LECTURE
VII.
THE
MYSTERIES OF HIBERNIA
Dornach,
December 7, 1923.
I
HAD to speak to you last time of the Ephesian Mysteries of Artemis in
order to draw your attention to certain connections between that
which in the course of human evolution has become known, and that
which today can be re-discovered through insight into the spiritual
world. In order to amplify the theme already treated, I should like
to speak today of another Mystery Centre which also stands in a
certain sense at the starting-point of modern spiritual life, in that
it has given impulses to this modern spiritual movement, and yet has
taken over much from the older spiritual movements in which the
primeval wisdom of man was enshrined. I wish to speak of those
Mystery Centres and their keynote-giving impulses, once to be found
on the island of Ireland, the Mysteries of Hibernia concerning which
indications are given in my
Mystery Plays.
It is relatively much harder to approach in the Akashic
Record (to which I have often referred in my writings), it is
relatively much harder to approach the ancient Mystery Centres of
Hibernia, that much-tried island to the West of England, to call up
in meditative vision the pictures which are imprinted in the Eternal
Record, than it is in the case of the other Mystery Centres. For when
these Mystery Centres of Hibernia are approached with inner vision
one receives the impression that the pictures of these Centres
possess extraordinarily repelling forces, forces which push one back.
Yet if one goes forward with some degree of courage in such matters
these repelling forces are through such courage not so hard to
overcome as in other similar cases; they offer nevertheless, even to
a courageous spiritual gaze resistance which produces, I might say, a
kind of bewilderment. So that it is only against obstruction that one
can arrive at that which I shall now describe. You will see during
the next few days why there had to be such obstruction to knowledge.
In these Mystery Centres there were of course Initiates,
who had received the old primeval wisdom of humanity, and who, moved
and inspired up to a certain stage by this primeval wisdom, could
attain to a kind of insight of their own. And there were pupils,
candidates for Initiation, in the particular way in which instruction
was given in that place, who were led on to the Cosmic Word. Now, if
we look into the preparation which, first of all, the candidates
received in Hibernia, we find that this preparation consisted in two
things. The first was, that those who were to be prepared were led to
face in their souls all the difficulties of knowledge. All that
which, I may say, may be the torture of the path of knowledge —
not that path of knowledge which leads into the depths of existence,
but that path which simply requires that we shall intensify our
everyday consciousness as strongly as is possible to each one of us —
all the difficulties which offer themselves to the ordinary
consciousness on this path of knowledge were brought before the souls
of the pupils. All the doubts, all the troubles, all the inner
striving and the frequent catastrophes of this inner striving, the
becoming disillusioned through Logic and Dialectic, be these ever so
good, all this had to be gone through. The pupils had to go through
all that we experience as difficulties if we have really gained
knowledge and then wish to put it into words.
You can realize that it is one thing to have attained a
truth and quite another thing to be able to express it, to formulate
it. Treading earnestly the path of knowledge we always have the
feeling that that which we can clamp into words is something no
longer strictly true, it is truth wedged between all kinds of cliffs
and pitfalls.
All that can be thus experienced, which he only knows
who has really trodden the path of striving after knowledge, all this
was to be experienced by the pupils.
The second thing that they had to experience in their
souls was how little of that which by the usual way of consciousness
can become knowledge contributes to human happiness, how little
Logic, Dialectic, Rhetoric can contribute to human happiness. On the
other hand it was shown to these pupils that man, if he would keep
his balance in life, must take part in that which to a certain extent
will bring him joy and happiness. Thus the pupils were driven on the
one side near to one abyss, and on the other side near to another
abyss, and always forced as if to doubt and to wait till a bridge had
been built for them over each abyss. And they were so deeply
initiated into the doubts and difficulties of knowledge that by the
time they were led from this preparation actually to enter the Cosmic
Mysteries they had come to the conclusion: if it must be so, then we
will renounce all knowledge, we will renounce all that cannot bring
happiness to man.
In all cases in the ancient Mysteries men were subjected
to stern tests, and were actually brought to the point where in the
most natural and simple way they developed feelings which ordinary
commonplace reasoning considers as without foundation. It is easy to
say: No one wishes to renounce knowledge, it stands to reason that
man desires to get knowledge, even if it presents great difficulties.
This is what people quite naturally say who do not know the
difficulties, and who are not led systematically into these
difficulties as were the pupils of the Mysteries in Hibernia.
It is also easy to say: Man is willing to renounce inner
happiness as well as outer happiness and wishes only to pursue the
path of knowledge. But to him who understands these things as they
are, both these dicta, so often heard, are altogether beside the
mark.
When the pupils had been prepared up to the grade
required they were led before two colossal statues, before two great,
mighty, majestic statues. The one was more majestic on account of its
huge dimensions, the other was equally large but it was in addition
impressive through its peculiar aspect. One statue was a male form,
the other female.
Through these statues the pupils experienced the
approach of the Cosmic Word. These statues were to them, as it were,
the external letters by means of which they must begin to decipher
the Cosmic Secret placed before men.
One of the statues, the male statue, was of wholly
elastic material, compressible in every part. The pupils were made to
press the statue in every part. Through this action, it revealed
itself to them as hollow. It was in fact only the skin of a statue
made of elastic material, so that after being pressed it regained the
same shape.
Over this statue, over the head of this statue which was
peculiarly characteristic, over the head there was something which
represented the Sun.
The whole head was such that one saw it must really be
as a Soul-Eye. The head as Soul-Eye represented microcosmically the
content of the whole macrocosm. This manifestation of the whole
macrocosm came to expression through the Sun in this colossal head.
One of the statues then made the impression directly
upon the pupil: Here the macrocosm works through the Sun and forms
the human head, which knows what are the impulses of the macrocosm
and forms itself inwardly and outwardly according to these impulses
of the macrocosm.
The other statue was such that first of all the eyes of
the pupil fell on something like bodies of light raying inwards with
light. And in the midst the pupil then saw a female form, standing
wholly under the influence of these rays. And the feeling came to him
that the head was created out of these rays. There was something
indefinite about the head.
This statue was of another substance, a plastic
substance, not elastic but plastic and extraordinarily soft. The
pupil was made to press it also. Every pressure he made remained.
Only always between one time when the pupil was tested before this
statue and the next time the indentations he had made were corrected.
So that whenever the pupils were led to the same ceremony before this
statue the statue was always intact again. In the case of the other
statue, the elastic one, the whole form recovered itself of its own
accord.
The impression received in the case of the second statue
was that it stood wholly under the influence of the moon-forces which
permeated the organism and caused the head to grow out of the
organism. An extraordinarily powerful impression was made on the
pupils by what they thus experienced. They were often brought before
this statue; each time the indentations were corrected. Often a group
of pupils were led, at not too long intervals, before this statue.
When they were led before this statue on the first
occasions soundless silence prevailed around them. They were led up
to the statue by those already initiated and were then left, the door
of the temple behind being shut. They were left in their solitude.
Then came a time when each pupil was taken by himself
and made to test the statue, to experience for himself the Elasticity
of the first, and in the second case the plasticity in which the
indentations he had made remained. Then he was left alone by himself
with the impression, which as I have already indicated was working
powerfully, most powerfully upon him. And through all that he had
formerly, gone through along the path which I have described to you,
in which all difficulties as regards knowledge, all difficulties as
regards happiness were experienced, there arose in the pupil a
certain longing. Indeed, to experience such things signifies much
more than the mere words which I now use express. Such experience
signifies that one goes through a complete scale of sensations, and
these sensations caused the pupil to have the most vivid longing when
he was brought before these two statues, that what appeared to him as
a great riddle should in some way or other become solved in his soul,
that he should get to understand the nature of this riddle — on
the one hand that he should understand the nature of this riddle, and
on the other hand the problem as to what lay in the forms and in the
whole manner in which he was to relate himself to them. All this
worked in a deep, strangely deep way upon the pupils. And they stood
before the statues in their whole soul and in their whole spirit as,
I might say, a colossal question-mark. Everything in them was a
question, Reason asked, the heart asked, the will asked, everything,
everything asked. The man of today can still learn from these things,
which were brought perceptibly before the mind in former ages, things
which today can no longer be brought perceptibly before the mind in
this way and used for Initiation, he can still learn what a scale of
sensations one must go through in order really to approach the truth,
truth which then leads into the secrets of the world. For even if the
right way today for the student is to go through these things by an
inner path of development, outwardly imperceptible to the senses, it
still remains a fact that the modern student must go through the same
scale of sensations, must struggle in himself through these
sensations in inner meditative experience. Thus the same scale of
sensations can be experienced by him which was gone through in the
old manner of civilization, in those old times by men who were to be
initiated.
When this was gone through, the pupils were led through
a kind of probation in which both experiences worked together, on the
one side, that which they had previously gone through in the
preparation stage on the ordinary path of knowledge and on the
ordinary path of happiness, and on the other side, what had become in
them a great question of the whole mind, indeed of the whole man.
These then had to work together.
And now, because they had inwardly realized the working
together of these experiences, they were led as far as possible at
that time before the Cosmic Mysteries of the Microcosm, and of the
Macrocosm, before something of that Union which we have touched upon
in these lectures, which formed the content of the Artemis Mysteries
of Ephesus, a part of which was brought before the pupils during a
kind of Probation-time. Thereby the great question in the minds of
the pupils became intensified. So that the pupil, through the
tremendous deepening which his mind experienced and endured, was
actually led in this question form to the Spiritual world. In actual
fact his experience brought him into that region which the soul
experiences when it feels: I stand now before the Power which guards
the Threshold.
In earlier times of humanity there were the most
different kinds of Mysteries, and men were led in the most different
ways to that which we must feel in the words: Now I am standing on
the threshold of the spiritual world. I know why this spiritual world
is guarded from ordinary consciousness, and I know wherein lies the
Being of the protecting Power, the Guardian of the Threshold.
After the pupils had gone through this time of Probation
they were led again before the statue. They then received a quite
remarkable impression, an impression which in actual fact shook their
whole inner being. I can only represent the impression to you by
rendering what was practised in that ancient language into modern
speech.
When the pupils had advanced as far as I have described
each one was again taken singly before the statue. But now the
initiating priest, the Initiator, remained with the pupil in the
temple. And now the pupil saw, after he once again in soundless
silence had listened to that which his own soul could say to him
after all his preparation and testing, after a still longer time had
elapsed, he saw his initiating priest as if rising above the head of
the first statue. And it then appeared as if the sun were further
back, and in the space between the statue and the sun the priest
appeared as if covering the sun. The statues were very large so that
the priest, relatively small in size, only appeared here above the
head of the statue, the rest of him was below, to a certain extent
covering the sun. Then came forth as if out of a musical-harmonic
(the ceremony began with a musical-harmonic) the speech of the
initiator. And when the pupil was at this stage it seemed to him as
if the words which sounded from the lips of the Initiator were
pronounced by the statue. And the words sounded to him as follows:
Ich bin das Bild der Welt
Sieh wie das Sein mir fehlt
Ich lebe in deiner Erkenntnis
Ich werde in dir nun Bekenntnis.
I am the Image of the World
Behold, I lack Being
I live in thy knowledge
I become now in thee Consecration.
This too, made, as you may imagine, a powerful
impression on the pupil for he had been prepared for it through that
Power which came to meet him in the form of this statue, and which
said to him:—
Ich bin das Bild der Welt
Sieh, wie das Sein mir fehlt
Ich lebe in deiner Erkenntnis
Ich werde in dir nun Bekenntnis.
I am the Image of the World
Behold, I lack Being
I live in thy knowledge
I become now in thee Consecration.
Through his preparation as regards the difficulty of the
ordinary path of knowledge, he was also prepared to accept this Image
as something which released him from those difficulties, even though
he could not overcome in himself doubt as regards knowledge, and he
was brought to have the feeling that he could not overcome these
knowledge doubts. He was prepared inwardly, through the fact that all
this had passed through his soul, to cling, as it were, with his
whole soul to this Image, to live with the Cosmic Power which was
symbolized through this Image, to live with this Cosmic Power, to
give himself, so to speak, up to it. He was prepared for this because
he experienced that which now came from the mouth of the priest and
which seemed to him as if this statue were simply the written
character which placed before the pupil the meaning which lies in
these four lines.
After the priest had stepped back and the pupil was left
again in soundless silence, after the priest had gone out leaving the
pupil alone, a second Initiator came after a little time. This one
then appeared over that second statue and again out of a
musical-harmonic resounded the voice of this priest-initiator. And
this voice pronounced the words which I give to you as follows:—
Ich bin das Bild der Welt
Sieh, wie Wahrheit mir fehlt
Willst du mit mir zu leben wagen
So werd ich dir zum Behagen.
I am the Image of the World
Behold, I lack Truth,
If thou wilt dare to live with me
I will be thy Consolation.
And
now, after all these preparations, after indeed he had been led to
experience inner happiness, inner fullness — I would rather say
“inner fullness of joy” instead of “happiness,”
because the German word “Gluck” does not give the right
meaning — after the pupil, through all that he had experienced,
had been brought to feel the necessity that man should come to this
inner fullness of joy, now that he, hearing what the second statue
said to him, had felt this necessity, he was again on the point, not
only almost but actually on the point of recognizing the Cosmic Power
which spoke through this second statue as that Power to which he
wished to devote himself.
Again the Initiator vanished. Again the pupil was left
alone, and during this silence and solitude each one really felt in
himself — at least it appeared that each one felt something
which may perhaps be expressed in the following words I stand on the
threshold of the spiritual world. Here in this physical world there
is something we call knowledge, but it has really no value in the
spiritual world. And the difficulties which we have in the physical
world with regard to knowledge are only the physical reflection of
the worthlessness of the knowledge which in this physical world one
can gain of the super-sensible, of the spiritual world. So he had the
feeling: Many say to me here in the physical world, ‘You must
renounce the inner fullness of joy, you must tread the path of
asceticism in order to enter the spiritual world,’ but that is
really illusion, that is deception. For that which appears in this
second statue says itself expressly: “Behold, I lack Truth.”
Thus the pupil, on the threshold of knowledge came near to the
feeling: One must struggle through to the inner joyful fullness of
soul, of mind, shutting out that which here in the physical world
through weak human striving, bound up with the physical body, is
longed for as truth. The pupils had indeed the feeling that on that
side of the threshold things must look quite otherwise than here on
this side, that much that is valued on this side is worthless on
that, and that even such things as knowledge and truth present a
wholly different appearance on the other side of the threshold.
All these were experiences which called forth in the
pupil the consciousness that he had reached beyond many illusions and
disappointments in the physical world. But there were also feelings
which from time to time were like inwardly active flames of fire. So
that he felt himself as if consumed by inner fire, as if inwardly
annihilated. And the soul swung backwards and forwards between one
feeling and the other. The pupil was, so to speak, tested in the
balances of knowledge and happiness. While he went through this inner
experience it was to him as if the statues themselves desired to
speak. He had now attained something like the Inner Word. It was as
if the statues themselves would speak. One statue said: I am
knowledge. But what I am has no Being. And now the pupil was wholly
filled one might say with this feeling of radiating fear: What man
has of ideas is only Idea; there is no Being in it. Let man exert his
human head — so the pupil felt — he certainly reaches
ideas but he never reaches Being. Ideas are illusion, not Being.
And the other statue, as if speaking, said: I am
Phantasy, but what I am has no Truth. Thus the two statues confronted
the pupil, the one statue represented that ideas have no Being, and
the other that the images of Phantasy have no Truth.
I beg you to understand here that nothing dogmatic is
being presented to you, no phrases are being coined to express any
truths or knowledge. The point is to give the experiences of the
pupil in the sanctuaries of Hibernia. The content of that which
stands in these sentences is not to be announced as a truth, but that
which in the moment of Initiation the pupil experienced in the
Hibernian Mysteries must now be written down.
All this the individual pupil experienced in absolute
loneliness. His inner experience was so powerful that his outer
senses functioned no longer. They functioned no longer. After a time
he no longer saw the statue. But he read as in letters of flame on
the place upon which he was gazing something indeed which was not
outwardly physical, but which he saw with terrific clearness. He read
there where he had seen before the head of the Knowledge-statue, he
read the word “Science,” and there where he had seen the
head of the other statue he read the word “Art.”
After he had experienced this he was led back through
the Temple door. The two Initiators again stood by the temple. One of
them directed the head of the pupil towards that which the other
Initiator pointed out — the Form of Christ.
And at the same time there fell words of warning. The
priest who had directed him to the Christ-picture said to him:
“Receive the Word and the Power of this Being into thy heart.”
And the other priest said: “And receive from Him what the two
Images wished to give thee — Science and Art.”
These were, so to speak, the first two Acts of the
Hibernian Initiation, the peculiar way in which, in Hibernia, the
pupils were led to the actual experience of the innermost Being of
Christianity.
And this stamped itself quite deeply into the souls and
minds of the pupils. And now, after they had imprinted this into
themselves, they could proceed further on their Path of Knowledge.
What has to be said, and can be said of this, we shall study in the
next few days in connection with other matters.
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