FIRST
LECTURE:
DECEMBER 28, 1913
Many people who are naturally fitted to receive
Anthroposophy in our present age will find it necessary to clear away
various contradictions that may arise in their minds. In particular,
the soul can be brought up against a certain contradiction when it
wants to take seriously the memories of such a season of festival as
that which includes Christmas and the New Year. When we take these
memories seriously, then it becomes clear to us that at the same time
as we try to gain knowledge, we must penetrate into the spiritual
history of mankind if we are to understand rightly our own spiritual
evolution. We need only take a certain thought, and we shall find it
on the one hand full of light, while on the other it makes us
disturbingly aware of how contradictions, difficulties, must pile up
before the soul of anyone who wants to accept in the right sense our
anthroposophical knowledge concerning man and the evolution of the
world.
Among the varied forms of knowledge that we try to reach
through our anthroposophical studies we must of course include
knowledge of the Christ; knowledge of the fundamentally important
impulse — we have called it the Christ Impulse — which
came in at the beginning of our era. And we are bound often to ask
ourselves how we can hope to penetrate more effectively, with
deepened anthroposophical knowledge, into the course of human
evolution, in order to understand the Christ Impulse, than those who
lived at the time of the Mystery of Golgotha were able to do. Was it
not much easier for them to penetrate into this Mystery, whose secret
is specially bound up with the evolution of humanity, than it is for
us, at this great distance in time? That might be a troublesome
question for persons who want to seek an understanding of Christ in
the light of Anthroposophy. It might become one of those
contradictions which have a depressing effect just when we want to
take most earnestly the deeper principles of our anthroposophical
knowledge. This contradiction can be cleared away only when we call
up before our souls the whole spiritual situation of humanity at the
beginning of our era.
If we try — at first without any kind of religious or
similar feeling — to enter into the psychic disposition of man at that
time, we can make a most peculiar discovery. We can say to ourselves
that we will rely on what cannot be denied even by minds most given
over to externals; we will draw on the old tradition as found in
history, but we will try to penetrate into that part of it which
embraces the purest spiritual life. In this way we may hope to lay
hold of essential elements in the evolution of humanity. Let us
therefore try to enter quite historically into the endeavours that
were made by men, say two hundred years before the Mystery of
Golgotha and a hundred and fifty years after it, to deepen their
thinking in order to understand the secrets, the riddles, of the
world. Then we realise that during the centuries before and after the
Mystery of Golgotha a change of far-reaching significance occurred in
the souls of men with regard to the life of thought. We find that a
large part of the civilised world received the influence of that
which Greek culture and other deepened forms of thinking had achieved
some centuries previously.
When we consider what mankind had accomplished in this
way by its own efforts, not in response to any impulse from without,
and how much had been attained by men called “sages” in
the Stoic sense (and a good many personalities in Roman history were
so ranked), then we are bound to say: These conquests in the realm of
thought and ideas were made at the beginning of our era, and Western
life has not added very much to them. We have gained an endless
amount of knowledge concerning the facts of Nature and have been
through revolutions in our ways of thinking about the external world.
But the thoughts, the ideas themselves, through which these advances
have been made, and with which men have tried to discern the secrets
of existence in external, spatial terms, have really developed very
little since the beginning of our era. They were all present — even
those of which the modern world is so proud, including the idea of
evolution — in the souls of that period. What might be called an
intellectual laying hold of the world, a life of ideas, had reached a
certain summit, and not only among particular individuals, such as
the pupils of Socrates a little earlier; it had become popular in a
limited sense and had spread widely over Southern Europe and other
regions. This deepening of thought is truly astonishing.
An impartial history of philosophy would have to pay
special attention to this triumph of human thinking at that time.
But if we now take these highly significant advances in
the realm of ideas, and on the other hand the secrets bound up with
the Mystery of Golgotha, we become aware of something different. We
realise that as the story of the event on Golgotha became known in
that age, an immense wrestling of thought with that Mystery occurred.
We see how the philosophies of the period, especially the Gnostic
philosophy in its much profounder form, struggled to bring all the
ideas it had gained to bear on this one purpose. And it is most
important to let this struggle work upon us. For we then come to
recognise that the struggle was in vain; that the Mystery of Golgotha
appeared to human understanding as though it were dispersed through
far-distant spiritual worlds and would not unveil itself.
Now from the outset I would like to say that when in
these lectures I speak of the Mystery of Golgotha, I do not wish to
invest this term with any colouring drawn from religious traditions
or convictions. We shall be concerned purely with objective facts
that are fundamental to human evolution, and with what physical and
spiritual observation can bring to light. I shall leave aside
everything that individual religious creeds have to say about the
Mystery of Golgotha and shall look only at what has happened in the
course of human evolution. I shall have to say many things which will
be made clear and substantiated later on.
In setting the Mystery of Golgotha by the side of the
deepest thought of that time, the first thing that strikes one is
what I expressed by saying: The nature of this Mystery lies far, far
beyond what can be reached by the development of thinking. And the
more exactly one studies this contrast, the more is one brought to
the following recognition. One can enter deeply into the
thought-world that belongs to the beginning of our era; one can try
to bring livingly before one's soul what thinking meant for
those men of Greece and Rome; one can call up before one's soul
the ideas that sprang from their thinking, and then one comes to the
feeling: Yes, that was the time when thought underwent an
unprecedented deepening. Something happened with thought; it
approached the human soul in a quite new way. But if then, after
living back into the thought-world of that time and recreating it in
one's soul, one brings clairvoyant perception to bear on this
experience, then suddenly something surprising emerges. One feels
that something is happening far, far away in the spiritual worlds and
that the deepening of thought is a consequence of it.
We have already called attention to the fact that behind
our world lie other worlds — the Astral, the Devachanic, and the Higher
Devachanic. Let us first remind ourselves that these three worlds lie
behind our own! Then, if the clairvoyant state of soul is raised to
full activity within oneself, the impression is received that neither
in the Astral world nor in the lower Devachanic world can a complete
explanation of the deepening of thought at that time be found. Only
if one could place one's soul in the higher Devachanic world —
so says clairvoyant insight — would one experience what it is
that streams through the other two worlds and penetrates right down
into our physical world.
On this physical plane there is no need to be aware,
while steeping oneself in that past world of ideas, of anything told
concerning the Mystery of Golgotha. One can leave that quite out of
account and ask simply: No matter what happened over there in
Palestine, what does external history indicate? It shows that in
Greece and Rome an infinite deepening of thought took place. Let us
put a circle round this Greek and Roman thought-world and make it an
enclosed island, as it were, in our soul-life — an island shut off from
everything outside; let us imagine that no report of the Mystery of
Golgotha has reached it. Then, when we inwardly contemplate this
world, we certainly find there nothing that is known to-day about the
Mystery of Golgotha, but we find an infinite deepening of thought
which indicates that here in the evolution of humanity something
happened which took hold of the innermost being of the soul on the
physical plane. We are persuaded that in no previous age and among no
other people had thinking ever been like that! However sceptical
anyone may be, however little he may care to know about the Mystery
of Golgotha, he must admit one thing — that in this island world that
we have enclosed there was a deepening of thought never previously
known.
But if one places oneself in this thought-world, and has
a clairvoyant faculty in the background, then one feels truly
immersed in the individual character of this thought. And then one
says to oneself: Yes, as this thinking flowers into idea, with Plato
and others, as it passes over into the world we tried to enclose, it
has a quality which sets the soul free, which lays hold of the soul
and brings it to a loftier view of itself. Whatever else you may
apprehend in the external world or in the spiritual world makes you
dependent on those worlds; in thinking you take hold of something
which lives in you and which you can experience completely. You may
draw back from the physical world, you may disbelieve in a spiritual
world, you may refuse to know anything about clairvoyant impressions,
you may shut out all physical impressions — with thoughts you can live
in yourself; in your thinking you lay hold, as it were, of your own
being!
But then — and it cannot be otherwise if one enters with
clairvoyant perception into this sea of thought, as I might call it — a
feeling of the isolation of thought comes over one; a feeling that
thought is still only thought; that it lives first of all only in the
soul, and that one cannot draw from it the power to go out into a
world where the ground of the rest of our being — the ground of
what else we are — is to be found. In the very moment when one
discerns the grandeur of thought, one discerns also its unreality.
Then one can see also how in the surrounding world that one has come
to know through clairvoyance, there is fundamentally nothing to
sustain thought.
Then why should thought be there at all? The physical
world can do nothing but falsify it. Those who wish to be pure
materialists, who refuse to ascribe to thought any primal reality of
its own, should really prefer to prohibit it. For if the natural
world is the only real world, thought can only falsify it. It is only
because materialists are illogical that they do not embrace the only
theory of cognition that goes with monistic Materialism — the
refrain-from-thinking, think-no-more theory. But to anyone who
immerses himself with clairvoyant perception in the world of thought
there comes this disquieting awareness of the isolation of thought,
as though he were standing quite alone with it. And then only one
thing remains for him; but it does remain. Something comes towards
him, even though it be from a far spiritual distance, separated from
him by two worlds; and it becomes apparent — so the clairvoyant
soul says to itself — that in this third world lies the true
origin, the fountain-head, of that which is in the life of thought.
For clairvoyant souls in our time it could be a powerful experience
to immerse themselves, alone with their thinking, in the time when
thought underwent its deepening; to shut out everything else,
including knowledge of the Mystery of Golgotha, and to reflect how
the thought-content on which we still nourish ourselves came forth in
the Graeco-Roman world.
Then one should turn one's gaze to other worlds
and feel rising over the Devachanic world a star that belongs to a
higher spiritual world; the star from which rays out the power that
makes itself felt in the thought world of Graeco-Roman antiquity.
Then one feels oneself here on Earth, but carried away from the world
of today and plunged into the Graeco-Roman world, with its influence
spreading out over other regions at that time, before the Mystery of
Golgotha. But as soon as one lets the spiritual world make its
impression on one, there appears again, shining over Devachan, the
star (I speak symbolically), or the spiritual Being of whom one says
to oneself: Yes, the experience of the isolation of thought, and of
the possibility of thought having undergone such a deepening at the
beginning of our era — this is a consequence of the rays that
shine out from this star in the higher spiritual world. And then
comes a feeling which at first knows nothing of the historical
tradition of the Mystery of Golgotha but can be expressed thus: Yes,
you are there in the Graeco-Roman world of ideas, with all that Plato
and others were able to give to the general education of mankind,
with what they have imparted to the souls of men — you feel
yourself living in the midst of that. And then you wait ... and truly
not in vain, for as though deep in the background of spiritual life
appears the star which sends forth its rays of power; and you can say
that what you have experienced is a result of that power.
This experience can be gone through. And in going
through it one has not relied on any kind of tradition, but has quite
impartially sought the origin of what took place in the Graeco-Roman
world. But one has also had the experience of being separated by
three worlds from understanding the root-causes of that Graeco-Roman
world.
And then, perhaps, one turns to the men of that time who
tried in their own way to understand the change. Even the external
scholarship of today has come to recognise that in this period of
transition at the beginning of our era some religious-philosophic
geniuses lived. And they can best be encountered by looking at
Gnosticism. The Gnosis is known in the most varied ways. Externally,
remarkably little is really known about it, but from the available
documents one can still get an impression of its endless depth. We
will speak of it only in so far as it bears on our present
considerations.
Above all we can say that the Gnostics had a feeling for
what I have just described; that for the causes of what happened in
that past epoch one must look to worlds lying infinitely far away in
the background. This awareness was passed on to others, and if we are
not superficial we can, if we will, see it glimmering through what we
may call the theology of Paul, and in many other manifestations also.
Now, anyone who steeps himself in the Gnosis of that
period will have great difficulty in understanding it. Our souls are
too much affected and infected by the fruits of the materialistic
developments of the last few centuries. In tracing back the evolution
of the world they are too readily inclined to think in terms of the
Kant-Laplace theory of a cosmic nebula, of something quite material.
And even those who seek for a more spiritual conception of the world
— even they, when they look back to the beginning of time,
think of this cosmic nebula or something similar. These modern
people, even the most spiritual, feel very happy when they are spared
the trouble of discerning the spiritual in the primal beginnings of
cosmic evolution. They find it a great relief, these souls of today,
when they can say to themselves: “This or that rarefied form of
material substance was there to start with, and out of it everything
spiritual developed side by side with everything physical.” And
so we often find souls who are greatly comforted when they can apply
the most materialistic methods of inquiry to the beginning of the
cosmos and arrive at the most abstract conception of some kind of
gaseous body.
That is why it is so difficult to enter into the
thoughts of the Gnosis. For what the Gnosis places at the beginning
of the world carries no suggestion of anything at all material.
Anyone thoroughly attuned to modern education will perhaps be unable
to restrain a slight smile if he is invited to think in the sense of
the Gnosis that the world in which he finds himself, the world he
explains so beautifully with his Darwinism, bears no relation to a
true picture of how the world began! Indeed, he will hardly be able
to help smiling when he is asked to think that the origin of the
world resides in that cosmic Being who is beyond all concepts, not to
be reached by any of the means that are applied nowadays to
explaining the world. In the primal Divine Father — says the
Gnosis — lies the ground of the world, and only in what
proceeds from Him do we find something to which the soul can struggle
through if it turns away from all material conceptions and searches a
little for its own innermost depth. And this is Silence: the eternal
Silence in which there is neither space nor time, but silence only.
It was to this duality of the primal Father and the
Silence preceding time and space that the Gnostic looked up; and
then, from the union of the primal Father with the Silence, as it
were, he conceived other existences proceeding: one can equally well
call them Worlds or Beings. And from them others, and again others,
and again others — and so on through thirty stages. And only at
the thirtieth stage did the Gnostic posit a condition prior to our
present mentality — a condition so delightfully explained by
Darwinism in terms of that mentality. Or, strictly speaking, at the
thirty-first stage, for thirty of these existences, which can be
called Worlds or Beings, precede our world. “Aeon” is the
name generally given to these thirty Beings or Worlds that precede
our own.
One can get a clear idea of what is meant by this
Aeon-world only by saying to oneself: To the thirty-first stage there
belongs not only what your senses perceive as the external world, but
also the way in which your thinking as physical man tries to explain
the sense world. It is easy enough to come to terms with a spiritual
conception of the world if one says: Yes, the external world is
certainly Maya, but with thinking we penetrate into a spiritual world
— and if one hopes that this thinking really can reach the
spiritual world. But according to the Gnostic this is not so; for
him, this thinking belongs to the thirty-first Aeon, to the physical
world. So not only sense perception, but human thinking, lies outside
the thirty Aeons, who can be looked up to through the stages of
spiritual evolution, and who reveal themselves in ever-mounting
perfection.
One can easily imagine the smile that comes to a Monist,
standing at the summit of his time, if he is asked to believe in
thirty preceding worlds — thirty worlds with a content entirely
different from anything his thinking can conceive. But that was the
view of the Gnostics. And then they asked themselves: How is it with
this world?
We will disregard for a while what we have ourselves
said about the world in the sense of the early twentieth century.
What I am now telling you must not be taken as offering a convincing
world-picture. In the Anthroposophy of the twentieth century we have
naturally to get beyond the Gnosis, but just now we want to sink
ourselves in it.
Why is this surrounding world, including the human
faculty of thinking about it, shut off from the thirty Aeons? We must
look, said the Gnostic, to the lowest but still purely spiritual
Aeon. And there we find the Divine Sophia, the Divine Wisdom. She had
evolved in a spiritual way through the twenty-nine stages, and in the
spiritual world she looked up to the highest Aeon through the ranks
of spiritual Beings or Worlds. But one day, one cosmic day, it became
evident, to her that if she was to maintain a free vision into the
spiritual world of the Aeons, she had to separate something from
herself. And she separated from herself that which existed in her as
desire. And this desire, being no longer present in the Divine
Sophia, the Divine Wisdom, now wanders through the realms of space
and permeates everything that comes into being in the realms of
space. Desire does not live only in sense perception, but also in
human thinking, and in the longing that looks back to the spiritual
world; but always as something cast out into the souls of men. As an
image, but as an image of the Divine Sophia cast out from her, lives
this desire, Achamod, thrown out into the world and permeating it.
If you look into yourself, without raising yourself into
spiritual worlds, you look into the desire-filled world of Achamod.
Because this world is filled with desire, it cannot disclose within
itself that which is revealed by looking out into the world of the
Aeons. Far, far away in the world of the Aeons — so thought the
Gnosis — the pure spirituality of the Aeons engenders what the
Gnostics called the Son of the Father-God, and also what they called
the pure Holy Spirit. So we have here another generation, as it were,
another evolutionary line, different from that which led to the
Divine Sophia. As in the propagation of physical life the sexes are
separate, so in the progression of the Aeons another stream took its
origin from a very high level in the spiritual world: the stream of
the Son and the Holy Spirit stemming from the Father. So in the world
of Aeons there was one stream leading to the Divine Sophia and
another to the Son and the Holy Spirit. If one rises through the
Aeons, one comes eventually to an Aeon from whom there arose on the
one hand the succession leading to the Divine Sophia, and on the
other the succession leading to the Son and the Holy Spirit. And then
we ascend to the Father-God and the Divine Silence.
Because the human soul is shut off with Achamod in the
material world, it has in the sense of the Gnosis a longing for the
spiritual world, and above all for the Divine Sophia, from whom it is
separated through being filled with Achamod. This feeling of being
separated from the Divine, of not being within the Divine —
this feeling is actually experienced, according to the Gnostic, as
the material world. And the Gnostic sees originating from the
divine-spiritual world, but bound up with Achamod, what one might
call (to borrow a Greek word) the Demiurgos, the cosmic Architect.
This Demiurgos is the real arch-creator and sustainer of
that which is permeated with Achamod and the material. The souls of
men are woven into his world. But they are imbued also with longing
for the Divine Sophia. As though in the far distance of the
Aeon-world appear the Son and the Holy Spirit in their pure divine
spirituality, but they appear only to someone who has — in the
sense of the Gnosis — raised himself above everything in which
is embodied Achamod, the desire that pervades space.
Why is there this longing in the souls that have been
drawn into the world of Achamod? Why, after their separation from the
divine-spiritual world, do they feel a longing for it? The Gnostics
also asked themselves these questions, and they said: Achamod was
cast out from the Divine Wisdom, the Divine Sophia, but before
Achamod had completely become this material world, where men now
live, there came to her something like a brief raying-out of light
from the Son of God; and then immediately the light vanished again.
For the Gnostic this was an important concept: that Achamod —
the same Achamod that lives in the souls of men — had been
granted in the primal remote past a glimpse of Divine light, which
had then immediately disappeared. But the memory of it lives on today
in human souls, however deeply enmeshed in the material world the
soul may be. “I live in the world of Achamod, the material
world”, such a soul might have said. “I am surrounded
with a sheath drawn from the material world, but when I sink into my
inner being, a memory comes to life within me. The element that holds
me bound to the material world longs after the Divine Sophia, the
Divine Wisdom; for the being of Achamod, which lives in me, was once
illuminated by a. ray from the Son of God, who dwells in the world of
the Aeons.”
We should try to picture clearly to ourselves such a
soul as this, a disciple of the Gnosis. There were such souls: they
are not a hypothetical invention. Anyone who studies history with
understanding will come to realise through the external documents
that many souls of this kind lived in that period.
. We need to see clearly why there are such strong
objections nowadays to what I have been saying. What will a
thoroughly level-headed man of today have to say about the Gnosis? We
have already had to listen to the view that the theology of Paul
gives an impression of rabbinical subtleties, far too intricate for a
sensible Monist to concern himself with — a Monist who looks
out proudly over the world and draws it all together with the simple
concept of evolution or with the still simpler concept of energy, and
says: “Now at last we have grown up; we have acquired the ideas
which give us a picture of the world based on energy, and we look
back at these children, these poor dear children, who centuries ago
built up the Gnosis out of childishness — they imagined all
sorts of spirits, thirty Aeons! That is what the human soul does in
its time of nursery play. The grown-up soul of today, with its
far-reaching Monism, has left such fancies far behind. We must look
back indulgently at these Gnostic infantilisms — they are
really charming!”
Such is the prevailing mood today, and it is not easily
teachable. One might say to it: Yes, if a Gnostic, with his soul born
out of the Gnosis, were to stand before you, he might also take the
liberty of expressing his outlook, somewhat like this: “I
understand very well how you have become so proud and arrogant, with
your ideas of evolution and energy, but this is because your thinking
has become so crude and simple and primitive that you are satisfied
with your nebulae and your entirely abstract concepts. You say the
words ‘evolution’ and ‘energy’ and think you
have got something, but you are blind to the finer spiritual life
that seeks its way up into that which rises through thirty stages
above anything you have.”
But for us the antithesis mentioned at the beginning of
this lecture becomes all the sharper. We see on the one hand our own
time, with its quite crude and primitive concepts, and on the other
the Gnosis. And we have seen how the Gnosis employs endlessly
complicated concepts — thirty Aeons — in order to find in
the course of evolution the Son of God and the Holy Spirit, and to
find in the soul the longing for the Divine Sophia and the Holy
Spirit.
Then we ask ourselves: Is it not from the deepening of
thought in the Graeco-Roman world that we have gained what we have
carried so splendidly far in our thoughts about energy and evolution?
And in this Gnosis, with its complicated ideas, so unsympathetic to
the present day, are we not looking at something quite strange? Are
not these colossal contrasts? Indeed they are. And the contradiction,
lying like a weight on the soul, becomes even greater if we reflect
on what was said about clairvoyant souls: that they can transpose
themselves into the thought-world of the Greeks and Romans, and then
see the world with the star, of which we have spoken. And mingled
everywhere with this deepening of Greek thought we find that other
deepening which the Gnosis exemplifies. Yet when we look at this with
the aid of what Anthroposophy should give us today, and are yet
powerless to understand what the star should signify, separated as we
are from it by three worlds — and if we ask the Gnostics: Have
you understood what happened at that time in the historical evolution
of humanity? ... then, standing on the ground of Anthroposophy, we
cannot take the answer from the Gnostics, for it could never satisfy
us; it would throw no light on what is shown to the clairvoyant soul.
It is not my wish that you should treat our
considerations today as offering an explanation of anything. The more
you feel that what I have told you is not an explanation; the more
you feel that I have put before you contradiction after contradiction
and have shown you only one occult experience, the perception of the
star, the better will you have understood me for today. I would wish
you to see clearly that at the beginning of our era there appeared in
the world something which influenced human understanding and was yet
far, far from being understood; I would like you to feel that the
period at the beginning of our era was a great riddle. I want you to
feel that in human evolution there happened something which seemed at
first like a deepening of thought, or a discovery of thought; and
that the root causes of this are a profound enigma. You must seek in
hidden worlds for that which appeared in the Maya of the physical
sense-world as a deepening of Graeco-Roman thought. And it is not an
explanation of what we have heard, but the setting out of a riddle,
that I wished to give you today. We will continue tomorrow.
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