spirit-Selfhood. Spirit-Selfhood is not to be found in the earthly
world, just as the Earthly-Physical is not to be found in the Cosmos.
But I bring you the message of it, for I am from the Sun.”
The Sun has indeed a
threefold aspect. If one lives within the Sun and looks down from the
Sun to the Earth, one beholds the Physical, Etheric and Astral. One may
also gaze on that which is within the Sun itself. Then one still sees
the Physical so long as one remembers the Earth or gazes down towards
the Earth. But if one looks away from the Earth one beholds on the other
side the Spirit-Selfhood. Thus one swings backwards and forwards between
the Physical and the nature of the Spirit-Self. Only the Etheric and
Astral in between are permanent. As you look out into the great
Universe, the Earthly vanishes away, and you have the Etheric, the
Astral and the Spirit-Selfhood. This is what you behold when you come
into the Sun-Time between death and a new birth.
Let us now imagine first
of all the inner mood of a man's soul to be such that he shuts himself
up entirely within this Earth-existence. He can still feel the Divine,
for out of the Divine he is born: Ex Deo Nascimur. Then let us
imagine him no longer shutting himself up within the mere world of
Space, but receiving the Christ who came from the world of Time into the
world of Space, who brought Time itself into the earthly Space. If a man
does this, then in Death he will overcome Death. Ex Deo Nascimur.
In Christo Morimur. But Christ Himself brings the message that
when Space is overcome and one has learned to recognise the Sun as the
creator of Space, when one feels oneself transplanted through Christ
into the Sun, into the living Sun, then the earthly Physical vanishes
and only the Etheric and the Astral are there. Now the Etheric comes to
life, not as the blue of the sky, but as the lilac-red gleaming radiance
of the Cosmos, and forth from the reddish light the stars no longer
twinkle down upon us but gently touch us with their loving
effluence.
If a man really enters
into all this, he can have the experience of himself, standing here upon
the Earth, the Physical put aside, but the Etheric still with him,
streaming through and out of him in the lilac-reddish light. No longer
now are the stars glimmering points of light; they are radiations of
love like the caressing hand of a human being. As we feel all this
— the divine within ourselves, the divine cosmic fire flaming
forth from within us as the very being of man; ourselves within the
Etheric world and experiencing the living expression of the Spirit in
the Astral cosmic radiance, there bursts forth within us the inner
awakening of the creative radiance of Spirit, which is man's high
calling in the Universe.
When those to whom Christ
revealed these things had let the revelation sink deep into their being,
then the moment came when they experienced the working of this mighty
concept, in the fiery tongues of Pentecost. At first they felt the
falling away, the discarding of the earthly-Physical as death. But then
the feeling came; This is not death, but in place of the physical of the
Earth, there now dawns upon us the Spirit-Selfhood of the Universe.
“Per Spiritum Sanctum Reviviscimus.”
Thus may we regard the
threefold nature of the one half of the year. We have the Christmas
thought — Ex Deo Nascimur; the Easter thought — In
Christo Morimur; and the Whitsun thought — Per Spiritum
Sanctum Reviviscimus.
There remains the other
half of the year. If we understand that too, there dawns on us the other
aspect of our human life. If we understand the relationship of the
physical to the soul of man and to the superphysical — which
contains the true freedom of which man is to become a partaker on the
Earth, — then in the interconnection of the Christmas, Easter and
Whitsun festivals we understand the human freedom on Earth. As we
understand man from out of these three thoughts, the Christmas thought,
the Easter thought and the Whitsun thought, and as we let this kindle in
us the desire to understand the remaining portions of the year, there
arises the other half of human life which I indicated when I said:
“Gaze upon this human destiny; the Hierarchies appear behind it
— the working and weaving of the Hierarchies.” It is
wonderful to look truly into the destiny of a human being, for behind it
stands the whole world of the Hierarchies.
It is indeed the language
of the stars which sounds towards us from the thoughts of Christmas,
Easter and Whitsuntide; from the Christmas thought, inasmuch as the
Earth is a star within the Universe; from the Easter thought inasmuch as
the most radiant of stars, the Sun, gives us his gifts of grace; and
from the Whitsun thought inasmuch as that which lies hidden beyond the
stars lights into the soul, and lights forth again from the soul in the
fiery tongues of Pentecost.
Enter into all this, my
dear friends! I have told you of the Father, the Bearer of the Christmas
thought, who sends the Son that through him the Easter thought may be
fulfilled; I have told you further how the Son brings the message of the
Spirit, so that in the thought of Whitsun man's life on Earth may be
completed in its threefold being. Meditate this through, ponder it well;
then for all the descriptive foundations I have already given you for an
understanding of Karma, you will gain a right foundation of inner
feeling.
Try to let the Christmas,
Easter and Whitsun thoughts, in the way I have expressed them to you
to-day, work deeply and truly into your human feeling, and when we meet
again after the journey which I must undertake this Whitsun-tide for the
Course on Agriculture — when we come together again, bring this
feeling with you, my dear friends. For this feeling should live on in
you as the warm and fiery thought of Pentecost. Then we shall be able to
go further in our study of Karma; your power of understanding will be
fertilised by what the Whitsun thought contains.
Just as once upon a time
at the first Whitsun Festival something shone forth from each one of the
disciples, so the thought of Pentecost should now become alive again for
our anthroposophical understanding. Something must light up and shine
forth from our souls. Therefore it is as a Whitsun feeling, to prepare
you for the further continuation of our thoughts on Karma, which are
related to the other half of the year, that I have given you what I have
said to-day about the inner connections of Christmas, Easter and
Whitsuntide.
Notes:
Note 1: Cp. Paul: “God that
made the world and all things therein, being Lord of heaven and
earth, giveth to all life and breath and all things, and is not far
from each one of us, for in him we live and move and have our
being.” Acts XVII, 24–28.
Note 2: “Time,” as
here used, is what we usually designate as “Eternity”,
i.e. a continuous, unbroken time-experience. What we usually call
“Time” is our spatialised concept of real Time, separate
successional events, measured by spatial changes.
Last Modified: 23-Nov-2024
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