Lecture 11:
CONCERNING
THE LOST TEMPLE AND HOW IT IS TO BE RESTORED
(In connection with
the Legend of the True Cross, or Golden Legend)
(First lecture)
Berlin, 15th May 1905
[See the
Notes for this Lecture]
Today we
will explain a great allegory, and deal with an object which is known
to occult science as the image or teaching of the lost temple which
has to be rebuilt. I have explained in earlier lectures
(Note 1)
why in occult science one starts from such images; today we shall see what
an enormous number of ideas are contained in essence in this image.
Thereby I will also have to touch upon a theme which is much
misunderstood by those who know little or nothing about theosophy.
There are some people who do not understand that theosophy and
practical [everyday things] go hand in hand, that they must work
together throughout the whole of life. Therefore I shall have to
speak about the connection between theosophy and the practical things
of life. For, basically, when we take up the theme of the lost temple
which has to be rebuilt, we are speaking about everyday
work.
I shall,
indeed, thereby be in the position of a teacher who prepares his
pupils for building a tunnel. The building of a tunnel is something
eminently practical. Someone might well say: building a tunnel is
simple; one only has to start digging into a hill from one side and
to excavate away until one emerges at the other side. Everyone can
see that it would be foolish to think in this way. But in other
realms of life that is not always perceived. Whoever wishes to build
a tunnel must, of course, first of all have a command of higher
mathematics. Then he will have to learn how it is to be made,
technically. Without practical engineering knowledge, without the art
of ascertaining the right level, one would not be able to keep on
course in excavating the mountain. Then one must know the basic
concepts of geology, of the various rock strata, the direction of the
water courses and the metallic lodes in the mountain, and so on.. It
would be foolish to think that someone would be able to build a
tunnel without all this prior knowledge, or that an ordinary stone
mason could construct a whole tunnel.
It would
be just as foolish if one were to believe that one could begin
building human society from the point of view of ordinary life.
However, this folly is perpetrated not merely by many people, but
also in countless books. Even one today supposes himself called upon
to know and decide how best to reform social life and the state.
People who have hardly learnt anything write detailed books about how
society should best be shaped, and feel themselves called to found
reform movements. Thus there are movements for reform in all spheres
of life. But everything done in this way is just the same as if
someone were to try to cut a tunnel with hammer and chisel. That is
all a result of not knowing that great laws exist which rule the
world and spring forth out of the life of the spirit. The real
problem of our day consists in this ignorance [of the fact] that
there are great laws for the building of the state and of the social
organism, just as there are for building a tunnel, and that one must
know these laws in order to carry out the most necessary and everyday
tasks in the social organism. Just as in building a tunnel, one has
to know about the interaction of all the forces of nature, so must
anyone wishing to start reforming society know the laws [which
interweave between one person and the next] . One must study the
effect of one soul on another, and draw near to the spirit. That is
why theosophy must lie at the basis of every practical activity in
life. Theosophy is the real practical principle of life; and only he
who starts from theosophical principles and carries them over into
practical life can feel himself called as able to be active in social
life.
That is
why theosophy should penetrate all spheres of life. Statesmen, social
reformers and the like are nothing without a theosophical basis,
without theosophical principles. That is why, for those who study
these things, all work in this field, everything done today to build
up the social structure, is external patchwork and complete chaos.
For one who understands the matter, what the social reformer is doing
today is like somebody cutting stones and piling them one on top of
another in the belief that a house will thereby come into being of
its own accord. First of all a plan of the house must be drawn up. It
is just the same if one asserts that, in social life, things will
take shape of their own accord. One cannot reform society without
knowing the laws of theosophy.
This way
of thinking, which works according to a plan, is called Freemasonry.
The medieval Freemasons, who dealt with and made contracts with the
clergy, about how they should build, wanted nothing else than to
shape outer life in such a way that — along with the Gothic cathedral
— it could become an image of the great spiritual structure of the
universe. Take the Gothic cathedral. Though composed of thousands of
individual parts, it is built according to a single idea, much more
comprehensive than the cathedral itself. To become complete in
itself, divine life must flow into it, just as light shines into the
church through the multi-coloured windows. And when the medieval
priest spoke from the pulpit, so that the divine light shone in his
listener's hearts just like the light shining through the coloured
panes, then the vibrations set up through the preacher's word were in
harmony with the great life of God. And the life of just such a
sermon, born out of the life of the spirit, set itself forth in the
cathedral itself. In like manner, the whole of outer life should be
transformed into the Temple of the Earth, into an image of the whole
spiritual structure of the universe.
If we go
still further back in time, we find that it is just this way of
thinking which was mankind's from the very earliest times. Let me
explain what I mean by way of an example. Our epoch is the time of
the chaotic interaction of one human being with another. Each
individual pursues his own aims. This epoch was preceded by another
one, the age of the ancient priestly states. I have often spoken
about the cultural epochs of our fifth Great Epoch. The first of
these was the ancient Indian epoch, the second, that of the Medes and
the Persians, the third, that of the Babylonians, the Assyrians, the
Chaldeans, the Egyptians and the Semites, and the fourth was the
Graeco-Roman period. We are now in the fifth epoch.
The
fourth and fifth cultural epochs were the first ones to be based on
the intelligence of men, of individual men.
We have a
great monument to the conquest of the old priestly culture by the
intelligence of men in art, in the Laocoon.
(Note 2)
The Laocoon priest entwined with serpents — the symbol of subtlety
— symbolises the conquest, by the civilisation of intelligence, of
the old priestly culture, which held other views about truth and wisdom,
and about what should happen. It is the overcoming of the third cultural
epoch by the fourth. That is represented in still another symbol, in the
saga of the Trojan Horse. The intelligence of Odysseus created the Trojan
Horse, by means of which the Trojan priestly culture was overthrown.
The
development of the old Roman State out of the ancient Trojan priestly
culture is described in the saga of Aeneas. The latter was one of the
outstanding defenders of Troy, who afterwards came over to Italy.
There it was that his descendants laid the foundation of ancient
Rome. His son Ascanius founded Alba Longa and history now enumerates
fourteen kings up to the time of Numitor and Amulius. Numitor was
robbed of his throne by his brother Amulius, his son was killed and
his daughter, Rhea Silvia, was made to become a vestal virgin, so
that the lineage of Numitor should die out. And when Rhea gave birth
to the twins, Romulus and Remus, Amulius ordered them to be thrown in
the Tiber. The children were rescued, suckled by a she-wolf, and
brought up by the royal shepherd Faustulus.
Now
history speaks about seven Roman kings: Romulus, Numa Pompilius,
Tuflus Hostilius, Ancus Martius, Tarquinius Pliscus, Servius Tullius
and Tarquinius Superbus.
Following
Livy's account
(Note 3)
it used to be believed that the first seven kings of Rome were real
personalities. Today, historians know that these first seven kings never
existed.
We are
therefore dealing with a saga, but the historians have no inkling of
what lies behind it. The basis of the saga is what
follows:
The
priestly state of Troy founded a colony, the priestly colony of
Alba Longa (Alba, an alb, or priest's vestment).
(Note 4)
It was a colony of a priestly state and Amulius
belonged to the last priestly dynasty. A junior priestly culture
sprang from this, which was then cut off by a civilisation based on
cleverness. History tells us no more about this priestly culture. The
veil which was spread over the priestly culture of the earliest Roman
history, is lifted by theosophy. The seven Roman kings represent
nothing else than the seven principles as we know them from
theosophy. Just as the human organism consists of seven parts —
Sthula-Sharira [physical body], Linga-Sharira [etheric], Kama-Rupa
[astral], Kama-Manas [ego], higher Manas [spirit-self], Buddhi
[life-spirit] and Atma [spirit-man] — so the social organism was
conceived, as it formed itself at the time, as a sequence in seven
stages. And only if it was developed according to the law of the
number seven, which lies at the base of all nature, was it able to
prosper. Thus the rainbow has seven colours; red, orange, yellow,
green, blue, indigo, violet. Likewise there are seven [intervals in
the scale]: first, second, third, fourth, fifth, and so on; likewise
the atomic weights in chemistry follow the rule of the number seven.
And that permeates the whole of creation. Hence it was self-evident
to the Guardians of the Ancient Wisdom that the structure of human
society must also be regulated by such a law. According to a
precisely worked out plan, these seven kings are seven stages, seven
[integral] parts. This was the usual way of inaugurating a new epoch
in history at that time. A plan was devised, since this was
considered a means of preventing any stupidities, and a law was
written for it. This plan was actually there at the beginning.
Everyone knew that world history was guided according to a fixed
plan. Everyone knew: When I am in the third phase of the fourth
epoch, I must be guided by this and that. And so, at first, in
ancient Rome, one still had a priestly state with a plan at the basis
of its culture, which was written down in books, called the Sibylline
Books. These are nothing else than the original plan underlying the
law of the sevenfold epoch, and they were still consulted when needed
in the earliest days of the Roman Empire.
The
physical body was taken as a model for the foundations. That is not
so unreasonable. Today people are inclined to treat the physical body
as something subordinate. People look down on the physical with a
kind of disdain. However, that is not justified, because our physical
body is our most exalted part. Take a single bone. Take a good look
at the upper part of a thigh bone and you will see how wonderfully it
is constructed. The best engineer, the greatest technician, could not
produce anything so perfect, if he were set the task of attaining the
greatest possible strength using the least amount of material. And so
the whole human body is constructed in the most perfect way. This
physical body is really the most perfect thing imaginable. An
anatomist will always speak with the utmost admiration of the human
heart, which functions in a wonderful way, even though human beings
do little else throughout life than imbibe what is poison for it.
Alcohol, tea, coffee and so on attack the heart in the most
incredible fashion. But so wonderfully has this organ been built that
it can withstand all this into ripe old age.
The physical body, the lowest of the bodies,
therefore possesses the greatest perfection. Less perfect, on the
other hand, are the higher bodies, which have
not yet gained such perfection in their development: the etheric body
and the astral body continually offend against our physical body
through the attacks of our lust, desires and wishes. Then follows, as
the fourth [principle], the real baby [of them all], the human ego,
which like a wandering will-o’-the-wisp, must still wait for
the future to offer it those rules which will act as a guide for its
conduct, just as the physical body has long since
had.
When we
develop a social structure, we must have that which will make the
foundations firm. Thus the saga allows Romulus, the first Roman king,
who represents the first principle, to be raised to heaven as the god
Quirinus. The second king, Numa Pompilius, the second principle.
embodies social order; he brought laws for ordinary living. The third
king, Tullus Hostilius, represents the passions. Under him, the
attacks against divine nature begin, causing discord, struggle and
war, through which Rome became great. Under the fourth king, Ancus
Martius, the arts develop, those things which spring out of
Kama-Manas, [the human ego].
Now the
four lower principles of man are not able to give birth to the three
higher principles, the fifth, sixth andc seventh. This is also
symbolised in Roman history. The fifth-Roman king, Tarquinius
Priscus, was not engendered out of the Roman organism, but was
introduced into Roman culture from the Etruscan culture as something
higher. The sixth king, Servius Tullus, represents the sixth member
of the human cyclic law, Buddhi. He is able to rule over Kama [the
astral body], the physical-sensual counterpart of Buddhi. He
represents the canon of the law. The seventh king, Tarquinius
Superbus, the most exalted principle, is he who must be overthrown,
since it is not possible to maintain the high level, the impulse, of
the social system.
We see it
demonstrated in Roman history that there must be a plan underlying
the building of the state, just as for any other building in the
world. That the world is a temple, that social life must be
structured and organised, and must have pillars like a temple, and
that the great sages must be these pillars — it is this intention
which is permeated with the ancient wisdom. That is not a kind of
wisdom which is merely learned, but one which has to be built into
human society. The seven principles were correctly applied. The only
person able to work towards the building up of society is he who has
absorbed all this knowledge, all this wisdom, into himself. We would
not achieve much as theosophists if we were to restrict ourselves to
contemplating how the human being is built up from its different
members. No, we are only able to fulfil our task if we carry the
principles of theosophy into everyday life. We must learn to put them
to use in such a way that every turn of the hand, every movement of a
finger, every step we take, bears the impress, is an expression of
the spirit. In that case we shall be engaged in building the lost
temple.
Along
with that, however, goes the fact which I mentioned recently — that
we should take into ourselves something of the greatness and all
embracing comprehensiveness of the universal laws. Our habits of
thought must be permeated by that kind of wisdom which leads from
great conceptions into the details — just in the same way as house
construction starts from the finished and complete plan and not by
laying one stone upon another. This demand must be made if our world
is not to turn into chaos. As theosophists we should recognise the
fact that law is bound to rule in the world as soon as we realise
that every step we make, every action of ours, is like an impression
stamped in wax by the spiritual world. Then we shall be engaged in
the building of the temple. That is the meaning of the temple
building: whatever we set ourselves to do must be in conformity to
law.
The
knowledge that man has to include himself in the construction of the
great world temple has become increasingly forgotten. A person can be
born and die today without having any inkling of the fact that laws
are working themselves out in us, and that everything we do is
governed by the laws of the universe. The whole of present-day life is
wasted, because people do not know that they have to live according
to laws. Therefore the priestly sages of ancient times devised means
of rescuing, for the new culture, something of the great laws of the
spiritual world. It was, so to speak, a stratagem of the great sages,
to have hidden this order and harmony in many branches of life — yes,
even so far as in the games which men use for their recreation at the
end of the day. In playing cards, in the figures of chess, in the
sense of rule by which one plays, we find a hint, if only a faint
one, of the order and harmony which I have described. When you sit
down with someone to a game of cards, it will not do if you do not
know the rules, the manner of playing. And this really conveys a hint
of the great laws of the universe. What is known as the sephirot of
the Cabbala, what we know as the seven principles in their various
forms, that is recognised again in the way in which the cards are
laid down, one after the other, in the course of the game. Even in
the allurements of playing, the adepts have known how to introduce
the great cosmic laws, so that, even in play, people have at least a
smack of wisdom. At least for those who can play cards, their present
incarnation is not quite wasted. These are secrets, how the great
Adepts intervene in the wheel of existence. If one told people to be
guided by the great cosmic laws, they would not do so. However, if
the laws are introduced unnoticed into things, it is often possible
to inject a drop of this attitude into them. If you have this
attitude, then you will have a notion of what it is which is
symbolised in the mighty allegory of the lost temple.
In the secret societies, among which Freemasonry
belongs, something connected with the lost temple and its future
reconstruction has been described in the Temple Legend. The Temple
Legend is very profound, but even the present-day Freemasons usually
have no notion of it. A Freemason is not even
very easy to distinguish from the majority of people, and he does not
carry much of importance with him in new life.
But if he lets the Temple Legend work upon him, it is a great help.
For whoever absorbs the Temple Legend receives something which, in a
specific way, shapes his thinking in an orderly fashion. And it [all]
depends on ordered thinking. This Temple Legend is as
follows:
Once one of the Elohim united with Eve, and out of
that Cain was born. Another of the Elohim, Adonai or Jehovah-Yahveh,
thereupon created Adam. The latter, for his part, united with
Eve, and out of this marriage Abel was born.
Adonai caused trouble between those belonging to Cain's family and
those belonging to Abel's family, and the result of this was that
Cain slew Abel. But out of the renewed union of Adam with Eve the
race of Seth was founded.
Thus we
have two different races of mankind. The one consists of the original
descendants of the Elohim, the sons of Cain, who are called the Sons
of Fire. They are those who till the earth and create from inanimate
nature and transform it through the arts of man. Enoch, one of the
descendants of Cain, taught mankind the art of hewing stone, of
building houses, of organising society of founding civilised
communities. Another of Cain's descendants was Tubal-Cain, who worked
in metal. The architect Hiram-Abiff was descended from the same
race.
Abel was
a shepherd. He held firmly to what he found, he took the world as it
was. There is always this antithesis between people. One sticks to
things as they are, the other wants to create new life from the
inanimate, through art. Other nations have portrayed the ancestor of
these Sons of Fire in the Prometheus saga
(Note 5)
It is the Sons of Fire
who have to work into the world the wisdom, beauty and goodness from
the all-embracing universal thought, in order to transform the world
into a temple.
King
Solomon was a descendant of the lineage of Abel. He could not build
the temple himself; he lacked the art. Hence he appointed the
architect Hiram-Abiff, the descendant of the lineage of Cain. Solomon
was divinely handsome. When the Queen of Sheba met him, she thought
she saw an image of gold and ivory. She came to unite herself with
him.
Jehovah
is also called the God of created form,
(Note 6)
the God who turns what is
living into a living force, in contrast with that other Elohim who
creates by charming life out of what is lifeless. To which of these
does the future belong? That is the great question of the Temple
Legend. If mankind were to develop under the religion of Jehovah all
life would expire in form. In occult science, that is called the
Transition to the Eighth Sphere.
(Note 7)
But the point in time has now
arrived when man himself must awaken the dead to life. That will
happen through the Sons of Cain, through those who do not rely on the
things around them, but are themselves the creators of new forms. The
Sons of Cain themselves frame the building of the world.
When the
Queen of Sheba saw the temple and asked who the architect was, she
was told it was Hiram. And as soon as she saw him, he seemed to her
to be the one who was predestined for her. King Solomon now became
jealous; and indeed, he entered into league with three apprentices
who had failed to achieve their master's degree, in order to
undermine Hiram's great masterpiece, the Molten Sea. This great
masterpiece was to be made by casting it. Human spirit was to have
been united with the metal. Of the three apprentices, one was a
Syrian mason, the second was a Phoenician carpenter, and the third
was a Hebrew miner. The plot succeeded: the casting was destroyed by
pouring water over it. It all blew apart. In despair the architect
was about to throw himself into the heat of the flames. Then he heard
a voice from the centre of the earth. This came from Cain himself,
who called out to him: ‘Take here the hammer of the world's
divine wisdom, with which you must put it all right again.’ And
Cain gave him the hammer. Now it is the spirit of man which man
builds into his astral body, if he is not to let it remain in the
condition in which he received it. This is the work which Hiram now
had to do. But there was a plot against his life. We shall proceed
from there next time.
I wanted
to recount the legend up to this point, to show how, in the original
occult brotherhoods, the thought lived, that man has a task to
fulfil; the task of restructuring the inanimate world, of not being
satisfied with what is already there. Wisdom thus becomes deed
through its penetration of the inanimate world, so that the world
should become a reflection of the original and eternal
spirituality.
Wisdom,
Beauty, Strength are the three fundamental words of all Freemasonry.
So to change the outer world, that it becomes a garment for the
spiritual — that is its task. Today, the Freemasons themselves no
longer understand this, and believe that man should work on his own ego.
(Note 8)
They regard themselves as particularly clever when they say
that the working masons of the Middle Ages were not Freemasons. But
the working masons were precisely those who have always been
Freemasons, because outward structure was to become the replica of
the spiritual, of the temple of the world, which is to be constructed
out of intuitive wisdom. This is the thought which formerly under lay
the great works of architecture, and was carried through into every
detail.
I will
illustrate by an example the superiority of wisdom over mere
intellect. Let us take an old Gothic cathedral, and consider the
wonderful acoustics, which cannot be matched today, because this
profound knowledge has been lost.
The
famous Lake Moeris in Egypt is just such a wonder-work of the human
spirit. It was not a natural lake, but was constructed through the
intuition of the wise men, so that water could be stored in time of
flood, for distribution over the whole country in time of drought.
That was a great feat of irrigation.
When man
learns to create with the same wisdom with which the divine powers
have created Nature and made physical things, then will the temple be
built [on earth]. It does not depend upon how many separate things we
have the power to create out of our own wisdom; we must however just
have the attitude of mind that knows that only by means of wisdom can
the temple of humanity be created.
When,
today, we go about the cities, here there is a shoe shop, there a
chemist, further on a cheese-monger and a shop selling walking
sticks. If just now we do not want anything, why should that concern
us? How little does the outward life of such a city reflect what we
feel, think and perceive! How very different it was in the Middle
Ages. If a person walked through the streets then, he saw the house
fronts built in the resident's style, manner and character. Every
door knob expressed what the man had lovingly shaped to suit his
spirit. Go, for instance, through a town such as Nuremberg: there you
will still find the basis of how it used to be. And then, by
contrast, take the fashionable abstraction that no longer has
anything to do with people. That is the age of materialism and its
chaotic productions, to which one has step by step come from an
earlier spiritual epoch.
Man was
born from a nature which was once so formed by the gods that
everything within it fitted the great scheme of the world, the great
temple. There was once a time when there was nothing on this earth
upon which you could gaze without having to say to oneself: Divine
beings have built this temple to the stage in which the human
physical body was perfected. Then the higher principles (the psychic
forces) [of man's nature] took possession of it, and through this
disarray and chaos came into the world. Wishes, desires and emotions
brought disarray into the temple of the world. Only when, out of
man's own will, law and order once again shall speak in a loftier and
more beautiful way than the gods once did in creating Nature, only
when man allows the god within him to arise, so that like a god he
can build towards the temple — only then will the lost temple be
regained.
It would not be right if we were to think that
only those who are able to build should do so. No, it depends upon
the attitude of mind, even if one knows a great deal. If one has the
right direction to one's thinking, and then one engages in social,
technical and juristic reform, then one is building the lost temple
which is to be rebuilt. But should one start reforms — however
well-intended they may be — lacking this attitude of mind, then one
is only bringing about more chaos. For the individual stone is
useless, if it does not fit into the overall plan [of the building].
Reform the law, religion, or anything else — as long as you only take
account of the particular item, without having an understanding of
the whole, it only results in a
demolition.
Theosophy
is thus not just theory, but practice, the most practical thing in
the world. It is a fallacy to suppose that theosophists are recluses,
not engaged in shaping the world. If we could bring people to engage
in social reform from a theosophical basis,
(Note 9)
they would achieve
much of what they want swiftly and surely. For, without needing to
say anything against particular movements, they only lead to
fanaticism if pursued in isolation. All separate reform movements —
emancipators, abstainers, vegetarians, animal protectors and so forth
— are only useful if they all work together. Their ideal can only be
properly realised in a great universal movement that leads in unity
to the universal world temple.
That is
the idea that lies behind the allegory of the lost temple which has
to be rebuilt.
Notes
from replies to questions
Question:
What is the difference between the sons of Cain and the sons of Abel?
Answer:
The sons, of Cain are the unripe ones; the sons of Abel are the over-ripe
ones. The sons of Abel turn to the higher spheres when they have finished
with these incarnations. The sons of Abel are the Solar Pitris [those
who underwent their human stage on the Old Sun]; the sons of Cain are
the most mature of the Lunar Pitris [those who passed their human
stage on the Old Moon].
Question:
Why have so many mystical and masonic associations developed?
Answer:
All higher work is only to be undertaken in an association. The Knights of
the Round Table generally numbered twelve.
Question:
Are you acquainted with the work of Albert Schaffle?
(Note 10)
Answer:
Albert Schaffle wrote a work about sociology, and the account he gives is
much more masonic than what emanates from the lodges of Freemasonry.
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