Zarathustra
By
RUDOLF STEINER
A Lecture delivered by
Dr. Rudolf Steiner on January 19th, 1911, at the
Architektenhaus,
Berlin. From a shorthand report unrevised by the lecturer. Published
by kind permission of Frau Marie Steiner. Further lectures dealing
with the Great Teachers will appear in the subsequent numbers of
Anthroposophy.
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AMONG the ideas advanced by Spiritual Science, that
of Reincarnation occupies a foremost place. The idea that the human
individuality has to manifest over and over again in a single
personality in the course of the development of mankind on the
Earth is at present but little understood, and, moreover, it is
generally unpopular. As we have seen and shall still see, many
questions arise in Spiritual Science, among them that of the meaning
of repeated earthly lives.
When we
study the evolution of human life on Earth in the light of Spiritual
Science, we find that there is a very deep meaning behind the fact
that the human individuality passes, not only once, but many times
through earthly life. Every epoch and every age has its special
content, its special characteristics, and all the varied
possibilities which it offers have to be assimilated over and over
again by the individual life-germs of man. This is possible because
man, with all that composes his being, is connected not once and for
all, but over and over again with the living stream of evolution.
Looking upon this evolution as a rational progress into which new
contents, new qualities are poured, we begin to realise the true
significance of those Great Ones who have been the leading and
guiding spirits of the different epochs. From each of these Great
Ones, new qualities, new impulses for the progressive evolution of
humanity have emanated and in the course of these lectures we shall
be considering important questions connected with such leaders of
mankind.
To-day our
attention is turned to an individuality who, so far as historical
investigation goes, is shrouded in mystery — an individuality lost
in dim prehistoric ages, of whom no documentary records exist. I refer to
the personality of Zarathustra.
A
personality such as that of Zarathustra, whose gifts to humanity, in
so far as they are preserved for us, seem so strange to the present
age, makes us realise what great differences arise in the sum total
of human nature during the various epochs. Superficial opinion may
state that ever since man has been man, he has thought, felt and
conceived ideas of morality exactly as he does to-day. But Spiritual
Science shows us that the life of the human soul and the nature of
man's thought, feeling and will, have undergone great changes in the
course of human evolution. Human consciousness in olden times was of
quite a different nature and we have reason to believe that, in the
future, other stages of consciousness will be reached, again very
different from the normal consciousness of to-day.
When we
turn our attention to Zarathustra, we must look back over an
infinitely long period of time. It is true that certain modern
investigators have fixed the date of Zarathustra as contemporary with
that of Buddha, which would mean that he lived some five or six
centuries before the Christian era. It is however significant that
our modern historians, after careful investigation of the traditions
referring to Zarathustra, have been obliged to indicate that the
personality hidden beneath the name of
“Zarathustra,” the original founder of the Persian
religion, must be placed a great many centuries before Buddha. Greek
historians have repeatedly pointed out that Zarathustra must have
lived about five or six thousand years before the Trojan War. We are
prepared to state that historical research will, however unwillingly,
eventually be forced to admit that the Greek tradition is correct in
regard to the epoch in which Zarathustra lived. Spiritual Science,
which is based on inner knowledge, agrees with the Greek tradition
and it is therefore reasonable to indicate that Zarathustra, living
as he did thousands of years before the birth of Christianity, was
confronted by a consciousness entirely different from that of the
present day.
I have
often pointed out, and I shall explain it further, that human
consciousness in ancient times was bound up with certain dream
states, or rather clairvoyant states, in normal human life. Primeval
man did not contemplate the world with the strong, clearly-defined
sense perceptions of to-day. We shall best understand the way in
which man of those primeval times took his environment into his
consciousness, if we think of a last remnant of the ancient
consciousness, still left to us in dreams. Everybody knows how dream
images appear and disappear, how they emerge and fade away. To our
present consciousness they are for the most part dream pictures,
meaningless reminiscences of the outer world. Interwoven though they
are with higher states of consciousness, they are incomprehensible to
people of our time. Images, ever-changing pictures, symbols — of
these our dream consciousness consists. Everyone has experienced how
a fire, for instance, is symbolised in a dream. Think of the
difference between a dream and ordinary waking consciousness. Such as
it is, this dream state represents the remnant of a primeval
consciousness of man. Man then lived in a world of images —
images not vague or empty but proceeding from a real external world.
In this ancient consciousness there were intermediate states
between waking and sleep and in these states man was face to face
with the spiritual world. The spiritual world actually entered into
his consciousness. Nowadays the door into the spiritual world
is locked against the normal consciousness of man, but this was not
the case in olden times; for he then entered into those intermediate
states between waking and sleep when the spiritual world appeared
before him in dreamlike images. In these dreamlike images he
saw the working and the weaving of the spirit behind the physical
world of sense. He had direct experience of the spiritual world,
although by the time of Zarathustra this was already indistinct and
dim. A man of antiquity could say to himself: “I behold the
outer physical world and the life of sense, but I also have
experiences and perceptions in a different state of consciousness; I
know that there is another world behind the world of sense — a
spiritual world.”
Evolution
consists in one faculty being acquired at the expense of another, and
thus as the epochs took their course, the faculty which man once
possessed of understanding the spiritual world became less and
less. Our clear reasoning and cognitional faculties, our present
logical thinking which we regard as the most important feature of
modern culture — these did not exist in those early
times. They had to be developed by man in the epoch to which we now
belong, at the expense of the old clairvoyant consciousness.
Clairvoyant consciousness will have to be cultivated again in the
future evolution of mankind, but in a different way. It has to be
added to the purely physical consciousness that is bound up with the
faculty of intellectual logic. A rising and a falling can be traced
in the evolution of human consciousness and we see therein a deep
purpose in man's development.
The old
consciousness described above dates back to a prehistoric age of
which there is no documentary evidence. Zarathustra himself belongs
to this age of which, as yet, no historical traditions have reached
us. He was one of those leading personalities who gave a stimulus for
great steps forward in the civilisation of mankind. Whatever the
level of human consciousness at the time, these leading personalities
must always draw from the source which we may call Illumination,
Initiation into the higher mysteries of the universe. Among
such personalities were Hermes, Buddha and Moses, as well as
Zarathustra, whom we are to study in the course of these
lectures.
Zarathustra lived at least eight thousand years before our
present era, and the gifts to civilisation which poured from his
enlightened spirit shine forth clearly across the centuries. Those
who penetrate into the inner currents of human evolution can detect
them even after this lapse of time. Zarathustra was one of those
whose soul had experienced Truth, Wisdom and Intuition to an extent
far transcending the normal consciousness of the age. In that part of
the Earth which later on was known as the Persian Empire, Zarathustra
proclaimed mighty truths from the super-sensible
worlds — regions lying far above the normal
consciousness of the men of that time.
If we
would understand the significance of Zarathustra's teaching, we must
realise that his mission was to communicate a certain conception of
the universe to one particular section of humanity, while other
streams had, as it were, a different mission in human culture. The
personality of Zarathustra is all the more interesting to us in that
he lived in a part of the world directly adjoining on its South side
another land whose people transmitted an entirely different order of
spirituality to mankind. I refer to the peoples of India, from whom
arose the Vedic poets. The region permeated with the mighty impulse
of Zarathustra lies to the North of the land from which the great
teaching of Brahma went forth.
Zarathustra's message to the world was fundamentally
different from the Brahministic teachings of the great leaders of
ancient Indian thought. These Indian teachings have come down to us
in the Vedas, and in the profound philosophy of the Vedanta, of which
the revelations of Buddha represent, as it were, the final
splendour.
We shall
understand the difference between the two thought
currents — the one proceeding from Zarathustra
and the other from the ancient Indian teachings — when we
consider that man can reach the spiritual world along two paths of
approach. There are two ways by which we may raise the inner powers
of the soul above their normal level so that we may pass from the
world of the senses into the super-sensible world. One way is to
penetrate deeply into our own souls, to immerse ourselves, as it
were, in our inner being. The other way leads behind the veils spread
around us by the physical world. Both ways lead into the
super-sensible world. If in the intimate experiences of soul life we
so deepen our feelings, ideas, and impulses that the powers of soul
grow stronger and stronger, we can descend mystically into the
“Self.” Passing through that part of our being which
belongs to the physical world, we may indeed find our real spiritual
essence — the imperishable essence that passes from incarnation
to incarnation. When we pierce through the veil of the inner being
with all the desires, passions and inner experiences of soul (which
are only one part of us in so far as we live in a physical body) we
then reach our eternal essence and enter a world of spirit. On the
other hand, if we develop powers which not only perceive the physical
world with its sounds, colours, sensations of warmth and cold —
if we so strengthen our spiritual powers that they can penetrate
behind the encircling veil of colour, sound, warmth, cold and other
physical phenomena — then our strengthened spiritual forces
will reach the super-sensible worlds, stretching before us into
boundless distances, into infinity. The first way is that of the
Mystic; the second the way of Spiritual Science. It was along one of
these two ways that the great teachers attained to the revelations of
truth which they had to inculcate into mankind as the basis of
culture.
In
primeval times the evolution of humanity was such that
only one of the two ways was open to a particular
people. Only later, in the Greek epoch (coinciding with the beginning
of the Christian era) did these two currents mingle and gradually
become a single current of culture. When we speak to-day of the
ascent into higher worlds, it is right to state that the man who
would make the ascent must to a certain extent develop both kinds of
spiritual powers within his soul — the mystical powers on the
path into the inner self and the powers developed by Spiritual
Science as it penetrates the outer world. To-day these two paths are
no longer strictly separate from one another, for it is part of the
purpose of human evolution that the two currents should meet. Before
the Greek and Christian eras these two methods of development were
practised by different peoples living in regions not very far apart
in space. We find traces of them in ancient Indian culture, in the
Vedic songs and in the Zarathustrian civilisation to the North. All
that we so greatly admire in the old Indian culture — which
later on found expression in Buddhism — all this was attained
through inner contemplation, by turning away from the outer world.
The eye had to become insensitive to physical colour, the ear to
physical sound, the senses to turn away from outer impressions, and
finally, with his inner powers of soul made strong, man attained to
Brahma. In Brahma, he felt himself united with the inner being of the
Cosmos, moving and creative. And so there arose the teaching of the
Holy Rishis which flowed into the Vedas and lived on in the Vedantic
philosophy and in Buddhism.
The other
path springs from the teachings of Zarathustra.
Zarathustra handed down to his disciples the secret of how
to strengthen the powers of understanding in order to penetrate the
veil of the outer world of sense.
Zarathustra did not teach as did the Indian mystics:
“Turn away from colours, sounds and all the outer impressions
of the senses, and seek the way into the spiritual worlds entirely by
means of inner contemplation, in your own soul life.” On the
contrary, Zarathustra taught: “Strengthen the powers of
knowledge and understanding for everything that lives, be it plant or
animal; understand all living things in air and water, on the
mountain heights or in the valleys. Look
upon this world!” We know that for the Indian
mystic, this world was Maya — illusion; he turned from it in
order to find Brahman; but Zarathustra
taught his disciples rather to penetrate the
world with understanding and to feel, behind the outer realm of
physical phenomena, the reality of a spiritual power, active and
creative. This is the other path.
It is
remarkable how these two paths converge in the Greek age, where the
understanding of things spiritual was far deeper than it is in our
time. This understanding was expressed in symbolical imagery, in
mythology. The two thought currents, the mystic path into the inner
self and the other leading into the outer Cosmos, blended in Greek
culture. One current derived its name from the mystical God Dionysus,
the mysterious being who was to be found when a man descended more
and more deeply into his inner being and there discovered the
sub-human element which formerly he did not know, and from which he
evolved into full manhood. This element, still unpurified, still
partly animal, was known by the name of Dionysus. The other element,
in which the eyes of spirit beheld the phenomena of the physical
world, was expressed by the name of Apollo
[See Chapter VI. of
“The East in the Light of the West”
by Rudolf Steiner. Anthroposophical Publishing Company].
Thus we find the teachings of Zarathustra
expressed in the cult of Apollo and the mystic doctrine of
contemplation in the cult of Dionysus in Greece. In ancient times,
these two currents arose separately, but in the Apollonian and
Dionysian cults they were united and blended. If we, in our modern
culture, undergo a true spiritual training, we can re-experience them
both in one.
Nietzsche
had an inkling of the significant difference between the cults of
Apollo and Dionysus. True, he did not enter very deeply into the
matter, but in his first Essay, “The Birth
of Tragedy from the Spirit of Music,” he shows that the
Apollonian and Dionysian cults of ancient Greece are represented on
the one hand in the mystic current, and on the other in the current
which is now expressed by Spiritual
Science.
Zarathustra taught his disciples to see the Spirit behind
every physical phenomenon. The whole civilisation inspired by
him was based on this principle. Now it is not enough to say that
behind the world of the senses there is the Divine-Spiritual. Man may
think he has discovered a great truth here, but it leads to nothing
but a vague Pantheism. We may think we express a
truth when we say: “God is at work behind
every physical phenomenon” — but this is merely a
conception of a nebulous spiritual power behind all things physical.
A teacher like Zarathustra, who had actually ascended to the
spiritual world, did not speak in this abstract and vague terminology
to his disciples and his people. He showed that just as individual
physical phenomena are different, so the spiritual essence behind
them is at one time more evident, at another less. He taught how
behind the physical Sun — the origin of all life and activity
— there is the centre of spiritual
life.
Let us try
to condense into simple language the doctrines which Zarathustra
tried to inculcate into his disciples. He spoke thus: “Man, as
we perceive him, is not merely composed of a physical body, for this
physical body is but the outer manifestation of the Spirit. Just as
the physical body is nothing but the manifested crystallisation of
the Spiritual in man, so the Sun, in so far as it is a body of
luminous matter, is nothing but the external body of a
spiritual Sun.” The spiritual part of man is
spoken of as the “Aura” — or “Ahura,”
to use the old expression — in distinction to his physical body
and in the same sense the spiritual part of the physical Sun may be
called the “Great Aura,” for it is all-embracing.
Zarathustra called that which lies behind the physical
Sun, Aura Mazda or Ahura Mazdao
— the Great Aura. With this spiritual essence
behind the Sun, all spiritual experiences and conditions are bound
up, just as the existence and well-being of plants, animals and all
that lives on Earth are bound up with the physical Sun. Behind the
physical Sun lives the spiritual Lord and Creator, Ahura Mazdao. This
is the derivation of the name “Ormuzd,” Spirit of Light.
While the Indians searched mystically in the inner self to find
Brahma, the Eternal, shining like a luminous centre in man,
Zarathustra pointed his disciples to the great periphery, showing
them that the mighty Spirit of the Sun, Ahura Mazdao, the Spirit of
Light, dwelt in the physical body of the Sun. Ahura Mazdao has to
face his enemy — Ahriman, the Spirit of Darkness — just
as man, who bears within himself the enemies of his good impulses,
strives to raise his real spiritual being to perfection and has to
battle against his lower passions, desires, and the delusive images
of lying and falsehood.
Zarathustra was able to transmute his conception of the
universe from mere doctrine into real feeling, real vision. And so he
was able to teach his disciples that within them was an active
principle of perfection. Whatever their development might be at the
time, they were taught to realise that this principle of perfection
could raise them to higher and higher stages of existence. They
were taught that passions and desires, lying and deceit within the
soul lead to imperfection. Zarathustra taught of the attacks made
upon Ahura Mazdao in the outer world by the principle of
imperfection, by the evil which casts shadow into the light,
by Angra Mainyus — Ahriman.
Zarathustra's disciples were thus enabled to realise that the
great universe is reflected in each individual. The real significance
of this doctrine lay, not in its theoretical concepts and ideas but
in the feeling it called forth in
man — a feeling which taught him of his
relationship to the universe and made him able to say:
“Here I stand — a little world, but a little world which
is a replica of the great world. In human beings, the principle of
perfection is opposed by evil; in the great universe, Ormuzd and
Ahriman face one another. The whole universe is, as it were, a man
grown immeasurably great and the highest human forces are Ahura
Mazdao — their enemy, Ahriman.”
If man
directs his attention truly to the physical world he must finally
discover that all phenomena are part of
the great cosmic process; he is filled with awe
when spectro-analysis reveals the fact that the same substances which
exist on Earth exist also on the farthest stars. In the light of
Zarathustra's teaching, man felt himself in his spiritual being, part
of the Spirit of the whole Cosmos; he felt himself emanating from
this Spirit. Herein lies the great significance of the doctrine.
The
teaching was not abstract but very concrete. Even when people of our
time have a certain feeling for the Spiritual behind the physical
world it is very difficult to make them realise that there must
necessarily be more than one central spiritual power. But just as
there are different natural
phenomena — heat, light, chemical forces and the
like — so there are different orders of lower spiritual Powers,
subordinate forces whose realm of activity is more limited than that
of the One All-Embracing Power. Zarathustra made a distinction
between Ormuzd and other lower spiritual beings, who were his
servants. Before we turn to consider these lower spiritual beings,
let us realise that the doctrine of Zarathustra is not mere dualism,
a teaching of the two worlds of Ormuzd and of Ahriman. He taught that
underlying these two currents in the universe there
is one power whence both the realm of light (Ormuzd)
and the realm of darkness (Ahriman) proceed. Old Greek writers tell
us that the unity behind Ormuzd and Ahriman was worshipped by the
ancient Persians as the LIVING UNITY, but it is difficult to
re-create this idea nowadays. Zarathustra calls this
Zervane Akarene — that which lies behind the light.
To get at some conception of the meaning of
this, let us think of the course of evolution. We must conceive of
all creation as travelling towards greater and greater perfection, so
that if we look towards the future, the Ahura of Ormuzd grows clearer
and clearer. Looking into the past, we see the Ahrimanic powers in
opposition to Ormuzd; in course of time, however, their existence
must cease. In all these things we must understand that a survey of
the future and of the past leads to the same point. It is very
difficult for the man of to-day to realise this. Let us think of a
circle, by way of illustration. If we start at the lowest point and
pass along one side, we arrive at the opposite, the highest point. If
we pass along the other side, we also arrive at the same point. If we
enlarge the circle, we have further to go, and the curve of the arc
becomes flatter and flatter. Draw the circle larger and larger, and
the arc eventually becomes a straight line; thereafter both lines
lead to infinity. But before this, with a smaller circle, we arrive
at the same point along both sides. Why should we not assume that the
same result obtains when the sides of the circle are flat and its
fines straight? In infinity, the point must then remain the same on
the one side as on the other. Therefore to conceive of infinity, we
may imagine a line continuing indefinitely on both sides — in
effect, a circle.
This is an
abstract conception of what underlies the Zarathustrian doctrine of
Zervane Akarene — Zaruana Akarana. Taking the concept of
Time, we look into the
future on the one side and into the past on the other. Time, however,
is welded into a circle; the completion takes place in infinity. This
is symbolically represented as the serpent biting its own tail; into
the serpent the Power of Light which grows brighter and brighter, is
woven on the one side, and on the other the Power of Darkness, which
appears to grow deeper and deeper. While we ourselves remain in the
centre, Ormuzd and Ahriman, Light and Shadow, are intermingled, and
into all this is woven the self-contained, mysterious “Zaruana
Akarana” — Time.
This
ancient conception of the
universe did not merely state vaguely: Outside and
behind the world of the senses which works upon eyes and ears, there
is “Spirit.” A kind of alphabet, records of the spiritual
world were revealed. Suppose we to-day take a page of a book. We see
letters on it and we build up words from these letters, but we must
first have learnt to read. Those who have not learnt to read in the
spiritual sense, cannot understand Zarathustra; they cannot read the
sense of his teaching but merely see signs and symbols. Only those
who know how to build up these signs into a doctrine to which their
souls respond can understand Zarathustra.
Now behind
the world of the senses, in the ordered grouping of the stars,
Zarathustra perceived a symbolic writing in cosmic space. Just as we
have a written alphabet, so Zarathustra saw in the starry worlds of
space, a kind of Alphabet of the spiritual worlds, a language through
which they became articulate. Thus arose the science of penetrating
into the spiritual world and of reading and interpreting the
constellations. He knew too, how to decipher the signs in
which the Cosmic Spirits inscribe their activities into space. Their
language is the grouping and movement of the stars. Zarathustra and
his disciples saw that Ahura Mazdao creates and manifests by
describing an apparent circle in the heavens, in the sense of our
Astronomy, and this circle was for them the outward sign of the way
in which Ormuzd manifested his activity to man. Zarathustra showed
— and this is a most important point — that the Zodiac is
a line which returns on itself, forming a circle as the expression of
the rotation of Time. In the highest sense, he taught that while one
branch of Time goes forward into the future, the other turns
backwards into the past. Zaruana Akarana, the self-contained line of
Time, the circle described by Ormuzd, the Spirit of Light, is what
was later called the Zodiac. This is the expression of the spiritual
activity of Ormuzd. The course of the Sun through the Zodiac is the
expression of the activity of Ormuzd. The Zodiac is the expression of
Zaruana Akarana. Zaruana Akarana and Zodiac
are one and the same word, like Ormuzd and Ahura Mazdao.
Two things must here be remembered.
When the
Sun passes in summer through the light,
his full powers fall upon the Earth; they are the
forces of spiritual light sent forth by Ormuzd from his realm of
light. The signs of the Zodiac through which Ormuzd passes in the
summer or in the daytime reveal his activity unhampered by Ahriman.
The signs of the Zodiac below the horizon are symbolical of the realm
of shadow through which Ahriman passes. What, then, are the
expressions of Ormuzd (who represents the light part of the Zodiac)
and of Ahriman (the dark part), in their activity on Earth? Now there
is a difference between the influence of the Sun in the morning and
at noon time. When Ormuzd ascends from Aries to Taurus, the effect of
his rays is not the same as when he is descending. His rays differ in
summer and in winter and they differ with every sign through which
the Sun passes. The course of the Sun through the signs of the Zodiac
revealed to Zarathustra the many sides of the activity of Ormuzd, and
he beheld here the expressions of spiritual beings who are, as it
were, the servants, the “sons” of Ormuzd, who execute his
commands. These subservient powers, each having their own special
activity, are the “Amschaspands” or “Ameschas
Pentas.” While Ormuzd represents the collective activity of the
Zodiac, the Amschaspands have to perform the specialised activities
expressed in the raying forth of the Sun from Aries, Taurus, Cancer,
and so forth. The activity of Ormuzd is expressed in the raying of
the Sun through all the light signs of the Zodiac — from Aries
to Libra or Scorpio. According to Zarathustra, Ahriman works from the
centre of the Earth, from the darkness where his servants, the
Amschaspands, dwell; they are the opponents of the good genii
surrounding Ormuzd. Zarathustra distinguished twelve orders of
spiritual beings, six or rather seven, on the side of Ormuzd; six, or
rather five, on the side of Ahriman. They are symbolised as good and
evil genii, or subservient spirits, according to whether the Sun's
course runs through the light or the dark signs of the Zodiac. Goethe
was thinking of these helpers of Ormuzd when he wrote at the
beginning of Faust, in the Prologue in Heaven: —
“But ye, pure
Children of God, enjoy eternal beauty: —
Let that which ever operates and lives
Clasp you within the limits of its love;
And seize with sweet and melancholy thoughts
The fronting phantoms of its loveliness.” (Shelley's translation).
The
Amschaspands of Zarathustra are the same beings to whom Goethe refers as
the “pure children of God,” who serve the highest Divine
Power.
There
are twelve Amschaspands or genii; below, there are other spiritual powers
of which the teaching of Zarathustra distinguished twenty-eight grades.
The number is approximate, for it varies between twenty- four, twenty-eight,
and thirty-one. These subordinate powers are called Izerads or
Izods. What class of beings are these? If we think of
the Amschaspands as the twelve great powers in Space, then the Izods
are the subordinate forces behind the lower activities of Nature, and
of these, there are from twenty-four to thirty-one. There is yet a
third group of spiritual powers — powers which, in our sense,
are not really active in the physical world as such. They are called
by Zarathustra, Ferruhars or Frawashars. The twelve forces
behind which the Amschaspands live are active in all the physical
activities of light upon the Earth: behind the Izods we must imagine
the forces affecting the animal kingdom. The Frawashars are to be
thought of as the spiritual beings guiding the group-souls of the
animals.
Thus
Zarathustra saw a real super-sensible world behind the
world of sense: Ormuzd and Ahriman, behind them Zaruana Akarana,
below them the Amschaspands, good and bad. Now what are the Izods and
Frawashars? According to Zarathustra they are the spiritual essence
pervading the macrocosm, the living essence
(das Wesenhafte)
of the external physical phenomena we perceive with our senses. Man,
as he stands in the world, is a replica of this greater world; therefore
he contains within himself all the powers which ensoul the greater
world. Just as we have recognised Ormuzd in the struggle of man
towards perfection, and Ahriman in man's impure instincts and
impulses, so we can also find in man the imprint of the other
spiritual beings, the lesser genii.
And now I
have to speak of something which may appear extraordinary to-day to
the usual conceptions of the Cosmos held by man. The time, however,
is not far distant when even external science will discover that
there is super-sensible element behind all physical phenomena, a
spiritual world behind the world of the senses. It will then be
realised that the physical body of man in all its parts, is an image
of the whole Cosmos The Cosmos pours itself into, and densifies
within the physical body of man. Thus, according to the conception of
Zarathustra — which much resembles that of Spiritual
Science — we can say that both Ormuzd and Ahriman work upon
man: Ormuzd as the impulse towards perfection, and Ahriman as the
impulse in opposition to this. But the spiritual activities of the
Amschaspands are also at work in man. We must think of these beings
as so far densified in man that they are physically manifest.
In the
time of Zarathustra there was, of course, no science of anatomy in
our sense of the word, but he and his disciples, with their spiritual
conception of the world, saw the twelve currents of the Amschaspands
as a reality. They saw these currents flowing towards man
and working in him. The human head was to them the visible expression
of the activities of the seven good and five evil currents of the
Amschaspands. How is this truth expressed at the present time?
To-day, the anatomist has discovered the existence of twelve pairs of
cerebral nerves which are repeated in the body. These are the
physical counterparts, the frozen currents, as it were, of the
Amschaspands. There are twelve pairs of nerves and by their means man
can either attain the highest perfection or sink to the greatest
evil. Thus the spiritual teaching given by Zarathustra to his
disciples appears again, materialised, in our own age. People may
regard it as so much fancy on the part of Spiritual Science to say
that Zarathustra was referring to the twelve pairs of cerebral nerves
when he taught of the Amschaspands, but the world will have much to
learn besides this, for it will be found that all the moving and
weaving Cosmos works on further in man. The ancient teachings of
Zarathustra are indeed revived in modern physiology. The twenty-eight
to thirty-one Izods occupy the same subordinate position to the
Amschaspands as do the twenty-eight nerves of the spine to the
nerves of the brain. The spinal nerves which stimulate the soul life
of man are created by the spiritual currents of the Izods outside;
they work into us and crystallise, as it were, into the spinal
nerves. And in that which is not of the nature of the nerves but
which makes us individuals, which does not now pour in from outside,
but lives within — there dwell the Frawashars or
Ferruhars. They live in those thoughts which transcend the merely
physical activity of the brain and nerves.
There is a
remarkable connection between the tendencies of our own time and the
doctrines which Zarathustra gave in spiritual pictures flowing behind
the veil of the world of sense. There is, however, one significant
thing to be remembered. The teachings of Zarathustra influenced the
thought of the people for a very long time and then for a while they
receded into the background. Sometimes it was the mystical way of
thought which predominated, sometimes the occult, after Greek thought
had in a measure united the two currents. Nowadays there seems to be
a tendency to the mystical way. Many feel drawn towards Indian
occultism with its tendency towards introspection and this explains
the fact that little heed is paid to the essential features of the
doctrines of Zarathustra in the spiritual life of to-day. There is a
great deal of ancient Persian thought in our own spiritual life, yet
in a sense, its most essential features, the very core of the
doctrine of Zarathustra, is lost to our age. When we realise once
more that the teachings of Zarathustra are the spiritual prototypes
of countless examples of physical research, then the key-note of our
present day culture will be replaced by another. Now one important
feature in almost all other mystical currents of culture is missing
in the religion of Zarathustra. The reason for this is its entire
preoccupation with macrocosmic phenomena. Other religious systems
have accentuated the contrasts presented by the division of the
sexes. In most old religious systems, Goddesses and Gods are
contrasting symbols of the two streams active in the world. The
religion of Zarathustra rises above this conception in the symbols of
Goodness as Light and Evil as Darkness. Hence the sublime purity of
this religion and the nobility which lifts it above ideas which play
an ugly part in any endeavour to deepen the thought life of our time.
Even the Greek writers stated that the highest Godhead had perforce
to create Ahriman as well as Ormuzd in order that there might be the
necessary contrast. This implies that one Primal Power was set over
against another. In the Hebrew religion, woman, Eve, is the symbol
for the evil which came into this world. In the religion of
Zarathustra there is no element of sex antagonism. The ugly things
which nowadays enter so largely into our daily literature, pour into
our thoughts and feelings and so unpleasantly accentuate the chief
causes of health and disease without touching upon the essentials of
life — all these will disappear when the
“heroic” conception of Ormuzd and Ahriman is understood,
when the true Zarathustrian influence spreads in present-day culture,
clothed in the words of its great founder. These things pursue their
own course in the world and nothing can arrest the progress of the
truth inherent in the culture of Zarathustra. If we follow the
progress of culture in Asia Minor, down to later times among the
Assyrians, Babylonians, Egyptians, and even up to the Christian era,
we find traces of concepts derived from the illumination of the great
Zarathustra. And we shall not wonder at the view expressed by a Greek
writer, that the great spiritual leaders of the races imparted to the
people part of a future culture of which they stood in need. This
Greek writer pointed to Pythagoras, showing what he had learned from
his great predecessors — Geometry from the Egyptians,
Arithmetic from the Phoenicians, Astronomy from the Chaldeans —
and how he had turned to Zarathustra's doctrines to learn from them
the sacred teaching of the relations of man to the spiritual world
and the true conduct of life. The same writer asserts that the
conduct of life laid down by Zarathustra leads man above all minor
conflicts, that they all culminate in the one great conflict between
Good and Evil, where victory can only be gained by purification from
evil, lying and falsehood. The worst enemy of Ormuzd bears the name
of “Calumny” — one of the chief qualities of
Ahriman. The Greek writer tells us that Pythagoras could not find the
highest moral idea (the moral purification of man) among the
Egyptians from whom he learnt Geometry, nor among the Phoenicians
from whom he learnt Arithmetic, nor among the Chaldeans from whom he
learnt Astronomy; but that he had to turn to the followers of
Zarathustra to understand the heroic conception of the universe,
since purification alone can
vanquish evil. This shows the high value placed upon the noble
teachings of Zarathustra in olden times.
What I
have said may be illustrated by quotations from historical documents.
Plutarch, for instance, says that Zarathustra teaches the worship of
Light because Light is the greatest factor for the well-being of the
Earth and the highest spiritual factor is Truth. This is in complete
agreement with what has been said.
Let us now
return again to the ancient Vedic conceptions. They were the result
of a mystic descent into the inner being. Before man can penetrate to
the inner light of Brahma, he meets with his own passions, his wild
and semi-human impulses. These oppose his entry into the true life of
spirit and soul. The Indian mystics realised that the mystic union
with Brahma could only be attained by the elimination of all the
impressions of the physical world, that the sensuous appeals of
colours and sounds must cease. So long as these elements enter into
meditation, the opponents of the attainment of perfection are there.
The Indian mystic would have said: “Cast away all
that may enter the soul from the outer powers; deepen yourself in the
innermost core of your own soul; descend into the realm of the Devas,
and when you have vanquished the lower Devas you will find the
kingdom of Brahman. But shun the world of the Asuras, those beings
who would fain penetrate into you from the world of Maya, the outer
world. These must on no account be allowed to enter.”
And now
listen to what Zarathustra taught his disciples: “The
peoples of the South are differently constituted and they seek the
spiritual world in another way. Their way would not help a nation
whose mission is not only to dream and meditate in this wonderful
world, but to teach mankind the art of Agriculture and the conquest
of savagery. Do not look upon external things merely as Maya; you
must penetrate behind this veil of colour and sound around you. Shun
all that threatens to keep your soul within the bonds of egoism, shun
all that bears the stamp of the Deva qualities! Make your way through
the realm of the lower Asuras and ascend to the higher. Your nature
is such that you can do this if you will!” In India the Rishis
had taught that man was not so organised as to enable him to seek
what lies in the realm of the Asuras, and that he should therefore
shun their world and enter that of the Devas.
This is
the difference between the Indian and Persian cultures. The Indian
peoples were taught that the Asuras are evil spirits and must be
avoided, for the organisation of the Indians was such that they only
could know the lower Asuras. The Persian peoples, on the other hand,
knew only the lower Devas and were therefore taught: ‘Penetrate
to the realm of the Asuras and you will be able to rise from there to
the realm of the higher Asuras.’
The
impulse which Zarathustra gave to the men of his epoch lay in the
fact that he had a gift for mankind which could work on through all
the ages — a gift which would make clear the
upward path and conquer all the false doctrines deceiving man on his
path to perfection. Zarathustra therefore looked upon himself as the
servant of Ahura Mazdao, and as such, he personally knew the
opposition of Ahriman. His teaching was intended to aid mankind to a
heroic conquest of the Ahriman principle. We find his words recorded
in the documents of a later era. Inspired by the inner impulse of his
mission, and fired by the passion with which he felt himself the
antagonist of Ahriman, he said: “I will speak! Harken, ye who
journey from afar, and ye that come from near at hand, with longing
to hear. Mark well my words! No longer shall the Evil One, the false
leader, conquer the Spirit of Good. Too long has his evil breath
permeated human speech. I will refute him with the speech which the
Highest, the Primal One has put into my mouth. I will speak what
Ahura Mazdao says to me. And he who hears not my words nor
understands their meaning as I speak them will experience much evil
ere the end of the world-cycles!” Thus spake Zarathustra.
May we
realise from these words that Zarathustra's message to mankind can be
felt and experienced through all later epochs of culture. Those of us
who have ears to hear the dim echoes still living in our time, will,
if they listen with spiritual ears, hear the faint tones of
Zarathustra's words to mankind thousands of years ago. For those who
have ears to hear, the message of Zarathustra and other great
Leaders of whom we shall speak in these lectures, may be summed up in
the following words: “These God-sent Spirits shine
as stars in the heavens of Life Eternal. May it be vouchsafed to
every soul to behold their radiance in the realms of earthly
life.”
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