LECTURE VII.
N
the last lecture I referred to two legends, that of Paradise and
that of the Holy Grail. I tried to show that these two legends
represent occult imaginations which may really be experienced
at a certain moment. When the pupil is independent of his
physical body and etheric body — as he is unconsciously
during deep sleep, and with clairvoyance consciously perceives
his physical body, he experiences the legend of Paradise; when
his perceptions are aroused by his etheric body, the legend of
the Grail presents itself. We must now point out that such
legends were given as stories or as religious legends, and so
popularised in a definite period. The original source of these
legends, which meet us in the form of romance or of religious
writings in the external history of the development of mankind,
is in the Mysteries, where their contents were established only
by means of clairvoyant observations. In the composition of
such legends it is especially necessary that the very greatest
care should be taken that both subject matter and tone should
suit the period and the people to which the legends are
given.
In
the previous lectures of this course we have explained how
through his theosophical occult development the student
undergoes certain changes in his physical and etheric body. We
shall have now to consider the astral body and the self more
closely, and then return briefly to the physical and etheric
body. We have seen that when, in order to progress further
through receiving the possessions of spiritual wisdom and
truth, the student undertakes this self-development, he
produces by this means changes in the various part;, of his
spiritual and physical organisation. Now, from the information
that has been given from the akashic records of various periods
of evolution, we know that in the course of the ordinary
historical evolution of man these various parts of human nature
also undergo a change, naturally, as it were; we know that in
the ancient Indian age, the first age of civilisation after the
great Atlantean catastrophe, the processes of the human etheric
body were conspicuous; we know that afterwards, during the
ancient Persian age of civilisation, the change in the human
astral body came into prominence, and during the
Egyptian-Chaldean age changes took place in the human
sentient-soul, and during the Graeco-Latin age there were
changes in the human intellectual- or mind-soul. In our times
the changes in the human consciousness-soul are more
conspicuous. Now, when a legend is given in some particular age
— let us say, in the age in which the intellectual-soul
undergoes a special change, when the facts in this soul are of
special importance — it is important that it should be
given in such a way that special attention should be paid to
that particular age, and that in the Mysteries from which the
legend proceeds it should be agreed that the legend must be so
presented that the changes which are going on in the human
intellectual- or mind-soul during that age should be protected
against any harmful influences incidental to the legend, and
specially adapted to its favourable influences.
Thus there can be no question of following his own inner
impulse alone, when a person belonging to a Mystery school has
the duty laid upon him of imparting such a legend to the world,
for he must follow the dictates of the age in which he lives.
If we turn our observations in this direction, we shall better
understand the changes that take place, more particularly in
the human astral body, when a person undergoes an esoteric
development.
In
the case of an esotericist, or one who seriously undertakes a
theosophical development, who makes Theosophy part of his life,
his astral body lives a separate life; in the case of an
ordinary human being it is not so free, not so independent. The
astral body of a student going through development becomes
detached and independent to some extent. It does not pass
unconsciously into a sort of sleep, but becomes independent,
and detached, going through in a different way what a human
being usually does in sleep. It thereby enters the condition
suited to it. In an ordinary man who lives in the exoteric
world, this astral body is connected with the other bodies, and
each exercises its special influence upon it. The individually
pronounced quality of this human principle does not then come
into notice. But when this astral body is torn out its special
peculiarities assert themselves. And what are the peculiarities
of the astral body? Now, my dear friends, I have often referred
to this quality — perhaps, to the disgust of many who are
sitting here. The quality peculiar to the human astral body on
earth is egotism. When the astral body, apart from the
influences which come from the other principles of human
nature, asserts, its own peculiar quality, this is seen to be
egotism, or the effort to live exclusively in itself and for
itself. This belongs to the astral body. It would be wrong, it
would be an imperfection in the astral body as such, if it
could not permeate itself with the force of egotism, if it
could not say to itself, ‘Fundamentally I will attain
everything through myself alone, I will do all that I do for
myself, I will devote every care to myself alone.’ That
is the correct feeling for the astral body. If we bear this in
mind we shall understand that esoteric training may produce
certain dangers in this direction. Through esoteric
development, for instance, because this esoteric development
must necessarily make the astral body somewhat free, those
persons who take up a kind of Theosophy that is not very
serious, without paying attention to all that true Theosophy
wishes to give, will in the course of it specially call forth
this quality of the astral body, which is egotism. It can be
observed in many theosophical and occult societies that while
selflessness, universal human love, is preached as a moral
principle and repeated again and again, yet through the natural
separation of the astral body egotism flourishes. Moreover, to
an observer of souls it seems quite justifiable, and yet at the
same time suspicious, when universal human love is made into a
much-talked of axiom — observe that I do not say it
becomes a principle, but that it is always being spoken of; for
under certain conditions of the soul-life a person prefers most
frequently to speak of what he least possesses, of what he
notices that he most lacks, and we can often observe that
fundamental truths are most emphasised by those who are most in
want of them.
Universal human love ought without this to become something in
the development of humanity which completely rules the soul,
something which lives in the soul as self-evident, and
concerning which the feeling arises: ‘I ought not to
mention it so often in vain, I ought not to have it so often on
my lips in a superfluous manner.’ Just as a well-known
commandment says: Thou shalt not take the Name of God in vain
... so might the following be a commandment to a true and noble
humanity: you ought not to utter so often in vain the
requirement of the universal human love which is to become the
fundamental feature of your souls, for if silence is in many
cases a much better means of developing a quality than speech,
it is particularly the case in this matter; quietly cultivating
it in the heart, and not talking about it, is a far, far better
means of developing universal brotherly love than continually
speaking about it. Now the advocacy of this exoteric principle
has primarily nothing to do with what has been described as the
fundamental quality of the astral body: egotism; the endeavour
to exist in itself, of itself and through itself.
The
question now is: How, then, is it possible to see this in a
right light, this quality — let us calmly use the
expression — of the astral body which seems so horrible
to us, viz., that it wishes to be an absolute egotist? Let us
set to work, beginning from the simple facts of life. There are
cases even in ordinary life in which egotism expands, and where
we must, to a certain degree, look upon this expansion of
egotism as a necessary adaptation in life. For example,
consider the characteristic of much mother-love, and try to
understand how in this case egotism extends from the mother to
the child. We may say that the further we penetrate among less
developed peoples, and observe what we might call the lion-like
way in which the mothers stand up for their children, the more
we notice that the mother considers any attack upon her child
as an attack upon herself. Her self is extended to the child;
and it is a fact that the mother would not feel an attack upon
a part of herself more than upon her child. For what she feels
in herself she carries over to her child and we cannot find
anything better for the regulation of the world than that
egotism should be extended in this way from one being to
others, and that one being should reckon itself as forming part
of another, as it were, and on this account should extend its
egotism over this other. Thus we see that egotism ceases to
have a dark side when a being expands itself, when the being
transfers its feeling and thinking into another, and considers
it as belonging to itself. Through extending her egotism to her
child, a mother also claims it as her possession: she counts it
as part of herself; she does just as the astral body does,
saying: All that is connected with me lives through me, to me,
with me, etc.
We
may see something similar even in more trivial cases than
mother-love. Let us suppose that a man has a house, a farm, and
land which he cultivates; let us suppose this man loves his
house, his farm, his land and his work-people as his own body;
he looks upon the matter in such a way that they are to him an
extension of his own body, and loves his house, farm, land and
people — as a woman may, under certain circumstances,
love her gown, as forming part of her own body. In this case
the being of the man expands in a certain sense to what is
around him. Now, if his care expands in this way to his
possessions and his servants, so that he watches over them and
resists any attack upon them as he would an attack on his own
body, we must then say that the fact of this environment being
permeated with his egotism is extremely beneficial. Under
certain circumstances, what is called love may, however, be
very self-seeking. Observation of life will show how often what
is called love is self-seeking. But an egotism extended beyond
the person may also be very selfless, that is, it may protect,
cherish and take care of what belongs to it.
By
such examples as these, my dear friends, we ought to learn that
life cannot be parcelled out according to ideas. We talk of
egotism and altruism, and we can make very beautiful systems
with such ideas as egotism and altruism. But facts tear such
systems to pieces; for when egotism so extends its interests to
what is around it that it considers this as part of itself, and
thus cherishes and takes care of it, it then becomes
selflessness; and when altruism becomes such that it only
wishes to make the whole world happy according to its own
ideas, when it wishes to impress its thoughts and feelings on
the whole world with all its might, and wishes to adopt the
axiom, ‘If you will not be my brother, I will break your
head,’ then even altruism may become very self-seeking.
The reality which lives in forces and in facts cannot be
enclosed in ideas, and a great part of that which runs counter
to human progress lies in the fact that in immature heads and
immature minds there arises again and again the belief that the
reality can in some way be bottled up in ideas.
The
astral body may be described as an egotist. The consequence of
this is that the development which liberates the astral body
must reckon with the fact that the interests of man must
expand, become wider and wider. Indeed, if our astral body is
to liberate itself from the other principles of human nature in
the right manner, its interest must include the whole of the
earth and earth-humanity. In fact, the interests of humanity
upon the earth must become our interests; our interests must
cease to be connected in any way with what is merely personal;
all that concerns mankind, not only in our own times, but all
that has concerned mankind at any time in the whole of its
earthly development, must arouse our deepest interests; we much
reach the point of considering as an extension of what belongs
to us, not only what belongs to our family by blood, not only
what is connected with us such as house and farm and land, but
we must make everything connected with the development of the
earth our own affair.
When in our astral body we are interested in all the affairs of
the earth, when all the affairs of the earth become our own, we
may give way to the sense of selfhood in our astral body. This,
however, is necessary, that the interests of mankind on earth
should be our interests. Consider from this point of view the
two legends I spoke of in the last lecture. When they were
given to humanity at a certain stage, they were given from the
point of view that the human being should be raised from any
individual interest to the universal interests of the earth.
The legend of Paradise leads the pupil directly to the starting
point of our earthly evolution, when man had not yet entered
upon his first incarnation, or when he is just beginning it,
where Lucifer approaches him, when he still stands at the
beginning of his whole development and can actually take all
human interests into his own breast. The very deepest problem
of education and training is contained in the story of
Paradise, that story which uplifts one to the standpoint of all
humanity, and imprints in every human breast an interest which
can also speak in each. When the pictures of the legend of
Paradise, as we have tried to comprehend them, press into the
human soul, they act in such a way that the astral body is
penetrated through and through by them; and under the influence
of this human being whose horizon is expanded over the whole
earth, the astral body may also make its own interest all that
now enters its sphere. It has now arrived at being able to
consider the interests of the earth as its own. Try, my dear
friends, to consider seriously and earnestly what a universal,
educative force is contained in such a legend, and what a
spiritual impulse lies there.
It
is the same with the legend of the Grail. While the Paradise
legend is given to the humanity of the earth, inasmuch as it
directs this humanity to the origin, the starting-point of its
earthly development, while the Paradise legend, as given,
uplifts us to the horizon of the whole development of humanity,
the legend of the Grail is given that it may sink into the
innermost depths of the astral body, into its most vital
interests, just because, if only left to itself, this astral
body becomes an egotist which only considers the interests that
are its very own.
As
regards the interests of the astral body, we can really only
err in two directions. One is the direction towards Amfortas,
and the other, before Amfortas is fully redeemed, leads towards
Perceval. Between these two lies the true development of man,
in so far as his astral body is concerned. This astral body
strives to develop the forces of egotism within itself. But if
it brings personal interests into this egotism it becomes
corroded, and while it ought to extend over the whole earth, it
will shrivel up into the individual personality. This may not
be. For if it occurs, then through the activity of the
personality, which expresses its ego in the blood, the whole
human personality is wounded — one errs on the Amfortas
side. The fundamental error of Amfortas consists in his
carrying into the sphere in which the astral body ought to have
gained the right to be an egotist, that which still remains in
him as personal desires and wishes. The moment we take personal
interests into the sphere where the astral body ought to
separate itself from personal interest it is harmful, we become
like the wounded Amfortas.
But
the other error can also lead to harm, and only fails to do so
when the being who suffers this harm is filled with the
innocence of Perceval. Perceval repeatedly sees the Holy Grail
pass. To a certain extent he commits a wrong. Each time the
Holy Grail is carried past it is on his lips to ask for whom
this food is really intended; but he does not ask; and at
length the meal is over without his having asked. And so, after
this meal he has to withdraw, without having the opportunity of
making good what he had omitted to do. It is really just as
though a man, not yet fully mature, were to become clairvoyant
for a moment during the night, when he would be separated as if
by an abyss from what is contained in the castle of his body,
and were then to glance for a moment into it; and as if then
without having obtained the appropriate knowledge, that is,
without having asked the question, everything were again to be
closed to him; for then, even though he wakened, he would not
be able to enter this castle again. What did Perceval really
neglect to do?
We
have heard what the Holy Grail contains. It contains that by
which the physical instrument of man on earth must be
nourished: the extract, the pure mineral extract, which is
obtained from all foods and which unites in the purest part of
the human brain with the purest sense-impressions, impressions
which come into us through our senses. Now, to whom is this
food to be handed? It is really to be handed — as appears
to us when from the exoteric poetic story we enter into the
esoteric presentation of it in the Mysteries — it is
really to be handed to the human being who has obtained the
understanding of what makes man mature enough gradually to
raise Himself consciously to that which this Holy Grail is.
Through what do we gain the faculty to raise ourselves
consciously to that which is the Holy Grail?
In
the story it is very clearly indicated for whom the Holy Grail
is really intended. And when we go into the Mystery
presentation of the legend of the Grail we find in addition
something very special. In the original legend of the Grail the
ruler of the castle is a Fisher King, a king ruling over fisher
folk. There was Another Who also walked among fisher folk, but
He did not wish to be the king of these fishermen, rather
something else; He scorned to rule over them as a king, but He
brought them something more than did the king who ruled over
them — this One was Christ Jesus.
Thus we are shown that the error of the Fisher King, who in the
original legend is Amfortas, was a turning aside. He is not
altogether worthy to receive health really through the Grail;
because he wishes to rule his fisher folk by means of power. He
does not allow the spirit alone to rule among this fisher
folk.
At
first Perceval is not sufficiently awake inwardly to ask in a
self-conscious way: What is the purpose of the Grail? What does
it demand? In the case of the Fisher King it required him to
kill out his personal interest and cause it to expand to the
interest in all humanity shown by Christ Jesus. In the case of
Perceval it was necessary that he should raise his interest
above the mere innocent vision to the inner understanding of
what in every man is the same, what comes to the whole of
humanity, the gift of the Holy Grail. Thus in a wonderful way
between Perceval and Amfortas, the original Fisher King, floats
the ideal of the Mystery of Golgotha, and at an important part
of the legend it is delicately indicated that on the one hand
the Fisher King has taken too much personality into the sphere
of the astral body, and on the other stands Perceval, who has
carried thither too little general interest in the world, who
is still too [unsophisticated, who does not feel sufficient
interest in the world. It is the immense educative value of the
Grail legend that it could so work into the souls of the
students of the Holy Grail that they had before them something
like a balance: in the one scale that which was in Amfortas,
and in the other that which was in Perceval; and they then knew
that the balance was to be established. If the astral body
follows its own innate interests, it will uplift itself to that
horizon of universal humanity which is gained when the
statement becomes a truth: ‘Where two are gathered
together in My name, there am I in the midst of them, no matter
where in the development of the earth these two may be
found.’ (Matthew 18, 20.)
At
this point, my dear friends, I beg you not to take a part for
the whole, but to take this lecture and the next together; for
they may cause misunderstanding. But it is absolutely necessary
that the human astral body should in its development be
uplifted to the horizon of humanity in a very special way, so
that the interest, common to all humanity, becomes its own, so
that it feels wronged, hurt, sad within itself, when humanity
is harmed in any way. To this end it is necessary that when,
through his esoteric development, the student gradually
succeeds in making his astral body free and independent from
the other principles of his human nature, he should then arm
and protect himself against any influences of other astral
bodies; for when the astral body is free it is no longer
protected by the physical body and etheric body, which are a
strong castle, as it were, for the astral. It is free, it
becomes permeable, and the forces in other astral bodies can
very easily work into it. Astral bodies stronger than itself
can influence it, should it be unarmed with its own forces. It
would be fatal if someone were to attain the free management of
his astral body, and yet were as innocent as regards its
conditions as Perceval was at the beginning. That will not do;
for then all sorts of influences proceeding from other astral
bodies would be able to have a corresponding effect on his.
Now, what we have just mentioned also applies to a certain
extent to the external exoteric world. Humanity upon the earth
lives under certain religious systems. These religious systems
have their cults and rituals. These rituals surround a member
of a cult with imaginations obtained from the higher worlds by
the help of the astral body. The moment such a religious
community admits a man to its membership he is in the midst of
imaginations which, while he is influenced by the ritual,
liberate his astral body. In any religious ritual the astral
body becomes, to a certain extent, free, at any rate for brief
moments. The more powerful the ritual, the more does it
suppress the influence of the etheric body and the physical
body; the more it works by means of methods that liberate the
astral body, the more is the astral body, during the ceremony,
enticed out of the etheric body and physical body. For this
reason also — though it might seem as if I am speaking in
ridicule, which I am not — for this reason there is no
place so dangerous to sleep in as a church, because in sleep
the astral body separates from the etheric body and physical
body, and because what goes on in the ritual insinuates itself
into the astral body; for it is brought down from the higher
worlds by the help of astral bodies. Thus to go to sleep in
church, which in some places is strongly attractive to people,
is something that really should be avoided. This applies more
to churches which have a ritual; it does not apply so much to
those religious communities which, through the ideas of modern
times, have relinquished a certain ritual or limit themselves
to a minimum of ritual. We are not now speaking of these things
from any preference or otherwise for one creed or another, but
purely according to the standard of objective facts. When,
therefore, a person has emancipated his astral body from the
other principles of his human nature, the impulses and forces
obtained by the help of astral bodies may easily influence him.
In this respect it is also possible that a person who has
arrived at the free use of his astral body, if he is stronger
than another whose astral body is to some extent emancipated,
may obtain a very great influence over the latter. It is then
absolutely like a transference of the forces of the astral body
of the stronger personality to that of the weaker. And if we
then clairvoyantly observe the weaker personality, he is really
seen to bear within his astral body the pictures and
imaginations of the stronger astral personality. You see how
necessary it is that ethics should be in the ascendant where
occultism is to be cultivated; for naturally egotism cannot be
cultivated without really striving to emancipate the astral
body from the other principles of human nature; but the most
destructive thing in the field of occultism is for the stronger
personalities to strive in any way for power to further their
personal interests and personal intentions. Only those
personalities who absolutely renounce all personal influence
are really entitled to work in the domain of occultism, and the
greatest ideal of the occultist who is to attain anything
legitimate is not to wish to attain anything whatever by means
of his own personality, but to put aside as far as possible all
consideration of personal sympathy or antipathy. Therefore,
whoever possesses sympathy or antipathy for one thing or
another, and yet wishes to work as an occultist, must carefully
relegate these sympathies and antipathies to his own private
sphere, and only allow them to prevail there; in any case he
may not cultivate and cherish any of these personal sympathies
and antipathies in the domain in which an occult movement is to
flourish. And, paradoxical as it may sound, we may say: To the
occult teacher his own teaching is a matter of no concern; in
fact, the matter of least concern of all to him is the teaching
which he can really only give by means of his own talents and
temperament. Teaching will only have a meaning when as such it
contains nothing in any way really personal, but simply what
can be of help to souls. Therefore, no occult teacher will at
any time give any of his knowledge to his own age if he is
aware that this part of his knowledge is useless to it, and
could only be useful to a different age. All this comes into
consideration when we are speaking of the peculiar nature of
the astral body under the influence of occult development.
During the preparation for our age and its progressive
development a further complication arises. For what is our own
age? It is the age of the development of the
consciousness-soul. Nothing is so closely connected with the
egotism which accentuates the narrow, personal interests as the
consciousness-soul. Hence, in no other age is there such a
temptation to confuse the most personal interests with those
that belong to mankind in general. This age has gradually to
gather the interests of humanity into the human ego, as it
were; into that very part of the human ego which is the
consciousness-soul. Towards the dawn of our age we see human
interests being concentrated into the ego, the acme of the
sense of selfhood. In this respect it is extremely instructive
seriously to consider whether, for example, what Saint
Augustine wrote in his ‘Confessions’ would ever
have been possible in ancient Greece. It would have been
absolutely out of the question.
The
whole nature of the Greek was such that his inner being was in
a certain harmony with his outer nature, so that external
interests were at the same time inner interests, and inner
interests extended into outer ones. Consider the whole Greek
culture. It was of such a nature that everywhere a certain
harmony between the human inner being and the outer must be
taken for granted. We can only understand Greek art and
tragedy, Greek historians and philosophers, when we know that
among the Greeks that which pertained to the soul was poured
into the outer culture, and as a matter of course showed its
union with the inner. Let us compare this with the Confessions
of Saint Augustine. Everything lives for himself; he searches,
digs and investigates into his own being. If we look for the
entirely personal, individual note in the writings of Saint
Augustine we can find it in them all. Although Augustine lived
long before our age, yet he prepared for it; his was the spirit
in whose records we find the first dawn, long before the rising
of the sun, the first dawn of the age apportioned to the
consciousness-soul. This can be perceived in every line written
by him, and every line of his can be distinguished by a
delicate perception from all that was possible in ancient
Greece.
Now, when we know that Augustine was advancing to meet the age
when the sense of selfhood — the occupation of man with
his own inner being even within the physical body — is as
a sort of character of this age, we can understand that one
who, like Augustine, has more extended interests as well, and
observes the whole of the development of mankind, will truly
shudder when a human being comes to him who gives him the idea
that, on attaining a certain height, the astral body must
naturally develop a sort of selfishness. Purely, nobly and
grandly Augustine attacks self-centredness.
We
might say that he attacks it selflessly. But he came into the
age when humanity had separated itself from the general
interests of the outer world. Recollect that in the third
post-Atlantean age every Egyptian directed his gaze to the
stars, where he read human destiny, how the soul was connected
with interests common to humanity. Naturally this could only be
attained when the human being was still capable, in the ancient
elementary clairvoyance, of keeping his astral body separate
from the physical body; therefore, Augustine could not but
shudder when in contact with a person who reminded him, as it
were, that with higher development comes selfishness. He can
comprehend this, he feels it, his instinct tells him that he is
living towards the age of egoism. When, therefore, a person
confronts him who represents the higher development beyond that
in the physical body, he feels: we are moving in the direction
of egotism. At the same time he cannot comprehend that this
person is bringing with him an interest common to the whole of
humanity. Try to obtain a perception of how Augustine,
according to his own confession, confronts the Manichaean
Bishop, Faustinus — for it is he whom I have described.
When he met with Faustinus, Augustine had the experience of a
man facing the age of egoism in a noble way, wishing to protect
it against egotism by the inner power alone, and who must turn
away from such a man as the Manichaean Bishop, Faustinus. He
turned away from him because, to him, Faustinus represented
something in which he ought not to take part; for he conceals
something within him which could not be understood at all in
exoteric life in such an age. Thus the Manichaean Bishop,
Faustinus, confronts the Church Father, Augustine; Augustine,
who is facing the age of the consciousness-soul, meets with a
human being who preserves his connection with the spiritual
world as it can be preserved in an occult movement, and who
thereby also preserves the fundamental quality of the astral
body, at which Augustine shudders and, from his standpoint,
justly.
Let
us pass on a few centuries. We then meet at the University of
Paris with a man who is but little known in literature; for
what he has written gives no idea of his personality; what he
has written seems pedantic. But personally he must have worked
in a magnificent way; personally he seems to have worked
principally in such a way that he brought into his circle
something like a renewal of the Greek conception of the world.
He was the personification of the Renaissance. He died in 1518,
working until the time of his death at the Paris University.
This personality was related to the Greek world — though
much more on the exoteric side — in the same way as the
Manichaean Bishop Faustinus was related to the Manichees, who
above all else had received, among many other things in their
traditions, all the great and good aspects of the third
post-Atlantean, the Egyptian-Chaldean age. Thus there was this
Manichaean Bishop Faustinus, who came in touch with Augustine,
and who, through what he was, had preserved the occult
foundations of the third post-Atlantean age. In 1518 there died
in Paris a man who had carried over, though exoterically,
certain aspects of the foundation of the fourth post-Atlantean
age. This caused him to impress those who worked around him in
traditional Christianity as weird, sinister. The monks looked
upon him as their deadly enemy; yet he made a great impression
upon Erasmus of Rotterdam when the latter was in Paris. But it
seemed to Erasmus as if his external environment were
ill-suited to the individuality which really lived within this
remarkable soul; and when Erasmus had departed and gone to
England, he wrote to this man, who in the meantime had become
his friend, that he wished his friend could free himself from
his gouty physical body and fly through the air to England, for
there he would find in the external environment a much better
soil for what he felt in his soul. The fact that the
personality who worked at that time could give rise to Greek
feeling and sensation in such an evident manner, we see with
special clearness if we bear in mind the relationship between
the refined and sensitive Erasmus and this personality. Thus,
just at the very beginning of the age of selfhood, one might
say, lived this personality who died in Paris in 1518. He lived
as an enemy of those who wished to adapt the life of human
souls to the age of selfhood, and who shuddered, as it were, at
a soul who could work in such a way because he wished to
conjure up another age, when man was, so to say, closer to the
selfhood of the astral body — the Greek age. This
personality who was called Faustus Andrelinus affected Erasmus
very sympathetically.
In
the sixteenth century, in central Europe, we meet with another
personality, who is represented as being a sort of travelling
minstrel, regarding whom we are told that he deviated from the
traditional theology. This personality no longer wished to call
himself a theologian, calling himself a man of the world and a
doctor; he placed his Bible on the shelf for a time, and
engaged in the study of nature. Now the study of nature, in the
age when the transition took place from all that was ancient to
all that is modern, was also such that it brought to man the
astral selfhood, just as did Manichaeism and the ancient
thought of Greece. Thus what stood at that time on the border
between ancient alchemy and modern chemistry, between ancient
astrology and modern astronomy, etc., brought the astral
selfhood home to man. This peculiar flickering and shimmering
of natural science between the ancient and modern standpoints
brought home to man — when he laid his Bible for a time
on the shelf — such an astral activity that it
necessitated coming to an understanding with egotism. No wonder
that those shuddered at it, who with their traditions wished to
adjust themselves to the age of selfhood in which the
consciousness-soul had already fully dawned; and there arose in
Central Europe the legend of the third Faust, John Faust, also
called George Faust, an actual historical personality. And the
sixteenth century welded together all the horror of the egotism
of the astral body by combining the three Fausts, the Faust of
Augustine, that of Erasmus, and the Faust of Central Europe,
into one — into that figure depicted in popular books in
Central Europe, which also became the Faust of Marlowe. Out of
a complete reversal of this character Goethe created his Faust,
clearly showing us that it is possible not to shudder at the
bearer of that which brings home to us the essence of the
astral, but to understand him better, so that to us he may be
evidence of a development which will call forth from us the
words, ‘We can redeem him.’ Whole ages have
occupied themselves with the question of the egoistic nature of
the astral body, and in legendary stories and, indeed, even in
history echoes the horror of man at its nature, and the human
longing to solve the problem of this astral body in the right
manner, in a manner corresponding to the wise guidance of the
world, and to the esoteric development of the individual human
soul.
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