LECTURE THIRTEEN (NOTES)
THE VOICE OF THE ANGELOS AND THE SPEECH OF
THE EXOUSIAI
Let us take as a starting-point these
words in St. Mark's Gospel: ‘Behold I send my
Angel (messenger) before thee who shall prepare thy way
before thee. The voice of one preaching (crying) in the
wilderness.’ In the original text the words are: It is
a voice of one crying in the solitude.
Anyone who reads these words with an open
mind will at first be at a loss for an explanation. He will
regard them more or less as a phrase or at most as
allegorical. For what would be the point of preaching in a
wilderness? It would be usual, surely, to go where there are
plenty of people, not into a wilderness!
In the light of Spiritual Science the
depth of the wisdom contained in every word of the Holy
Scriptures is revealed in this passage. We shall find that
every word in the original text is at its proper place, and
moreover is only then intelligible.
What is meant by the words: ‘I send
my Angel before thee, who shall prepare thy way before
thee’? We know that the Bible is here referring to John
the Baptist. But to understand why the word
‘Angel’ is used we must go back to conditions in
an earlier period of our Earth's evolution and consider
what ranks of Beings belonged to it. We know that on our
physical Earth too there is a certain hierarchical order of
which the mineral kingdom is the lowest stage; then come the
plant and animal kingdoms and, at the highest stage, man.
Beyond man is the hierarchy of the Angels, Archangels and
Archai (Spirits of Personality, or Principalities); then the
hierarchy of the Exousiai (Spirits of Form, or Powers), the
Dynameis (Spirits of Movement, or Mights, also Virtues), and
the Kyriotetes (Spirits of Wisdom, or Dominions); then the
highest hierarchy of Thrones, Cherubim and Seraphim.
All these hierarchies too are involved in
a constant process of evolution. Just as we are nowadays
passing through the human stage of evolution on the Earth,
the Angels passed through the human stage (though in a
different form from ours) during the Old Moon evolutionary
period, the previous condition of our planet. They are
therefore a stage ahead of us. Just as one of our tasks on
Earth is to lead and guide our children, so the task of the
Angels is to lead and guide humanity. But because it is
impossible for them to incarnate in the forms of earthly
existence, to be able to help us they must allow their wisdom
to flow into the bodies of the purest, most highly developed
men, in order that the divine truths may be proclaimed to
humanity through their mouths. In such a case we may say: the
Angels clothe themselves in maya.
This becomes still more intelligible if we
go back to times of remote antiquity and picture the seven
Rishis of India. If we had looked at their outer forms we
should have seen simple men, perhaps peasants. The essential
core of their being was concealed within them. Clairvoyantly,
however, we should have seen them in flaming auras, from
which warmth radiated into their surroundings. But in order
that the greatest cosmic wisdom might penetrate into them it
was necessary for all the seven to be together. Divinity
played upon them as if they were a scale of seven tones. The
language they spoke would have seemed to us nothing but
unintelligible sounds.
It is hardly possible nowadays to form any
idea of the nature of language in those ancient times because
our own, by contrast, is a conglomeration of lifeless ideas
which we employ to reach a logical conclusion. In the days of
the Rishis it was the sound that caused pictures to
rise up before the inner eye. What, then, was the original
source of language? The wise men, the sages, of ancient
times, brought it down from the stars. For them the Zodiac
was the script of the Godhead in the heavens. The zodiacal
constellations created the consonants, the planets created
the vowels, and according to how the planets altered their
courses in the Zodiac the sages interpreted the various
meanings of the heavenly wisdom.
The bodies of the Rishis were maya,
enshrining the inmost core of Divinity.
If we direct the light gained from
Spiritual Science upon the words of the Bible, all the
bleakness with which materialists are so prone to invest
them, disappears. We understand the real meaning of the words
which say that God sent an Angel in advance, to prepare the
way of the one who was to come. The Angel is a more highly
developed Being of the hierarchy of the rank immediately
above man, a Being who sheathed his spirit in the maya of a
human body — in this case in the body of John the Baptist,
the reincarnated Elijah. If we are to understand the words of
the Bible truly, it is only a matter of shedding the right
light upon them and interpreting them literally.
Theologians are baffled by the words about
the voice of a preacher in the wilderness, the voice of one
crying in the wilderness. What can this mean?
John the Baptist baptised with water. In
this baptism the whole body was plunged into the Jordan as
part of the rites of Initiation. Why was this done? Because
the etheric body of a spiritually developed man was to be
loosened for a short time from the physical body; the man
then experienced what one who is dying experiences when his
etheric body is loosened from the physical. A picture of his
present incarnation back to his birth is unrolled before him
in all detail as a kind of panorama and he feels and knows
that outside his body of flesh he is a spiritual being.
Anyone who had returned to his physical
body after this experience during baptism was henceforth
inwardly different from other men: he felt as if he were
standing alone with this expansion of knowledge, separated
from the rest of humanity; he felt that men could no longer
understand him, that he was isolated, as it were in a
‘wilderness’, in solitude. And in this state of
deepest inner isolation he became aware of the ‘voice
of one crying’ — his Angel. In this case the guiding
Angel was clothed in the person of John the Baptist. That is
the meaning of the passage in the Bible about the voice
calling, or crying, in the wilderness.
Later in St. Mark's Gospel, where
Christ is proclaiming the highest wisdom in the schools, the
words are: ‘And they were astonished at His teaching:
for He taught them as one that had authority, and not as the
scribes.’ What does speaking ‘with
authority’ mean? Just as Angels are the guides of
individual men and Archangels of whole peoples, so there are
other, still higher Beings who are the guides of the forces
and powers of nature. These are the sources upon which men of
genius draw to create their masterpieces. The works of
Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Raphael, give expression to
the powers of nature.
To picture where these powers of nature
are made manifest let us imagine that we are standing on the
heights of a Swiss mountain. If we are fortunate enough to be
there at sunrise, we shall be overwhelmed by the magic and
sublimity of this spectacle of nature, and we shall feel
pervaded through and through by the mighty forces radiating
from it and revealing to us the power of Almighty God. We
watch how from the glimmering grey of dawn the first delicate
colours of the rising sun appear, how the peaks of the
snowcapped mountains are suffused with rosy mauve, and our
eyes are dazzled by this spectacle of greater and greater
brilliance. We see how the rays call forth colours which seem
to stream from every side, filling more and more of the space
around us, until finally the sun appears in all its
splendour, kindling life and radiating warmth into the lowest
valleys. In this majestic manifestation of nature we are
actually beholding the confluence of spiritual forces and
these forces are the Beings of the Hierarchies we have learnt
to know as the Exousiai, the Powers, or Spirits of Form. In
the original text the words are: ‘He taught as the
Exousiai teach.’ Christ spoke with the powers of these
Beings. In John the Baptist it was the Angel, the Being of
the rank immediately above man, who spoke. In Christ it was
the Exousiai, who as I have said, speak through events of
nature. It was their forces in the body of Christ which
enabled Him to teach ‘with authority’.
John the Baptist had received the highest
Initiation connected with the constellation of Aquarius. In
old maps of the Zodiac the sign depicting Aquarius is a man
stooping down with the arms held in a particular position.
This illustrates the words in St. Mark's Gospel:
‘There cometh after me one mightier than I, the latchet
of whose shoes I am not worthy to stoop down and
unloose.’
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