The Influence of Luciferic and Ahrimanic Beings on Historical Development. The clear Perception of the Sensory World and Free Imaginations as the Task of Our Time. Genghis Khan and the Discovery of America
Dornach, September 17, 1916
Yesterday, we tried to characterize the forces that permeated Greece
and Rome in order to obtain an idea of the influences that have been
carried over from the fourth into the fifth post-Atlantean age, and we
gave some indication of where we have to look today for signs of
continued activity of the forces of the fourth post-Atlantean age. I
want to ask you now to turn your attention once again to our
description of the civilizations of Greece and Rome.
In the way it developed, the civilization of Greece was a source of
great disappointment to the luciferic powers. One can, of course, only
say these things out of imaginative cognition, and this will also be
true of what is to be presented to you today. The development of Greek
civilization was a great disappointment to the luciferic powers
because they expected something quite different from it. Think what
this means. They had expected the civilization of Greece, the fourth
epoch of post-Atlantean times, to bring into being for them all they
had striven for during Atlantean times. On Atlantis they had developed
certain activities, certain influences and forces and they had
expected to see the fruits of their labors appear in the fourth
post-Atlantean epoch. What was it they were really looking for?
To speak of such a matter lets us look right into the luciferic soul.
We come to know this luciferic life that continually strives, hoping
that certain results may ensue, but that continually meets with fresh
disappointment. A logician would naturally ask, Why do not these
luciferic powers stop trying? Why do they not see that they must be
forever and repeatedly disappointed? Such a conclusion would be
human, not luciferic, wisdom. At any rate, the luciferic powers have
yet to come to this conclusion. On the contrary, it is their practice
to redouble their efforts whenever they experience disappointment.
What was it, then, that the luciferic powers expected from this fourth
post-Atlantean age? They wanted to obtain mastery of all the soul
forces of the Greek people, those soul forces that were, as we have
seen, directed to carrying over the ancient imaginations of the
Chaldean-Egyptian period, and to incorporate them into the creations
of their own fantasy. The luciferic powers made it their endeavor to
work so strongly on the human beings of the Greek civilization that
their imaginations, refined and distilled to fantasy, should fill
their whole being. The Greeks would then have lost themselves in a
soul world, in an everyday thinking, feeling and willing that would
have consisted entirely of those subtle imaginations that had become
complete fantasy.
If the Greeks had developed nothing in their souls but these
imaginations refined to fantasy, if these enticing imaginations had
come to fill their souls completely, the luciferic powers would have
been able to lift the Greeks and a great part of humanity out of human
evolution to place them in their own luciferic world. This was the
intention of the luciferic powers. From the Atlantean epoch on, it had
been their hope to achieve in the fourth post-Atlantean age what they
had failed to do in Atlantis. Humanity, at the stage it had then
reached, would have been incorporated into the cosmos. They wanted
nothing less than to create for themselves a separate world where
earthly gravity did not exist, but where human beings would dwell with
absolute super-sensible lightness, entirely given up to a life of
fantasy. It was the hope of the luciferic beings to create a planetary
body, which would contain those members of humanity who had reached
this highest development of the fantasy life. They made every endeavor
to lead the souls of the Greeks away from the earth. Had they
succeeded, these souls would gradually have forsaken the earth. The
bodies that still came to birth would have been degenerate. Egoless
beings would have been born, the earth would have fallen into
decadence and a special luciferic kingdom would have begun. This did
not come to pass. Why?
This condition did not come about because, mingled with the
self-deifying madness of Greek poetry, to quote Plato, was
the genius and greatness of Greek philosophy and wisdom. The Greek
philosophers Heraclitus, Thales, Anaximenes, Anaximander,
Parmenides, Socrates, Plato and Aristotle saved Greek
civilization from being completely spiritualized in a life of fantasy.
They kept the Greeks on earth, providing the strongest forces that
kept Greece within earthly evolution. In considering the course of
history, we must always take into account the forces that lie behind
physical reality and are the true causes of all that happens. It was,
then, in this way that Greece was preserved for earthly evolution.
Now, the luciferic beings would have been unable to achieve anything
at all without the help of the ahrimanic beings. In all their
intentions and hope they reckoned on their support. Indeed, it must
always be that two forces strive together in this kind of working.
Just as the luciferic beings were disappointed in Greece, so were the
ahrimanic beings disappointed in Rome and the way it developed. The
luciferic beings wanted to lead Grecian souls away from the
earth-planet and the ahrimanic beings wanted to contribute their
efforts to the end that the Roman civilization would assume a
particular form. The ahrimanic beings exerted their strongest efforts
in Rome, just as the luciferic beings did in Greece. They calculated
that a certain hardening would arise on earth brought about by an
entirely blind obedience and subjection to Rome. What did the
ahrimanic powers want to accomplish in Rome? They wanted to establish
a Roman Empire that would extend over the whole of the then known
world, embracing within it every human activity. It would be directed
entirely from Rome with the strictest centralization and the utmost
development of the rule of might. They sought to establish a widely
flung state machinery that would include and make subject to it all
religious and artistic life. Its goal would be to stamp out all
individuality. Every people and human being would comprise merely some
small part of this mighty state machine.
Thanks to the clarity of its philosophers, however, Greece was not
lulled into the luciferic dream, nor could Rome be hardened as these
ahrimanic powers desired, because in Rome, too, something was working
against them. This was described in the last lecture as Roman ideals,
but the legal, political and military ideals that were then developing
could not have withstood Ahriman alone. Within the Roman civilization
the ahrimanic powers gathered for a stupendous onslaught. That attempt
was like a repetition of their attempt made in Atlantean times, and it
developed infinitely strong powers and forces. It was only from
another side that Ahriman's intention was hindered. It was, at first,
prevented by something that, at first sight, might be regarded as a
lower trait in the Roman character, but that was not the case. As a
matter of fact, the Romans had need of what I may have seemed to
describe in the last lecture with some antipathy. They needed their
ruthlessness, stubborn egoism, that continuous stirring up of
emotions, to be able to march against the ahrimanic powers. Roman
history I beg you expressly to note this is not a
revelation of the ahrimanic powers. Although they stand in the
background, it is a fight against them. If it is all confused
and self-seeking, seeming to tend more and more toward a
politicalization of the whole world, it is because only in this way
could Ahriman's mechanizing be resisted.
All this alone, however, would not have been of much avail. Rome had
also received Christianity, which in Rome would have assumed a form
that would have given Ahriman a splendid opportunity to achieve his
aim since, through the spiritual decline of a Roman rule that had been
transformed into a papacy, the mechanizing of culture could have been
accomplished. So another external power had to be brought against
Ahriman, who works with much more external means than Lucifer.
Ahriman, as we have seen, diverted the forces of Christianity to his
own service. Another power had to be brought against him. This was the
onslaught of the Germanic tribes caused by the migration of peoples in
Europe. Through this onslaught on Rome, the mechanizing of the world
under a single, all-embracing Roman Empire was hindered. If you will
study all that took place in the migration of these peoples, you will
find that you can get a true insight into it when you see it from this
point of view. Whenever the migration of peoples occurs in the Roman
world, Roman history is not thereby brought to an end, but the
ahrimanic powers, combated throughout their history by the Romans, are
repelled.
Thus did Ahriman meet with his disappointment, as Lucifer had met with
his. But they will take up their tasks again in the fifth
post-Atlantean age with all the more determination. Here is the point
at which we must gain an understanding of the forces that are
operative in our age, insofar as such an understanding is possible
today.
The fourth post-Atlantean age extends both backwards and forwards from
its central point in 333 A.D. It ended about 1413 A.D. and it began
about 747 B.C. These are of course, approximate dates. I have just
told you that the disappointment of Lucifer and Ahriman in the forms
the Greek and Roman civilizations had assumed, has led them to make
still stronger efforts in our fifth post-Atlantean age. Their efforts
are already at work in the human forces that have been active from the
fifteenth century. It does not matter whether something occurs a few
decades earlier or later. In outer physical reality, which takes on
the form of the great illusion, things are sometimes
misplaced.
The fact that the Roman civilization could be retained in the
evolution of humanity as it was due to the events brought about by the
migrations of the peoples. If Rome had developed in such a way that a
great all-embracing mechanized empire had arisen, it would only have
been habitable for egoless human beings who would have remained on
earth after Lucifer had drawn out their souls on the path of Greek
culture and art. You see how Ahriman and Lucifer work together.
Lucifer wants to take men's souls away and found a planet with them of
his own. Ahriman has to help him. While Lucifer sucks the juice out of
the lemon, as it were, Ahriman presses it out, thereby hardening what
remains. This is what he tried to do to the civilization of Rome. Here
we have an important cosmic process going on all due to the
intention and resolve of luciferic and ahrimanic powers. As I have
said, they were disappointed. They have continued their efforts,
however, and our fifth post-Atlantean age has yet to learn how strong
these attacks are. They are now only beginning but they will become
stronger and stronger. This age must learn, too, that the necessity to
understand these attacks will become ever greater. At the beginning of
an age the backward beings cannot work strongly. As yet, we are only
in the beginning, and even though it became manifest only later, the
luciferic and ahrimanic powers began to exert their forces before the
expiration of the fourth post-Atlantean age.
To understand how these powers work in the fifth post-Atlantean age,
we must turn our attention for a moment to what is intended for man in
the right and normal course of his evolution. It is rightfully
intended that he shall take a further step forward. The step taken by
humanity in the fourth post-Atlantean age is revealed in the culture
of the Greeks and in the political development of the Romans, and it
was through the battle with Lucifer and Ahriman that what was intended
actually came about. These opposing forces are always such that they
fit into the progressive plan of the world. They belong to it and are
needed there as opposing forces. But what special qualities are the
men of the fifth post-Atlantean age, our own, to develop?
We know that this is the age of the development of the consciousness
soul and that, to accomplish this, a number of forces soul and
bodily forces must be active. First, a clear perception of the
sense world is necessary. This did not exist in earlier times because,
as you know, a visionary, imaginative element continuously played into
the human soul. The Greeks still possessed fantasy but, as we have
seen, after fantasy and imagination had taken possession of humanity,
as it did of the Greeks, it then became necessary for men to develop
the faculty to see the world of external nature without the
illumination of a vision standing behind it. We need not imagine that
such a vision has to be a materialistic one. That point of view is
itself an ahrimanically perverted perception of sense reality. As
indicated before, observation of sense reality is one task incumbent
upon the human soul in our fifth post-Atlantean age.
The other task is to unfold free imaginations side by side with the
clear view of reality in a way, a kind of repetition of the
Egypto-Chaldean age. To date, humanity has not progressed too far in
this task. Free imaginations as sought through spiritual science means
imaginations not as they were in the third post-Atlantean age, but
unfettered and undistilled into fantasy. It means imaginations in
which man moves as freely as he does only in his intellect. That,
then, is the other task of the fifth post-Atlantean age. The
unfoldment of these two faculties will lead to a right development of
the consciousness soul in our present epoch.
Goethe had a beautiful understanding of this clear perception, which,
contrary to the materialistic point of view, he described as his
primal phenomenon (Urphänomen). You will find that
this has been dealt with at length in Goethe's writings, and I have
spoken of it in my explanation of the primal phenomenon. His is a
clear, pure perception of reality and of his primal phenomenon. Goethe
not only gave the first impulse for perceptions free of any visions
but also for free imaginations.* What he has given us in his
Faust, even though it has not yet gone far in the direction of
spiritual science, and in comparison with spiritual science is still
more or less instinctive, is nevertheless the first impulse to a free
imaginative life. It is no mere world of fantasy, yet we have seen how
deep this world of fantasy really is that develops in free
imaginations in the wonderful drama, Faust.
* This distinction between pure perception free of memory pictures and
visions on the one hand and an objective imagination which begins with
brain-free thinking on the other is developed in Boundaries of
Natural Science, Anthroposophic Press, 1983
So, over against this primal phenomenon, we have what Goethe calls
typical intellectual perception. You will find it described in detail
in my book,
The Riddle of Man.
This mode of thought must
continue to develop. The men of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch,
however, must not merely behold reality. They must be able to live
with reality. They must get busy, like Goethe, and, working in quite a
different way from that of the materialistic physicists, really make
such use of their laboratory apparatus that it produces the primal
phenomenon for them. They will then have to devise some way of getting
the primal phenomenon into practical life. As you know, it is at home
in, and holds sway throughout, nature. The intentions of humanity that
come from free imaginations will have to be included in this primal
phenomenon of nature. On the one hand, men will have to direct their
gaze quite selflessly to the outer world to work in it and to gain
knowledge of it. On the other, by powerful application of their
personalities, they will have to bring it all into inner movement in
order to find the imaginations for outer activity and outer knowledge.
Gradually, the consciousness soul and its culture will achieve this
transformation.
There will certainly be onesidedness in this cultural epoch. That goes
without saying. Our cognition will direct its efforts only outwards,
as in Bacon, or only inwards, as in Berkeley. We have already spoken
of this. The imaginative life welling up from within will not unfold
without all manner of disturbing influences. But even now we can point
to moments in this development when someone feels this free
imaginative life springing up in his soul. In these beginnings it is
still in great measure unfree, but we may see how so significant a man
as Jacob Boehme, quite soon after the fifth post-Atlantean age began,
felt how it was trying to develop in his soul. He brought this to
expression in his Aurora, and we can feel as we read it how
imaginative life was working within him. It must become free; Boehme
still feels it to be a little unfree. Nevertheless, he knew it was a
divine creative thing that was working in him. So Boehme was, in a
sense, at the opposite pole to Bacon, whose endeavor always directed
his attention to the external world. Jacob Boehme, however, was
entirely engrossed in the world within, and described this world
beautifully in the Aurora:
I declare before God, he says because he is speaking of
his inner soul, that I do not know how it comes to pass in
me. He means by this how the imaginations arise in him.
Without feeling the impulse of the will, I also don't know what
I have to write.
This is how Boehme speaks of the uprising of imaginations in himself.
He detects the beginning of forces that must grow continually stronger
in the men of the fifth post-Atlantean age.
I declare before God that I do not know how it comes to pass in
me. Without feeling the impulse of the will, I also don't know what I
have to write. The spirit dictates to me in a great and marvelous
knowledge what I write, so that often I do not know whether I am in
this world with my spirit, and I rejoice exceedingly that sure and
continuous knowledge is thus vouchsafed to me.
Boehme describes the instreaming of the imaginative world. We can see
that he feels harmony and rest in his soul, and he describes how men's
souls shall, in the normal and right progress of their evolution, let
themselves be taken hold of by these inner forces, which are to grow
stronger in them in the fifth post-Atlantean age. But one must take
possession of them in the pure inner being of the spirit and thereby
avoid devious paths. In the seventeenth century one had to speak of
these forces much in the way that Boehme, who spoke as a man
completely and utterly devoted to divine righteousness, did.
The entire aim in the work of the luciferic and ahrimanic powers in
the fifth post-Atlantean age, concerning both the perception of the
primal phenomenon and the development of free imaginations, is to
hinder these forces from arising in man. The luciferic and ahrimanic
powers are working in this fifth post-Atlantean age to disturb these
forces in the human soul, to employ them to a wrong end, thus bringing
men's souls out of the earth sphere to establish a new sphere of their
own. Many things must work together to disturb the right, quiet and
slow unfolding of these forces. Note well that I say the quiet and
slow unfolding because the entire period of 2,160 years, starting in
1413 A.D., should be used for the gradual unfoldment of the forces I
have named, that is, free imaginations and the gradual development of
working with primal phenomena. At intervals by fits and starts,
as it were the luciferic and ahrimanic powers throw the whole
weight of their opposition against this right evolution. When we bear
in mind that everything is prepared for by the world beyond the earth
long before it happens, we shall then not be surprised to find
preparations being made to bring the strongest possible forces of
opposition against the normal evolution of humanity.
We have already seen how the luciferic and ahrimanic powers poured
what they had developed in Atlantean times into Greece and Rome. Now,
in an altered form, they have tried to repeat these efforts before the
arrival of the fifth post-Atlantean age. You will not be surprised
when I say that for this fifth post-Atlantean age, too, a powerful
impetus had to be present bearing along with it the after workings, in
a luciferic and ahrimanic sense, from Atlantis. We know that the
Atlantean influences spread out from a region that was called Atlantis
even by Plato. Let us make a diagram and imagine Atlantis here, then
over here on the right would be Europe and Asia, and here on the left
would be America. The old Atlantean forces, including the old
luciferic and ahrimanic forces, spread out from Atlantis. Some part of
these Atlantean forces, however, was held
back, and it came to work in our fifth post-Atlantean age as luciferic
and ahrimanic forces. That is, some part of the good forces, which
were good and right in Atlantean times, have been carried over to our
time to become luciferic and ahrimanic forces. Only the center was
transferred to another region.
Atlantis, as we know, is gone and the center transposed to Asia. You
must imagine it on the reverse side of my drawing and the effects of
the old Atlantean culture spreading out from it as a preparation for
the fifth post-Atlantean age.
Its intent was to lucifericize and ahrimanicize it. It was actually
the descendants of the old Atlantean teachers who were now working
from a place in Asia. A priest there had been educated to behold
to have a belated vision, as it were, of what the Atlanteans
called the Great Spirit, and to receive his commands.
These the priest communicated to a young man of remarkable energy and
strength who, by virtue of this authority, received the name The
Great Ruler of the Earth from his community. This was Genghis
Khan. The Great Spirit, through his follower and through that priest,
gave to Genghis Khan the command to summon all the powers of Asia to
spread the influence that would lead the fifth post-Atlantean age back
into a luciferic form. These forces and they were far more
powerful than the forces established in Greek culture were all
employed to this end. Free imaginations were to be changed into old,
visionary imaginations. Every effort was to be made to lull the soul
of man to sleep in a dim and dreamy experience of imaginations instead
of a free experience filled through and through with clear
understanding.
With the help of the special forces that had been preserved from
Atlantis, it was the intended purpose to carry an influence into the
West that would make its culture visionary. Then it would have become
possible to separate the souls of men from the earth and to form a new
continent, a new planetary body with them. All the unrest and
disturbance that came into the evolution of modern man through the
Mongolian invasions, everything connected with them that has gone on
working into the fifth post-Atlantean epoch all this unrest,
which was prepared long ago, is nothing more than the great attempt
that is being made from Asia to bring about a visionary European
culture. It would cut it off from the conditions of its further
evolution and lead it altogether away from the earth, just as the East
has experienced again and again this feeling of being filled with
vision and of wanting to be estranged from the earth.
Something was needed to counterbalance this tendency. An opposite
trend had to be created as a counterforce that moves in the direction
of the normal evolution of mankind. The influence of Genghis Khan's
priest was intended to bring about a kind of buoyancy and lightness in
the human race that would draw man away from the earth. Over against
this, a corresponding heaviness had to come to man from the weight of
the earth; this was provided through the discovery of the western
world. America, with all that it holds, was discovered and thereby
earth heaviness, the desire to remain on earth, was given to man. The
discovery of America and everything connected with it, and the way man
carried his life into the many new places of the earth, all this, when
seen in wider connections, shows itself as a counterbalancing force to
the activity of Genghis Khan. America had to be discovered so that man
might be brought to grow closer to the earth, to grow more and more
materialistic. Man needed weight and heaviness to counterbalance the
spiritualization that was the aim of the descendants of the
Great Spirit.
Along with this normal process whereby the scene of action of man's
life was extended to America, we find the other forces, the ahrimanic
powers of the Great Spirit, intervening again. An
influence came from America to Europe, and another came to permeate
America from Asia. Thus, normal forces developed through the discovery
of America and also powerful ahrimanic onslaughts. They worked less
strongly at first, but will continue to work in our time and on into
the future. We must learn to recognize these ahrimanic forces.
What Rome had achieved in the Church and in the ecclesiastical state
was grasped by the ahrimanic influence. While it is comparatively easy
to see how the luciferic influence worked on Genghis Khan we
have exact knowledge of the fact that a priest was initiated by the
follower of the Great Spirit it is much more
difficult to say how the ahrimanic spirit worked. This is because the
ahrimanic influence is dispersed and scattered. But you need only
study how Spain, strictly Roman Catholic as it was, was fascinated by
all the treasures of gold that were discovered in America. What a hold
it had upon her! You can observe how strong the specter-like working
of the old Romanism still was in such a ruler as Ferdinand of Castile
or Charles V, the ruler of the kingdom over which the sun never
set. Study the reaction of Europe to the gradual discovery and
opening up of America and you will see what temptations came from that
direction. Taken all in all, it is a history of temptation woven in
with a history that runs a normal course.
Please do not go about saying that I have presented the discovery of
America as an ahrimanic deed. In reality, I have said the very
opposite. I have said that America had to be discovered and that the
entire event was necessary to the progress of the world. Ahrimanic
forces entered, however, and set themselves in violent opposition to
what was happening quite rightly in the normal course of progress.
Things are not so simple that we can say, There is Lucifer, and
there is Ahriman; they act and behave in such and such a way, and
divide the world between them. Things are by no means so simple
as that.
We find, therefore, many forces working together when we set out to
listen to them in their field of action behind the physical plane.
These forces take possession of other forces. They try to seize the
forces in man that have continued on from the fourth post-Atlantean
epoch in order to distort them and make them serve their ends. Look at
a man like Machiavelli. You will find in him the symbol for the
politicizing of thought that begins in the Renaissance. He is a
veritable revelation of the whole process. He was a great and powerful
spirit but one who, under the onslaught of the forces of which I have
told you, brings to a new life again the complete attitude of thought
and mind that has its source in the heathen Rome of ancient times. You
have a true picture of Machiavelli when you study the history of his
time and see him, not as a single personality, but as the outstanding
expression of many who think in the same way. In him you can observe
these forces trying to charge forward with all speed, bringing to
their assistance the atavistic and thus luciferic forces
that have been left behind. Had things gone as Machiavelli intended,
all of Europe would have become nothing but a political machine.
Opposing the violent onslaught of such forces are the forces that work
in the normal direction. Over against a figure like Machiavelli, who
was purely political and turned all man's thought into political
thinking, we can place another great figure, Thomas à Kempis, who was
also Machiavelli's contemporary. He stands entirely within the slow
and gradual evolution, working slowly and gradually. He was anything
but a man of politics.
So we can follow the several streams in history. We shall find normal
streams, and we shall also find currents that flow from earlier times
and are made use of by the forces of which I have told you. Many
forces work together in history and it is important to observe and
study their connections. A man like Jacob Boehme felt free
imaginations rising within him. We can say of such a man that he
fortified himself against the attacks of Lucifer and Ahriman through
the whole character of his life of soul and succeeded in going
undisturbed along the straight path of evolution.
East of Europe, however, in all the culture of the East, we find an
untold number of people who suffer greatly under the disturbing
influence of Lucifer. His influence is, as we know, to draw man again
and again away from the earth, to draw him right out of his physical
body so that he shall perpetually fall into a state where he becomes
no more than a vision of himself and is completely soul. That is the
tendency that has been grafted onto Eastern Europe.
The feeling of being drawn in the other direction was given to the
West. The world of imagination was pulled down into the heavy physical
body so that what should rightly be free imagination working merely in
the soul becomes instead something that rams the soul down into the
organism, thereby causing the organism also to live on imaginations.
You can hardly find a more telling description of what I mean than in
the words of Alfred de Musset in which he attempts to give us a
picture of the condition of his soul. De Musset is one who feels the
presence of the imaginative life in himself, but he also feels the
onslaught upon this life of imagination that seeks to thrust it right
down into the bodily nature. This life of imagination, which does not
belong in the bodily nature but should develop freely, hovering in and
existing purely as a thing of the soul, is there taken hold of by
earthly gravity and by what belongs to the body. In his book, Elle
et Lui, which he was led to write from his relation with Georges
Sand, you will find a fine description of his soul life. I would like
to quote here a passage that will serve to show how he feels himself
to be placed within an imaginative life that is the scene of conflict
and dispute. He says:
Creation disturbs and bewilders me; it sets me trembling. Execution,
always too slow for my desire, starts my heart beating wildly.
Weeping, and restraining myself with difficulty from crying out, I
give birth to an idea. In the moment of its birth it intoxicates me,
but next morning it fills me with loathing. If I try to modify and
change it, it only gets worse and escapes me altogether. It would be
better for me to forget it and wait for another. But now this other
comes upon me in such bewilderment and in such boundless dimensions
that my poor being cannot grasp it. It oppress me, tortures me, until
it can be realized. Then come the other sufferings, the birth throes,
really physical pains that I am quite unable to define. Such is my
life when I let myself be ruled by this giant artist who is in me.
Note the contrast with Boehme, who feels the God in him. With
de Musset it is a giant artist.
It were better that I live as I have resolved, committing excesses of
every kind in order to kill this gnawing worm, which others modestly
call inspiration and I quite often openly call illness.
Almost every single sentence of this quote can be matched with a
sentence in our quotation from Boehme. How singularly typical!
Remember what I said just now, that normal evolution seeks to progress
slowly. We shall have more to say about this tomorrow. Here, as
described by de Musset, it is a Wild charge; it cannot be fast enough.
The picture he gives us as he surveys himself is marvelous.
Creation disturbs and bewilders me; it sets me atremble,
he says, because this to will go faster and faster and comes storming
in upon him from the ahrimanic side, disturbing what is still trying
to progress slowly.
Execution, always too slow for my desire, starts my heart
beating wildly. Here you have the whole psychology of the man
who wants to live in free imaginations and is distressed and vexed by
the onslaught of ahrimanic forces.
Weeping and restraining myself with difficult from crying
out... Think of it! The imaginations work so physically in him
that he feels like crying out when they find expression in him.
I give birth to an idea. In the moment of its birth it
intoxicates me, but next morning it fills me with loathing. This
because it comes from his organism and not from his soul!
If I try to modify and change it, it only gets worse and escapes
me altogether. Better I forget it and wait for another. Here he
wants perpetually to go faster, faster than normal evolution can go.
But now this other comes upon me in such bewilderment and in
such boundless dimensions that my poor being cannot grasp it. It
oppresses me, tortures me, until it can be realized. Then come the
other sufferings, the birth throes, actual physical pains that I am
quite unable to define. Then, when he beholds this giant artist
that works within him, he says he would rather follow the life he has
marked out for himself; that is, have nothing to do with this whole
imaginative world, because he calls it an illness.
Now take by way of contrast, the saying of Jacob Boehme, I
declare before God, I myself do not know how it comes to pass in
me. Here you have an expression of joy and bliss. Confusion and
bewilderment, on the other hand, can be heard in the words of de
Musset, Creation disturbs and bewilders me; it sets me
trembling. Execution, always too slow for my desire, starts my heart
beating wildly.
With Boehme all is of the soul and, when he wants to write, he does
not feel as though a giant artist, who makes him unhappy, were
dictating to him, but a spirit. He feels that he is transported into
the world where the spirit dictates to him. He is in this world and he
is supremely happy to be there because a continuous stream of
knowledge is given him that flows slowly and steadily on. Boehme is
inclined to receive this slow stream of knowledge. He does not find it
too slow because he is not overwhelmed by the swift attacking force I
have described to you. On the contrary, he is protected from it.
If time permitted, we could present many more instances of ways in
which individual human beings are situated in the world process. The
examples I have selected are from those whose names have been
preserved in history but, in a sense, all of mankind is subject to
these same conditions in one way or another. I have only chosen these
particular examples in order to express what is really widespread, and
by taking special cases I have been able to give you a description of
it in words. If you will try to make a survey of what we have been
saying, you will then be able to understand much of what has come
about in the course of evolution.
It would be quite possible in this connection to study many other
phenomena of life. If, however, we confine ourselves today to the
spiritual life, and moreover to that special region of the spiritual
life comprising knowledge and cognition, we shall be able to find in
it qualities that are characteristic of modern man, the recognition of
which will make many things in life comprehensible. Since it is not
possible to say much about the external life of today, owing to the
existing prejudices and because men's souls are so deeply bound up
with the conditions of the times in which they live, you will readily
understand that it is only in a limited way that I can speak of the
things that are carrying their influence right into the immediate
present. It cannot be otherwise, as I have frequently made clear to
you. I would like, however, to indicate certain phenomena of our time
that are less calculated to arouse passions and emotions. Let me
describe some phenomena that I will select from the life of cognition
and feeling. I think you will find them underlying all I have been
saying about the forces at work in this fifth post-Atlantean epoch. We
will first consider these phenomena in a purely historical way in
order afterward to see their relation to these forces.
Let us take first a phenomenon in which we all necessarily feel the
deepest interest. The kind of understanding men have of the nature and
being of Christ is of great significance, and so we will select
examples of various kinds of understanding of His nature and being
that lie near at hand. We have first of all a modern instance in
Ernest Renan's The Life of Jesus, which appeared in the 19th
century and went rapidly through many editions. I believe the
twentieth appeared in 1900 after his death. Then we have The Life
of Jesus, which is really no life of Jesus at all, by David
Friedrich Strauss. Then we have we cannot say, a life of Jesus,
but coming from the east of Europe it is a view and conception of
Christ that is of deep significance. It is not a life of Jesus but an
understanding of Christ that culminates in what Soloviev wrote about
Him and His part in the evolution of the earth. How significant are
these three expressions of the spiritual life of the nineteenth
century: The Life of Jesus by Renan, The Life of Jesus
by Strauss, which is no life of Jesus at all and we shall presently
hear why, and Soloviev's conception of the meaning of the Christ event
in the evolution of the earth, for it is true, at any rate, to say
that all of his work culminates in the Christ idea.
What is the fundamental premise of Renan's description of Jesus' life?
If you want to appreciate rightly Renan's book, to understand it as a
document of the times, then you must compare it with the earlier
presentations of Jesus' life. Nor do you need to read only the
literary accounts of His life; you can also look at the paintings of
artists. You will find that the representation of the life of Jesus
always takes the same path. In the early centuries of Roman
Christianity, it was not only Christianity that was taken over from
the East but also the manner in which Jesus was presented. The Greek
art of pictorial representation was there in the West, as we know, but
the ability to portray the Christ remained with the East. The Jesus
countenance that is characteristic of Byzantine art was found
repeatedly in the West until, in the thirteenth century, national
impulses and ideas began to arise those national ideas and
impulses that later work themselves out in the way I have indicated in
these last lectures.
Owing to the national impulse, a gradual change came about in the
traditional stereotyped Jesus countenance that had been portrayed so
long. Each of several nations appropriated the Jesus type and
represented Him in its own way, and so we must recognize many
different impulses at work in the different representations. Study,
for example, the head of Jesus as painted by
Guido Reni,
Murillo,
and
LeBrun,
and you will see how strikingly the national point of view
steals in. These are only three instances that one could select. In
each case there is a strong desire to represent Jesus in a national
way. One has the impression that in
Guido Reni's,
paintings, to a far
greater degree than was the case with his predecessors, we can detect
the Italian type in the countenance of Jesus; similarly, in Murillo's
representations, the Spanish; in LeBrun's, the French. All three
painters show evidence as well of the working of church tradition;
behind every one of their paintings stands the power of the Church.
Contrarily, you will find a resistance to this far reaching power of
the Church, which we recognize in the art of
Murillo,
Lebrun,
and
Reni,
in the works of
Rubens,
van Dyck,
and
Rembrandt
a resistance to
it and a working in freedom out of their own pure humanity.
Considering art in respect of its representations of the Jesus
countenance, you have here direct artistic rebellion. You will now see
that there is no standing still in this progression in the
representation of Jesus because the forces that are at work in the
world work also right into this domain. We can see how the breath of
Romanism hovers over the paintings of the nationally minded
LeBrun,
Murillo,
and
Reni,
and how in
Rubens,
van Dyck,
and especially
Rembrandt,
the opposition to Romanism comes to such clear expression
in their paintings of faces, not of Jesus alone but also of other
Biblical characters. So we see how all the spiritual activities of man
gradually take form among the various impulses that make themselves
felt in human evolution.
Similarly, you would find that in the times when painting and
representative art have given place to the word, for since the
sixteenth century the word has had the same significance in such
matters as pictorial representation had in earlier times, you will
find that the figure of Jesus, of the Christ, is again continually
changing. It is never fixed and constant but is always conceived
according to how the various forces flow together in writers. Standing
there before us as the latest products, let us say, we have the Jesus
of Renan, the Jesus of Strauss, who is no Jesus, and the Christ of
Soloviev. These are the latest products and how vastly different they
are!
The Jesus of Renan is entirely a Jesus who, as a man, lives in the
land of Palestine as a human historical figure. Palestine itself is
marvelously depicted. With the aid of the best of modern scholarship
it is described in such a way that one has before one the complete
Palestinian landscape with its people. Wandering about this
realistically rendered landscape and among its people is the figure of
Jesus. The attempt is made to explain this Jesus figure on the basis
of this landscape and its inhabitants; to explain how he grows up and
becomes a man, and to explain how it was possible for such a man to
arise in this land. The outstanding character of Renan's description
will only be revealed when we compare it with earlier accounts and
representations. These take the inner course of the events described
in the Gospels and place them in a landscape that is really nowhere in
particular. The facts as they are described in the Gospels are simply
related over and over again and the landscape in which they occurred
is totally disregarded. It is depicted in such a way that it might be
anywhere.
Renan, however, goes to work to portray the Holy Land in a realistic,
detailed way so that Jesus becomes a true Palestinian in this Holy
Land. Christ Jesus, who should belong to all of mankind, becomes a
Jesus who lives and walks in Palestine as an historical figure who is
to be understood in relation to the Palestine of the years 1 to 33
A.D., that is, understood from the customs, views, opinions and
landscape of the country a right proper, realistic description.
For once, Jesus was to be shown as an historical person and was to be
described as any other in history. For Renan, it would have been
meaningless to portray an abstract Socrates who might have lived
anywhere, anytime, and it would have been equally meaningless for him
to portray an abstract Jesus who might have lived anywhere on earth.
In complete accord with the science of the nineteenth century, he sets
out to depict Jesus as an historical figure living between the years 1
and 33 A.D., and made absolutely comprehensible by the conditions
prevailing in Palestine at that time. Jesus lived from the year 1 to
33 A.D. He died in 33 A.D., just as any other man might have died in
this or that year. If He continues to work in the world, it is in the
same way any other dead person might have continued to work. Fitted
completely into the modern point of view, Jesus was an historical
personality accounted for by the milieu in which He lived. That is
what Ernest Renan gives us in his Life of Jesus.
Now let us turn to the Life of Jesus that is in reality no life
of Jesus by David Friedrich Strauss. I have said it is no life
of Jesus. Strauss also works as a highly cultured and learned man.
When he sets out to investigate anything, he does so with thoroughness
akin to that of Renan in his domain. Strauss, however, does not turn
his attention to the historical Jesus. He is, for him, only the figure
to which he attaches something quite different. Thus, Strauss
investigates all that was said of Jesus insofar as He was the Christ.
He examines what is said about His miraculous entry into the world,
His wonderful and miraculous development, His expression of great and
special teachings, and how He undergoes suffering, death and
resurrection. These are the accounts in the Gospels that Strauss
selects for investigation.
Naturally, Renan, too, used the Gospels but he reduced them to what
he, from his detailed and exact knowledge of Palestine, could conceive
of the life of Jesus. This approach has no interest at all for
Strauss. He tells himself that the Gospels relate this or that
concerning Christ, who lived in Jesus. Then he sets out to investigate
the extent to which what is related of the Christ has also been living
as myth in other parts of the world, for instance, how the story that
is told of a miraculous birth and the development of Jesus Christ is
to be found in various other folk myths, as is also the Mystery of
Golgotha, which is referred now the one god and then to another. Thus,
Strauss sees in the figure of the historical Jesus only the
opportunity for concentrating the myth forming activity of mankind
into one personality. Jesus does not concern him at all. The only
value He has for Strauss is that the myths, which are distributed all
over the world, are concentrated in this single man Jesus. They are
all hung on Him, as it were. These myths, however, all spring from a
common impulse. All of them bear witness to the myth forming power
that lives in mankind. Where does this myth forming power arise?
As Strauss sees it, in the course of mankind's earthly development,
from the times of the first beginnings of the earth to its final end,
mankind has and always will have a higher power in it than the merely
external power that develops on the physical plane. A power runs right
through mankind that will forever address itself to the super-earthly;
this super-earthly finds expression in myths. We know that man bears
something super-sensible within him that seeks to find expression in
myth since it cannot be expressed in external physical science. Thus,
Strauss does not see Jesus in the single individual, but rather the
Christ in all men the Christ who has lived in and through all
men since their beginning, and who has brought it about that myths are
told of Him. In the case of Jesus it is only that His personality
gives occasion for the myth forming power to develop with extreme
force and strength. In Him it is concentrated. Strauss, therefore,
speaks of a Jesus that is in reality no Jesus, but he fastens upon Him
the spiritual Christ force that lives in all humanity. For Strauss,
mankind itself is the Christ, and He works always before and after
Jesus. The true incarnation of the Christ is not the single Jesus, but
the whole of humanity. Jesus is only the supreme representative for
the representation of the Christ in mankind.
The main thing in all this is not Jesus as an historical figure, but
an abstract mankind. Christ has become an idea, which incarnates in
and through all mankind. That is the kind of highly distilled thought
that a man of the nineteenth century is able to conceive! The element
of life in the idea has become the Christ. He is conceived entirely as
an idea and Jesus is passed by. This is a life of Jesus that is no
more than a record of the fact that the idea, the divine, incarnates
continually in all humanity. Christ is diluted down to an idea, is
thought of merely as an idea.
So much for the second life of Jesus, The life of Jesus by
David Friedrich Strauss. So we have Ernest Renan's Life of
Jesus. which sets forth the historical figure of Jesus amidst the
individuals around Him as well as by Himself. Then we have in
Strauss's book the idea of Christ, which runs through all
mankind. In this highly distilled form, however, it remains a mere
abstraction.
When we come to Soloviev, behold, Jesus is no more, but only the
Christ. Nevertheless, it is the Christ conceived as living. Not
working in men as an idea, with the consequence that its power is
transformed in him into a myth, but rather working as a living Being
who has no body, is always and ever present among men, and is, in
effect, positively responsible for the external organization of human
life, the founder of the social order. Christ, who is forever present;
a living Being who would never have needed a Jesus in order to come
among men. Naturally, you will not find this so radically expressed in
Soloviev, but that is of no account. It is the Christ as such Who
stands always in the foreground the Christ, moreover, as the
living One who can only be comprehended in imagination, but by this
means can be truly understood as a real and actual super-sensible Being
working on earth.
There you have the three figures. The same Being meets us in the
nineteenth century in a threefold description. The Life of
Jesus by Ernest Renan, completely realistic; realistic history
a fortiori; Jesus as an historical figure; a book that is
written with all the learning of the nineteenth century. Then came
David Friedrich Strauss with this idea of mankind, working on, running
through all mankind, but remaining an idea, never awakening to life.
Lastly, Soloviev's Christ; living power, living wisdom, altogether
spiritual.
A realistic life of Jesus by Renan; an idealistic life of Jesus by
Strauss that is also an idealistic presentation of the Christ impulse;
a spiritual presentation of the Christ impulse by Soloviev.
Today, I want to place before you, side by side as three expressions
of modern life, these three ways of cognizing the figure of Jesus
Christ. Tomorrow we shall see how they take their place among the
various impulses that we have recognized as working in mankind.
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