LECTURE NINE
Dornach,
18 February 1922
Let us
recall the main points we considered yesterday. Through conception
and birth into the physical, sense-perceptible world, the human being
brings down on the one hand something which inwardly still possesses
the living spiritual world, but which then becomes shaded and toned
down to the thought world he bears within him. On the other hand he
brings down something which fills his element of soul and spirit,
something which I have described as being essentially a state of
fear. I then went on to point out that the living spirit is
metamorphosed into a thought element, but that it also sends into
earth existence a living remnant of pre-earthly life that lives in
human sympathy. So in human sympathy we have something that maintains
in our soul the living quality of pre-earthly existence. The feeling
of fear that fills our soul before we descend to the physical world
is metamorphosed here on earth on the one hand into the feeling of
self and on the other into the will.
What
lives in the human soul by way of thoughts is dead as far as spirit
and soul are concerned, compared with the living world of the spirit.
In our thoughts, or at least in the force which fills our thoughts,
we experience, in a sense, the corpse of our spirit and soul
existence between death and a new birth. But our present experience
during physical earthly life, of a soul that has — in a way
— been slain, was not always as strong as it is today. The
further we go back in human evolution the greater is the role played
here in earthly life by what I yesterday described as sympathy
— sympathy not only with human beings but also for instance
with the whole of nature. The abstract knowledge we strive for today
— quite rightly, to a certain extent — has not always
been present in human evolution. This abstract inner consciousness
came into being in its most extreme form in the fifteenth century,
that is, at the beginning of the fifth post-Atlantean period. What
human beings now experience in their thoughts was, in earlier times,
filled with living feelings. In older knowledge — for instance,
that of the Greek world — abstract concepts as we know them
today simply did not exist. Concepts then were filled with living
feelings. Human beings felt the world as well as thinking it. Only at
the beginning of the fifth post-Atlantean period did people begin to
merely think the world, reserving their feelings of sympathy for what
is really only the social realm.
In
ancient India human beings felt strong sympathy for the whole of
nature, for all the creatures of nature. Such strong sympathy in
earthly life means that there is a strong experience of all that
takes place around the human being between death and a new birth. In
thinking, this life has died. But our sympathy with the world around
us certainly contains echoes of our perceptions between death and a
new birth. This sympathy was very important in the human life of
earlier times. It meant that every cloud, every tree, every plant,
was seen to be filled with spirit. But if we live only in thoughts,
then the spirit departs from nature, because thoughts are the corpse
of our spirit and soul element. Nature is seen as nothing more than a
dead structure, because it can only be mirrored in dead thoughts.
That is why, as times moved nearer to our own, all elemental beings
disappeared from what human beings saw in nature.
So what
is this kind of spirituality that human beings still feel within
themselves — this living spirituality — when, in reality,
they ought to experience nothing but dead spirituality? To answer
this question we shall have to consider what I have said with regard
to the physical organization of the human being as a threefold
organism. Here (see diagram) is the organism of nerves and senses,
located mainly in the head. The rhythmical organism is located mainly
in the upper chest organs. But of course both systems appear in the
total organism too. And here is the organism of the limbs and the
metabolism, which is located mainly in the limbs and the lower parts
of the trunk.
Let us
look first at the head organization which is chiefly, though not
exclusively, the bearer of our life of nerves and senses. We can only
understand it if we look at it pictorially. We have to imagine that
our head is for the most part a metamorphosis — not in its
physical substance, but in its form — of the rest of the body,
of the organism of limbs and metabolism we had in our previous
incarnation on the earth.
The
organism of limbs and metabolism of our previous earthly life —
not its physical substance, of course, but its shape — becomes
our head organization in this life. Here in our head we have a house
which has been formed out of a transformation of the organism of
limbs and metabolism from our former incarnation, and in this head
live mainly the abstract thoughts (see next diagram, red) which are
the corpse of our pre-earthly life of soul and spirit.
In our
head we bear the living memory of our former earthly life. And this
is what makes us feel ourselves to be an ego, a living ego, for this
living ego does not exist within us. Within us are only dead
thoughts. But these dead thoughts live in a house which can only be
understood pictorially; it is an image arising out of the
metamorphosis of our organism of limbs and metabolism from our former
earthly life.
The more
living element that comes over from the life of spirit and soul, when
we descend into a new earthly life, takes up its dwelling from the
start not in our head, but in our rhythmical organism. Everything
that surrounded us between death and this new birth and now plays
into life — all this dwells in our rhythmical organism. In our
head all we have is an image out of our former earthly life, filled
with dead thoughts. In our rhythmical, breast organism lives
something much more alive. Here there is an echo of everything our
soul experienced while it was moving about freely in the world of
spirit and soul between death and this new birth. In our breathing
and in our blood circulation something vibrates — forces that
belong to the time
between
death and birth. And lastly, our being of spirit and soul belonging
to our present earthly incarnation lives — strange though this
may seem — not in our head, and not in our breast, but in our
organism of limbs and metabolism. Our present earthly ego lives in
our organism of limbs and metabolism (green).
Imagine
the dead thoughts to be still alive. These dead thoughts live —
speaking pictorially — in the convolutions of the brain. And
the brain in turn lives in a metamorphosis of our organism from our
former incarnation. The initiate perceives the way the dead thoughts
dwell in his head, he perceives them as a memory of the reality of
his former incarnation. This memory of your former incarnation is
just as though you were to find yourself in a darkened room with all
your clothes hanging on a rail. Feeling your way along, you come,
say, to your velvet jacket, and this reminds you of the occasion when
you bought it. This is just what it is like when you bump into dead
thoughts at every turn. To feel your way about in whatever is in your
head organization is to remember your former life on earth.
What you
experience in your breast organism is the memory of your life between
death and a new birth. And what you experience in your limbs and
metabolism — this belongs to your present life on earth. You
only experience your ego in your thoughts because your organism of
limbs and metabolism works up into your thoughts. But it is a
deceptive experience. For your ego is not, in fact, contained in your
thoughts. It is as little in your thoughts as you are actually behind
the mirror when you see yourself reflected in it. Your ego is not in
your thought life at all. Because your thought life shapes itself in
accordance with your head, the memory of your former earthly life is
in your thought life. In your head you have the human being you were
in your former life. In your breast you have the human being who
lived between death and this new birth. And in your organism of limbs
and metabolism, especially in the tips of your fingers and toes, you
have the human being now living on the earth. Only because you also
experience your fingers and toes in your brain do your thoughts give
you an awareness of this ego in your earthly life. This is how
grotesque these things are, in reality, in comparison with what
people today usually imagine.
Thinking
with the head about what happens in the present time is something
that only became prevalent at the beginning of the fifth
post-Atlantean period, in the fifteenth century. But in an ahrimanic
way things are forestalled. Things that take place later than they
should in the course of evolution are luciferic. Things that come too
soon are ahrimanic. Let us look at something which came about in
history very much too soon and should not have happened until the
fifteenth century. It did happen in the fifteenth century, but it was
foreshadowed at the time of the Mystery of Golgotha. I want to show
you how the ideas of the Old Testament, which I partly described
yesterday, were transformed into nothing more than allegories by a
contemporary of Christ Jesus, Philo of Alexandria.
[ Note 1 ]
Philo of
Alexandria interprets the whole of the Old Testament as an allegory.
This means that he wants to make the whole Old Testament, which is
told in the form of direct experiences, into a series of thought
images. This is very clever, especially as it is the first time in
human evolution that such a thing has been done. Today it is not all
that clever when the theosophists, for instance, interpret
Hamlet
by saying that one of the characters is Manas, another
Buddhi, and so on, distorting everything to fit an allegory. This
sort of thing is, of course, nonsense. But Philo of Alexandria
transformed the whole of the Old Testament into thought images,
allegories. These allegories are nothing other than an inner
revelation of dead soul life, soul life that has died and now lies as
a corpse in the power of thinking. The real spiritual vision, which
led to the Old Testament, looked back into life before birth, or
before conception, and out of what was seen there the Old Testament
was created.
But when
it was no longer possible to look back — and Philo of
Alexandria was incapable of looking back — it all turned into
dead thought images. So in the history of human evolution two
important events stand side by side: The period of the Old Testament
culminated in Philo of Alexandria at the time of the Mystery of
Golgotha. He makes allegories of straw out of the Old Testament. And
at the same time the Mystery of Golgotha reveals that it is not the
experience of dead things that can lead the human being to
super-sensible knowledge, but the whole human being who passes through
the Mystery of Golgotha bearing the divine being within him.
These are
the two great polar opposites: the world of abstraction foreshadowed
in an ahrimanic way by Philo, and the world which is to enter into
human evolution with Christianity. The abstract thinker — and
Philo of Alexandria is perhaps the abstract thinker of the greatest
genius, since he foreshadowed in an ahrimanic way the abstractness of
later ages — the abstract thinker wants to fathom the mysteries
of the world by means of some abstract thought or other which is
supposed to provide the answer to the riddle of the universe. The
Mystery of Golgotha is the all-embracing living protest against this.
Thoughts can never solve the riddle of the universe because the
solution of this riddle is something living. The human being in all
his wholeness is the solution to the riddle of the universe. Sun,
stars, clouds, rivers, mountains, and all the creatures of the
different kingdoms of nature, are external manifestations which pose
an immense question. There stands the human being and, in the
wholeness of his being, he is the answer.
This is
another point of view from which to contemplate the Mystery of
Golgotha. Instead of confronting the riddle of the universe with
thoughts in all their deadness, confront the whole of what man can
experience with the whole of what man is.
Only
slowly and gradually has mankind been able to find the way towards
understanding this. Even today it has not yet been found.
Anthroposophy wants to open the gate. But because abstraction has
become so firmly established, even the awareness that the way must be
sought has disappeared. Until abstraction took hold, human beings did
wrestle with the quest for the way, and this is seen most clearly at
the turn of the fourth to the fifth post-Atlantean period. As
Christianity spreads externally, the best spirits wrestle to
understand it inwardly.
Both
streams had come down from the far past. On the one side there was
the heathen stream which was fundamentally a nature wisdom. All
natural creatures were seen to be inhabited by elemental spirits,
demonic spirits, those very demonic spirits who, in the Gospels, are
said to have rebelled when Christ came amongst mankind, because they
knew that their rule was at an end. Human beings failed to recognize
Christ, but the demons recognized him. They knew that he would now
take possession of human hearts and human souls and that they would
have to withdraw. But for a long time they continued to play a role
in the minds and hearts of human beings as well as in their search
for knowledge. Heathen consciousness, which sought the demonic,
elemental spirits in all creatures in the old way, continued to play
a role for a long time. It wrestled with that other form of knowledge
which now sought in all earthly things the substance of Christ that
had united with the earth through the Mystery of Golgotha.
This
heathen stream — a nature wisdom, a nature Sophia — saw
the spirit everywhere in nature and could therefore also look at man
as a natural creature who was filled with spirit, just as all nature
was filled with spirit. In its purest, most beautiful form we find it
in ancient Greece, especially in Greek art, which shows us how the
spirit weaves through human life in the form of destiny, just as the
natural laws weave through nature. We may sometimes recoil from what
we find in Greek tragedies. But on the other hand we can have the
feeling that the Greeks sensed not only the abstract laws of nature,
as we do today, but also the working of divine, spiritual beings in
all plants, all stones, all animals, and therefore also in man. The
rigid necessity of natural laws was shaped into destiny in the way we
find it depicted, for instance, in the drama of Oedipus. Here is an
intimate relationship between the spiritual existence of nature and
the spiritual existence of man. That is why freedom and also human
conscience as yet play no part in these dramas. Inner necessity,
destiny, rules within man, just as the laws of nature rule the
natural world.
This is
the one stream as it appears in more recent times. The other is the
Jewish stream of the Old Testament. This stream possesses no nature
wisdom. As regards nature, it merely looks at what is physically
visible through the senses. It turns its attention upwards to the
primal source of moral values which lies in the world between death
and a new birth, taking no account of the side of man which belongs
to nature. For the Old Testament there is no nature, but only
obedience to divine commandments. In the Old Testament view, not
natural law, but Jahve's will governs events. What resounds from the
Old Testament is imageless. In a way it is abstract. But setting
aside Philo of Alexandria, who makes everything allegorical, we
discern behind this abstract aspect, Jahve, the ruler who fills this
abstraction with a supersensibly focused, idealized, generalized
human nature. Like a human ruler, Jahve himself is in all the
commandments which he sends down to earth. This Old Testament stream
directs its vision exclusively to the world of moral values; it
absolutely shies away from looking at the externally
sense-perceptible aspect of the world. While the heathen view saw
divine spiritual beings everywhere, the god of the Jews is the One
God. The Old Testament Jew is a monotheist His god, Jahve, is the One
God, because he can only take account of man as a unity: You must
believe in the One God, and you shall not depict this One God in any
earthly manner, not in an idol, not even in a word. The name of God
may only be spoken by initiates on certain solemn occasions. You must
not take the name of your God in vain.
Everything points to what cannot be seen, to what cannot come to
expression in nature, to what can only be thought. But behind the
thought in the Old Testament there is still the living nature of
Jahve. This disappears in the allegories of Philo of Alexandria.
Then came
the early Christian struggles — right on into the fifteenth,
sixteenth, seventeenth centuries — to reach a harmony between
what can be seen as the spirit in external nature and what can be
experienced as the divine when we look at our own moral world, our
own human soul. In theory the matter seems simple. But in fact the
quest for harmony, between seeing the spirit in external nature and
guiding the soul upwards to the spiritual world out of which Christ
Jesus had descended, was an immense struggle. Christianity came over
from Asia and took hold of the Greek and Roman world. In the later
centuries of the Middle Ages we see the struggle taking place most
strongly in those parts of Europe, which had retained much of their
primeval vitality. In ancient Greece the old heathen element was so
strong that although Christianity passed through Greek culture and
assimilated many Greek expressions on the way, it could not take root
there. Only Gnosis, the spiritual view of Christianity, was able to
take root in Greece.
Next,
Christianity had to pass through the most prosaic element of world
evolution: Roman culture. Being abstract, Roman culture could only
comprehend the abstract, as it were foreshadowing in an ahrimanic way
what is later alive in Christianity. A truly living struggle then
took place in Spain. Here, a question was asked which was not
theoretical but vital, intensely alive: How can man, without losing
sight of the spirit in natural creatures and processes, find the
whole human being revealed to him by Christ Jesus. How can man be
filled with Christ? This question lived most strongly in Spain, and
we see in Calderón
[ Note 2 ]
a poet who knew how to depict
this struggle with great intensity. The struggle to fill the human
being with Christ lived — if I may put it like this —
dramatically in Calderón.
Calderón's most characteristic drama in this respect is about
Cyprianus, a kind of miracle-working magician; in other words he is,
in the first instance, a person who lives in natural things and
natural processes because he seeks the spirit in them. A later
metamorphosis of this character is Faust, but Faust is not as filled
with life as is Calderón's Cyprianus. Calderón's portrayal
of how Cyprianus stands in the spirit of nature is still filled with
life. His attitude is taken absolutely for granted, whereas in the
case of Faust everything is shrouded in doubt. From the start, Faust
does not really believe that it is possible to find the spirit in
nature. But Calderón's Cyprianus is, in this respect, a
character who belongs fully to the Middle Ages. A modern physicist or
chemist is surrounded in his laboratory by scientific equipment
— the physicist by Geissler tubes and other things, the chemist
by test tubes, Bunsen burners and the like. Cyprianus, on the other
hand, stands with his soul surrounded by the spirit, everywhere
flashing out and spilling over from natural processes and natural
creatures.
Characteristically, a certain Justina enters into the life of
Cyprianus. The drama depicts her quite simply as a woman, but to see
her solely as a female human being is not to see the whole of her.
These medieval poets are misunderstood by modern interpretations
which state that everything simply depicts the material world. They
tell us, for instance, that Dante's Beatrice is no more than a gentle
female creature. Some interpretations, on the other hand, miss the
actual situation by going in the opposite direction, lifting
everything up allegorically into a spiritual sphere. But at that time
the spiritual pictures and the physical creatures of the earth were
not as widely separated as they are in the minds of modern critics
today. So when Justina makes her debut in Calderón's drama, we
may permit ourselves to think of the element of justice which
pervades the whole world. This was not then as abstract as it is now,
for now it is found between the covers of tomes which the lawyers can
take down from their shelves. Jurisprudence was then felt to be
something living.
So
Justina comes to Cyprianus. And the hymn about Justina which
Cyprianus sings presents another difficulty for modern scientific
critics. Modern lawyers do not sing hymns about their jurisprudence,
but Cyprianus sensed that the justice which pervades the world was
something to which he could sing hymns. We cannot help repeating that
spiritual life has changed. Now Cyprianus is at the same time a
magician who has dealings with the spirits of nature, that world of
demons among whose number the medieval being of Satan can be counted.
Cyprianus feels incapable of making a full approach to Justina, so he
turns to Satan, the leader of the nature demons, and asks him to win
her for him.
Here we
have the deep tragedy of the Christian conflict. What approaches
Cyprianus in Justina is the justice which is appropriate for
Christian development. This justice is to be brought to Cyprianus,
who is still a semi-heathen nature scholar. The tragedy is that out
of the necessities of nature, which are rigid, he cannot find
Christian justice. He can only turn instead to Satan, the leader of
the demons, and ask him to win Justina for him.
Satan
sets about this task. Human beings find it difficult to understand
why Satan — who is, of course, an exceedingly clever being
— is ever and again prepared to tackle tasks at which he has
repeatedly failed. This is a fact. But however clever we might
consider ourselves to be, this is not the way in which to criticize a
being as clever as Satan. We should rather ask ourselves what it
could be that again and again persuades a being as clever as Satan to
try his luck at bringing ruin on human beings. For of course ruin for
human beings would have been the result if Satan had succeeded in
— let me say — winning over Christian justice in order to
bring her to Cyprianus. Well — so Satan sets about his task,
but he fails. It is Justina's disposition to feel nothing but
revulsion for Satan. She flees from him and he retains only a
phantom, a shadow image of her.
You see
how various motifs which recur in Faust are to be found in
Calderón's drama, but here they are bathed in this early
Christian struggle. Satan brings the shadow image to Cyprianus. But
Cyprianus does not know what to do with a phantom, a shadow image. It
has no life. It bears within it only a shadow image of justice. This
drama expresses in a most wonderful way what ancient nature wisdom
has become now that it masquerades in the guise of modern science,
and how, when it approaches social life — that is, when it
approaches Justina — it brings no life with it, but only
phantom thoughts. Now, with the fifth post-Atlantean period, mankind
has entered upon the age of dead thoughts which gives us only
phantoms, phantoms of justice, phantoms of love, phantoms of
everything — well, not absolutely everything in life, but
certainly in theory.
As a
result of all this, Cyprianus goes mad. The real Justina is thrown
into prison together with her father. She is condemned to death.
Cyprianus hears this in the midst of his madness and demands his own
death as well. They meet on the scaffold. Above the scene of their
death the serpent appears and, riding on the serpent, the demon who
had endeavoured to lead Justina to Cyprianus, declaring that they are
saved. They can rise up into the heavenly worlds: ‘This noble
member of the spirit world is rescued from evil!’
The whole
of the Christian struggle of the Middle Ages is contained in this
drama. The human being is placed midway between what he is able to
experience before birth in the world of spirit and soul, and what he
ought to experience after passing through the portal of death. Christ
came down to earth because human beings could no longer see what in
earlier times they had seen in their middle, rhythmic system which
was trained by the breathing exercises of yoga. The middle system was
trained, not the head system. These days human beings cannot find the
Christ, but they strive to find him. Christ came down. Because they
no longer have him in their memory of the time between death and a
new birth, human beings must find him here on earth.
Dramas
such as the Cyprianus drama of Calderóndescribe the struggle to
find Christ. They describe the difficulties human beings face now
that they are supposed to return to the spiritual world and
experience themselves in harmony with the spiritual world.
Cyprianusis still caught in the demonic echoes of the ancient heathen
world. He has also not sufficiently overcome the ancient Hebrew
element and brought it down to earth. Jahve is still enthroned in the
super-sensible worlds, has not descended through the death on the
cross, and has not yet become united with the earth. Cyprianus and
Justina experience their coming together with the spiritual world as
they step through the portal of death — so terrible is the
struggle to bring Christ into human nature in the time between birth
and death. And there is an awareness that the Middle Ages are not yet
mature enough to bring Christ in in this way.
The
Spanish drama of Cyprianus shows us the whole vital struggle to bring
in the Christ far more vividly than does the theology of the Middle
Ages, which strove to remain in abstract concepts and capture the
Mystery of Golgotha in abstract terms. In the dramatic and tragic
vitality of Calderón there lives the medieval struggle for
Christ, that is, the struggle to fill the nature of the human being
with the Christ. When we compare Calderón's Cyprianus drama with
the later drama about Faust — this is quite characteristic
— we find first in Lessing
[ Note 3 ]
the awareness: Human
beings must find the Christ during their earthly life because Christ
endured the Mystery of Golgotha and united himself with earthly
mankind. Not that this lived in any very clear ideas in Lessing, but
he did have a definite sense for it. The fragment of his
Faust
which Lessing succeeded in getting down on paper concludes when the
demons — those who were still able to prevent Cyprianus from
finding the Christ during earthly life — receive the call:
‘You shall not conquer!’
This set
the theme for the later
Faust
of Goethe. And even in Goethe
the manner in which the human being finds Christianity is rather
external. Think of Goethe's
Faust:
In Part One we have the
struggle. Then we come to Part Two. In the Classical Walpurgis-Night
and in the drama of Helena we are shown first how Christianity is
taken up with reference to the Grecian world. Goethe knows that human
beings must forge their links with Christ while they are here on the
earth. So he must lead his hero to Christianity. But how? I have to
say that this is still only a theoretical kind of knowledge —
Goethe was too great a poet for us not to notice that this was only a
theoretical kind of knowledge. For actually we find that the ascent
in the Christian sense only comes in the final act, where it is
tacked on to the end of the whole drama. It is certainly all very
wonderful, but it does not come out of the inner nature of Faust.
Goethe simply took the Catholic dogma. He used the Catholic cultus
and simply tacked the fifth act on to the others. He knew that the
human being must come to be filled with Christ. Basically the whole
mood that lives in the second part of Faust contains this being
filled with the Christ. But still Goethe could not find pictures with
which to show what should happen. It is really only after Faust's
death that the ascent into Christianity is unfolded.
I wanted
to mention all this in order to show you how presumptuous it is to
speak in a light-hearted way about achieving a consciousness of the
Mystery of Golgotha, a consciousness of Christianity. For to achieve
a consciousness of Christianity is a task which entails severe
struggles of the kind I have mentioned. It behoves mankind today to
seek these spiritual forces within the historical evolution of the
Middle Ages and modern times. And after the terrible catastrophe we
have all been through, human beings really ought to realize how
important it is to turn the eye of their souls to these spiritual
impulses.
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