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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Egyptian Myths and Mysteries
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Egyptian Myths and Mysteries
Ancient and Modern Cultural Streams and their Spiritual Connections
Schmidt Number: S-1823
On-line since: 20th November, 2000
Spiritual Connections between
the Culture-streams of Ancient
and Modern Times.
If we ask ourselves what spiritual science should be for men, then
presumably, out of all sorts of reactions and feelings that we have
developed in the course of our work in this field, we will place the
following answer before our souls: Spiritual science should be for us
a path to the higher development of our humanity, of all that is human
in us.
Thus we set up a life-aim, which in a certain way is self-understood
for every thinking and feeling person, a life-aim that includes the
achieving of the highest ideals and also includes the unfolding of the
deepest and most significant forces in our souls. The best men in all
ages have asked themselves how man can rightly bring to expression
what lies within him, and to this question the most diverse answers
have been given. Perhaps none can be found that is terser or more
telling than the answer Goethe gave out of a deep conviction in his
Geheimnisse:
From the power that binds all beings
That man frees himself who overcomes himself.
Deep meaning lies in these words, for they show us clearly and
pregnantly what lies at the heart of all evolution. This is that man
develops his inner feeling through rising above himself. Thereby we
lift ourselves, so to speak, above ourselves. The soul that overcomes
itself finds the path that leads beyond itself to the highest
treasures of humanity. This lofty goal of spiritual research should be
borne in mind when we undertake to treat such a theme as the one that
is to occupy us here. It will lead us beyond the ordinary horizons of
life to sublime things. We will have to survey wide reaches of time if
we take as our subject an epoch stretching from ancient Egypt down to
our own day. We will have to pass millennia in review, and what we
gain therefrom will really be something connected with the deepest
concerns of our souls, something that grips our innermost soul-life.
Only apparently does the man who strives toward the heights of life
remove himself from his immediate surroundings; just through this he
comes to an understanding of his daily concerns. Man must get away
from the troubles of the day, from what his routine brings to him, and
look up to the great events of the history of the world and its
peoples. Then for the first time he finds what is most sacred for his
soul. It may seem strange to suggest that connections, intimate
connections, should be sought for between our own time and ancient
Egypt, when the mighty pyramids and the Sphinx appeared. It can at
first seem remarkable that one should understand his own time better
by directing his gaze so far back. But just for this purpose we are
going to look backward over much wider and more comprehensive epochs.
This will bring the result we seek: The possibility of transcending
ourselves.
To one who has already carefully studied the ideas of spiritual
science, it will not seem strange that one should look for a
connection between widely separated periods of time. It is one of our
basic convictions that the human soul continually returns, that the
experiences between birth and death occur repeatedly for us. The doctrine
of reincarnation has become ever more familiar to us. When we reflect
on this we may ask: Since these souls that dwell in us today have
often been here before, is it possible that they were also present in
ancient Egypt during Egyptian cultural epoch, that the same souls are
in us which at that time looked up at the gigantic pyramids and the
enigmatic Sphinxes?
The answer to this question is, Yes. Our souls have beheld the old
cultural monuments that they see again today. The same souls that
lived then have gone through later periods and have appeared again in
our own time. We know that no life remains without fruit; we know that
what the soul has gone through in the way of experiences remains
within it and appears in later incarnations as powers, temperament,
capacities, and dispositions. Thus the way we look on nature today,
the way we take up what our times bring forth, the way we view the
world, all this was prepared in ancient Egypt, in the land of the
pyramids. We were then prepared in such a way that we now look at the
physical world as we do. Just how these widely separated periods link
themselves together is what we will now explore.
If we want to grasp the deeper meaning of these lectures, we must go a
long way back in earthly evolution, We know that our earth has often
changed. Before ancient Egypt there were still other cultures. By
means of occult research we can see much further back into the gray
primeval times of human evolution, and we come to times when the earth
appeared quite other than it is today. Things were entirely different
in ancient Asia and Africa. If we look back clairvoyantly into
primeval times, we come to a point where a tremendous catastrophe,
caused by water-forces, took place on our earth and fundamentally
altered its face. If we go still further back, we reach a time when
the earth had an entirely different physiognomy, when what now forms
the floor of the Atlantic Ocean, between Europe and America, was above
water, was land. We come to a time when our souls lived in entirely
different bodies than today; we reach ancient Atlantis, of which our
external science can as yet say little.
The regions of Atlantis were destroyed through colossal deluges. Human
bodies had different forms at that time, but the souls that live in us
today lived also in the ancient Atlanteans. Those were our souls. Then
the water-catastrophe caused a movement of the Atlantean peoples, a
great migration from west to east. We ourselves were these peoples.
Toward the end of Atlantis all was in movement. We wandered from the
west toward the east, through Ireland, Scotland, Holland, France, and
Spain. Thus the peoples moved eastward and populated Europe, Asia, and
the northern parts of Africa.
It must not be imagined that those who, in the last great migration,
wandered out of the west into the regions that have gradually
developed into Asia, Europe, and Africa, did not encounter other
peoples. Almost all of Europe, the northern parts of Africa, and large
parts of Asia were already inhabited at that time. These areas were
not peopled from the west only; they had already been settled earlier,
so that this migration found a strange population already established.
We may assume that when quieter times set in, special cultural
relations arose. There was, for instance, in the neighborhood of
Ireland, a region where, before the catastrophe that now lies
thousands of years behind us, there lived the most advanced portions
of the entire population of the earth. These portions then migrated,
under the special guidance of great individualities, through Europe to
a region of central Asia, and from that point cultural colonies were
sent out to the most diverse places. One such colony of the
post-Atlantean time was sent from this group of people into India,
finding a population that had been seated there from primeval times
and had its own culture. Paying due heed to what was already present,
these colonists founded the first post-Atlantean culture. This was
many thousand years ago, and external documents tell us scarcely
anything about it. What appears in these documents is much later. In
those great compendiums of Wisdom called the Vedas, we have only the
final echoes of a very early Indian culture that was directed by
super-earthly beings and was founded by the Holy Rishis. It was a
culture of a unique kind, and we today can form only a feeble idea of
it because the Vedas are only a reflection of that primeval holy
Indian culture.
After this culture there followed another, the second cultural epoch
of the post-Atlantean time. Out of this the wisdom of Zarathustra
flowed and the Persian culture arose. Long did the Indian culture
endure, long also the Persian, reaching a culmination in Zarathustra.
Then arose, under the influence of colonists who were sent into the
land of the Nile, the culture that is comprised under the four names,
Chaldean-Egyptian-Assyrian-Babylonian. This third post-Atlantean
culture arose in Asia Minor and northern Africa, and reached its
summit, on the one side, in the wonderful Chaldean star-lore and, on
the other, in the Egyptian culture.
Then comes a fourth age, developing in the south of Europe, the age of
the Greco-Roman culture, which dawns with the songs of Homer and goes
on to produce the Greek sculptures and the art of poetry that appears
in the tragedies of Aeschylus and Sophocles. Rome also belonged to
this period. The epoch begins in the eighth pre-Christian century,
approximately in 747 B. C., and lasts until the fourteenth or
fifteenth century A. D. After that we have the fifth period, in which
we ourselves live, and this in turn will be followed by the sixth and
seventh periods.
In the seventh period, ancient India will appear in a new form. We
shall see that there is a remarkable law that enables us to understand
the working of wonderful forces through the various epochs and the
relationships of the epochs to each other. If we begin by looking at
the first period, that of the Indian culture, we will find that this
first culture later recrudesces in a new form in the seventh period.
Ancient India will then appear in a new form. Mysterious forces are at
work here. And the second period, which we have called the Persian,
will appear again in the sixth period. After our own culture perishes,
we will see the Zarathustra religion revive in the culture of the
sixth period. And in the course of these lectures we will see how, in
our own fifth period, there takes place a sort of reawakening of the
third period, the Egyptian. The fourth period stands in the middle; it
is peculiar to itself, and neither earlier nor later does it have a
parallel.
To make this mysterious law somewhat clearer, we should add the
following. We know that India has something that strikes our
humanitarian consciousness as strange. This is the division into
definite castes, into priests, warriors, merchants, and laborer. This
strict segregation is foreign to our modern views. In the first
post-Atlantean culture it was not strange, it was entirely natural; in
those times it could not be otherwise than that the souls of men
should be divided into four grades according to their capacities. No
harshness was felt in it for men were distributed by their leaders,
who had such authority that what they prescribed was accepted without
question. It was felt that the leaders, the seven Holy Rishis who had
received their instruction from divine beings in Atlantis, could see
where each man should be placed. Thus such a classification of men was
something altogether natural. An entirely different grouping will
appear in the seventh period. The division in the first period was
effected by authority, but in the seventh period men will group
themselves according to objective points of view. Something similar is
seen among the ants; they form a state which, in its wonderful
structure as well as in its capacity to perform a relatively
prodigious amount of work, is not rivaled by any human state. Yet
there we have just what seems to be alien to us, the caste system; for
each ant has its particular task.
Whatever we may think of this today, men will see that the salvation
of humanity lies in division into objective groups, and they will even
be able to combine division of labor with equality of rights. Human
society will appear as a wonderful harmony. This is something we can
see in the annals of the future. Thus ancient India will appear again;
and in a similar way certain traits of the third period will appear
again in the fifth.
Glancing at the immediate implications of our theme, we see a large
domain. We see the gigantic pyramids, the enigmatic Sphinx. The souls
that belonged to the ancient Indians were also incarnated in Egypt and
are again incarnated today. If we follow our general line of thought
into detail, we will discover two phenomena that show us how, in
superearthly connections, there are mysterious threads between the
Egyptian culture and that of today. We have observed the law of
repetition in the different periods of time, but it will seem far more
significant if we follow it in spiritual regions. We are all familiar
with a painting of great importance that has surely passed before all
our souls at least once. I mean Raphael's famous painting of the
Sistine Madonna, which by a chain of circumstances has come to be
located among us in central Germany. In this picture, which is
available in countless reproductions, we have learned to admire the
wonderful purity poured out over the whole form. We have all felt
something in the countenance of the mother, in the singular way the
form floats in the air, perhaps also in the deep expression of the
child's eyes. Then, if we see the cloud-forms round about from which
numerous little angel-heads appear, we have a still deeper feeling, a
feeling that makes the whole picture more comprehensible to us. I know
it seems daring when I say that if one gazes deeply and earnestly on
this child in the arms of the mother and on the clouds in the
background forming themselves into a number of little angel-heads,
then he has the feeling that this child was not born in the natural
way, but that it is one of those that float round about in the clouds.
This Jesus child itself is such a cloud-form, only become a little
denser, as though one of the little angels had flown out of the clouds
onto the arm of the Madonna. That would be a healthy feeling. If we
make this feeling live within us, then our view will expand and free
itself from certain narrow conceptions about the natural connections
of life. Just out of such a picture our narrow vision can be expanded
to see that what must happen in a certain way according to modern laws
could at one time have been different. We will discern that there was
once a form of reproduction other than the sexual one. In short, we
will perceive deep connections between what is human and the spiritual
forces in this picture. This is what lies in it.
If we allow our gaze to wander back from this Madonna into the
Egyptian time, we are met by something similar, by an equally sublime
picture. The Egyptian had Isis, the figure connected with the words:
I am what was, what is, and what will be. No mortal has yet raised
my veil.
A deep mystery, heavily veiled, manifests itself in the figure of
Isis, the lovable goddess who, in the spiritual consciousness of the
ancient Egyptian, was present with the Horus child as our Madonna is
present today with the Jesus child. In the fact that this Isis is
presented to us as something bearing the eternal within it, we are
again reminded of our feeling in contemplating the Madonna. We must
see deep mysteries in Isis, mysteries that are grounded in the
spiritual. The Madonna is a remembrance of Isis: the Isis appears
again in the Madonna. This is one of the connections that I spoke of.
We must learn to recognize with our feelings the deep mysteries that
show a superearthly connection between ancient Egypt and our modern
culture.
Still another connection can be brought before you today. We recall
how the Egyptian handled the dead; we remember the mummies, and how
the Egyptian concerned himself that the outer physical form should be
preserved for a long time. We know that he filled his tombs with such
mummies, in which he had preserved the outer form, and that as
mementos of the past physical life he gave to the deceased certain
utensils and possessions suited to the needs of physical life. Thus
what the person had had in the physical was to be retained. In this
way the Egyptian bound the dead to the physical plane. This custom
developed more and more and is a special earmark of the old Egyptian
culture. Such a thing is not without consequences for the soul. Let us
remember that our souls were in Egyptian bodies.
This is quite correct; our souls were incorporated in these bodies
that became mummies. We know that when man, after death, is freed from
his physical and etheric bodies, he has a different consciousness; he
is by no means unconscious in the astral world. He can look down from
the spiritual world, even though today he cannot look up; he can then
look down on the physical earth. It is not then indifferent to him
whether his body has been preserved as a mummy, has been burned, or
has decayed. A definite kind of connection arises through this. We
shall see this mysterious connection. Through the fact that in ancient
Egypt the bodies were preserved for a long time, the souls experienced
something very definite in the period after death. When they looked
down they knew that is my body. They were bound to this
physical body. They had the form of their body before them. This body
became important to the souls, for the soul is susceptible to
impressions after death. The impression made by the mummified body
imprinted itself deeply, and the soul was formed in accordance with
this impression.
These souls went through incarnations in the Greco-Latin period, and
in our own time they are living in us. It was not without effect that
they saw their mummified bodies after death, that they were repeatedly
led back to these bodies; this is by no means unimportant. They
attached their sympathies to these bodies, and the fruit of their
looking down upon them appears now, in the fifth period, in the
inclination that souls have today to lay great weight upon the outer
physical life. All that we describe today as the attachment to matter
stems from the fact that the souls at that time, out of the spiritual
world, could look upon their own embodiment. Through this man learned
to love the physical world; through this it is so often said today
that the only important thing is the physical body between birth and
death. Such views do not arise out of nothing.
This is not a criticism of the practice of mummifying. We only want to
point to certain necessities that are connected with the repeated
incarnating of the soul. Without this pondering on the mummies men
would not have been equal to developing further. We would by now have
lost all interest in the physical world had the Egyptians not had the
mummy-cult. It had to be thus if a proper interest in the physical
world was to be awakened. That we see the world as we do today is a
consequence of the fact that the Egyptians mummified the physical body
after death.
This cultural stream was under the influence of initiates, who could
see into the future. Not through any whim did men make mummies.
Particularly in those days mankind was led by high individualities who
prescribed What was right. This was done under authority. In the
schools of the initiates it was known that our fifth epoch was
connected with the third epoch. These mysterious connections stood at
that time before the eyes of the priests, who instituted mummification
so that the souls might acquire the disposition to seek spiritual
experience in the external physical world.
The world is guided through wisdom; this is a second example of such
connections. That men think as they do today is a result of what they
experienced in ancient Egypt. Here we glimpse deep mysteries that
reveal themselves in the cultural streams. We have barely touched
these mysteries, for what has been shown of the Madonna as a
remembrance of Isis, together with what we have seen of mummification,
gives only a feeble hint of the real spiritual connections. But we
will throw more light upon these relationships; we will consider not
only what appears outwardly, but also what lies behind the external.
External life runs its course between birth and death. Man lives a
much longer life after death, in what we know as kamaloca and the
experiences of the spiritual world. The experiences in the
super-sensible worlds are no more uniform than the experiences here in
the physical world. What did we experience as ancient Egyptians in the
other world?
When our eyes looked on the pyramids and the Sphinx, how completely
different was the course of our lives, how differently did our souls
live between birth and death! That life cannot be compared to the life
of the present day; such a comparison would have no meaning, and the
experiences between death and a new birth have been far more
dissimilar than the experiences of outer life. During the Egyptian
epoch the soul experienced something quite different than in the Greek
world, or in the time of Charlemagne, or in our own time. Also in the
other world, in the spiritual world, evolution takes place, and what
the soul experiences today between death and a new birth is something
quite different from what the ancient Egyptian experienced when he
laid aside his outer form at death. Just as mummification worked on in
its peculiar way, causing the mood of the present day, just as this
external life repeats itself from the third into the fifth period, so
does evolution continue in those mysterious worlds between death and
birth. This also we will have to study and here again we will find a
mysterious connection. Then we will be able to grasp what lives in us
as the fruit of that ancient time. We will be led into deep recesses
of the labyrinth of the earth's evolution. But just through this we
will recognize the full connection between what the Egyptian built,
what the Chaldean thought, and what we today live. We will see what
was then achieved flaring up again in what surrounds us, in what
interests us in our environment. Physically and spiritually we will
obtain clues to this connection. It will also be shown how evolution
proceeds, how the fourth period forms a wonderful link between the
third and the fifth. Thus our souls will lift themselves to the
significant connections of the world, and the fruit will be a deep
understanding of what lives in us.
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