Lecture I
Dornach
24th July, 1915
Tree of Life - I
My dear friends,
When people encounter the world conception of
Spiritual Science their chief desire is to have an answer to their
questions, a solution of their problems. That is quite natural and
understandable, one might even say justifiable. But something else
must be added if the spiritual scientific-movement is really to
become the living thing it must be, in accordance with the general
course of evolution of earth and humanity. Above all, a certain
feeling must be added, a certain perception that the more one strives
to enter the spiritual world, the more the riddles increase. These
riddles actually become more numerous for the human soul than they
were before, and in a certain respect they become also more sacred.
When we come into the spiritual scientific world concept, great life
problems, the existence of which we hardly guessed before, first
appear as the riddles they are.
Now, one of the greatest riddles
connected with the evolution of the earth and mankind is the
Christ-riddle, the riddle of Christ-Jesus. And with regard to this,
we can only hope to advance slowly towards its actual depth and
sanctity. That is to say, we can expect in our future incarnations
gradually to have an enhanced feeling in what a lofty sense, in what
an extraordinary sense this Christ-riddle is a riddle. We must not
expect just that regarding this Christ-riddle much will be solved for
us, but also that much of what we have hitherto found full of riddles
concerning the entry of the Christ-Being into humanity's evolution,
becomes still more difficult. Other things will emerge that bring new
riddles into the question of the Mystery of Golgotha, or if one
prefers, new aspects of this great riddle.
There is no question here of ever
claiming to do more than throw some light from one or other aspect of
this great problem. And I beg you to be entirely clear that only
single rays of light can ever be thrown from the circuit of human
conception upon this greatest riddle of man's earthly existence, nor
do these rays attempt to exhaust the problem, but only to illumine it
from various aspects. And so something shall here be added to what
has already been said that may bring us again some understanding of
one aspect of the Mystery of Golgotha.
You remember the pronouncement of the
God Jahve, radiating from the far distance, which stands at the
beginning of the Bible, after the Fall had come about. The words
announced that now men had eaten of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good
and Evil they must be banished from their present abode, so that they
might not eat also of the Tree of Life. The Tree of Life was to be
protected, as it were, from being partaken of by men who had already
tasted of the Tree of Knowledge.
Now behind this primordial two-foldness
of the eating of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil on the one
hand and the eating of the Tree of Life on the other hand, there lies
concealed something which cuts deep into life. Today we will turn our
attention to one of the many applications to life of this
pronouncement: we will bring to mind what we have long known: i.e.,
that the Mystery of Golgotha, in so far as it was accomplished within
the evolution of earthly history, fell in the Fourth Post-Atlantean
epoch, in the Graeco-Latin age.
We know indeed that the Mystery of
Golgotha lies approximately at the conclusion of the first third of
the Graeco-Latin age and that two-thirds of this age follow, having
as their task the first incorporation of the secrets of the Mystery
of Golgotha into human evolution.
Now we must distinguish two things in
regard to the Mystery of Golgotha. The first is what took place as
purely objective fact: in short, what happened as the entry of the
Cosmic Being ‘Christus’ in the sphere
of earthly evolution. It would be-hypothetically possible, one might
say, it would be conceivable, for the Mystery of Golgotha, that is,
the entry of the Impulse of Christ into earthly evolution, to have
been enacted without any of the men on earth having understood or
perhaps even known what had taken place there. It might quite well
have happened that the Mystery of Golgotha had taken place, but had
remained unknown to men, that no single person would have been able
to think about solving the riddle of what had actually occurred
there.
This was not to be. Earthly humanity was
gradually to reach an understanding of what had happened through the
Mystery of Golgotha. But none the less we must realise that there are
two aspects: that which man receives as knowledge, as inner working
in his soul, and that which has happened objectively within the human
race, and which is independent of this human race
— that is to say, of its knowledge. Now, men
endeavoured to grasp what had taken place through the Mystery of
Golgotha. We are aware that not only did the Evangelists, out of a
certain clairvoyance, give those records of the Mystery of Golgotha
which we find in the Gospels; an attempt was also made to grasp it by
means of the knowledge which men had before the Mystery of Golgotha.
We know that since the Mystery of Golgotha not only have its tidings
been given out, but there has also arisen a New Testament theology,
in its various branches. This New Testament theology, as is only
natural, has made use of already existing ideas in asking itself:
What has actually come about with the Mystery of Golgotha, what has
been accomplished in it?
We have often considered how, in
particular, Greek philosophy that which was developed for instance as
Greek philosophy in the teachings of Plato and Aristotle
— how the ideas of Greek philosophy endeavoured to
grasp what had taken place in the Mystery of Golgotha, just as they
took pains to understand Nature around them. And so we can say that
on the one hand the Mystery of Golgotha entered as objective fact,
and on the other hand, confronting it, are the different
world-conceptions which had been developed since antiquity, and which
reach a certain perfection at the time in which the Mystery of
Golgotha took place, and then go on evolving.
Whence were these concepts derived? We
know indeed that all these concepts, including those which live in
Greek philosophy and which approached the Mystery of Golgotha from
the earth, are derived from a primeval knowledge, from a knowledge
which could not have been at man's disposal if, let us say, an
original revelation had not taken place. For it is not only
amaterialistic, but an entirely nonsensical idea that the attenuated
philosophy which existed at the time of the Mystery of Golgotha could
at its starting point have been formed by human beings themselves. It
is primeval revelation, which as we know was founded in an age when
men still had the remains of ancient clairvoyance; primeval
revelation which in ancient times had been given to man for the most
part in imaginative form and which had been attenuated to concepts in
the age when the Mystery of Golgotha entered, the Graeco-Latin age.
Thus one could see an intensive stream of primeval revelation arise
in ancient times, which could be given to men because they still had
the final relics of the old clairvoyance that spoke to their
understanding and which then gradually dried up and withered into
philosophy.
Thus a philosophy, a world-conception
existed in many, many shades and nuances, and these sought in their
own way to comprehend the Mystery of Golgotha. If we would find the
last stragglers of what was diluted at that time to a world-concept
of a more philosophic character; then we come to what lived in the
old Roman age.
By this Roman age I mean the time that
begins approximately with the Mystery of Golgotha, with the reign of
the Emperor Augustus, and flows on through the time of the Roman
Empire until the migration of nations that gave such a different
countenance to the European world. And what we see flare up in this
Roman age like a last great light from the stream flowing from
revelation — that is the Latin-Roman poetry, which
plays so great a role in the education of youth even up to our own
day. It is all that developed as continuation of this Latin-Roman
poetry till the decline of ancient Rome. Every possible shade of
world-conception had taken refuge in Rome. This Roman element was no
unity. It was extended over numberless sects, numberless religious
opinions, and could only evolve a certain common ground from the
multiplicity by withdrawing, as it were, into external
abstractions.
Through this, however, we can recognise
how something withered comes to expression in the far-spread Roman
element in which Christianity was stirring as a new impulse. We see
how Roman thought is at great pains to seize with its ideas what lay
behind the Mystery of Golgotha. We see how endeavour was made in
every possible way to draw ideas from the whole range of world
conception in order to understand what hid behind this Mystery of
Golgotha. And one can say, if one observes closely: it was a
despairing struggle towards an understanding, a real understanding of
the Mystery of Golgotha. And this struggle as a matter of fact
continued in a certain current throughout the whole of the first
millennium.
One should see, for instance, how
Augustine first accepts all the elements of the old withered
world-conception, and how he tries through all that he so accepts to
grasp what was flowing in as living soul-blood, for he now feels
Christianity flow like a living impulse into his soul. Augustine is a
great and significant personality — but one sees
in every page of his writings how he is struggling to bring into his
understanding what is flowing to him from the Christ Impulse. And so
it goes on, and this is the whole endeavour of Rome: to obtain in the
western world of idea, in this world of world-conception, the living
substance of what comes to expression in the Mystery of
Golgotha.
What is it, then, that makes such
efforts, that so struggles, that in the Roman-Latin element overflows
the whole civilised world? What is it that struggles despairingly in
the Latin impulse, in the concepts pulsating in the Latin language,
to include the Mystery of Golgotha? What is that? That is also a part
of what men have eaten in Paradise. It is a part of the Tree of the
Knowledge of Good and Evil. We can see in the primeval revelations
when the old clairvoyant perceptions could still speak to men, how
vividly alive concepts were in this ancient time, concepts which were
still imaginations, and how they more and more dry up and die and
become thin and poor. They are so thin that in the middle of the
Middle Ages, when Scholasticism flourished, the greatest efforts of
the soul were necessary to sharpen these attenuated concepts
sufficiently to grasp in them the living life existing in the Mystery
of Golgotha. What remained in these concepts was the most distilled
form of the old Roman language with its marvellously structured
logic, but with its almost entirely lost life-element. This Latin
speech was preserved with its fixed and rigid logic, but with its
inner life almost dead, as a realisation of the primeval divine
utterance: Men shall not eat of the Tree of Life.
If it had been possible for what had
evolved from the old Latin heritage to comprehend in full what had
been accomplished in the Mystery of Golgotha, had it been possible
for this Latin heritage, simply as if through a thrust, to gain an
understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha, then this would have been
an eating of the Tree of Life. But this was forbidden, after the
expulsion from Paradise. The knowledge which had entered humanity in
the sense of the ancient revelation was not to serve as a means of
ever working in a living way. Hence it could only grasp the mystery
of Golgotha with dead concepts.
‘Ye shall not eat of
the Tree of Life’: this is a saying which also holds good
through all aeons of earthly evolution with regard to certain
phenomena. And one fulfilment of this saying was likewise the
addition: ‘The Tree of Life will also draw near in
its other form as the Cross erected on Golgotha —
and life will stream out from it. But this older knowledge shall not
eat of the Tree of Life.’
And so we see a dying knowledge
struggling with life, we see how desperately it strives to
incorporate the life of Golgotha in its concepts.
[See ‘The
Christmas Thought and the Mystery of the Ego. The Tree of the Cross
and the Golden Legend’ — Rudolf
Steiner.]
Now there is a peculiar fact, a fact
which indicates that in Europe, confronting as it were the starting
point of the East, a kind of primordial opposition was made. There is
something like a sort of archetypal opposition set against the
primeval-revelation [See Genesis
3:3 — The creation of man] decreed to mankind. Here, to be sure, we touch
upon the outer rim of a very deep-lying secret, and one can really
only speak in pictures of much that is to
There exists in Europe a legend
concerning the origin of man which is quite different from the one
contained in the Bible. It has gone through later transformations no
doubt, but its essentials are still to be recognised. Now the
characteristic feature is not that this legend exists, but that it
has been preserved longer in Europe than in other parts of the earth.
But the important thing is that even while over in the Orient the
Mystery of Golgotha had been accomplished, this different legend was
still alive in the feelings of the inhabitants of Europe. Here, too,
we are led to a tree, or rather to trees, which were found on the
shore of the sea by the gods Wotan, Wile and We. And men were formed
from two trees, the Ash and the Elm. Thus men were created by the
trinity of the gods, (although this was Christianised later, it yet
points to the European original revelation) by fashioning the two
trees into men: Wotan gives men spirit and life; Wile gives men
movement and intelligence, and We gives them the outer figure,
speech, the power of sight and of hearing.
The very great difference that exists
between this story of creation and that of the Bible is not usually
observed — but you need only read the Bible
— which is always a useful thing to do
— and already in the first chapters you will
remark the very great difference that exists between the two Creation
legends. I should like but to point to one thing, and that is,
according to the saga, a threefold divine nature flowed into man. It
must be something of a soul-nature that the Gods have laid within
him, which expresses itself in his form and which in fact is derived
from the Gods. In Europe, therefore, man was conscious that inasmuch
as one moves about on earth, one bears something divine within; in
the Orient, on the contrary, one is conscious that one bears
something Luciferic within one. Something is bound up with the eating
of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil which has even brought
men death, something that has turned all men away from the Gods and
for which they have earned divine punishment. In Europe man is aware
that in the human soul a threefold nature lives, that the Gods have
sunk a force into the human soul. That is very
significant.
One touches with this, as I have said,
the edge of a great secret, a deep mystery. But it will be readily
understood: it looks as if in this ancient Europe a number of human
beings had been preserved who had not been taken away from sharing in
the Tree of Life, in whom there lived on, so to say, the tree or the
trees of Life; ash and elm. And with this the following fact stands
in intimate harmony. European humanity (and if one goes back to the
original European peoples this would be seen with great clarity in
all details) actually had nothing of the higher, more far-reaching
knowledge that men possessed in the Orient and in the Graeco-Latin
world.
One should imagine for once the immense,
the incisive contrast between the naive conceptions of European
humanity, who still saw everything in pictures, and the highly
evolved, refined philosophical ideas of the Graeco-Latin world. In
Europe all was ‘Life’; over there all
was ‘Knowledge of Good and Evil.’ In
Europe something was left over, as it were, like a treasured remnant
of the original forces of life; but it could only remain if this
humanity were, in a way, protected from understanding anything that
was contained in such marvellously finely wrought Latin concepts. To
speak of a science of the ancient European population would be
nonsense. One can only speak of them as living with all that
germinated in their inner soul nature, that filled it through and
through with life. What they believed they knew was something that
was direct experience. This soul nature was destined to be radically
different from the mood that was transmitted in the Latin influence.
And it belongs to the great, the wonderful secrets of historical
evolution, that the Mystery of Golgotha was to arise out from the
perfected culture of wisdom and knowledge, but that the depths of the
Mystery of Golgotha should not be grasped through wisdom; they were
to be grasped through direct life.
It was therefore like a predetermined
karma that — while in Europe up to a definite
point life was grasped — the ego-culture appeared
purely naively, vitally and full of life where the deepest darkness
was; whereas over there where was the profoundest wisdom, the Mystery
of Golgotha arose. That is like a predestined harmony. Out of the
civilisation based on knowledge which was beginning to dry up and
wither ascends this Mystery of Golgotha: but it is to be understood
by those who, through their whole nature and being, have not been
able to attain to the fine crystallisation of the Latin knowledge.
And so we see in the history of human evolution the meeting between a
nearly lifeless, more and more dying knowledge, and a life still
devoid of knowledge, a life unfilled with knowledge, but one which
inwardly feels the continued working of the divinity animating the
world.
These two streams had to meet, had to
work upon one another in the evolving humanity. What would have
happened if only the Latin knowledge had developed further? Well,
this Latin knowledge would have been able to pour itself out over the
successors of the primitive European population: up to a certain time
it has even done so. It is hypothetically conceivable, but it could
not really have happened, that the original European population
should have experienced the after-working of the dried up, fading
knowledge.
For then, what these souls would have
received through this knowledge would gradually have led to men's
becoming more and more decadent; this drying, parching knowledge
would not have been able to unite with the forces which kept mankind
living. It would have dried men up. Under the influence of the after
effects of Latin culture, European humanity would in a sense have
been parched and withered. People would have come to have
increasingly refined concepts, to have reasoned more subtly and have
given themselves up more and more to thought, but the human heart,
the whole human life would have remained cold under these fine spun,
refined concepts and ideas.
I say that that would be hypothetically
conceivable, but it could not really have taken place. What really
happened is something very different. What really happened is that
the part of humanity that had life but not knowledge streamed in
among those people who were, so to say, threatened with receiving
only the remains of the Latin heritage. Let us envisage the question
from another side. At a definite period we find distributed over
Europe, in the Italian peninsula, in the Spanish peninsula, in the
region of present France, in the region of the present British Isles,
certain remains of an original European population; in the North the
descendants of the old Celtic peoples, in the South the descendants
of the Etruscan and ancient Roman peoples. We meet with these there,
and in the first place there flows into them what we have now
characterised as the Latin stream. Then at a definite time,
distributed over various territories of Europe, we meet with the
Ostrogoths, the Visigoths, the Lombardi, the Suevi, the Vandals, etc.
There is an age when we find the Ostrogoths in the south of present
Russia, the Visigoths in eastern Hungary, the Langobardi or
Lombard's where today the Elbe has its lower
course, the Suevi in the region where today Silesia and Moravia lie,
etc. There we meet with various of those tribes of whom one can say:
they have ‘life’ but no ’knowledge.’
Now we can put the question: Where have
these peoples gone to? We know that for the most part they have
disappeared from the actual evolution of European humanity. Where
have the Ostrogoths, the Visigoths, the Langobardi, etc. gone? We can
ask this. In a certain respect they no longer exist as nations, but
what they possessed as life exists, exists somewhat in the following
way. My dear friends, let us consider first the Italian peninsula,
let us consider it still occupied by the descendants of the old Roman
population. Let us further imagine that on this old Italian peninsula
there had been spread abroad what I have designated Latin knowledge,
Latin culture; then the whole population would have dried
up.
If exact research were made, it would be
impossible not to admit that only incredible dilettantism could
believe that anything still persists today of a blood relationship
with the ancient Romans. Ostrogoths, Visigoths, Lombardi, marched in,
and over these there streamed the Latin heritage —
though merely mentally as seed of knowledge — it
streamed over-the life-without-knowledge, and this gave it substance
for continuing. Into the more southern regions there came a more
Norman-Germanic element. Thus there streamed into the Italian
peninsula from the European centre and the East a life-bearing
population. Into Spain there streamed the Visigoths and the Suevi in
order later to unite with the purely intellectual element of the
Arabs, the Moors. Into the region of France there streamed the Franks
and into the region of the British Isles, the Anglo-Saxon
element.
The following statement expresses the
truth. If the southern regions had remained populated by descendants
of the old Romans, and the Latin culture had gone on working in them,
they would have faced the danger of completely losing the power of
developing an ego-consciousness. Hence the descendants of ancient
Rome were displaced and there was poured into this region where
Latinism was to spread, what came from the element of the Ostrogoths
and Lombardi. The blood of Ostrogoths and Lombardi as well as Norman
blood absorbed the withering Latin culture. If the population had
remained Romans they would have faced the danger of never being able
to develop the element of the Consciousness-soul. Thus there went to
the south in the Langobardi and the Ostrogoths what we can call the
Wotan-Element, Spirit and Life. The Wotan-Element was, so to say,
carried in the blood of the Langobardi and Ostrogoths and this made
the further evolution and unfoldment of this southern civilisation
possible.
With the Franks towards the West went
the Wile-element, Intelligence and Movement, which again would have
been lost if the descendants of the primitive European population who
had settled in these regions had merely developed further under the
influence of Rome. Towards the British Isles went We, what one can
call: Configuration and Speech, and in particular the faculty to see
and to hear. This has later experienced in English empiricism its
later development as: Physiognomics, Speech, Sight,
Hearing.
So we see that while in the new Italian
element we have the expression of the Folk Soul in the Sentient-soul,
we could express this differently by saying: The Wotan-element
streams into the Italian peninsula. And we can speak of the
journeying of the Franks to the West by saying: the Wile-element
streams West, towards France. And so in respect of the British Isles
we can express it by saying: the We-element streams in
there.
In the Italian peninsula, therefore,
nothing at all is left of the blood of the original European peoples,
it has been entirely replaced. In the West, in the region of modern
France, somewhat more of the original population exists,
approximately there is a balance between the Frankish element and the
original peoples. The greatest part of the original population is
still in the British Isles.
But all this that I am now saying is
fundamentally only another way of pointing to the understanding of
what came out of the South through Europe, pointing to the fact that
the Mystery of Golgotha was ensheathed in a dying wisdom and was
absorbed through a living element still devoid of wisdom.
One cannot understand Europe if one does
not bear this connection in mind; one can, however, understand Europe
in all details if one grasps European life as a continuous process.
For much of what I have said is still fulfilling itself in our own
times. So, for instance, it would be interesting to consider the
philosophy of Kant, from these two original polarities of European
life, and show how Kant on the one hand desires to dethrone
Knowledge, take all power from Knowledge, in order on the other hand
to give place to Faith. That is only a continuation of the dim hidden
consciousness that one can really do nothing with knowledge that has
come up from below — one can only do something
with what comes down from above as original life-without-knowledge.
The whole contrast in pure and practical reason lies in this: I had
to discard knowledge to make way for Faith. Faith, for which
protestant theology fights, is a last relic of the
life-without-knowledge, for life will have nothing to do with an
analysed abstract wisdom.[Gap
left between these sentences]
But one can also consider older
phenomena. One can observe how an endeavour appears among the most
important leading personalities to create a harmony, as it were,
between the two streams to which we have referred. For the modern
physiognomy of Europe shows that up to our own day there is an
after-working of the Latin knowledge in the European life, and that
one can immediately envisage the map of Europe with the Latin
knowledge raying out to south and west, and the Life still preserved
in the centre. One can then see, for instance, how pains were taken
at one time to overcome this dying knowledge. I should like to give
an example. To be sure, this dying knowledge appears in the different
spheres of life in different degrees, but already in the
8th-9thCentury European evolution had so progressed that
those who were the descendants of the European peoples with the Life
could get no further with certain designations for cosmic or earthly
relations which had been created in old Roman times. So even in the
8th-9thCenturies one could see that it had no special
meaning for the original life of the soul when one said: January,
February, March, April, May, etc. The Romans could make something of
it, but the Northern European peoples could not do much with it;
poured itself over these peoples in such a way as not to enter the
soul, but rather to flow merely into the language, and it was
therefore dying and withering. So an endeavour was made, especially
towards Middle and Western Europe (over the whole stretch from the
Elbe to the Atlantic Ocean and to the Apennines) to find designations
for the months which could enter the feelings of European humanity.
Such month-names were to
be:
WintarmanothHornungLenzinmanothOstarmanothWinnemanoth (also Nannamanoth)BrachmanothHenimanoth (using the word Hay)Aranmanoth (Aran = harvest)Widumanoth (Wide = what is left when one has gone
over the field)Windumemanoth
(vintage)HerbistmanothHeiligmanoth.
He who was at pains to make these names
general was Charlemagne.
It shows how significant was the spirit
of Charlemagne, for he sought to introduce something which has not up
to now found entrance. We still have in the names of the months the
last relics of the drying-up Latin cultural knowledge. Charlemagne
was altogether a personality who aimed at many things which went
beyond the possibility of being realised. Directly after his time, in
the 9th Century, the wave of Latinism drew completely over
Europe. It would be interesting to consider what Charlemagne desired
to do in wishing to bring the radiation of the Wile-element towards
the West. For the Latinising only appeared there later on.
Thus we can say that the part of mankind
which has been race, which, as race, was the successor of the old
Europe, — of the Europe from which the Roman
influence proceeded and which itself became the successor of Rome,
wholly for the south, largely for the north — has
simply died out. Their blood no longer persists. Into the empty space
left, there has poured in what came from Central Europe and the
European East. One can therefore say: the racial element both of the
European South and West is the Germanic element which is present in
various shadings in the British Isles, in France, in Spain and in the
Italian peninsula, though in this last completely inundated by the
Latin influence.
The racial element therefore moves from
East to the West and South, whereas the knowledge-element moves from
South to North. It is the race-element which moves from the East to
the West and South and along the West of Europe to the North, and
gradually flows away towards the North. If one would speak correctly,
one can talk of a Germanic race-element,-but not a Latin race. To
speak of a Latin race is just as sensible as to speak of wooden iron;
because Latinism is nothing that belongs to race, but something that
has poured itself as bloodless knowledge over a part of the original
European people. Only materialism can speak of a Latin race, for
Latinism has nothing to do with race.
So we see how, as it were, the Bible
saying works on in this part of European history, how the destiny of
Latinism is the fulfilment of the words: ‘Ye shall
not eat of the Tree of Life.’ We see how the Life given
to the earth with the Mystery of Golgotha cannot come to full harmony
with the old knowledge; but rather how into what remained of the
ebbing original wisdom, new life had to enter. If we are to give a
concrete answer to the question: Where does that remain, which from
such new life has not been preserved in its own special character,
but has disappeared in history, the element of the Visigoths, the
Suevi, the Langobardi, the Ostrogoths, etc.? we must give as answer:
It lives on as life within the Latin culture. That is the true state
of affairs. That is what must be known regarding the primeval Bible
two-fold utterance and its working in early times in the development
of Europe, if we are to understand this European
evolution.
I had to give you this historical
analysis today because I shall have things to say which assume that
one does not hold the false ideas of modern materialism and formalism
with regard to historical evolution.