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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Universe, Earth and Man
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Universe, Earth and Man
The progress of man. His conquest of the physical plane in the post-Atlantean civilizations. The beginning and up-building of the I am.&
Schmidt Number: S-1815
On-line since: 11th July, 2002
The progress of man. His conquest of the physical plane in the post-Atlantean civilizations. The beginning and up-building of the I am. The chosen people.
Our task today is to comprehend the spiritual horizon within which man
stands by investigating his origin. We have seen that in the course of
his development throughout the Lemurian and Atlantean epochs he has
gradually acquired his present form; we will now extend our study of
this second epoch, the Atlantean, on into our own age so far as is
necessary to an understanding of our subject.
We know that previous to the middle of the Atlantean epoch the
conditions of the consciousness of man were quite different to what
they are today. While in his physical body during the day he then saw
objects by no means with the same sharp outlines he does now,
everything was more or less blurred; and when at night he left his
physical body he did not sink into dreamless sleep, but was able to
perceive Spiritual Beings in a spiritual world.
We will now deal further with the fact that these beings (who also
sought embodiment in Atlantean bodies) entered into a certain
companionship with man, but will only remind ourselves that at that
time man had a conviction, based on direct experience, that above the
human kingdom to which he himself belonged there were other kingdoms
that of the Angels and of the Archangels; and that he learned
to recognize these higher beings face to face, just as we now learn to
recognize each other in the physical world. Then came the time when
objective day consciousness became ever clearer and clearer, and, on
the other hand, when dimness and darkness enveloped man at night. This
was the period when the first rudimentary germs of ego or I
am were laid down in man. By learning to perceive the objects
around him he at the same time gained that form of self-consciousness
it was intended he should develop.
We must conceive of everything in the world as graded; that just as
there are all possible grades of beings in the animal and human
kingdoms so also there are many different grades among the beings
above man. Some beings in the kingdom of the Angels are very close to
man, and others are at a higher stage; many grades are met with when
we direct our gaze to the higher worlds. We have in the first place to
understand clearly that at the time when man rose at night through dim
clairvoyant consciousness into higher worlds these beings (to put it
trivially) gained something from man through their intercourse with
him; their own being was enriched. For though these beings stood above
man they were still inwardly connected with him; they inspired him and
influenced his imaginative consciousness, which was, however, dim. So
that we must think of man in that ancient period as being in such a
condition that when he withdrew from his physical and etheric bodies
it was as if a higher being, or, in a wider sense, a whole host of
higher beings, took possession of him. Fundamentally this is also the
case today, only man is not aware of it, whereas at that time he was,
though in a dim clairvoyant way. It has already been explained in
other lectures that sleep is by no means unnecessary for man; it serves
a very great purpose.
During the day man is continually making use of his physical and
etheric bodies. The life we lead from morning till evening exhausts
these bodies, and what we feel as fatigue is nothing more than the
expression of the fact that indirectly through the astral body all
kinds of perceptions have been taking place in us as well as impulses
of joy, of sorrow, and of pain; all these have been playing through
us. This wears out our physical and etheric bodies, and in the evening
we are tired because all day long we have been destroying them.
When at night we leave these bodies on the bed the astral body and ego
are not inactive; all night long they send their forces into the
physical and etheric bodies; they work at repairing the disorganized
and exhausted forces of these bodies; this they could not do if, on
their withdrawal, they were not taken up into a higher kingdom. Above
the human kingdom a spiritual kingdom is outspread, the kingdom of the
Angels, Archangels, and other beings. It is as if ozone streamed from
the Spiritual Beings that then surround us, and from whom we are
separated during the day, because with our perceptions we are enclosed
within the shell of our bodies. At night we plunge into this spiritual
ozone; from it our astral body absorbs forces which it then pours into
the physical and etheric bodies to repair them. Today man is
unconscious of this, but at the time when he still possessed dim
clairvoyant consciousness he saw how his astral body and ego left the
other members and was absorbed into the divine spiritual world.
Things seen in one way in the physical world have a very different
appearance above. One might even say that the Gods profit by
participating thus in humanity. In order rightly to understand the
relationship of man to the universe we must try to form a conception,
which is not so easy, but is, however, necessary, if we are to
understand his true position. We have said that the earth is the
planet of love, that love will be first rightly developed upon the
earth. To put it crudely, it will be bred here, and through their
participating in mankind the Gods will learn to know love, though in
another sense it is they who bestow it. It is difficult to picture
this.
It is entirely possible that one being may impart a gift to another,
and only come to know his gift through the other. Picture to
yourselves an exceedingly rich person who has never known anything but
riches, nor ever experienced the deep satisfaction of soul which
results from well-doing. Picture this person now as doing something
good; he gives to the poor. The gift calls forth great thankfulness in
the soul of the needy individual; this feeling of gratitude is at the
same time a gift; it would never have existed if the rich person had
not first given. He is the originator of the feeling of gratitude,
although he does not himself feel it, and is only acquainted with it
through its reflection, which streams back to him from the person in
whom he roused it. It is approximately in this way that the gift of
love is imparted to man by the Gods. They have progressed so far that
they are able to kindle love in man so that he feels it, but they only
learn to know it as a reality through man. From their heights the Gods
reach down into the ozone of humanity and feel the warmth of love. We
know that the Gods lack something when man does not live in love. The
more human love there is on earth the more food for the Gods there is
in heaven; the less love there is, the more the Gods hunger.
The sacrifice of man to the Gods is nothing else than the love which
streams up to them, which man has produced. It is not difficult to
picture that in ancient times, when man was still conscious of the
Divine, this reciprocity this mutual giving, from man and from
the Gods was quite different to what it became later. Indeed,
there were some among divine Spiritual Beings who, because man could
no longer rise by means of his dim clairvoyant consciousness, could no
longer descend, or reach the sphere of humanity. Throughout the
Atlantean epoch man lived with numerous divine beings, and the less
capable he became of looking up to the Gods the less could a certain
category of divine beings experience all they had formerly been able
to experience through man. When Atlantis came to an end there were
among the Atlantean gods some who suffered hunger, if we may so
express it, because they could no longer find the way to man.
We must now picture the further development of man from this
standpoint. We know that there was a realm in the neighbourhood of
Ireland where dwelt the most advanced beings of the Atlantean epoch,
those who were best prepared to pass through an advanced development.
These now journeyed from the West to the East, populating Europe,
where some remained at a particular stage of evolution, while others
went further. The most advanced passed on to the neighbourhood of
Central Asia, others into Africa. There were already in these parts
some people left over from the older Lemurian and Atlantean epochs;
these now mixed in diverse ways, and from them arose the people whom
the Greeks represent in many artistic forms as the Satyr, the Hermes,
and the Zeus types.
We must picture to ourselves that the condition of human consciousness
changed from this time more and more. Those who had come over from
Atlantis still possessed a remnant of ancient clairvoyant
consciousness, but this continually decreased. At the time of the
Atlantean catastrophe there were some even among those who had
journeyed towards Asia, Europe, and Africa who had already lost every
trace of clairvoyance, and, again, others who still had some remnants
of it.
Everywhere under certain conditions there were some who (between
sleeping and waking, for example) were able to obtain a clear view
into the spiritual worlds. The spiritual being known as Wotan, for
instance, was a personality well known to the Atlanteans;
we might say that all the ancient Atlanteans were more or less in
close touch with him, as some men today come in touch with a monarch,
but the conscious connection was gradually lost. Among the peoples of
Europe, especially the ancient Germans, there were many who in an
intermediate condition between sleeping and waking could enter into
relationship with Wotan, who actually existed in the spiritual world;
but owing to the advance in evolution he was limited and could no
longer make himself so generally known as before. There were people in
Asia also who knew him, and this knowledge continued on into later
times to which even history refers, a time when there was an original
natural clairvoyance, and man could speak of the Gods from his own
experience.
We must keep before us the fact that man was descending more and more
into the material world; and because of this the Gods were less and
less able to maintain their connection with him; many were able only to
have companionship with certain outstanding beings. Certain of the
Gods were unable to descend to ordinary humanity, but could only get
in touch with personalities who rose to meet them, who developed
themselves up to them. The varied dispositions of men, and the
remnants of old clairvoyance, as well as the principle of initiation,
mingled in a strange way, and this intermingling was preserved in the
consciousness of the Germanic people.
During the Atlantean epoch men knew that during sleep, when outside
the physical and etheric bodies, they rose into the kingdom of the
Gods, the Gods were known to them, and they knew they would meet them
there again. It was felt as a kind of punishment when, after death,
man was for a time unable to behold the Gods and to be received into
their company; when, after death, he had to pass through a period of
probation owing to his having become too much entangled in material
existence.
Among those who were in a position to value material life less than
non-material life the conviction grew that they were not bound to the
material world, but that immediately after death they could enter the
kingdom of the spirit, which was well known to them. The opinion was
held by the various peoples inhabiting Europe that those men who
fought bravely and met death on the field of battle, who valued the
honours of war more highly than material honours, were not dependent
on material existence. They were convinced that in such a case the
hero met with some deity or other immediately after death. Those who
did not die on the battlefield, who had not learnt to value spiritual
possessions more than material life, were said to have died ignobly,
and not to be mature enough to be taken immediately into the realm of
the spirit, but would first have to enter a kingdom in which they
would have to undergo certain trials.
This idea is expressed in the meeting with the Valkyre, and is
connected with an ancient clairvoyant memory. It was thought rightly
that the man who met death on the field of battle was taken up by the
Valkyre, and it is quite in harmony with such an idea that in its
further development it should have been pictured in ancient Europe as
symbolic of initiation. Among other peoples other ideas had developed,
but in Europe personal bravery and personal excellence were considered
to be most valuable.
It was always understood, and rightly so, that as regards initiation
man might experience even during life that which normally he only
experienced after death, namely, direct communication with the
spiritual world. As the warrior experienced his first meeting with the
Valkyre upon the battlefield, it was obvious that those who sought
initiation had to experience this in physical life. In one part of
Europe Siegfried was looked on as the last of the heroes of
initiation. This fact is preserved in the legend of Siegfried, which
tells how the hero united himself with the Valkyre during life, just
as dying warriors did upon the battlefield.
Let us now try to enter into the mentality of those who migrated from
the West towards the East. They had risen in a certain way up to the
point where they were fitted to enter upon a further development. They
had not become ossified, and had within them the germs of a more
perfect development, but they had retained a comparatively strong
clairvoyant capacity. Among all the people who had gone forth from
Atlantis the Europeans were most gifted with clairvoyance; it was less
strong among those who peopled Africa. Those who had emigrated earlier
into Asia, and who were among the most advanced, came upon a still
older people who were in possession of a still older clairvoyance, so
that there was much clairvoyance in those parts.
Then there was a certain small colony consisting of the most advanced
men of the Atlantean epoch who had settled near the Gobi desert. What
kind of people were these, and what do we mean when we say they were
the most advanced? It means those least able to see into
the spiritual world, for advancement consisted in their having
proceeded from the spiritual world and having entered into the
physical world. They were the people who felt constrained to say:
Formerly we had connection with the spiritual world, but we have
it no longer. This loss filled their hearts with sorrow; they
longed for the spiritual world from which they had come and which they
valued more than that in which they now dwelt.
Conditions varied among the different European populations. Under
certain conditions many could still see into the spiritual worlds.
When the Mysteries still existed in Europe, and Initiates who
through occult development could rise in full consciousness to the
spiritual world spoke of those worlds and of the beings
dwelling there, or of the varied parts men had to play after death;
when the initiates brought all this in mighty pictures before the
people by means of myth and legend, they found some who understood
them, for some still had vision. The peculiar conditions of life and
of environment in ancient Europe caused even uninitiated persons to
experience the spiritual world. Though they could not come in contact
with the higher Gods they believed in the spiritual worlds and trusted
in them. These worlds were real to them, hence they felt their
humanity in a quite different way from other peoples. Let us try to
enter into the feelings of these ancient Europeans. They said: I
am indeed connected with the Gods. Through consciousness of this
a strong sense of personality developed in them, a special sense of
the divine worth of the human personality, and, above all, a strong
sense of freedom. We must picture this state of feeling vividly, for
it was this consciousness of the personality which the people of
Europe took with them when they went south and peopled the Grecian and
Italian peninsulas. We can note stragglers from those who were
possessed of this feeling, particularly among the ancient Etruscans.
Even in their art we can observe this strong sense of freedom, for it
had a spiritual foundation. Before the rise of the true Roman kingdom
there was an Etruscan population in the Italian peninsula which had a
high degree of freedom in its system of government; on one hand it was
somewhat hierarchical, and, on the other, free in the highest sense.
Each town made provision for its own freedom, and an ancient Etruscan
would have felt any kind of confederacy, in our sense of the word, as
unbearable. Everything which passed southwards in the peninsula as a
sense of freedom, or a feeling for personality, sprang from the causes
we have mentioned.
Those other people who had gone the farthest into Asia included a
small company from whom the divine spiritual world had withdrawn the
most. In its place they had acquired something else, something that
had been saved from the world, which had withdrawn into profoundest
darkness this was the ego, or the I am. They felt
that what was preserved within them as the I am was the
eternal core of their being, and that it had sprung from the spiritual
world; they felt all the forms they had previously seen were like a
sacred memory, and that their strength depended upon this firm core
which remained within them. As yet they did not perceive the ego in
its complete form; this only came later, but those who were the most
advanced, who had descended most deeply, developed a certain tendency
which they might have expressed as follows: What we have to treasure
above all else is the consciousness of our divinity, consciousness of
that in which is to be found the deepest memories of our soul. Even if
this soul has forgotten the divine beings which once it knew, we can
find the way back to them by looking within our own being by
being conscious of our ego. In short, the consciousness of a formless
God was now evolved, a God who does not appear in outward form, but
who must be sought within man's innermost being. This conception,
which is a very old one, was transformed in the course of man's
further development into the commandment: Thou shalt not make to
thyself any graven image or likeness of thy God.
In primeval ages man experienced God by means of an image. Now the
image had withdrawn into the invisible world, and man strove with all
his strength to bring forth a conception of God from out his own ego.
There, where God is formless, man strove to form an idea of Him and to
realize His power. This was not immediately possible; during the first
post-Atlantean civilization the memory of what had been lost was still
too vivid. Man felt in his soul The door is shut, and the
longing to enter again into the spiritual world was too strong. Hence
in the first age of civilization the people were filled with longing
for the hidden world of the spirit; they looked with great reverence
up to the Initiates and besought them to allow them to become
partakers of this lost world. The first great age of post-Atlantean
culture was founded under the influence of Initiates by means of
colonies. This was the wonderful awe-inspiring pre-Vedic culture, the
last remnants of which are to be found in the Vedas; in it the longing
for the spiritual world was so great that men strove by artificial
means to regain contact with the Spirits and Gods which they had lost.
The longing to fly from the physical world into which they had entered
was overwhelmingly strong; we find this feeling in the souls of those
who were instructed by the Initiates the Holy Rishis.
We see the feeling developed in them which they might have expressed
as follows: The world of the physical plane into which we have
now entered, which we see spread out around us, is merely illusion; it
is worthless; it is Maya; but the world lying behind this illusory
physical plane is valuable. Thus a feeling of the worthlessness
of the physical plane was developed, a feeling of the need to flee
from it in order to attain that which was spiritual. A feeling evolved
which was the basis of this ancient civilization, that man must lose
his strong sense of personality if he was to be conscious of his
divine origin. He strove for complete absorption in divinity, with
extinction of his personality; this was of more value to him than life
within that personality. We must try to understand the mood of this
ancient civilization, we shall then understand this turning away from
all that was material, and how, if man desired to seek the divine he
had to free himself from the bonds of sense and get away from all
illusion, from Maya.
Such was the nature of the first post-Atlantean age; but the mission
of the whole epoch is that man should make the surroundings in which
he lives more and more his own, that he should master them more and
more.
In the Persian, that is, the pre-Zarathustra, civilization we see the
first phase of the conquest of the external world. The ancient
Persians (we refer here to the prehistoric Persians) had already a
different consciousness from that of the ancient Indians; they
regarded the physical plane as something real. It no longer appeared
strange to them; they said: We can bring spirit into the
physical plane and can cultivate it here. They paid attention to
the physical plane; they did not study it as yet, but they considered
it; the ancient Persians still perceived a hostile element in their
surroundings, but thought that the enemy could be overcome. The
Persian made a friend and companion of the God Ormuzd in order that he
might redeem matter. He worked into the physical world gradually; he
began to perceive that this is not only Maya, not merely soulless
appearance, but a reality which must be taken into account.
In the great migration towards the East there was another group which
moved more towards Asia Minor and Africa, where the Chaldean and
Egyptian civilizations were founded. Through them a further step
forward was made in the conquest of the physical plane. Here the
condition of the people was such that they no longer regarded what is
of the senses as merely hostile or illusory. When they looked up to
the stars they said: Those stars are not Maya, they are not mere
appearances! They thought much about the stars, and studied how
one star approached another and what changes took place in the
constellations. They felt the stars were an outward expression of the
ruling Gods; they were a script which the Gods had written what they
saw was not merely appearance but a revelation of the Gods.
A further advance had been made; sensible matter was now considered as
an expression of Divinity; man began to look for wisdom in things of
sense. In the Egyptian world man's gaze was turned from the heavens
and directed to the earth; geometry was studied so that the earth
might be measured. That to which the spirit could attain was thus
joined to substance perceived by the senses an essential
advance in evolution. Thus, step by step, evolution progressed.
Now, there was formed within the third age of civilization a small
company which separated off in a certain way and absorbed all that
could be gained from ancient tradition as well as from recent
knowledge. This small company, whose Initiates had preserved the
ancient wisdom and the earlier companionship with the Gods, knew how
to impart what they had gained as experience from the spiritual world,
and they had also absorbed the wisdom of the Chaldeans the
writings of the Gods in space as well as the wisdom of Egypt,
which expressed the union of spirit with that which is physical. This
group of people, who, in a certain sense, may be called the
chosen people, had to make preparation for the greatest
period in the world's history; they are the people of the Old
Testament, who in their Testament possessed the greatest and most
significant document regarding long-past events and also those that
were to come. It is not only an error in learning, but a farce, when
some historical work is thought even to approach the Old Testament in
value; for it portrays in mighty pictures man's descent from divine
heights, and shows at the same time how historical experiences are
connected with cosmic events. All this is contained in the Old
Testament, and, above all, its contents correspond exactly with the
events of evolution.
We have now seen how the rudimentary germ of the human ego was
prepared step by step in earthly evolution. We have seen that this
rudimentary germ would never have been able to evolve if the sun, and
afterwards the moon, had not separated from the earth. It was only
possible for it to develop through man's horizon with regard to the
spiritual world being gradually limited and then closed.
Let us consider how this rudimentary germ developed. What had man
gradually learnt during the earth's development? We must first look
back to those ancient times when he was as yet unable to see
physically, when he lived in the spiritual world; then came the time
when the external objects of the physical world appeared to him as if
blurred, when he could still see in the spiritual world as well. Who
was it prepared man so that in later times, when he was to behold the
sun clearly, he should be ready for this change? It was the God we
call Jehovah who brought man to full maturity; He who separated
Himself from the Elohim in order, from the moon, to prepare for the
most important moment in the earth's evolution. While man was still
unable to see the outer world Jehovah instilled ego-consciousness into
Him. It was He who in the time of the old dim clairvoyant
consciousness entered into man at initiation, and it was He who
appeared to man in dreams and prepared him slowly to receive the
I which he could obtain fully only through the coming of
Christ.
Christ has not only come once, but only once in personal form; His
last coming was in Jesus Christ. In ancient times He worked also
through the Prophets. Christ Himself indicates this in the Gospel of
John, where He says that those who did not believe Moses and the
Prophets would not believe Him either, for Moses and the Prophets
spoke of Him, not indeed as already on earth, but as one whom they
foretold. In this sense Christ has a certain story in earthly
evolution. If we go back to the ancient Mysteries we find everywhere
the story of Christ and His descent. Let us for a few minutes consider
the European Mysteries. We find in all of them a certain tragic
feature. If one transports oneself into these ancient Mysteries one
always finds that the teachers told their pupils: You may raise
yourselves to divine heights, and receive a high degree of initiation,
but there is something you cannot yet know fully, something for which
you must wait and which we can only indicate: this is the coming of
Christ.
They always spoke of Christ in the northern Mysteries as He who
would come; they knew Him everywhere, but not as One already on
the earth. The Initiates in Asia and Egypt also knew Him as the
approaching Christ. One day, they said, He will
appear. They knew also that the olden Mysteries could not lead
men to the highest stage of development. This idea has been preserved
symbolically, only too much stress must not be laid on such things;
they must be accepted generally, partly as truth and partly as
allegory, and not be outlined too sharply. Some echo of this tragic
feature regarding the ancient Gods and the waiting for the Christ has
survived. The glory of the old Gods was to disappear before the glory
of Christ.
This is found even in the most recent legends of the Teutonic gods,
where something remarkable is ascribed to Siegfried he was
invulnerable and had the strength of an Initiate according to the
European Mysteries; he was, however, vulnerable in one spot. He was
wounded in this spot, and thus met his death. In what place was he
vulnerable? The place on which later the cross was laid on Him for
Whom they were looking with such expectation. The place where
Siegfried was vulnerable was covered by the cross in the journey to
Golgotha. This legend contains a last memory of that tragic feature
which passes through all the ancient European Mysteries. But in those
other Mysteries into which Moses was initiated, from which the Old
Testament has proceeded, and which Moses implanted in his people so
far as seemed possible to him, this strange feature in human evolution
is often referred to. It is more than a mere picture; there is
something which imparts deep reality to it, which we might illustrate
as follows. Let us think of a man as regards his astral body, his ego,
his etheric and physical bodies; let us think of these four principles
as shone upon by the sun.
Through Christ's coming to the earth man has become able to absorb
both the physical and spiritual forces of the sun. Previously this was
different. Then, during sleep, when at night the astral body and ego
were outside the physical body and etheric body, the direct sunlight
did not fall upon man, only sunlight that was reflected from the moon.
Man absorbed this reflected light, not the direct sunlight. This is
exactly the same (in an external, symbolic, yet true form) as in the
case of the Christ, Who lived as the spiritual part of the sunlight,
and with Jehovah, who reflected the true Christ-light until such time
as men were sufficiently mature to receive it direct. Jehovah sent the
Christ down to humanity as from a mirror.
Men spoke of Him when they spoke of Jehovah. Hence Jehovah says to
Moses: Say to thy people, I am the I AM. This
was the name later applied to the Christ. He would not as yet turn His
own countenance to men. Jehovah prepared humanity; he sent them the
image of Christ before Christ Himself descended, for man had to learn
to comprehend the complete descent of Christ into the physical world
with His I am in the depths of his own being. Therefore
this people, which had been prepared in the truest sense for the
coming of Christ, held most firmly to the conception of a formless
God. They had to attain to a new conception of God, not merely to
remember an old form. This people with its Jehovah-religion became in
fact those who prepared for the coming of the Christ.
Now, we must clearly understand that everything that has to be
specially striven for in the world must proceed from strong impulses;
hence the idea of the power of the formless God spread through all the
Old Testament; an entirely abstract God, condensed within the centre
of a mere I-principle, stands at the centre of the religion of the Old
Testament an image-less I-God.
How could this God first obtain a form that could be comprehended by a
people living on the physical plane which they had to conquer? Through
a wise dispensation something remarkable originated in Southern
Europe.
Emigrations had taken place from Asia and Africa; these mingled with
other streams coming from the North. Those that came from the East
brought the firm conviction of the worthlessness of Maya, of the need
to change the material kingdom of men into a kingdom of the spirit;
these mingled with others who had gained a stronger feeling of
personality. Those with the greatest spiritual force, who had remained
longest behind in the emigration from West to East, met in Asia Minor
and in the Grecian and Italian peninsulas; here the fourth age of
civilization was built up, and the conquest of the physical world
advanced another stage.
The mission of the third age, the Egypto-Chaldean, had been to
perceive and comprehend the profundities of God; from it had to spring
a people who were able to seek God in an abstract way, as a Spiritual
Being with the least content of anything sensely. Meanwhile in
Southern Europe another group was being formed. Certain men had come
down from the north with their strong northern consciousness of
personality in them; a union was formed between matter and the human
soul. The result of this we see and admire in the art of Greece, in
the temples of Greece, and in the tragedies of Greece, in which man
began to represent his own destiny. In these tragedies he secreted his
own spirit in matter, incorporating it with external objects. One
might say that we have here a marriage between what is spiritual and
what is physical, wherein each has an equal share. In all that the
Greeks produced spirit and matter had an equal share, and this was
also the case in a certain sense with the Romans; they knew that spirit
dwelt in them, that spirit could become personality in them.
It was only at this stage of human evolution that that which had been
foretold could assume actual form upon the physical plane. Christ
could only descend to the physical plane when man had conquered it. A
Christ would not have been possible in the old civilizations, when the
physical plane was only seen as Maya, and a longing for the past
filled the souls of men. At the time the union occurred which we have
seen represented in Greek art man had turned more and more to the
physical plane; this was expressed in the strong consciousness of the
Roman citizen; it was also the time when the Christ-principle was able
to appear in the flesh.
We have to consider all those who worked previously to the coming of
Christ as being indeed acquainted with Him, but we must look on them
as Prophets who could only foretell; they beheld in the coming of
Christ the fulfillment of that for which they themselves had striven.
In the following lectures we shall see how Christianity is mingled
with other elements in the era subsequent to the coming of Christ, and
how this produced the conditions that now surround us. Today the
period has been described when, through the conquest of the physical
plane, man made himself sufficiently mature to understand the God-man
the Christ.
Last Modified: 23-Nov-2024
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