INTRODUCTION
HUMAN
BEINGS ARE DWELLERS in two worlds. Our uniqueness amongst the
creatures of the earth lies in this role that we have as half beast
and half angel. A dynamic tension exists because of the contrary
demands which living in each of these realms places on us. We
experience this on a daily basis, an internal tug-of-war, pulling
first in one direction, then to the opposite pole. Whenever we are
called upon to make a choice, a decision, the earthly and the
heavenly draw us one way or the other and often both at once!
A long held view has been
that, of course, one should always give way to the heavenly or
spiritual; the alternative is to succumb to the earthly, the fallen,
to evil. The struggle has been portrayed as white versus black, as
good versus evil. The enduring legacy of this attitude has been to
deem the earthly, the bodily nature of the human being as soiled,
unclean, corrupt, shameful. With this view the spiritual
aspirant of the past had no choice but to reject the body, the earth.
In India incarnating into a physical body has long been
considered a curse, the entering into the “veil of tears”
which constitutes life.
The physical body was
especially singled out for punishment, to be starved and
tortured, purged and scourged. St. Francis derided his body as his
“donkey,” but reluctantly acknowledged that he must give
it some care if it was to continue carrying him about. The
medieval Cathars saw the human body as a pit into which the devil had
lured the souls of weakened angels. Procreation was thus looked upon
with horror as an act of unwitting cruelty — each new
birth dragged a heavenly soul into the fallen world of matter,
bringing another diabolically corrupt angel into the flesh. Even to
study the physical body too closely was suspect, hence Leonardo's
need for secrecy in dissection of corpses. The accumulation of an
inordinate amount of the material realm in the form of wealth has
also been rather suspect.
Such views have persisted
on varying levels into modern times, and not just amongst the
puritanical or the late Victorian. Sigmund Freud had
difficulty, as a scientist, in acknowledging an angelic side in
his patients. He reframed the conflict as one involving human bodily
nature and the probably superstitious religious and moral
beliefs they maintain. This wrestling match between the
instinctual id and the moralistic superego was refereed by the
central ego.
Later psychologists have
continued to use this framework of two opposing forces moderated by
the central force of an ego (though they all interpret the ego
somewhat differently). Gestalt psychologists very pragmatically focus
on how an individual becomes caught in this struggle between
the two poles, without worrying about the relative merits of either
pole — what is important is to get the individual
“unstuck,” to empower the central ego to again be able to
choose, to act more decisively through becoming conscious of its
dilemma. The Italian psychiatrist, Robert Assagioli, wrote of the
pull between the lower and higher unconscious, once again recognizing
an earth/heaven dichotomy. He developed a therapy that sought a
“psychosynthesis” of the two opposing forces, paving the
way for the discovery of one's unifying center. Similarly, Carl Jung
described the marriage of Eros and Logos within the soul, with the
sometimes alchemical participation of the ego.
Some of these more
spiritually inclined psychologists share with Rudolf Steiner the
recognition that it is a synthesis of the two poles and not the
choosing of one over the other that frees us for self-development.
Humanity has both an earthly and a heavenly mission, tasks in the
outer world as well as the inner, necessitating an acceptance, an
embracing of both our natures.
In examining this
predicament of living in two worlds, Rudolf Steiner, by virtue of his
capacity for spiritual research, went much further than previous
researchers. Steiner was able not merely to speak of opposing
psychological forces, but to relate these specifically to the
influence of mighty spiritual beings, Lucifer and Ahriman. The
influence of these beings is not to be thought of as limited to the
realm of the soul but rather taken in the widest context as
encompassing human evolution, history, and almost every aspect of our
existence.
The name Lucifer comes from
the Latin meaning “bearer of the Light.” One's childhood
picture of Lucifer as a slithering manifestation of evil is difficult
to reconcile with the beauty of this name. Lucifer, however,
represents a force that paradoxically can combine beauty and if
you will, beauty gone too far, to the extreme of decadence, hence to
evil.
In the Greek legend, Icarus
and his father Daedalus escape from the tower of their island prison
with wings fashioned of wax. Despite his father's warning, Icarus
becomes enamored of his newfound power and of the beauty of the Sun;
he flies up to the light (and heat), his wings melt, and he falls to
his death. The wiser and more restrained Daedalus keeps his flight
balanced between heaven and earth, thus succeeding in his
escape from bondage. The Greeks were very aware of the temptation of
Lucifer — in most of their tales of tragedy,
“hubris” or overweening pride was the source of a
hero's downfall.
In Rudolf Steiner's
sculpture, the
Representative of Humanity,
Lucifer is portrayed as an exceedingly handsome and powerful winged form.
Despite his having fallen from Heaven, he was nevertheless, an angel,
a leader of angels. As the Light Bearer he has particular gifts for
humankind, especially that of wisdom, the gift he first offered to
Adam and Eve. By their eating of the fruit of the Tree of
Knowledge, Lucifer promised that they would “be as gods.”
Like Icarus, they were not yet prepared for such a gift and
ignoring warnings to the contrary, they accepted it and fell from
Paradise. In this example it should be noted that the gift in and of
itself is not evil. As in our earlier psychological examples, neither
the heavenly nor the earthly is of itself to be seen as either
absolutely desirable or absolutely forbidden. The beings of the
polarities actually have something of value to offer to humanity.
This is very different from the traditional view of the Devil's
offerings! However, an individual must be inwardly prepared for the
reception of these gifts if they are to be of any value. The
hallucinogenic drug user is open to receiving Luciferic light and
often feels quite wise when in the midst of the drug experience.
Without the meditative discipline of the serious student of the
spirit, however, the contact with those realms is rarely beneficial
and, in fact, is often quite harmful.
In this century, society
has especially interested itself in the material. Partially in
response to the excessive rejection of the earth and the body, and of
the authoritarianism which maintained this position, we have
now fully entered the realm of matter, with head, heart, and
soul. Whereas in former times humankind was more dreamy in its
consciousness and thus more prone to the Luciferic realm of fantasy,
illusion, and superstitious thinking, modern consciousness tends to
the concrete, to materialism. The belief only in what can be
ascertained by the physical senses (and the instruments which extend
those senses) binds us to the earth and to the influence of the being
named Ahriman.
Aingra Mainu, or Ahriman,
was first spoken of in the Zoroastrianism of ancient Persia. He
was the evil god, the lord of lies who tempted men and women to
believe that they were solely earthly beings. At a time in history
when the clairvoyance which had once been common was becoming
rare, the ethical teachings of Zarathustra sought to remind the
people of their divine origin and to teach through the revelation he
had received of the Lord of the Sun, Ahura Mazda.
The influence of Ahriman
has grown through the centuries, quietly gaining respectability in
the age of the Renaissance and flourishing in our own century as
the predominant worldview. Only in the last years has there
been any serious questioning of the notion that the only reality is
the physical one. For the most part the realm of soul and spirit has
been dismissed. The prevailing scientific view has been that
only what can be weighed, measured, or quantified should merit
serious attention. Ahriman has welcomed statistics as his
handmaid.
At the beginning of the
century, the Russian philosopher, Vladimir Soloviev, warned of this
danger in his “A Short Narrative about
Anti-Christ.” In this fictional essay Soloviev described the
appearance of a great individual who taught world peace and became
first the World Leader, and later the reuniter of the world's
religions. He is a vegetarian and anti-vivisectionist and brings
great material prosperity and physical comfort to all who acknowledge
his authority, all of this without effort on the people's part.
The world becomes peaceful, even docile, for the minor sacrifice of
individuality and freedom.
The influence of Ahriman is
seen in the generous gifts that he has bestowed on humankind in the
past centuries and for which we must feel very grateful. All of the
technological marvels which science has made possible have
given many of us relative freedom from all manner of drudgery while
maintaining a high standard of living, freeing us to pursue
other interests, giving us more time ... or do we have more
time? The great difficulty with our acceptance of Ahriman's bounty
has been our relative blindness and lack of foresight as we have lost
ourselves in its enjoyment. The birth of the ecology movement
and discussion of the reductionist nature of science has wakened some
consciousness of the danger into which we have strayed. Some
awareness has arisen as to what we are sacrificing in the Faustian
bargain which society has struck, a sacrifice which involves our very
humanity.
Through Darwin's theory of
evolution as well as through Freud's positing of the sexual as the
primary motive of humankind, the idea that we are no more than
“naked apes” has become quite accepted. To this
instinctual or animalistic picture of the human, science has added
the model of the human being as machine, with the brain as computer.
With such a confining definition of humanity, is it any wonder that
we have increasingly come to act and to see ourselves as just
machines, or just animals?
The challenge for the
individual is often not how to face either Ahriman or Lucifer, but
how not to be torn asunder in the encounter with both forces. In T.S.
Eliot's play,
Murder in the Cathedral,
the Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas a Becket, is conducted to an
examination of himself and his past by a succession of four Tempters.
The first three attempt to win him with the Ahrimanic enticements of
pleasures of the senses, good fellowship, and temporal power for
himself and for his Church. Becket turns away from these three only
to be approached by a fourth Tempter, clad like himself as a priest
and tonsured. The Luciferic temptation now offered is the most
dangerous and difficult for Becket, the whisper of spiritual pride
— to die in order to attain immortality on earth, to
envisage the saint's tomb being visited by pilgrims for
centuries, to stand high within the ranks in heaven. Only with
difficulty does Becket turn away from these “higher
vices.”
In Rudolf Steiner's
sculpture, a strong figure stands with one clenched hand upraised to
the beautiful Lucifer, the other hand stretched downward to the
twisted and sclerotic Ahriman.
The Representative of Humanity
stands heroically, holding at bay and in balance the two
opposing forces, centered within the “Third Force,” that
force which we recognize in ourselves in the word
‘I’.
In this series of lectures,
Rudolf Steiner strives to deepen our understanding of the two
opposing forces, to alert us especially to the dangers of
Ahriman, whose wiles have lulled us into a soporific state. The
intent, however, is not to drive us to obsession over Luciferic or
Ahrimanic demons, but rather to remind us, to reawaken us to our true
center. In the words of Henry David Thoreau, “We must learn to
reawaken and keep ourselves awake, not by mechanical means, but by an
infinite expectation of the dawn, which does not forsake us even in
our soundest sleep.” We recognize that dawn in the figure of
the risen Christ who stands for all of us as the
“Representative of Humanity” in the modern struggle for
the kernel of our being.
Thomas Poplawski
|