Egyptian Myths and Mysteries
The Influence of Sun and Moon Spirits, Isis and Osiris Forces
Schmidt Number: S-1831
On-line since: 20th November, 2000
The Influence of the Sun and Moon Spirits,
of the Isis and Osiris Forces.
The Change in Consciousness.
The Conquest of the Physical Plane.
IN the preceding lectures we reviewed in some detail a number of facts
concerning the evolution of humanity. I tried to show how man
developed in the period of evolution that stretches approximately from
the moment when the sun withdrew from the earth to the time when the
moon also departed. Today something will be added to these facts,
which could be called facts of occult anatomy and
physiology. In order to understand everything properly,
however, today we must throw a little light on certain other facts of
the spiritual life, for we must not forget that what is really to be
demonstrated is the relation between the Egyptian myths and mysteries,
between the whole Egyptian cultural period, and our own time.
Therefore it is necessary that we be entirely clear about how
evolution progressed further through the various epochs.
Let us again recall what was described as the working of the sun and
moon spirits, especially of the Osiris and Isis forces, through whose
activities the human body first appeared and was built up. Remember
that this occurred in the remote past, that our earth as yet had
scarcely crystallized out of the water-earth, and that a great part of
what was described actually took place in the water-earth. Man at that
time was in a condition that we should bring clearly before our minds
so that we may form a clear conception of how things looked to human
vision during man's progress through evolution.
I have described how man's lower members, the feet, shanks, knees,
etc., appeared as physical forms as early as the time when the sun had
shown indications of withdrawing from the earth. But we must always
remember what has been said so often: all this would have been visible
had there been a human eye to see it. But such an eye did not exist.
It appeared only much later. While man was still in the water-earth,
he perceived only by means of the organ described as the pineal gland.
Perception by means of the physical eye began only after the hip
region had been formed. Thus we may say that man already had the lower
part of the human form, but possessed nothing whereby he could have
seen the body. At that time man could not see himself. Only at the
moment when his body, building itself up from below, passed the region
of the hips, did man receive the capacity of seeing himself. When he
was shaped as far as the sign of the Balance, man's eyes were opened
for the first time. Then he began to see himself as in a mist. Then he
developed the vision of objects. Until the hip region evolved, all
human perception, all seeing, was of a clairvoyant astral-etheric
nature. At that time man could not yet see physical things. Human
consciousness was still dark and shadowy, though of a dreamy
clairvoyant nature.
Then man passed over to that condition of consciousness in which
sleeping and waking alternated. When he was awake man saw darkly what
was physical, but as though it were wrapped in mist and surrounded by
an aura of light. In his sleep man rose to the spiritual worlds and
the divine spiritual beings. He alternated between a clairvoyant
consciousness, which grew ever weaker, and a day-consciousness, an
object-consciousness, which grew stronger and stronger and is the
head-consciousness of today. Gradually he lost the capacity of
clairvoyant perception, together with the faculty of seeing the gods
in sleep. However, the clarity of day-consciousness waxed in the same
proportion, and the consciousness of self, the I-feeling, the
I-perception, grew stronger.
If we look back into the Lemurian time, into the time before, during,
and after the moon's exit from the earth, we find that man then had a
clairvoyant consciousness in which he had no inkling of what we today
call death. For if, at that time, man withdrew from his physical body,
whether through sleep or through death, his consciousness did not
diminish. On the contrary, he received a higher consciousness and, in
certain ways, one more spiritual than his consciousness when in his
physical body. He never said to himself, Now I am dying,
or, I am falling into unconsciousness that did
not exist in those times. Man did not yet rely on his own feeling of
self, but he felt himself immortal in the womb of divinity, and for
him all that we describe here today were obvious facts.
Let us imagine that we lie down to sleep, that the astral body removes
itself from the physical, and that all this happens in the full moon.
We have the physical and etheric bodies lying in bed, the astral body
hovering above, and all of this in the full moonlight. Now the
situation is not so that an astral cloud simply becomes visible there
for the clairvoyant. On the contrary, what he actually sees is streams
from the astral body into the physical, and these streams are the
forces that remove fatigue in the night. They bring to the physical
body replenishment for the wear and tear of the day, so that it feels
refreshed and quickened. At the same time one would see spiritual
streams proceeding from the moon, and these streams are permeated by
astral powers. One would see how there actually proceed from the moon
spiritual effects that permeate and strengthen the astral body and
influence its working on the physical body.
Let us assume that we are men of the old Lemurian time. Then the
astral body would have perceived this streaming-in of the spiritual
forces, would have gazed upward and said, This is Osiris who
strengthens me, who works on me. I see how his influence goes through
me. We would have felt ourselves sheltered in Osiris during the
night; we would have lived, so to say, in Osiris with our ego. We
would have felt, I and Osiris are one. Had we been able
to give words to what we felt at that time, we would have described it
approximately thus, when we returned into the physical body,
Now I must descend again into the physical body that waits for
me there below; this is a time when I must dive down into my lower
nature. We should have rejoiced when the time came when we
could leave the physical body once again, and rise up to rest in the
lap of Osiris, or in the lap of Isis, where we again united our ego
with Osiris.
As the physical body evolved further, and especially after the
development of the upper members, man could see more physically, could
perceive the objects in the physical world about him. In the same
proportion, however, he had to tarry longer when he descended into his
physical body. He took more interest in the physical world. His
consciousness grew darker for the spiritual world as his consciousness
in the physical body became clearer. He became disaccustomed to the
spiritual world. Thus the life of man in the physical world evolved
further, and in the conditions that prevailed between death and a new
birth consciousness grew darker and darker. In the Atlantean time man
lost almost entirely the feeling of being at home with the gods, and
when the great catastrophe was past, a great part of mankind had
completely lost the natural ability to gaze into the spiritual world
at night. But in place of this they gained the capacity of seeing ever
more sharply by day, so that the objects around them appeared in ever
clearer outlines. We have already pointed out that, among the men who
had remained behind, the gift of clairvoyance was still preserved,
even into the post-Atlantean cultures. At the time when Christianity
was founded, remnants of this clairvoyance still existed, and even
today there are occasional persons who have preserved it as a natural
gift. But this clairvoyance is entirely different from that which is
gained through esoteric training.
Thus night gradually grew dark for man in Atlantis, while
day-consciousness began to light up. The night was without
consciousness for the people of the first post-Atlantean culture, whom
we tried to characterize in all their greatness, in the spirituality
that entered through the holy Rishis. In the earlier lectures we
examined these people, and now we must describe them from another
side.
Let us try to enter into the souls of the pupils of the holy Rishis,
into the souls of the people of the Indian culture in general, in the
time immediately after the last traces of the great Atlantean
water-catastrophes had vanished. A sort of memory of the ancient world
still lived in the soul, a memory of that world in which man
experienced and saw the gods who worked on his body, a memory of how
Osiris and Isis worked on him. Now he had emerged from this world, out
of the womb of the gods. Formerly all this had been present to him as
the physical is present to him today. Like a memory this passed
through the mind of the Indian man of the first post-Atlantean times,
to whom the Rishis still could speak of how things actually had been.
He knew that the Rishis and their pupils still could see into the
spiritual world, but he also knew that for the normal person of the
Indian culture the time was past when he could see into the spiritual
world.
Like a painful memory of his old true home, this went through the soul
of the ancient Indian when he saw himself transplanted into the
physical world, which is only the outer shell of the spiritual world.
He yearned to be out of this external world. He felt, Unreal
are the mountains and valleys, unreal the cloud-masses in the air,
unreal even the firmament. All this is only like a sheath, like the
physiognomy of a real being, and we cannot see the reality behind
this, the gods and the true form of man. What we see is Maya, is
unreal; the real is veiled. The feeling grew ever keener that
man had sprung from the truth and had his real home in the spiritual;
that the things of sense were untrue, were Maya, and that the physical
world of the senses was the
night around him.*
When one feels so strongly the contrast between the spiritual and the
unreal physical, the religious mood will tend to produce little
interest in the physical world and to lead the spirit toward what the
initiates see, as to which the holy Rishis could give knowledge. The
ancient Indian longed to escape from this hard reality, which for him
was nothing but illusion, for to him the true was not what his senses
perceived, but what lay beyond that. Therefore the first
post-Atlantean culture entertained little interest for what occurred
externally on the physical plane.
Things were already different among the Persians in the second
cultural period, out of which arose Zarathustra, the great pupil of
Manu. If we wish to characterize in a few strokes the difference
between the Indian and Persian cultures, we may say that a member of
the Persian culture felt the physical to be not merely a burden, but a
task to be fulfilled. He also looked up into the regions of light,
into the spiritual worlds, but he turned his gaze back into the
physical world and in his soul he saw how everything divides into the
powers of light and the powers of darkness. The physical world became
for him a field of work. The Persian said to himself, There is
the beneficent fullness of light, the god Ahura Mazdao or Ormuzd, and
there are the dark powers under the leadership of Angramainyush or
Ahriman. From Ahura Mazdao comes salvation for men; from Ahriman comes
the physical world. We must transform what comes from Ahriman; we must
unite with the good gods and vanquish Ahriman, the evil god in matter,
by transforming the earth, by becoming beings capable of working upon
the earth. By thus vanquishing Ahriman, we make the earth into a
medium for the good. The first step toward redeeming the earth
was taken by the members of the Persian culture. They hoped that the
earth would become a good planet one day, that it would be redeemed,
and that a glorification of Ahura Mazdao, the highest being, would
come about.
Thus a man felt who did not gaze up into the sublime heights like the
Indian, but planted his feet firmly on this physical earth. A member
of the Indian culture, who did not plant his feet in this way, would
not have thought thus.
The conquest of the physical plane proceeded further in the third
cultural epoch, in the Egyptian-Babylonian-Assyrian-Chaldean culture.
At this time, hardly anything remained of the ancient repugnance with
which the physical world was felt to be Maya. The Chaldeans looked up
to the heavens, and the light of the stars was not merely Maya for
them; it was the script that the gods had imprinted on the physical
plane. On the paths of the stars the Chaldean priest pursued his way
back into the spiritual worlds, and when he was initiated, when he
learned to know all the beings who inhabited the planets and the
stars, he lifted up his eyes and said, What I see with my eyes
when I gaze up to the heavens is the outer expression of what is given
me by occult vision, by initiation. When the initiating priest endows
me with the grace of the perception of the divine, then I see God. But
all I see externally is not mere illusions; I see in it the
handwriting of the gods.
The initiate felt as we would feel if we had been long separated from
a friend, then received a letter from him and recognized his familiar
handwriting. We see that it was our friend's hand that formed these
signs, and we observe the feelings of his heart expressed in them.
Approximately thus felt the Chaldean initiate (and also the Egyptian)
who was inducted into the holy mysteries and who, while he was in the
mystery temple, saw with his spiritual eye the spiritual beings that
are connected with our earth. When he went out again, after seeing all
this, and cast his eyes on the world of stars, this appeared to him
like a letter from the spiritual beings. He perceived a script of the
gods. In the blaze of the lightning, in the rolling of the thunder, in
the tempest, he saw a revelation of the gods. The gods manifested
themselves for him in all that he saw externally. As we feel about the
letter from a friend, so did he feel in regard to the outer world.
Thus did he feel when he saw the world of the elements, the world of
plants, animals, and mountains, the world of the clouds, the world of
the stars. Everything was deciphered as a divine script.
The Egyptian had confidence in the laws that man could find in the
physical world, through which man can master matter. By this means
arose geometry, mathematics. With the help of this, man could rule the
elements because he trusted in what his spirit could find, because he
believed that he could imprint the spirit upon matter. Thus he could
build the pyramids, the temples, and the sphinxes. This was a mighty
step in the conquest of the physical plane that was accomplished in
the third cultural period. Man had progressed so far that for the
first time he was able rightly to respect the physical plane. The
physical world began to mean something to him. But what kind of
teachers did he require for this?
Man had always needed teachers. Even the initiates had teachers, as in
the old Indian time. What kind of teachers did the initiates need? It
was necessary that the initiate should be artificially led to see
again, during initiation, what man had been able to see previously in
his dark clairvoyant consciousness. The neophyte had to be led back
into the spiritual world, into the earlier home of the spirit, so that
he could communicate to others what he learned from his experiences.
For this he needed teachers. The pupils of the Rishis needed teachers
who could show them what happened in ancient Lemuria and Atlantis,
when man was still clairvoyant. The same was also true of the
Persians.
It was different with the Chaldeans, and even more different with the
Egyptians. They also had teachers who aided the pupil to develop his
powers so that he could see, through clairvoyant vision, into the
spiritual world behind the physical world. These were the initiators,
who showed what lay behind the physical. But a new teaching, a wholly
new method, became necessary in Egypt. In ancient India man had
troubled himself little about how what happened in the spiritual world
was imprinted upon the physical plane, about the correspondence
between gods and men. But in Egypt something else was needed. It was
necessary that through initiation the pupil should see the gods, but
also that he should see how the gods moved their hands in writing the
starry script, how all physical forms had evolved. The ancient
Egyptians had schools entirely on the model of those of the Indians,
but they also learned how the spiritual forces were correlated with
the physical world. Thus they taught new subjects. In ancient India
the pupil was shown the spiritual forces through clairvoyance, but in
Egypt he was also shown what corresponded physically with the
spiritual deeds. He was shown how every member of the physical body
corresponded to some spiritual labor, how the heart, for example,
corresponded to some spiritual work. The founder of this school, in
which was shown not only the spiritual but also its work upon the
physical, was the great initiator, Hermes Trismegistos. It was
he, the thrice-great Thoth, who first showed to men the entire
physical world as the handwriting of the gods. Here we see how piece
by piece our post-Atlantean cultures embodied their impulses in human
evolution. Hermes appeared to the Egyptians like a divine ambassador.
He gave then what had to be deciphered as the deed of the gods in the
physical world.
In all of this we have somewhat characterized the first three cultural
epochs of the post-Atlantean time. Men had learned to value the
physical plane.
The fourth epoch, the Greco-Latin, is the period when man came even
more into contact with the physical plane. In this time man progressed
so far that he not only saw the script of the gods in the physical
world, but he also inserted his own self, his spiritual individuality,
into the objective world. Such artistic creations as we find in Greece
were not known earlier. That man could portray himself in sculpture,
creating therein something like his physical self this was
achieved in the fourth cultural period.
In this time we see man's inward spiritual elements step out of him
onto the physical plane and flow into matter. This marriage between
the spiritual and the material may be seen most clearly in the Greek
temple. For everyone who can look back and see this temple, it is a
wonderful work. The Greeks had the greatest architectonic gifts. Every
art has its climax at some point, and here architecture had its high
point. Modeling and painting reached their climax elsewhere. Despite
the gigantic pyramids, the most wonderful architecture appears in the
Greek temple. For what is attained here? A weak echo may be
experienced by one who has an artistic feeling for space, who feels
how a horizontal line is related to one that moves in the vertical. A
number of cosmic truths light up in the soul that can simply feel how
the column carries what is above it. One must be able to feel how all
these lines were already invisibly present in space. The Greek artist
saw the column as though clairvoyantly, and simply filled what he saw
with matter. He saw space as altogether composed of life, as something
permeated by living forces.
How can the man of today get some impression of the liveliness that
this space-filling had? We see a faint reflection of it in the old
painters. For example, we can find paintings where angels float in
space, and we have the feeling that the angels support each other.
Today little remains of this feeling for space. I shall make no
objection to
Boecklin's colors,** but all occult
space-feeling is missing in him. Such a being as we find above his
Pietá you cannot tell if it is supposed to be an
angel or some other being must waken in the observer the
feeling that at any minute it may fall on the group below it. This
must be emphasized when one tries to explain something of which hardly
an inkling can be conveyed today, such as the space-feeling of the
Greeks. It must be expressly stated that this was of an occult nature.
In a Greek temple it was as if space had given birth to itself out of
its own lines. The result of this was that the divine beings for whom
the temple was built, and with whom the Greek as a clairvoyant was
acquainted, really descended into the temple, really felt comfortable
in it. It is true that Pallas Athena, Zeus, etc., were actually within
the temples. They had their bodies, their material bodies, in these
temples. For since these beings could incarnate only as far as an
etheric body, they found their dwelling-place in the physical world in
these temples. Such a temple could become their physical body, in
which their etheric body felt at home.
One who understands the Greek temple knows that it differs profoundly
from a Gothic cathedral. This is not a criticism of the Gothic, for
the Gothic cathedral is a sublime work of art. But an understanding
person can well imagine of a Greek temple, that even if it stood in a
solitude with no people anywhere near, even if it were quite alone, it
would be a whole. A Greek temple is complete even when nobody is
praying in it. It is not soulless, it is not empty, for the god is in
it. It is inhabited by the god.
But a Gothic cathedral is only half complete if there are no
worshippers within. One who understands this cannot think of a Gothic
cathedral, standing alone, without a congregation of the faithful,
whose thoughts stream into it. All the Gothic forms and ornaments
belong to what streams from it. No god, no spiritual being, is close
to the Gothic cathedral when the prayers of the faithful are not
present. Only when the praying congregation is assembled is the cathedral
filled with the divine. This is shown in the very word Dom, for this is connected with
the dom in Christendom and similar words, which
signifies something collective. Even the word Duma is related to this. The
Greek temple is not a house for the faithful. It is shaped as a house
that the god himself inhabits; it can stand alone. But in the Gothic
cathedral one feels at home only when it is filled by the believing
throng, when the pious congregation is assembled, when the light of
the sun shines through the colored window-panes and the colors are
diffused by the fine dust-particles. Then, as often happened, the
preacher in the cathedral pulpit would say, Even as the light
is split into many colors, so is the single spiritual light, the
divine force, divided among the crowds of souls and split into the
diverse forces of the physical plane. Such words were often
heard from the preacher. When perception and spiritual experience
flowed together in this way, the cathedral was something complete.
As in the great temple buildings, so was it in everything artistic
among the Greeks. The marble of their sculptures took on the
appearance of life. The Greek expressed in the physical what lived in
his spiritual. Among the Greeks the marriage of the spiritual with the
physical was a fact.
The Roman went a step further in the conquest of the physical plane.
The Greek had the capacity of embodying the soul-spiritual in his
works of art, but he still felt himself as part of a whole, of the
polis, the city-state. He did not yet feel himself as a
personality. This was also the case in the earlier cultures. The
Egyptian did not feel himself as a separate person, but as an
Egyptian, as a member of his people. Thus in Greece we find that a man
laid little worth on feeling himself to be a person, but it was his
greatest pride to be a Spartan or an Athenian. To be a personality, to
be something in the world through the self, was felt for the first
time in Rome. That a personality could be something for itself was
first true for the Roman. The Romans worked out the concept of the
citizen, and it was among them that jurisprudence, the science
of law, arose. This is correctly regarded as a Roman invention. Only
modern jurists, who know nothing of these facts, have had the lack of
judgment to assert that law, in this sense, existed earlier. It is
nonsense to speak of oriental lawgivers, such as Hammurabi. There were
no legal rules earlier; there were only divine
commands. One would have to use harsh words if one
were to speak objectively about this kind of science.
The concept of the citizen first became a real feeling in ancient
Rome. By that time man had brought the spiritual into the physical
world as far as his own individuality. The last Will and Testament was
invented in ancient Rome. The will of the single personality had
become so strong that even beyond death it could determine what should
be done with its property, its own things. The single personal man was
now the determining factor. With this deed man, in his own
individuality, had brought the spiritual down to the physical plane.
This was the lowest point of evolution.
Man stood at his highest in the Indian culture. At this highest point
the Indian still moved in spiritual heights. In the second culture,
the ancient Persian, man had already descended a little. In the third
culture, the Egyptian, still more. In the fourth culture man descended
entirely to the physical plane, into matter. There came a point when
man stood at the parting of the ways. Either he could sink lower and
lower, or he could achieve the possibility of working up again, of
fighting his way back into the spiritual world. But for this a
spiritual impulse had to appear on the physical plane, a mighty thrust
that could lead man back into the spiritual world. This mighty thrust
was given through the appearance of Christ Jesus on earth. The
divine-spiritual Christ had to come to men in a physical human body,
had to go through a physical appearance in the physical world. Now,
when man was wholly in the physical world, the god had to descend to
him so he might find the way back into the spiritual world. Previously
this would not have been possible.
Today we have followed the evolution of the cultures of the
post-Atlantean time down to their lowest point. We have seen how the
spiritual impulse occurred through the Christ at the lowest point. Now
man must rise again, transfigured by the Christ principle. We shall go
on to show how the Egyptian culture emerges again in our time, but
permeated by the Christ principle.
* Note 1: For a clear expression of this sentiment, see Sacred Books and Early Literature of the East (New York, Parke, Austin, & Lipscomb; 1917), Vol. 9, p. 104.
Note 3: Dom is the German word for cathedral.
Note 4: The Duma was a short-lived parliament in late Czarist Russia.
Note 5: Our best modern scholars agree with the views here expressed. See Wigmore, Panorama of the World's Legal Systems (Washington Law Book Company, 1936).
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