Lecture IV
April 22, 1924
We
have seen how the Mysteries provided human beings with a
conscious connection to the world in such a way that this
connection could be portrayed in the yearly cycle of festivals.
In particular we have seen how Easter developed out of the
principle of initiation. It should be obvious from all that has
been said that the Mysteries played a highly significant role
in humanity's development. Indeed, in ancient times
essentially all of humanity's spiritual life and
development originated within the Mysteries. To put it in
modern terms, the Mysteries wielded great power in the overall
guidance of spiritual life.
Human beings, however, were destined to achieve freedom, which
meant that the Mysteries' powerful influence had to
diminish and for a time leave human beings more or less
to their own devices. Although today it can hardly be said that
we have already achieved true inner freedom and are ready to
proceed with the next evolutionary step, still a significant
number of people have gone through incarnations in which the
power of the Mysteries has been less palpable than it was in
earlier times. The fruit of these incarnations, although not
yet ripe, is alive in peoples' souls. And when an age finally
dawns that is once again more spiritual, the current
ignorance will be overcome. People will then freely greet
with esteem and reverence the spiritual knowledge and
experience that can be achieved through modern
initiation. For without esteem and reverence, neither knowledge
nor humanity's spiritual life would be possible.
One
of the purposes of the festivals is to try to cultivate this
reverence in ourselves by understanding how the spiritual has
developed throughout human history. Through the festivals we
can learn to look very intimately at how historical
events pass spiritual contents on from one age to another. For
even though human beings are the most fundamental link in the
chain of historical development, in that they reincarnate
and thereby carry experiences of earlier epochs into later
ones, nevertheless each life is lived in a particular milieu,
of which the Mysteries are of course a highly significant part.
A most important factor for the progress of humanity is
the carrying of the contents of Mystery experiences into later
incarnations, where they are encountered again, either in new
Mysteries, which in turn have their effect upon humanity as a
whole, or in some other form of knowledge.
It
is in some other form of knowledge that past Mystery
wisdom must be experienced in our time, for the actual
Mysteries have all but disappeared from outer life, and must
rise again. I might say that if the impulse originating
from the Christmas Conference that was held here at the
Goetheanum truly takes hold within the Anthroposophical
Society, then the Society, inasmuch as it leads to the Classes,
which have already begun to be established, will become the
basis for a renewal of the Mysteries.
[The School for Spiritual Science, which was
founded at the Christmas Conference in 1923, was divided into
subject sections. In addition, the esoteric training was
to progress through three classes, only the first of which had
been established before Rudolf Steiner died in 1925.
]
The Anthroposophical Society must consciously cultivate this
renewal. The Society was, after all, witness to an event that,
like the burning of the Temple at Ephesus, can be turned to
good historical account. In both cases a grievous wrong was
perpetrated. However, what is a terrible wrong on one level can
turn out to be useful for human freedom on another level. Such
harrowing events can indeed call forth a true step
forward in human evolution.
To
understand such matters we must examine them, as I mentioned
before, on as intimate a level as possible. We must look at the
particular way in which the world's spirituality lived within
the Mysteries.
As
I indicated yesterday, the fixing of Easter's date grew out of
a spiritual appreciation of the constellation of the sun and
the moon. I also indicated that moon-beings observe the
planets, and that these observations guide human beings in
their descent from pre-earthly into earthly life, guide them in
the formation of their etheric bodies. Now in order to
understand how the lunar forces or, one might say, the
spiritual observatory on the moon makes etheric forces
available to human beings, we can look to the cosmos;
for, as we have had occasion to see, it is inscribed there, it
exists there as a fact. However, it is also important to
appreciate the interest human beings have taken in these
matters throughout history. And that interest was nowhere
more sincere than in the Mysteries at Ephesus.
Every aspect of the service to the goddess of Ephesus, known
exoterically as Artemis, was designed to give an experience of
the creative spiritual forces pervading the cosmic ether. When
the participants in the Mysteries approached the statue
of the goddess, they had the sensation of hearing her
speak, in words such as this: “I delight in all
that bears fruit within the vast cosmic ether.”
To
hear the goddess thus express her heartfelt delight in
everything that grows, buds, and sprouts within the cosmic
ether was a truly profound experience. Indeed, the spiritual
atmosphere of Ephesus was aglow with heartfelt sympathy for all
budding and sprouting things. The Mysteries there were
instituted in such a way that nowhere else could one find such
sympathy with vegetative growth, with the budding and
sprouting of the earth into the plant world.
One
consequence of this was that the lessons, if I may call them
that, that dealt with the mystery of the moon, of which I spoke
yesterday, could be given at Ephesus with particular force and
clarity. As a result of such instruction, each student
was able to experience himself as a figure of light formed by
the moon. One exercise in particular directly placed a person
capable of performing it into a process of building himself up
out of sunlight transformed by the moon. In the midst of this
the sounds I, O, A * rang forth, as if emanating from the
sun.
[ *Translator's note: Pronounced as in
English “eagle,” “boat,”
“father.” ]
These sounds, the Mystery student knew, enlivened his ego and
astral body. I, O: ego, astral body, and with A, the
approach of the luminous etheric body: I, O, A.
As these sounds vibrated within him, he experienced himself as ego,
as astral body, and as etheric body. Then, as if resounding from
the earth, for the student was now outside the earth, came the sounds
eh-v, which mingled with the I, O, A.
In
this word, IehOvA, the Mystery student experienced
himself as a complete human being. Through the consonants, he
felt a premonition of his earthly physical body. These
consonants are bound up with the vowels, I O A, which
express the ego, astral body, and etheric body.
It
was through such immersion in the word IehOvA that the
Ephesian apprentice was able to experience the final stages of
his descent out of the spiritual world. As he did so, however,
he felt himself living within the light. Now truly human, he
was a sounding ego and sounding astral body within a
light-filled etheric body. Sound within light — such is
the cosmic human being.
In
this way it was possible to take in what is visible in the
cosmos, just as what happens in the earth's physical
surroundings can be taken in through the eyes.
While carrying I O A within himself, the Ephesian
student felt himself transported to the sphere of the
moon, where he shared in the observations that could be made
from there. In this condition he was still a human being in
general, undifferentiated; only upon descending to earth did he
become man or woman.
It
was a pre-earthly state into which the student was transported,
a state preparatory to the descent to Earth. In the Ephesian
Mysteries this self-elevation into the sphere of the moon was
an especially vivid experience, which the initiates inwardly
cherished, and whose content might be expressed in the
following words:
Cosmic-born
being, thou clothed in light,
Strengthened by sun in the realm of moon's might,
Blessed art thou by Mars' creative ringing
And Mercury's swiftness, mobility bringing,
Illumined by wisdom from Jupiter raying
And by Venus's beauty, love portraying —
So that Saturn's venerable spirit-ways
Might consecrate thee to the world of space and time.
Every Ephesian bore this reality within himself, counting
it among the most important things that permeated his being.
Indeed, he felt himself to be truly human when these verses
sounded in his ears, to use a somewhat trivial
expression. For he associated them with a newly-awakened
consciousness of his connection with all the planets through
his etheric body's forces. The verses, pregnant with meaning,
were addressed by the cosmos to the etheric body:
Cosmic-born
being, thou clothed in light,
Strengthened by sun in the realm of moon's might,
The
human being is experiencing himself here within the power of
the shining moon.
Blessed
art thou by Mars' creative ringing.
Creative tones resonate forth from Mars. Then comes the force
that animates our limbs, makes us into beings of movement:
And
by Mercury's swiftness, mobility bringing.
Jupiter sends forth its rays:
Illumined
by wisdom from Jupiter raying.
As
does Venus:
And
by Venus's beauty, love portraying.
So
that Saturn may gather all together and complete our inner and
outer development, preparing us to descend to Earth and
to clothe ourselves in a physical body, so that we might live
on Earth as physical beings who carry the god within us:
So
that Saturn's venerable spirit-ways
Might consecrate thee to the world of space and time.
From these descriptions you may gather that a brilliant inner
light permeated the spiritual life of Ephesus. In fact, all
that had ever been known about humanity's true stature within
the cosmos was gathered and preserved there in the concept of
Easter.
Yesterday I mentioned that certain people wandered from place
to place in order to experience the totality of Mystery wisdom.
Of these, many expressed wonder at the richness of the
spiritual life at Ephesus. They assure us repeatedly that
nowhere but there could they perceive so clearly and richly the
harmony of the spheres as heard from the standpoint of the
moon. The most brilliant astral light of the cosmos
appeared to them there: they sensed it in the sunlight
glimmering around the moon, pervading that light with spirit in
the same way that the human soul pervades the physical body.
Nowhere else than in Ephesus could they experience this, at
least not with the same sense of joy or artistic vision.
Such was the Mystery center that went up in flames through the
deed of a criminal or a madman. Ephesian initiates later
reincarnated in Aristotle and Alexander, as I mentioned at the
Christmas Conference.
[Alexander the Great, 356–323
B.C., king of Macedonia 336–323,
conqueror of Greek city-states and of the Persian empire.
Pupil of Aristotle.
Aristotle, 384–322 B.C. Greek
philosopher, pupil of Plato. Tutor of Alexander the Great.
]
These individualities then came into contact with what remained
of the Mysteries of Samothrace.
As
an example of how a seemingly meaningless outer coincidence can
actually be of great significance in the world's spiritual
evolution, I may mention, as I have before, indeed for
many years now, that the temple at Ephesus was burning at the
very moment as Alexander the Great was born. As it burned,
however, something else happened as well.
Consider for a moment how much the devotees of the temple had
experienced throughout the centuries, how much spiritual light
and wisdom had passed through its halls. All that was passed on
to the cosmic ether by the flames. One might indeed say that
the temple's continuous, concealed celebration of Easter
was henceforth inscribed, although in somewhat less
legible characters, into the vault of the heavens, to the
extent that that vault is etheric. This is also true of much
other human wisdom as well. Surrounded in ancient times by
temple walls, it later escaped and was written into the cosmic
ether, where those who have risen to true Imagination may
perceive it directly. Because of this, Imagination may be said
to be an interpreter of the secrets of the stars. It is the key
to former temple secrets now inscribed into the cosmic
ether.
The
same thought may be expressed in another way. Imagine that you
are looking at a crystal clear night sky, allowing your
perceptions to sink deep into your soul. Provided you are
properly prepared, the forms of the constellations, the
movements of the planets will all begin to transform
themselves into something like a cosmic script. And by reading
this script you will grasp the outlines of the mystery of
the moon, which I set forth yesterday. Such things can be
read in the cosmic script, provided the stars are no
longer seen merely as objects of mathematical and mechanical
calculation, but as letters of a cosmic alphabet.
To
continue with the Ephesian Mysteries: as I mentioned,
Aristotle and Alexander came into contact with the Cabeirian
Mysteries in Samothrace at a time when all the ancient
Mysteries were in decline. At Samothrace, however, these
Mysteries were remembered and preserved, even practiced.
Under their influence, Alexander and Aristotle
experienced something akin to a memory of Ephesus, in
whose spiritual life both had of course participated in an
earlier incarnation. Once more the I O A sounded
forth for them, as well as the verses:
Cosmic-born
being, thou clothed in light,
Strengthened by sun in the realm of moon's might,
Blessed art thou by Mars' creative ringing
And Mercury's swiftness, mobility bringing,
Illumined by wisdom from Jupiter raying
And by Venus's beauty, love portraying —
So that Saturn's venerable spirit-ways
Might consecrate thee to the world of space and time.
But
this was more than just a memory of times past. Rather, it gave
them the strength to create something new, something unusual and
hence little regarded by humankind. Before I reveal it, you must
understand just what kind of creation it was.
Take any significant work of literature, for example, the
Bhagavad Gita, or Goethe's Faust, or
Iphigenia, in short, any work that you admire, and think
about its richness and powerful content. Now, how is that
content transmitted to you? Let us assume that it was
transmitted in the usual way, that is, that at some point in
your life, you read it. Physically speaking, what precisely did
you have before you? Nothing but combinations of letters of the
alphabet on paper. The entire magnificent content comes to you
through mere combinations of the twenty odd letters of the
alphabet. But provided you can read, something comes to life
through these twenty odd letters that enables you to experience
the entire rich content of Goethe's Faust.
On
the other hand, you may decide that the alphabet is a
frightfully boring thing, that such a concatenation of letters
is the most abstract thing imaginable. And yet these little
abstract letters, properly combined, can give you all of
Goethe's Faust!
When Aristotle and Alexander heard the celestial
harmonies once again at Samothrace, they realized what
the burning of the temple at Ephesus had meant. They
perceived that the Ephesian Mysteries had been carried
out by the flames into the vast cosmic ether. At that moment
they became inspired to found the cosmic script, which is
composed not of letters of the alphabet, but of thoughts.
Thus the letters of the cosmic script were discovered, which in
their own way are as abstract as the alphabet:
Quantity
(amount)
Quality (trait)
Relation
Space
Time
Position
Action
Passion
What we have here is a collection of concepts, first introduced
by Aristotle to his pupil Alexander. One can learn to use them
in much the same way that one learns to use the letters of the
alphabet and read the cosmic script with them.
In
later times, particularly in the abstract phase of
scholastic logic, a very unusual thing occurred. Imagine
a school in which the students are taught not to read, but
rather only to learn the various letters of the alphabet in
every imaginable combination — ac, ab,
ae, and so on. In essence, this is what happened to
Aristotelian logic. Works on logic would enumerate the above
concepts, called categories. Students would learn them by
heart, but not know what else to do with them next. It was as
if they learned the alphabet but never learned to spell.
In
a way, the concepts of quantity, quality, relation, and so on,
are as simple as the letters of the alphabet, but knowledge of
them is required in order to read in the cosmic script, just as
to read Faust one must know the alphabet. And in
essence, all past and future achievements of
anthroposophy are experienced in terms of these concepts. For
all the secrets of the physical and spiritual worlds are
contained in them. These simple concepts, in other words,
constitute the alphabet of the cosmos.
Starting in the time of Alexander, the earlier, direct
perceptions characteristic of practices at Ephesus were
replaced by something deeply hidden, something esoteric,
that really began to develop only during the Middle Ages and
that is embodied in the above-mentioned eight concepts (they
may actually be expanded to ten). We are learning to live more
and more with these, but we must strive to keep them as alive
in our souls as the letters of the alphabet are when we read
any rich and spiritual work of literature.
And
so you see how ten concepts, whose illuminating and effective
power has yet to be rediscovered, came to embody an enormous
wisdom known instinctively for thousands of years. And although
this light-filled wisdom lies, as it were, in the grave,
someday it will rise again. People will then be able to read
once again in the cosmic script, and to experience the
resurrection of what has been hidden in the time between the
two spiritual epochs.
It
is of course our mission, my dear friends, to bring to light
what has been hidden. We are here, after all, to find the human
meaning of Easter. On another occasion I said that
anthroposophy is a Christmas experience, but in all its
endeavors it is also an Easter experience, a resurrection
experience, bound up with the experience of the grave. It is
essential, particularly at an Easter gathering such as this, to
experience something of the solemnity, if I may put it that
way, of our anthroposophical striving. We should sense the
presence of a spiritual being just beyond the threshold to whom
we can go and say: “How blessed mankind once was by
divine-spiritual revelation! How glorious that revelation was
in the temple at Ephesus! Now all that is buried; where must I
dig for it?” To which the being beyond the threshold will
reply, just as another did on a similar occasion, “What
you seek is no longer here; it is in your hearts, if only you
know how to open them.”
Anthroposophy is indeed in people's hearts, and these hearts
need only be opened in the right way. That should be our
conviction, and if it is, we shall be led back, not
instinctively as in ancient times but in full awareness, to the
wisdom that lived and shone in the Mysteries.
I
offer you these Easter words in the hope that they might reach
your hearts, for by devotedly cultivating the solemn mood that
anthroposophy can enkindle within our souls, we reach up into
the spiritual world. At the same time, this solemn mood is
connected with the Christmas impulse given at Dornach,
which must not be allowed to remain abstract or
intellectual, but must issue from the heart. Avoiding both
joylessness and sentimentality, it must be a natural
expression of the solemn facts.
Just as the fire of Ephesus flared anew within the hearts of
Aristotle and Alexander, after scorching the cosmic ether and
revealing to them the secrets that they compressed into
the simplest of forms, just as they used the burning of
Ephesus, so too must we — and this may be said in all
modesty — be able to make use of what the flames of the
Goetheanum carried out into the ether as the substance of
our anthroposophical aims, both past and to come.
It
was in keeping with this, my dear friends, that at Christmas
time, at the beginning of the new year, the very time of year
in which our misfortune occurred, we were permitted to let
issue forth a new impulse from the Goetheanum. Why? Because we
could feel that a previously earthly concern had been
carried out by the flames into the vastness of the cosmos, and
that because of this misfortune, what we represent is no longer
a merely earthly concern, but rather of significance for the
whole cosmic-etheric world. This world, filled with spiritual
wisdom, has adopted the Goetheanum's cause, which was
carried out by the flames. The Goetheanum impulses with which
we imbue ourselves now stream in from the cosmos.
Take this any way you like; take it as a picture. But as a
picture it points to a profound reality. To put it simply,
since the impulse at Christmas all anthroposophical
endeavor must be infused with esotericism. This is
because impulses are now working their way in from the cosmos
as a result of the astral light that streamed up from the
burning Goetheanum. These impulses can strengthen the
anthroposophical movement, provided we are in a position to
receive them. If we are, then everything
anthroposophical, including the Easter mood, will be
sensed as an essential part of the whole that is
anthroposophy.
The
anthroposophical Easter mood convinces us that the spirit never
dies, that though it may die to the world, it always rises
again. Anthroposophy must base itself upon this spirit that
rises ever anew from its eternal foundations.
Such is the feeling and concept of Easter that we may take into
our hearts. And from this gathering, my dear friends, we shall
carry away courage and strength for our work in other
places.
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