ORIGINAL SIN
8th December 1908
We will keep to our set
programme, and in the group meetings this winter we will work through
a series of apparently widely divergent aspects of human health and
illness. And later on these various aspects will group themselves
into a whole and culminate in an understanding of certain things
towards which we will gradually work our way. In the first lecture of
this series we made a kind of classification of illness types, and
last time we attempted to portray the text of The Ten Commandments.
All that goes beyond this text will follow in the course of the
coming meetings. Our main concern last week was to acquaint ourselves
with the content and the actual trend of the Commandments. Today we
want to speak of other aspects that will not appear to be directly
connected with the preceding or following talks, for they are a
series of aspects the comprehensive meaning of which will not dawn on
us until later.
We
will start today by looking at an important moment in man's earthly
evolution. Those of you who have been working in the anthroposophical
movement for some time have long been familiar with it; the others
will gradually accustom themselves to this way of thinking.
The
moment in human evolution we want to recall lies a long way back. If
we go back through post-Atlantean times and then through Atlantean
times as far as ancient Lemuria we come to that moment when the
division of the sexes took place in the kingdom of man on earth. You
know that before this we cannot speak of such a division of the sexes
in the human kingdom. I want to emphasise that we are not speaking of
the very first appearance altogether of two sexes in earthly
evolution or in evolution as a whole, in so far as it comprises the
kingdoms that are around us. Phenomena that doubtlessly belong to
bisexuality occur earlier. But what we call the human kingdom did not
divide into two sexes until Lemurian times. Prior to that the human
shape was formed differently, and both sexes were in a way contained
within it undifferentiated. We can form an external picture of the
transition from dual sexuality to the division into sexes if we
visualise how the earlier dual sexed human being gradually developed
in such a way that in one group of individuals the characteristics of
the one sex, the female, became more pronounced, whilst in the other
group the characteristics of the male sex developed more strongly.
This was still a long time before the sexes separated, when there was
progressive development in one direction or the other, at a time when
man still lived in a very insubstantial material body.
We
have focused our attention on this moment in time to start with,
because we want to enquire into the meaning of the arising of the two
sexes. It is only when we have a spiritual scientific basis that we
can enquire into such a meaning, for physical evolution receives its
meaning from higher worlds. As long as we are in the physical world,
if we consider it let us say philosophically, it is somewhat childish
to talk of purposes. And Goethe and others were right to make fun of
the people who talked of the purposes in nature, as though nature in
her wisdom had created cork so that man could make stoppers with it.
This is a childish way of looking at things and can only lead to our
missing the main point at issue. This view would be similar to
thinking of a clock as having little demonic beings behind it wise
enough to make the hands go round. In actual fact if we want to know
how the clock works we must go to the mind that produced it, namely
the clockmaker. And similarly, when we want to understand purpose in
our world, we must step beyond the physical world and enter the
spiritual. Thus purpose, meaning and goal are words that we can apply
to evolution only when we consider them on a spiritual scientific
basis. It is in this sense that we ask the question: What is the
meaning behind the two sexes gradually developing and then
inter-working?
The
meaning will become clear to you when you see what we call
fructification, the reciprocal influence of the sexes, (as) replacing
something else that had previously existed. You must not think that
fructification appeared for the first time at the moment when the
division into sexes occurred in human evolution. That was not so. We
must picture to ourselves that in the times preceding bisexuality
this fructification took place in quite a different way. Clairvoyant
vision can see that there was a time in mankind's earthly evolution
when fructification happened in connection with the intake of food,
and those beings which in those early times were male-female received
fructifying forces with their food. This food was still of course of
a much more delicate nature, and when human beings partook of
nourishment in those times there was something else contained in
these nourishing fluids which gave these beings the possibility of
bringing forth another being of like kind. You must realise, however,
that the nourishing fluids taken from the substance of their
surroundings did not always contain these fructifying fluids, but
only at quite definite times. This depended on the changes that took
place, comparable to today's seasonal changes, changes of climate,
and so on. The nourishing foods imbibed from the surroundings by
these beings of bisexuality had the power of fructification as well
at quite definite times.
If
with clairvoyant consciousness we look further back still, we find
another peculiarity in the propagation of ancient times. What you
know (of) today as the difference between the various
individualities, which expresses itself in the multiformity of life
in our present cycle of humanity, these differences did not exist
before the arising of the sexes. A great uniformity was there then.
The beings that arose then were similar to one another and to their
forefathers. All these beings that were still undivided into two
sexes were outwardly very similar, and their characters were more or
less the same too. That men were so much alike did not have the
disadvantage in those times that it would have at the present time.
Just imagine how infinitely dull human life would be if people were
to come into the world today with identical appearance and character,
and how little could actually happen in human life, as everybody
would want to do the same thing as everybody else. But in ancient
times this was not the case. When man was still as it were more
etheric, more spiritual, and not so firmly embedded in matter, then
at birth and on into childhood human beings were really very similar
to one another, and the teachers would not have needed to notice
whether the one child was a scamp and the other a gentle little
being. Although the people were different in character at different
times, they were in a certain way all fundamentally alike. Each
person, however, did not remain the same throughout his life. Because
man was still in a softer, more spiritual body he was much more open
to the permanent influences coming from the environment, so that in
those ancient times these influences brought about tremendous changes
in him. Man became in a certain way individualised because, having a
nature as soft as wax, he became more or less an impress of his
surroundings. At a quite definite time in his life, which would
coincide nowadays with puberty, it became possible for him to let
everything that happened in his environment work upon him. The
difference between the various times that were comparable to our
present day seasons was very great, and it was of great importance to
a man whether he lived in one part of the earth or another. If he
traveled just a short distance over the earth, that had a great
influence on him. If people go on a long journey nowadays, however
much they see, they return on the whole the same as when they went
away, unless they are very impressionable. This was different in
olden times. Everything had the greatest influence on people, and so
long as they had a body of soft material they could actually become
gradually individualised in the course of life. Then this possibility
ceased.
Something
further that reveals itself to us is that the earth itself became
denser and denser, and to the same extent as the substance, let us
say the earthy nature of the earth intensified, this uniformity
became harmful. For this gradually reduced mans capacity to change.
He became as it were very dense at birth. This is the reason why men
nowadays change so little during their life. And this led
Schopenhauer to think that men were absolutely incapable of bringing
about any basic changes in their character. The reason for this is
that men are embodied in such dense substance. They cannot easily
work on the substance or change it. If, as once was the case, men
could still alter their limbs at will, and make them long or short
according to their need, then man would, of course, still be very
impressionable. Then he would really be able to take into his
individuality the power to change himself Man always has an inner
contact with his environment, especially his human environment. To
make this quite clear I would like to tell you something that you may
not have noticed before but which is nevertheless true.
Imagine
you are sitting facing someone and speaking to him. We are referring
to ordinary human relationships in the normal course of life and not
to someone who is specially deeply schooled in occultism. Two people
are sitting together, one talking and the other just listening. It is
generally imagined that the one who is listening is doing nothing.
But that is not true. In things like this we still see the influence
of the environment. It is not noticeable to outer perception, but
inwardly it is very clear, in fact striking, that the one who is
merely listening is joining in everything the other one is doing.
He
even imitates the movements of the vocal cords, and speaks with the
speaker. Everything you hear you also say with a gentle movement of
the vocal cords and the other speech organs. It makes a great
difference whether the speaker has a croaky voice and those are the
movements you have to imitate, or whether he has a pleasant voice. In
this respect the human being does everything the other person is
doing, and as this is really happening all the time, it has a great
influence on a man's whole development, though only in this limited
respect. If you imagine this last remains of man's participation with
his surroundings vastly increased, you get an idea of how the man of
ancient times lived and felt with his environment. Man's faculty of
imitation, for instance, was developed on a tremendous scale. If one
person made a gesture, then everyone else made the same gesture too.
Only a few insignificant things in certain particular directions
remain of this today, like for instance when one person yawns, other
people do too. But remember that in these ancient times it was
entirely a question of their having a dim consciousness with which
this power of imitation was connected.
Now
as the earth and everything upon it became denser and denser man
became less and less capable of transforming himself through the
influence of his environment. In comparatively late Atlantean times a
sunrise, for instance, had a powerfully creative effect upon man,
because he was completely open to its influence and underwent sublime
inner experiences, which, if they continually recurred, changed him
tremendously in the course of his life. This diminished more and more
and gradually disappeared altogether the more humanity progressed.
In
Lemurian times, before the moon left the earth, mankind was in a
dangerous predicament. It was in danger of becoming rigid to the
point of mummification. Through the gradual departure of the moon
from the evolution of the earth this danger was averted. At the same
time as the moon departed, however, the division into sexes took
place, and with this division came a new impulse for the
individualisation of man. If it had been possible for human beings to
propagate without the two sexes, this individualising would not have
taken place. The present diversity among men is due to the
inter-working of the sexes. If there was only the female element,
human individuality would be extinguished, and men would all become
alike. Through the co-operation of the male element human beings are
individual characters from birth. So the significance and meaning of
the inter-working of the sexes is to be found in the fact that
through the separating off of the male element the individualising of
man at birth has replaced the old kind of individualisation. What was
achieved in earlier times by the whole surrounding environment was
compressed into the inter-working of the sexes, so that
individualisation was pushed back to the arising of the physical
human being at birth. That is the significance of the inter-working
of the two sexes. Individualisation happens by way of the effect of
the male sex on the female.
Now
this came about at the expense of something else, and when I describe
the situation I beg you to take it as applying strictly to human
beings, for when we are based on spiritual science we must not assume
that what applies to man also applies to animals. Health and illness,
in their more delicate aspects, are subject to quite different causes
in human beings than in animals. So what is being said applies solely
to man, and we will begin by looking at the finer aspects.
Imagine
yourself actually there in those ancient times when man was entirely
given up to his surroundings, and the surroundings entered into him
and on the one hand fructified him with the nourishing juices it
offered him, and on the other hand he became individualised through
its influence upon him. Now we know when we base ourselves on
spiritual science that everything around us which influences us, be
it light or sound, heat or cold, hardness or softness or this or that
colour, is the revelation, the external expression of something
spiritual. And in those ancient times man did not at all perceive
external sense impressions, he perceived the spiritual. When he
looked up to the sun he did not see the physical ball of the sun but
that which is preserved in the Persian religion as ‘Ahura
Mazdao, the Great Aura’. The spiritual part, all the spiritual
sun beings appeared to him, and it was the same with the air, water
and the whole environment. Today when you drink in the beauty of a
picture, you can have something that is as it were distilled from it,
only in those times it was far richer. If we wanted to speak as they
did in those times we would not be able to say: ‘This or that
tastes in some particular way’; but we would have to say: ‘This
or that spirit does me good!’ This is what it was like when men
were eating — an activity quite different from what it is today
— and quite different, too, was the time when the forces of
fructification were received: it was a phenomenon of the spiritual
environment. Spirits overshadowed man and stimulated him to bring
forth his kind, and this was also experienced and seen as a spiritual
process.
Then
little by little it became impossible for men to see the spiritual in
their environment. It became more and more veiled from sight,
especially during their day consciousness. Little by little men lost
sight of the spirit behind things, and they only perceived the
external objects which are the outer expression of these. They learnt
to forget the spiritual background, and the influence of the spirit
grew less and less the denser man's body became. Through this
densification man became a more and more independent being and shut
himself off from his spiritual surroundings. The further we go back
into these ancient times the more spiritually godlike was this
influence that came from the surroundings. Human beings were really
organised in such a way that they were a likeness of the spiritual
beings hovering round them in their environment; images of the gods
who in older times were present on earth.
Through
the inter-working of the two sexes in particular this was lost more
and more, and the spiritual world withdrew from men's sight. Men
beheld the sense world more and more clearly. We must picture this
situation vividly: Just imagine, in those times man was fructified
from the spiritual world of the gods. It was the gods themselves who
gave forth their forces and made men like themselves. That is why in
those ancient times what we call illness did not exist. There was no
inner disposition to illness, and it could not be there because
everything that was in man and that worked upon him came from the
health giving divine-spiritual cosmos. The divine-spiritual beings
are full of health, and in those days they made men in their image.
Man was healthy. But the nearer he came to the time when the
inter-working of the sexes came about and together with it the
withdrawal of the spiritual worlds, and the more independent and
individual man became, the more the health of divine-spiritual beings
withdrew from him and something else took its place. What happened in
reality was that this inter-working of the sexes was accompanied by
passions and instincts aroused in the physical world. We must look
for this incitement in the physical world after human beings had
reached the point when the two sexes were sensually attracted to one
another. This was a long time after the sexes already existed. The
effect of the sexes one upon the other — even in Atlantean
times — happened when physical consciousness was actually
asleep, during the night. It was not until the middle of Atlantean
times that what we call the attraction of the sexes began, what we
might call passionate love; that is, sensual love that mingled with
pure super-sensual or platonic love. There would be much more
platonic love if sensual love did not enter into it. And whereas
everything that formerly helped to form man came from the
divine-spiritual environment it now came more from the passions and
instincts of the two sexes working one upon the other. The kind of
sensual longing that is stimulated by seeing the outer appearance of
the opposite sex is bound up with the working together of the two
sexes. And therefore something was incorporated into man at birth
that is connected with the particular kind of passions and feelings
human beings have in physical life. Whilst in earlier times man still
received what was in him from the divine-spiritual beings of his
surroundings, he now acquired something through the act of
fructification which, as an independent, self-contained being, he had
taken into himself from the world of the senses.
After
human beings had been separated into two sexes they passed on to
their descendants what they themselves experienced in the sense
world. So we now have two types of human being. These two types live
in the physical world and perceive the world through their senses,
and this leads them to develop various externally aroused impulses
and longings, especially those arising from their own externally
stimulated sensual attraction to one another. What now confronts man
in an external way has been drawn down into the sphere of the
independent human being, and it is no longer in full harmony with the
divine-spiritual cosmos. That is imparted to men through the act of
fructification, it is implanted into them. And this worldly life of
theirs, received not from the world of the gods but from the external
side of the divine-spiritual world, is passed on to their offspring
through fructification. If a man is bad in this respect, then he
passes worse qualities on to his descendants than another person who
is good and pure.
And
this is the true meaning of ‘original sin’. That is the
concept of original sin. Original sin is brought about by man coming
to the point of transferring to his offspring his own individual
experiences in the physical world. Every time the sexes glow with
passion the ingredients of the two sexes combine in the human being
who is descending from the astral world. When a human being
incarnates he comes down from the Devachanic world and forms his
astral sphere in accordance with his particular individuality.
Something of what belongs to the astral bodies of his parents —
their impulses, passions and desires — combines with this
astral sphere so that he thereby shares in the experiences of his
forefathers. What descends through the generations in this way, what
is actually acquired as human attribute through the generations and
is handed down as such, is what we have to understand as the concept
of original sin. And now we come to something else: an entirely new
impetus entered humanity through the individualisation of man.
In
earlier times the divine-spiritual beings — and they were
absolutely healthy — made man in their own likeness. But now
man, as an independent being, detached himself from the all-embracing
harmony of divine-spiritual health. In a certain respect he set
himself up in his individualism against the whole of this
divine-spiritual environment. Imagine that you have a being
developing entirely under the influence of his environment. What he
expresses will be the environment. Imagine, though, that he shuts
himself off in his skin, then in addition to the characteristics of
his environment he has his own characteristics as well. And indeed,
with the division into sexes men became individual and developed
their own individual characteristics. And there was contradiction
between the great divine-spiritual harmony with its health and the
individualism of man. And through this individuality continuing to
work, through it becoming a really effective factor, the possibility
of becoming ill has entered into human evolution. This is the moment
when the possibility of illness first occurred in human evolution,
for it is bound up with the individualisation of man. When man was
still connected with the divine-spiritual world the possibility of
illness did not exist. It came about at the same time as
individualisation, and that is the same time as the division into
sexes. This holds good for human evolution, and you must not apply it
in the same way to the animal world.
Illness
is indeed a result of these processes I have just described, and you
can see that it is really the astral body in particular that is
originally influenced in this way. The human being draws the astral
body into his organism himself to begin with as he comes down from
the Devachanic world, and there it encounters what flows into it
through the inter-working of the two sexes. So the astral body is the
part of man that shows most clearly the non-divine. The etheric body
is more divine, for man does not have so great an influence on that,
and the physical body is the most divine of all; it is God's temple,
for it is completely withdrawn from man's influence. Whereas in his
astral body man seeks all kinds of pleasures and can have all sorts
of desires that have a harmful effect on the physical body, even
today his physical body is still such a wonderful instrument that it
can withstand heart poisons and other harmful influences of the
astral body for decades. And so we have to admit that because of all
these things that occur in the human astral body it has become the
worst part of man. Whoever looks deeper into human nature will find
that the deepest causes of illness lie in the astral body and in its
bad effects on the etheric body, and by way of the etheric body on
the physical body. Now we will understand a number of things that
cannot be understood otherwise. I will now speak of ordinary mineral
medicaments.
A
medicament from the mineral kingdom works in the first place on man's
physical body. Now what is the significance of man giving his
physical body a mineral medicament? Please note that we are not going
to speak of any plant medicaments but purely mineral ones, what is
prescribed in the way of metals and salts and so on. Suppose someone
takes one or another mineral medicament. Something very remarkable is
then seen by clairvoyant consciousness. This clairvoyant
consciousness can carry out the following feat — it always has
the ability to divert its attention away from something. It is
possible to divert the attention from the whole physical body. Then
you still see the etheric body, the astral body and the ego aura. You
have suggested away the physical body through strongly negative
attention. Now if someone has taken a mineral medicament, you can
remove everything from your attention and just direct your
clairvoyant vision to the mineral or metal that he now has within
him. That is, you suggest away everything in him of the nature of
bone, muscle, blood and so on, and turn your attention solely to the
particular mineral substance that has permeated him. Something very
remarkable presents itself to clairvoyant consciousness. This mineral
substance has become very thinly diffused and has itself acquired the
human form. You have before you a human form, a human phantom
consisting of the substance taken in by the man. Supposing the person
has taken antimony, you have before you a human form of very finely
diffused antimony, and it is the same with every mineral medicament a
man takes. You create a new man within you consisting of this mineral
substance; you incorporate it. Now let us ask ourselves what the
purpose and significance of this is?
The
significance is that if you were to leave a man as he is and withhold
from him the medicine he really needs, then because of certain bad
forces in his astral body the astral body would work on the etheric
body and the latter on the physical body and gradually destroy it.
You have put a double into the physical body. This works to prevent
the physical body obeying the influences of the astral body. Imagine
you have a bean plant. If you give it a prop it winds up it and is no
longer blown by the wind. This double made out of the incorporated
substance is a prop like this for the man. It attaches the physical
body to itself and removes it from the influences of the astral and
etheric body. In this way you make the human being's physical body
independent as it were of his astral and etheric body. This is the
effect of a mineral medicament. But you will immediately see the bad
side of it, for it has a very serious drawback. Since you withdraw
the physical body artificially from its connection with the other
bodies you have weakened the influence of the astral and etheric body
on the physical body and have made the physical body independent. And
the oftener you take such medicines the more the influence of the
astral and the etheric body disappears, making the physical body a
hardened, independent being, subject to its own laws. Imagine what
people are doing who take mineral medicaments of this sort all their
lives. A man who has in course of time taken a lot of these mineral
medicaments has within him a phantom of all these minerals, a round
dozen of them. It is as though the physical body were surrounded by
solid walls. And what kind of influence can the astral and etheric
body still have on it? Such a person is actually dragging his body
around with him and has very little power over it. If a man who has
been dosing himself in this way for a long time applies for treatment
to someone who wants to treat him psychologically and work especially
on his finer bodies, he will discover that he has become more or less
unreceptive to psychological influences. For by making his physical
body independent in the first place, he has deprived it of the
possibility of being affected by anything that might take place in
his finer bodies. And this has happened mainly because the human
being has so many phantoms in him that are not in harmony, that they
pull him hither and thither. If the human being has deprived himself
of the possibility of working from out of his soul and spirit, he
need not be surprised if spiritual treatment is not very successful
either. In cases of psychological treatment, therefore, you should
always give consideration to the kind of person the patient is. If he
has made his astral or etheric body powerless by making his physical
body independent, then it will be very difficult to help such a
person by means of spiritual treatment.
So
now we understand how mineral substances affect a man. They create
doubles in him that preserve his physical body and remove it from the
possible harmful effects of his astral or etheric body. Because
materialistic medicine is ignorant of man's higher members, almost
all our present-day medicine works in the direction of treating the
physical body in some way or another only.
We
have begun today by looking at the effects of mineral substances.
Some time we shall have to speak of the effects of plant forces and
animal substances on the human organism, and then we shall go on to
those influences or remedies that work from one being to another in a
psychic or spiritual way. But you will see that it is essential for
our studies for us to acquire once again such concepts as the concept
of original sin and understand it correctly. With certain things
nowadays people just do not see what lies in front of them and show
no understanding for them at all.
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